Rae Lakes Loop: my wife got sick on the descent from Glen Pass down to Upper Rae Lake (we had procrastinated on eating lunch), and it took a few hours before she was able to get fluids down again. I carried her pack the last 1/4 mile before we found an acceptable place to camp, put her on a sleeping pad while I set up the tent, and slowly helped her recover. We didn't really lose any time on the trip but it was a close call. Big lesson there for dealing with altitude/appetite issues.
Kettle Peak class 2 summit attempt: a group of six of us, with beginner to intermediate experience, hit the trailhead later than planned (8am instead of 6am). We had issues finding a route up to Kettle, and one in the group was really struggling, so we stopped at Ice Lake and turned around. Got some great photos of Incredible Hulk though.
Bear Creek Spire (Ulrich's route) attempt: another group of six, with some climbing experience. Got mired in unexpected chossy Class 5 in the apparent "Cox's Col," before identifying a steadier class 3 ascent to the ridge further north. It was getting late though, 1 hour before turnaround time, and my wife was rattled by the endless unstable talus and some altitude woes, and another in the group had already decided to bail solo back to the trailhead. After a little consultation with my wife I convinced her to turn around with me and the other guy. I almost certainly could've summitted with the remaining 3 (was feeling strong and alert) but it was a good opportunity to test my own ego, group skills, and realistically my marriage (ha ha ha). The guys who summitted got back to the campsite after dark, luckily having reached trail with a little light left... and we had a warm fire waiting for them. I still need to make good on BCS.
Long Lake attempt in Mokelumne/Silver Lake area: 2017 was an insane snow year. A simple backpacking trip mid-July to Long Lake was stymied by endless snow over what was supposed to be a *road* midway along our route, so after wasting 3 hours ascending a sketchy snow-covered ridge and feeling lost in the snowy forest on the other side, we returned to Hidden Lake to enjoy our canned wine. VACATION, DAMMIT.
Middle Palisade attempt: just me and a buddy, too much snow in the traditional class 3 chute. We had a good time doing an out/back trip, camped at Finger Lake, the next morning got close to the 'schrund by the red rocks before agreeing that snow shenanigans on a sustained cl3 route without axe/crampons were uncalled for.
Iceland Lake/Emigrant Wilderness: on our 'shake out the legs' trip in June, before we did Circle of Solitude, I wanted to do a long hike out of Gianelli Cabin TH to Iceland lake, Granite Dome, etc. I misread the topo and didn't heed online beta closely, and we ended up on a beautiful but dead-end shelf below a northerly outlet/waterfall of Iceland Lake. (Should've gone further south, along the west side of the cliffs below the lake) I was having knee pain and it was late, so we camped on the shelf, had the waterfall to ourselves, still bagged Granite Dome on the way out. Iceland Lake itself will be a future reward.
Circle of Solitude variation down Cunningham Creek: my wife convinced my to not try to slide 10 ft down a 60deg dry waterfall to get out of jail free from cliffing out... nuff said. We Class 3'd with heavy packs about 75ft back upslope, traversed to find more reasonable steep terrain, and made it out unscathed.
Jeremy Jones once admitted that he occasionally bails on routes even when he's feeling good, just so he doesn't get cocky, and I think about this whenever I'm attempting my comparatively pedestrian goals in the Sierra no matter the season
