I took my sister along this trip; I had wanted to do something easier than the last trip I took her on. I don’t think I met my goal on this; day 1 was about 8 miles and +2160’ / -920’ gain/loss. Anyway, on to the report.
We drove to Grant Grove the day before our start. After doing the usual tourist things, we picked up our permit and checked into our tent cabin - not far from the John Muir Lodge. I thought it was pretty comfortable and would stay in one of these again. Also, the neighborhood was nice:

The next morning, we drove to Rowell Meadow trailhead; the drive was pretty interesting- especially the last couple of miles of bumpy one-lane dirt road. Starting the hike, we had a good climb right out of the gate, and felt like we’d earned a nice lunch break when we got to Rowell Meadow.

Many wildflowers (Lupine, Paintbrush, etc) were either past their bloom or just not abundant. But of those that were in bloom, the dominant species was some type of Yarrow. These blooms were a favored food source for countless thousands of butterflies, mostly all the same type. I’m no entomologist, so feel free to weigh in on just what these are in my photo (yes, I know, the plant in the photo is a variety of Monardella):

After leaving the meadow, we climbed through forest for a while, topped out (at the boundary sign entering Kings Canyon NP), then descended again, passing through lots of dead/down trees and an old burn area:

Not long into this, we saw the sign for Seville Lake. Never having been there (and fearing the current landscape might extend to that lake), I rejected my earlier plan to have an easier Day 1 by ending our day there. So, we trudged on until we got to Lost Lake. We did see some nice stuff along the way:

I’ll save the Lost Lake photos until the end.
Day 2, we had a leisurely breakfast and filtered some water, then packed up some snacks and headed to Ranger Lake. Sorry if you’ve seen the “Ranger and Mt Silliman” shot a zillion times, but I threw in a “dead tree in lake” shot because something about it appealed to me:


We hung around quite a while and enjoyed the calm; nobody else appeared to be there. I watched a bit for wildlife and saw a nice-looking hawk high above me (sorry, no photo). At home, I see lots of Red-tails and Kestrels, but nothing like this. I had to look up what I saw and decided on an ID of Sharp-shinned Hawk (over Cooper’s Hawk), based on its wing and tail shapes.
We returned to our camp at Lost Lake; my sister read her book and I explored a bit more around the lake:



Day 3: we got up early, wanting time to deal with my sister’s car (which had developed an ominous noise after the dirt road ugliness) upon getting back to the trailhead. Before we started packing up, I went to top off our water supply and found the lake surface to be utterly still:


Anyway, we made it back out with appreciably less effort than our trip in, found the car to be in decent-enough shape, and made it back to Grant Grove with time to spare for cheeseburgers and exchange of a few photos before we parted ways and each headed home.