MAMMOTH LAKES, CALIFORNIA MAMMOTH LAKES FACTS • Population: 8,214 the Town of Mammoth Lakes Sits High in the Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MAMMOTH LAKES, CALIFORNIA MAMMOTH LAKES FACTS • Population: 8,214 the Town of Mammoth Lakes Sits High in the Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California MAMMOTH LAKES, CALIFORNIA MAMMOTH LAKES FACTS • Population: 8,214 The town of Mammoth Lakes sits high in the Eastern Sierra Nevada mountains of California. At its center is Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, consistently listed as one of • Elevation: 7,880 ft. North America’s fi nest winter/summer recreation areas. • The top of Mammoth Mountain Ski Area is 11,053 ft. Mammoth Lakes and the Eastern Sierra boasts some of the world’s fi nest hiking, fi shing, mountain biking, bird watching, scenic beauty and national parks. • Mammoth Mountain Ski Area offers winter activities on over 3,500 acres Mammoth has an impressive snowfall record averaging over 400 inches annually • Mammoth Lakes is centrally located as well as Alpine skiing, snowboarding and Nordic skiing for all ability levels. Mix in in the State of California. Los Angeles, our 300 days of sunshine a year, and you have a great blend of powder skiing with San Francisco and Las Vegas are all bluebird days. approximately a 5-hour drive away. Mammoth Lakes has 4,600 rental units, offering its guests a wide variety of lodging • Year-round fl ight service from Los choices from the cozy atmosphere of a family operated hotel, inn or bed & break- Angeles and winter seasonal service fast, to the pampering services and amenities of a full-service resort. from San Francisco, San Diego, Las Vegas and Denver. Mammoth Lakes offers more than 60 restaurants in a wide range of inventive and • Mammoth Lakes is 3 hours from traditional dining choices. Live music, from rock and reggae to folk, jazz and blues, Death Valley National Park (lowest is featured at pubs and dining establishments throughout town. point in North America) and 2 hours Mammoth Lakes also boasts a full year-round calendar of events and festivals that from Mt. Whitney (highest peak in showcase the unique character that makes Mammoth Lakes special. the contiguous United States) • The town of Mammoth Lakes is 4 square miles and is surrounded by 3 million acres of national park and national forests. Michael Vanderhurst p 760.934.2715 ext 1211 f 760.934.7066 [email protected] 1.888.GO MAMMOTH www.VisitMammoth.com FLY TO MAMMOTH DRIVING TIMES Year-round daily fl ights from Los Angeles AND DISTANCES and seasonal winter fl ights from San Diego, Death Valley 4 hours 214 miles San Francisco and Denver make access to Mammoth Lakes even easier! Lake Tahoe 3 hours 140 miles Las Vegas 5 hours 377 miles Los Angeles 5 hours 325 miles Reno 3 hours 164 miles San Diego 6 hours 396 miles San Francisco 4-6 hours 360 miles Yosemite 45 minutes 35 miles ANNUAL EVENTS 2016 JANUARY Sprint US Snowboarding Grand Prix FEBRUARY Presidents’ Day Art Festival Woolly’s Birthday Celebration MARCH Elevation-Mammoth’s Gay Ski Week Mammoth Winter Biathlon APRIL SUMMER ACTIVITIES Mammoth Mountain Pond Skim • Make Mammoth Lakes your home base as you explore the Ancient Bristlecone Opening Day of Fishing Season Pine Forest (oldest trees in the world), Yosemite National Park, Mono Lake, Bodie MAY State Historic Park (largest unrestored ghost town in the West), Devils Postpile Cinco de Mayo Celebration Mammoth Lakes Film Festival National Monument, Reds Meadow, and Rainbow Falls. Mule Days in Bishop • Hiking in Mammoth Lakes is extraordinary, with over 17 lakes within a 20-minute JUNE drive. Golf Course and Bike Park Open • Biking in Mammoth Lakes is a thrill with over 70 miles of single-track mountain Monster Energy Mammoth Motocross biking and 20 miles of paved bike trail for your enjoyment. Mammoth Food and Wine Experience • Fishing is world-class in our trout-stocked lakes, rivers and creeks. JULY Mammoth Celebrates the Arts • Take an overnight horseback riding trip to Yosemite National Park. June Lake Triathlon • Other activities include helicopter tours, golf, rock climbing, boating, motocross USA Cycling Mountain Bike and ATV trail rides, youth camps, running camps, kayaking and canoeing. National Championships VillageFest WINTER ACTIVITIES Kids’ Fishing Festival • Two resorts, Mammoth Mountain and June Mountain, offer 4,000 acres of terrain Festival of Beers and Bluesapalooza for beginner, intermediate and advanced skiers and snowboarders. Mammoth Fine Arts Festival • Mammoth Lakes averages over 400 inches of powder annually, while still enjoying AUGUST 300 days of sunshine a year. Mammoth Margarita Festival Mammoth Wine Weekend • 150 miles of groomed cross country skiing and snowshoeing trails. Mammoth Reggae Festival • 100 miles of snowmobiling trails. • Overnight and hour-long dog sled trips. SEPTEMBER • Other activities include snowcat tours, scenic gondola rides, snowmobile tours. Mammoth Rock N Rye Hop ’n’ Sage Harvest Festival NEW! Graniteman Challenge • Mammoth Rock ’n’ Bowl – bowling alley and virtual golf. Mammoth Gran Fondo • Mammoth Brewery – new location with expanded tasting room. The Fly Fishing Faire Millpond Music Festival MAMMOTH LAKES TOURISM SERVICES FOR TOUR OPERATORS Mammoth Kamikaze Bike Games • Distribution of group leads for all lodging properties NOVEMBER Mammoth Mountain Opening Day • Coordinate site inspections • Value and wholesale rates year-round DECEMBER • Visitor Guides, Vacation Planners, Area Maps Mammoth Night of Lights Festival • Year-round Events Calendar • Step-on Guide Services Coordination.
