Trip planning for HS Hotspring loop.
Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2021 2:27 pm
Hi all!
I was raised camping (mostly by car) all over the American South-West and now that I have reached some semblance of adulthood (22), the freedom and capability it affords has me pinning for the wide and lonely vistas of my childhood's family vacations.
So, long story short.... 4x4 cars and gas are $$$ and walking is (mostly) free so my girlfriend and compatriots and I have been getting very into backpacking although this hobby currently leans more on enthusiasm than real experience (20 mile, two night trip in Hawaii and a 20 mile, one night trip in big sur).
We are well prepared in terms of gear (garage full top quality equipment courtesy of parents) and well prepared in ideology (environment related college major, was read Edward Abby as a bed time book at 9, and was taught to leave no trace since as soon as I was old enough to do so)
Areas we are looking for help:
Route advice:
After a very successful trip to Sykes hot springs in Big Sur the complimentary relationship between natural hot water and dusty sore limbs seemed obvious. So, when I noticed that a trail loop could be drawn connecting Iva Bell Hot Springs to (almost) Mono Hot Springs, it seemed like a fun adventure.
This the was the original idea but after researching, it seems there are some concerns around trail conditions (Silver Creek Trail and Saddle Mountain Trail)
So another route option would be: Clarity on Permits
Bit confused here. I have read that if you come in from the more popular Mammoth resort start point the correct permit is the quote controlled one for Fish Creek. But I have no Idea about what permit is needed when starting from Lake Edison or if a permit is even needed (did not see a Lake Edison permit here https://www.recreation.gov/permits/2332 ... 2021-06-20
Avoiding lvl 5 mosquito swarms
I am avidly following the 2021 mosquito reports page on this board but if anyone had any wisdom specific to this area that would be great. It seems picking a trip date after the mosquito "bloom" has subsided but before our lovely new wildfire/smoke season starts is a fine line to walk.
Fishing as a supplemental food source?
By no means do I plan to relay on finding food but after the fun treat of eating wild fruit plucked from the side of the trail in Hawaii the possibility of non freeze-dried food as a suplimnet seems like a fun idea.
I know how to clean a river trout but would consider my angling abilities very limited and my experience with High Sierra lake fishing/fishing permits/license/legality non existent. Is fly fishing the only way to go or is there even a slim chance someone with traditional pole + lure could snag something edible along this route?
Thanks in advance!
Aidan
I was raised camping (mostly by car) all over the American South-West and now that I have reached some semblance of adulthood (22), the freedom and capability it affords has me pinning for the wide and lonely vistas of my childhood's family vacations.
So, long story short.... 4x4 cars and gas are $$$ and walking is (mostly) free so my girlfriend and compatriots and I have been getting very into backpacking although this hobby currently leans more on enthusiasm than real experience (20 mile, two night trip in Hawaii and a 20 mile, one night trip in big sur).
We are well prepared in terms of gear (garage full top quality equipment courtesy of parents) and well prepared in ideology (environment related college major, was read Edward Abby as a bed time book at 9, and was taught to leave no trace since as soon as I was old enough to do so)
Areas we are looking for help:
Route advice:
After a very successful trip to Sykes hot springs in Big Sur the complimentary relationship between natural hot water and dusty sore limbs seemed obvious. So, when I noticed that a trail loop could be drawn connecting Iva Bell Hot Springs to (almost) Mono Hot Springs, it seemed like a fun adventure.
This the was the original idea but after researching, it seems there are some concerns around trail conditions (Silver Creek Trail and Saddle Mountain Trail)
So another route option would be: Clarity on Permits
Bit confused here. I have read that if you come in from the more popular Mammoth resort start point the correct permit is the quote controlled one for Fish Creek. But I have no Idea about what permit is needed when starting from Lake Edison or if a permit is even needed (did not see a Lake Edison permit here https://www.recreation.gov/permits/2332 ... 2021-06-20
Avoiding lvl 5 mosquito swarms
I am avidly following the 2021 mosquito reports page on this board but if anyone had any wisdom specific to this area that would be great. It seems picking a trip date after the mosquito "bloom" has subsided but before our lovely new wildfire/smoke season starts is a fine line to walk.
Fishing as a supplemental food source?
By no means do I plan to relay on finding food but after the fun treat of eating wild fruit plucked from the side of the trail in Hawaii the possibility of non freeze-dried food as a suplimnet seems like a fun idea.
I know how to clean a river trout but would consider my angling abilities very limited and my experience with High Sierra lake fishing/fishing permits/license/legality non existent. Is fly fishing the only way to go or is there even a slim chance someone with traditional pole + lure could snag something edible along this route?
Thanks in advance!
Aidan