JMT 2021 Hike Plan

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stevet
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JMT 2021 Hike Plan

Post by stevet »

I am hiking the John Muir Trail this summer; in fact, starting July 2nd. That is the easy part. “Getting there” or figuring out how to get there has been a bit of challenge and one I think worthy of documenting if only to have the instruction handy should I decide to go it again. This note is not a comprehensive guide to permitting, travel logistics, and resupply planning, but is a detailed account how I have planned to do it.

My priorities for travel are schedule predictability and spend as little time possible in transit. I have limited time off from work, constraints on when I can get away, and want to maximize my time on the trail. And in effort to optimize the away from work time I generally want to travel Thursday, start hiking Friday and for most trips return home on the week out Sunday, or if a holiday weekend, Monday. For hikes in the Sierra, I like August and September especially the last week August through Labor Day (for the extra day).

But I am getting ahead of myself. Permits. What about permits?

This year I have a family trip at the end of September so set my sights on a hike starting any Friday or Saturday in July or August. And for permits I started playing the Happy Isles and Mt Whitney Trail lotteries as soon as the windows opened; played them several times. The mistake with this was ignoring the possibility of failure and not reserving permits out of Horseshoe Meadow as they became available. And of course, I failed.

My backup plan: checking rec.gov several times every day. To my delight, in early May some thoughtful permit holders, when their plans changed, cancelled and I was able to score a Cottonwood Lakes permit for July 2nd and a Cottonwood Pass permit for August 6th. My boss prefers July 2nd and my plans build on that. Meanwhile, I cancelled my August 6th permit for someone else to enjoy.

I’ve edited the permit twice. Once to adjust the nightly stops, and a second time to extend my stay just in case I need an extra day.

About getting there…I’ve outlined my travel priorities, and there are a few other considerations: 1) I am travelling from near Albany, NY. 2) Most of my hikes are from east side trailheads so my best “fly in” options are Mammoth, Las Vegas, Reno, LA. 3) For weeklong trips a rental car that sits at the trailhead is generally cheaper than one-way rentals and hired shuttles. 4) While hiking I need a place to keep my travel duffel and clean change of clothes. This most often is a rented car but can be a hotel with the promise of a night’s stay. 5) And with all my constraints I’ll tend toward the cheaper end of the available options.

Integrate everything above, my go to for weeklong hike, for the last 7 years is fly to Vegas, arrive ~11am, rent a car, do my last-minute shopping, drive to Lone Pine, pick up the paper permit, get a room at elevation for the night, and then off to the trailhead first thing the next morning. But this isn’t quite optimal for a 2-week JMT hike.

A rental car, parked for 2 weeks, is wastefully expensive and I am going to need a shuttle anyway. This year there are no one way rentals into Mammoth or Bishop until August and United stopped its daily flights in and out of Mammoth with the onset of COVID. Using public transportation from LA or the Yarts from Fresno both take a long time and have tight connections that put priority one at risk. The only thing that is easy is I’ll have my permit in hand and don’t have to be at a ranger station by 4:30pm that afternoon before I start hiking.

Have you started playing the violins yet? Should I continue?

Long story short, the solution this year is Thursday the 1st: A Southwest flight into Reno, the Eastern Sierra Bus into Mammoth, and stay the night at a Mammoth Hotel where I can store my travel duffel in a ski locker. Friday the 2nd: a crack of dawn East Side Sierra shuttle to Horseshoe Meadow.
I suppose I could have just written this last paragraph.

The getting home is simple by compare. If successful I finish Friday morning July 16th in Happy Isles. From there it is the afternoon Yarts to Mammoth and another hotel night. Saturday the 17th I take a cab to the Mammoth Airport, rent a car from Enterprise, and drive to Las Vegas. From there it is a red eye and arrive back in Albany by noon the 18th.

Of course, I also need a Plan B and Plan C way of getting home. Plan B, what I do if I hike too slow: exit at Tuolumne and hop onto Plan A with the after Yarts or exit at Mammoth and hop onto Plan A. Plan C, what to do if I must bail? Wing it and rely on a few kind souls to get me to Mammoth where I can get back onto Plan A. There is always the Plan D wing it option where I am evac’d out of the backcountry, but I am not going there.

Things were a lot easier when I lived in Arizona. I just drove.

----------

With travel down it is onto menu and resupply.

My backpacking menu is rather pedestrian. I want convenience, so no home dehydrating and no original recipes for me. I like Pack-It Gourmet and start there for both breakfasts and dinners. Lunch is seldom a stop and sit meal, instead I graze a couple hundred calories per hour from bars, almond M&M, nut butters, dried fruit, and sausages. The grazing habit is a trial and error learned practice of how I need to eat and sustain myself while hiking 12+/- hours a day.

The choices are not the most calorically dense but not too bad, and there is enough variety to keep me interested and eating. Menu details, quantities, and nutritional values are listed in the table below.