Recommended publications
  • Inyo National Forest Visitor Guide
    >>> >>> Inyo National Forest >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Visitor Guide >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> $1.00 Suggested Donation FRED RICHTER Inspiring Destinations © Inyo National Forest Facts “Inyo” is a Paiute xtending 165 miles Bound ary Peak, South Si er ra, lakes and 1,100 miles of streams Indian word meaning along the California/ White Mountain, and Owens River that provide habitat for golden, ENevada border between Headwaters wildernesses. Devils brook, brown and rainbow trout. “Dwelling Place of Los Angeles and Reno, the Inyo Postpile Nation al Mon ument, Mam moth Mountain Ski Area National Forest, established May ad min is tered by the National Park becomes a sum mer destination for the Great Spirit.” 25, 1907, in cludes over two million Ser vice, is also located within the mountain bike en thu si asts as they acres of pris tine lakes, fragile Inyo Na tion al For est in the Reds ride the chal leng ing Ka mi ka ze Contents Trail from the top of the 11,053-foot mead ows, wind ing streams, rugged Mead ow area west of Mam moth Wildlife 2 Sierra Ne va da peaks and arid Great Lakes. In addition, the Inyo is home high Mam moth Moun tain or one of Basin moun tains. El e va tions range to the tallest peak in the low er 48 the many other trails that transect Wildflowers 3 from 3,900 to 14,494 feet, pro vid­ states, Mt. Whitney (14,494 feet) the front coun try of the forest. Wilderness 4-5 ing diverse habitats that sup port and is adjacent to the lowest point Sixty-five trailheads provide Regional Map - North 6 vegetation patterns ranging from in North America at Badwater in ac cess to over 1,200 miles of trail Mono Lake 7 semiarid deserts to high al pine Death Val ley Nation al Park (282 in the 1.2 million acres of wil der- meadows.
    [Show full text]
  • Snow Hydrology with Dr
    Snow Hydrology with Dr. Ned Bair Ologies Podcast January 14, 2019 Oh hey, it’s that blueberry bagel that tastes like onions ‘cause it pressed its face into an everything bagel. Alie Ward, back with another episode of Ologies. It’s the middle of January, and here in the northern hemisphere, lips are chapped, feet are cold, parkas are on. I’m here to give you a snow job. But first, thank you to everyone who supports on Patreon, and who gets merch, including the new black t-shirts (yes!) at OlogiesMerch.com. Of course, thanks to everyone who rates and subscribes, who leaves reviews on iTunes, you know I read them. You know I read them. For example, this week, thank you to Evie, who said, In the hopes of Alie noticing me [heeyyy], I gotta say that this podcast just recently got me through some pretty bad flying anxiety. So thank you. Thank you for taking me into the sky with you, Evie. Also, EvanDK, I hope you and your pops are feeling okay. Okay, so: snow. Snow! Not just snow, but big cold crumbly scary dangerous avalanches. What the hell are they? I searched far and wide for a snow expert, and I connected with a dude who got his Ph.D. in Environmental Science and Management from University of California, Santa Barbara, a place Steven Ray Morris and I both attended, but this guy is primarily based up near Mammoth Mountain, which is technically a giant lava dome complex. Freakin’ volcano, near Yosemite. It’s chill.
