Ok so my trip was successful in the way that we made it through our intended path, but we had to cut it short due to the storm that arrived the night of Sept 1-2, but here is a little summary of how it went:
Wednesday August 30th:
Dropped off my 4Runner at Pine Creek trailhead and drove back to North lake campground where my buddy and I stayed the night in the roof top tent of his Tacoma.
Thursday August 31st:
Moved the car to the trailhead parking and started walking around 8:30 am. Our destination for the day was Muriel Lake, at which we arrived around 1:30 PM. The whole way there was gusty but with clear skies. Pretty windy at the lake. We took the one spot with some wind protection from the south/southwest, which worked pretty well. Our tents did not cave in from the wind but still got kind of shaken when a gust would flow overhead. Basically napped and explored and my buddy tried to fish but to no avail. Got to see a hare and an ermine (I think). We hardly slept. Basically 2 hour nap, wake up for an hour, rinse and repeat all night.
Up towards Piute Pass
Muriel Lake evening
Last day's sunrays on Mt Humphrey's peeking over the knoll next to Muriel Lake
Friday Sept 1st:
Packed up, had breakfast, and started walking around 8:30 am again. Basically just walked the path of least resistance (and incline) from Muriel Lake across Humphrey's Basin towards Puppet Pass. We descended near the outlet of Lake Muriel, skirting the swampier areas and just enjoying the rock hopping across all the streams. Passed Lower Desolation Lake and stopped by the outlet of Desolation Lake for a snack. We got stared at by the locals (the marmots), either looking for an opportunity to pounce or making sure we left the area. Walked up the knoll after crossing the outlet and devised a plan to make it up Puppet Pass. We basically zigzagged up from Wedge Lake to the ridge right above, hoping we could circumvent the cirque on the other side, but to our dismay we had to lose some precious altitude to make it back up the nice ramp up to Puppet Pass. Puppet Pass is INCREDIBLE when you first get there. Had lunch around 1pm with the bitchin' view. Definitely steeper in person than what pictures make it out to be. We couldn't really find an easy way to make it to the wall that everyone talks about so we just found a way above the wall and descended below it. It appeared too sketchy for a direct frontal attack towards that wall. We wanted to make it to Star Lake, seeing that the wind was coming from the west and we felt like there might be some cover there. Walked above Puppet lake trying not to lose too much elevation, and to our dismay, there wasn't a shred of good protection at Star Lake, so we just picked a subpar spot for the night. Time of arrival around 4pm. The wind sort of calmed down by the time we went to sleep but we were buffeted all night from all directions. My tent would constantly cave in towards my face but I receded deeper into my sleeping back and learned to ignore it. Around midnight we start hearing hail, didn't make much of it since it was on and off. Same thing as previous night except the sleeping sections were shorter. Sleep for an hour, awake for an hour, rinse and repeat.
Sunrise at Muriel Lake with the moon in the sky
Very Middle-Earth-esque with the Glacier Divide as a backdrop
Aptly named Desolation Lake with the imposing Mt Humphrey's
View from Puppet Pass at high noon
Walking above Puppet Lake
Our hostile home for the night
Saturday Sept 2nd:
Woke up around 5am with more constant hail. Water intrusion was definitely a thing at this point, from my rainfly being buffeted all night and coming off from one of the corners near where I lay my head. Also, somehow my sleeping bag had been dripped on near my feet. My buddy and I decided to just pack up everything and get out. We were planning to keep backpacking at least for another day and stay at Upper Pine Lake, but seeing that the storm wasn't letting up and a lot of of our stuff was wet, we opted to make it all the way to the car from there. I didn't have a cover for my pack so I asked my buddy to just drape my rainfly over my pack the best he could. He had a poncho for his. Started walking around 7am and descended to L lake and had a snack. We basically cross country walked from L Lake down into the upper end of French Canyon and up towards Pine Creek Pass trail. We met the main trail probably a 1/4 mile below the pass proper. Everything was so lush and verdant in the canyon; very dreamy. Made it up and over the pass to Upper Pine Creek lake where we had lunch. Made it back to the car around 2:30 pm, with our knees beat up to hell after the long, brutal, unending descent. Changed our clothes and drove back to North lake to retrieve my buddy's truck. Had an awesome burger in Bishop and drove home that same day seeing that all hotels were booked. Made it back home to the San Fernando Valley around 10pm.
Towards L Lake
Pilot Knob from the upper reaches of French Canyon
Lower Pine Creek Lake
Hope y'all enjoy my first trip report, even though I've been lurking for years.