JMT 2021 Menu.png

I am resupplying at Muir Trail Ranch and Reds Meadow. These I’ll mail by June 18th. This gives them about 3 weeks to arrive and I’ll likely have confirmation they’ve been received before I start hiking. Quantities carried and what goes in each bucket are listed in the next table.

JMT 2021 Resupply.png

Next is gear. I probably have not changed more than 5 items since 2006. Absent food, fuel, and water I am about 15 lbs. This year call it 16 since I am going to carry both a tarp and a poncho unless the 2-week forecast as of July 1 is two weeks no rain. This includes the bear can.

gear
McHale Sarc-chasm Backpack
2 Mons Peak Tiger Paw carbon trekking poles
Chrome Dome Umbrella
Western Mountaineering Ultralight Sleeping bag
1 Osprey Ultralight Stuff Pack / doubles as sleeping bag stuff sack
Inflatable pillow
Thermarest Neo-Air Large
2 DCF stuff sacks
Mountain Laurel Designs Cuben Tarp
Mountain Laurel Designs Cuben Pro Poncho/tarp
Mountain Laurel Designs bivy
8 aluminum y-stakes with attached guylines in rolled into tarp
Gerber Dime multitool
1-liter Smartwater Bottle
2-liter platypus
Katadyn BeFree
Fenix LD02 mini flashlight
1 Bearikade weekender
Quarter (for opening bearikade)
Ti Spoon w/long handle
Shaker Cup
1 600ml titanium pot
Caldera Cone w/Gram Weenie Stove
18 Esbit cubes
BIC Lighter

clothes to pack
Patagonia UL Windbreaker
Patagonia wind pants
Patagonia Micro Puff Hoody
100 wt. fleece gloves
Patagonia Capilene Air hoody
Underwear
1 pair Injinji toe socks
Mini Pack-towel

first aid
3’ Leukotape (wrapped on hiking staff)
1 0.5oz Tube Hydrocortisone cream
1 0.5oz Tube Anti-Fungal cream
5 band-aids w/antibiotic ointment
Meds (Benadryl, Sudafed, Imodium, Bisacodyl, Tylenol, Bonine)
Script Meds (32 Eliquis, 16 Allopurinol, 32 Colchicine, Prednisone
1 sheet shop towel, quartered
2 sheets 2nd skin
5 2nd Skin blister patches
1 large safety pin

emergency/repair
1 roll McNett tape
~6’ Duct tape (wrapped on hiking staff)
Needle & thread
BIC Lighter
9 pieces fire starter
10 Katadyn Micropur tablets

cleanup kit
Fingertip Toothbrush
SS Wire Toothpick
Glasses cleaner
8 Deet Wipes Insect Repellent
1oz Sunblock

toilet kit
Toilet paper, 45 sheets
2 one-quart Ziploc (one for new, one for used TP)
Poop trowel
1oz Hand gel

miscellaneous
iPhone with Gaia GPS app
Anker charger (plug and charging cord in resupply)
iPhone cable
Locker key
Small notepad, pencil
Sea to Summit mosquito head net

clothes to wear
Prana shorts
Underwear
Patagonia Merino 1 t-shirt
2 pair Injinji toe socks
Trail Runners
Orthotics
Hat
Scrap of paper with phone #
A bit of cash
Debit card
Medical insurance card
Driver’s license
Eyeglasses
Suunto Core Compass/Altimeter watch
Bandanna
½ oz eye drops
Tin of lip balm

Lastly, here is the above and my hike itinerary laid out in table format.
JMT 2021 Itinerary.png

Hopefully some of you find it useful, whether preparing your own JMT hike or in grabbing bits that you can use on another adventure. I welcome questions and comments, and in recompense for any harm endured while reading this I’ll report back on how it actually plays out.
Last edited by stevet on Mon Jun 21, 2021 2:37 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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wildhiker
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Re: JMT 2021 Hike Plan

Post by wildhiker »

Thanks for laying out your plan. Always interesting to compare my equipment, food, etc. with others.

By the way, your hike plan shows you hiking to Bullfrog Lake outlet on July 5. I assume this is the Bullfrog Lake south of Glen Pass. Where are you planning to camp? No camping is allowed around Bullfrog Lake.

-Phil
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stevet
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Re: JMT 2021 Hike Plan

Post by stevet »

Yep, no camping at Bullfrog Lake at least since my first pass.by in 1973. Supposedly per Lizzy Wenk’s guide there is a small spot on the “NE Corner” where the creek crosses the trail. If not I’ll have to scramble around a bit or push on up to Charlotte Lake.
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Enigmagic
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Re: JMT 2021 Hike Plan

Post by Enigmagic »

stevet wrote: Mon May 31, 2021 4:24 pm Supposedly per Lizzy Wenk’s guide there is a small spot on the “NE Corner” where the creek crosses the trail. If not I’ll have to scramble around a bit or push on up to Charlotte Lake.
there is a fairly large set of sites on the west side of the trail somewhere around 36.7665, -118.4126 with a view of East Vidette. we stopped there for lunch last year... I didn't count but it seems like it had room for six or more tents.
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