Harlen wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2024 8:21 am
jrad, Cool trip I am dying to follow--that is, your (above link) Woodchuck to Tehipite, Simpson Meadow, Muir Pass, Ionian Basin and return. What pass did you use to cross LeConte Divide? Congratulations on your epic of long ago, Ian.
It truly was a real mountaineering adventure, which is something one CAN do in the Sierra if one works at it unlike in Canada, Alaska, Tropics and such where one has to work to AVOID serious (and deadly) adventure! I have long known that a difficult hike with a group or just one friend can become a minor adventure if done alone especially in the off-season. So I'd definitely recommend this route which was as best I can recall (it's been 45 years and I never sketched out an exact map):
https://caltopo.com/m/VH4BQP4
NOTES:
- at Camp 1 my neck was so strained from the 60+ pound pack that it was crackling quite a lot and I said to myself - "I think I'll quit and drive up to South Lake Tahoe instead of this!"
- my breakfast view from Castle Peak (still Indian Summer) was the finest forest view of any I've seen in the High Sierra (still is, I think, healthy unburnt forest to the N as far as one can see).
- the drop into Tehipite Valley is AWFUL (ZERO as in NO break) - relentless nearly 100% (30-45 degree) downhill for over 3 miles!! The only trail that has brought me almost to tears (1975, 1977, 1979) and a trail I could not do again w/o lots of serious training (I'm 78 almost now). Your thighs will be bouncing on their own after a bit. People do it; but it's awful.
- TAKE ICE AXE! Or walk well above the first 2 large lakes in Ionian Basin. Crossing above Lake 11592 is the only time in my life I've been truly terrified. One slip would have meant unavoidable death. And this was at the very end of the entire Dry Season. The snow slope was gentle but hard as ice and I could not have stopped a single misstep and slide into open water with zero chance of extricating myself (no beach, rocks, nothing ... just a drop straight into what looked like deep water and no nice powder snow to dry off in and no fire possibility anywhere near).
- Have a sturdy tent. I had a $20 A-frame single wall thing (1-season "tent"). I took a walking stick, the idea being to find a tree for the other end ... but in white-out in the middle of the afternoon I had slammed it into the ice in frustration and so had a 3-foot tall piece of stick and the nearest tree miles away. Took over an hour to "pitch" the silly thing. There was zero wind else it would have blown down and I likely would have frozen in the very, very long night which had me in a state of moderate terror until midnight when I popped my head out to see a gloriously clear, dark sky full of stars.
- Of course, forget challenging Mother Nature needlessly; She can crush you, even in the Sierra, so damn easily. In all my late October trips, I never had to deal with worse than lows in the teens. There was the one time atop Mammoth Crest with 40 mph wind about 10 years ago - I felt like my eyeballs were starting freeze, in the sun! With wind chill, it must have been well below 0 degrees F. Luckily I was hiking as fast as I could (nearly getting blown over) down to Lake George TH and nearby creature comforts.
In a word, as I said, my best trip ever. I could not do it again (cannot take the cold nearly as well as I used to do).