SEKI Trails Damage c/o Monsoon + High & Silted Creeks / 18-Wheelers on 180
Posted: Thu Aug 04, 2022 7:55 am
Just back last night from 9 days in SEKI. Morning coffee report here as know that timely info helps a lot and I'm not ready to deal with normal life stuff yet anyhow...plus I am seeing nothing on this so far through a skim over the Board.
1. THE STORM(s) on Sunday July 31st.!!!!!!! Even the exit ranger at Roads End had no clue what had happened. I mean that must have been one of the biggest rain dumps in a long time in certain places. Parts of the JMT/PCT took some damage for sure, but the Bubbs Creek trail down from Sphinx Junction to the bottom got hammered. The top half of it seems to have almost no 'water bars' (those angled rock barriers to feed water off the trail) and it sure tells. I went up that trail on July 26th. and came down it yesterday, August 3rd. and it is very sad to see.
Areas of the trail are completely covered by rocks, gravel and sand. About 90% of the top trail sections look like they were primarily one continuous creek with no exits. There are plenty of ruts and gouges. And so on.
I don't want to be dramatic, and for sure, the trail is totally doable especially if used to X-country. The sad part is to see how different it is from the week before, when it was firm, smooth, good condition. Main thing now is it will slow speed down due to rougher trail and much more 'slip and skid' rolly-poly loose rocks, etc.
The PCT took it much better where I was on it due to better water channeling. Forester was unchanged. However, there were some places adjacent to the Kearsarge Pinnacles - Bubbs trail that looked like an avalanche of water must have come down and carried big fans of silt and smaller rocks over sections of the trail. No big deal to get over but again NPS is going to have a lot of work to do and big $$$ to get.
2. Judging from the height and colour of the creek coming out of Center Basin, like the K. Pinnacles it must have had a cloudburst. Very high still and no way I could cross (even 2 days after the storm) at same point I did outbound and super milky-silty. Bubbs Creek is the same creamy colour all the way down, but I think a lot of it's silt is coming from Center Basin.
Side streams were clear and I figure all the creeks should be going down and clearing up rapidly unless more water dumps occur.
3. Be lucky or be prepared for huge degree of frustration following or being stopped by big 'belly-dump' 16-wheeler trucks crawling up 180 (and down) into SEKI for road work...and I mean LOTS of them. I passed dozens coming up yesterday late morning and they have to go down presumably in the afternoon?! Let alone the usual slow RVs and trailers. I was lucky to hit a mostly free road out but that was all it was...luck.
SEKI has info on this here - https://www.visitsequoia.com/explore/tr ... conditions
I'm not a fan of going forever behind very slow vehicles, so if you can time it I would make the effort to avoid them.
Best ~ Michaelzim (TR to follow with more details in due course - Lots to digest on this trip!)
1. THE STORM(s) on Sunday July 31st.!!!!!!! Even the exit ranger at Roads End had no clue what had happened. I mean that must have been one of the biggest rain dumps in a long time in certain places. Parts of the JMT/PCT took some damage for sure, but the Bubbs Creek trail down from Sphinx Junction to the bottom got hammered. The top half of it seems to have almost no 'water bars' (those angled rock barriers to feed water off the trail) and it sure tells. I went up that trail on July 26th. and came down it yesterday, August 3rd. and it is very sad to see.
Areas of the trail are completely covered by rocks, gravel and sand. About 90% of the top trail sections look like they were primarily one continuous creek with no exits. There are plenty of ruts and gouges. And so on.
I don't want to be dramatic, and for sure, the trail is totally doable especially if used to X-country. The sad part is to see how different it is from the week before, when it was firm, smooth, good condition. Main thing now is it will slow speed down due to rougher trail and much more 'slip and skid' rolly-poly loose rocks, etc.
The PCT took it much better where I was on it due to better water channeling. Forester was unchanged. However, there were some places adjacent to the Kearsarge Pinnacles - Bubbs trail that looked like an avalanche of water must have come down and carried big fans of silt and smaller rocks over sections of the trail. No big deal to get over but again NPS is going to have a lot of work to do and big $$$ to get.
2. Judging from the height and colour of the creek coming out of Center Basin, like the K. Pinnacles it must have had a cloudburst. Very high still and no way I could cross (even 2 days after the storm) at same point I did outbound and super milky-silty. Bubbs Creek is the same creamy colour all the way down, but I think a lot of it's silt is coming from Center Basin.
Side streams were clear and I figure all the creeks should be going down and clearing up rapidly unless more water dumps occur.
3. Be lucky or be prepared for huge degree of frustration following or being stopped by big 'belly-dump' 16-wheeler trucks crawling up 180 (and down) into SEKI for road work...and I mean LOTS of them. I passed dozens coming up yesterday late morning and they have to go down presumably in the afternoon?! Let alone the usual slow RVs and trailers. I was lucky to hit a mostly free road out but that was all it was...luck.
SEKI has info on this here - https://www.visitsequoia.com/explore/tr ... conditions
I'm not a fan of going forever behind very slow vehicles, so if you can time it I would make the effort to avoid them.
Best ~ Michaelzim (TR to follow with more details in due course - Lots to digest on this trip!)