I used to be active on HST, but a few years ago we stopped going to the Sierra because of the droughts, fires, etc. BITD we were pretty strong for seniors, say doing Ramona or Merriam Lk. in the first day from North Lake; I never worried too much about going lite, etc. In the meantime I pursued white water kayaking running all the forks of the Salmon, the Grand Canyon, rivers in OR and WA (where I live). We sea kayaked in the spectacular Haida Gwaii (look it up) and the Broken Islands, but that doesn't take a lot of fitness. Only one short backpack in the Sawtooths that kicked my behind....a growing theme...and we just returned from a trip to Daisetsuzan Nat'l. Park on Hokkaido, where even 6 year old kids and 99 year old Japanese men passed me by day hiking as I wheezed, hacked and stumbled my way along.
Point of all this is that in a couple of weeks I'll be trying to get a walk-up permit for some trailhead out of Bishop (determined by availability) and I'm scared of finding out just how now, things I used to take for granted are out of reach. I'm out of shape, with the body of a 20 year old with 44 years of experience (do the math), old heavy gear and bad hamstrings. Amazing how fast things can go 'south.' So what are reasonable goals? Crawl over Piute Pass, collapse at Packsaddle Lk. and let the skeeters have me? Or over Pine Ck. and attempt to find shade in Granite Park?

But on a more serious note, it breaks my heart a little to reflect on how there are places I always dreamed of exploring in more depth may now be simply out of reach, like Lake Basin (been there twice and could spend a month there), or say, West Pinnacles Creek (passed through there twice) or many other unnamed places...
So anyway it is good to be back at HST and see so many familiar faces.