    [Show full text]
  • Yosemite, Lake Tahoe & the Eastern Sierra
    Emerald Bay, Lake Tahoe PCC EXTENSION YOSEMITE, LAKE TAHOE & THE EASTERN SIERRA FEATURING THE ALABAMA HILLS - MAMMOTH LAKES - MONO LAKE - TIOGA PASS - TUOLUMNE MEADOWS - YOSEMITE VALLEY AUGUST 8-12, 2021 ~ 5 DAY TOUR TOUR HIGHLIGHTS w Travel the length of geologic-rich Highway 395 in the shadow of the Sierra Nevada with sightseeing to include the Alabama Hills, the June Lake Loop, and the Museum of Lone Pine Film History w Visit the Mono Lake Visitors Center and Alabama Hills Mono Lake enjoy an included picnic and time to admire the tufa towers on the shores of Mono Lake w Stay two nights in South Lake Tahoe in an upscale, all- suites hotel within walking distance of the casino hotels, with sightseeing to include a driving tour around the north side of Lake Tahoe and a narrated lunch cruise on Lake Tahoe to the spectacular Emerald Bay w Travel over Tioga Pass and into Yosemite Yosemite Valley Tuolumne Meadows National Park with sightseeing to include Tuolumne Meadows, Tenaya Lake, Olmstead ITINERARY Point and sights in the Yosemite Valley including El Capitan, Half Dome and Embark on a unique adventure to discover the majesty of the Sierra Nevada. Born of fire and ice, the Yosemite Village granite peaks, valleys and lakes of the High Sierra have been sculpted by glaciers, wind and weather into some of nature’s most glorious works. From the eroded rocks of the Alabama Hills, to the glacier-formed w Enjoy an overnight stay at a Yosemite-area June Lake Loop, to the incredible beauty of Lake Tahoe and Yosemite National Park, this tour features lodge with a private balcony overlooking the Mother Nature at her best.
    [Show full text]
  • The History of Valentine Camp by Mary Farrell
    History of Valentine Camp Mary M. Farrell Trans-Sierran Archaeological Research P.O. Box 840 Lone Pine, CA 93545 November 7, 2015 Prepared for Valentine Eastern Sierra Reserve University of California, Santa Barbara, Natural Reserve System Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory 1016 Mt. Morrison Road Mammoth Lakes, CA 93546 Abstract Located in Mammoth Lakes, California, Valentine Camp and the nearby Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory form the Valentine Eastern Sierra Reserve, a field research station in the University of California's Natural Reserve System. The University’s tenure at Valentine Camp began over 40 years ago, but the area’s history goes back thousands of years. Before the arrival of Euroamericans in the nineteenth century, the region was home to Paiutes and other Native American tribes. Land just east of Valentine Camp was surveyed under contract with the United States government in 1856, and mineral deposits in the mountains just west of Valentine Camp brought hundreds of miners to the vicinity in the last decades of the nineteenth century. Even as mining in the region waned, grazing increased. The land that became Valentine Camp was patented in 1897 by Thomas Williams, a rancher and capitalist who lived in Owens Valley. It was Williams’s son, also Thomas, who sold the 160 acres to Valentine Camp’s founders. Those founders were very wealthy, very influential men in southern California who could have, and did, vacation wherever they wanted. Anyone familiar with the natural beauty of Mammoth Lakes would not be surprised that they chose to spend time at Valentine Camp. Valentine Camp was donated to the University of California Natural Land and Water Reserve System (now the Natural Reserve System) in 1972 to ensure the land’s continued protection.
    [Show full text]
  • Matthew Greene Were Starting to Understand the Grave the Following Day
    VANISHED An account of the mysterious disappearance of a climber in the Sierra Nevada BY MONICA PRELLE ILLUSTRATIONS BY BRETT AFFRUNTI CLIMBING.COM — 61 VANISHED Three months earlier in July, the 39-year-old high school feasted on their arms. They went hiking together often, N THE SMALL SKI TOWN of Mammoth Lakes in math teacher dropped his car off at a Mammoth auto shop even in the really cold winters common to the Northeast. California’s Eastern Sierra, the first snowfall of the for repairs. He was visiting the area for a summer climb- “The ice didn’t slow him down one bit,” Minto said. “I strug- ing vacation when the car blew a head gasket. The friends gled to keep up.” Greene loved to run, competing on the track year is usually a beautiful and joyous celebration. Greene was traveling with headed home as scheduled, and team in high school and running the Boston Marathon a few Greene planned to drive to Colorado to join other friends times as an adult. As the student speaker for his high school But for the family and friends of a missing for more climbing as soon as his car was ready. graduation, Greene urged his classmates to take chances. IPennsylvania man, the falling flakes in early October “I may have to spend the rest of my life here in Mam- “The time has come to fulfill our current goals and to set moth,” he texted to a friend as he got more and more frus- new ones to be conquered later,” he said in his speech.
    [Show full text]
  • A Diatom Proxy for Seasonality Over the Last Three Millennia at June Lake, Eastern Sierra Nevada (Ca)
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge Theses and Dissertations--Earth and Environmental Sciences Earth and Environmental Sciences 2019 A DIATOM PROXY FOR SEASONALITY OVER THE LAST THREE MILLENNIA AT JUNE LAKE, EASTERN SIERRA NEVADA (CA) Laura Caitlin Streib University of Kentucky, [email protected] Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.13023/etd.2019.291 Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Streib, Laura Caitlin, "A DIATOM PROXY FOR SEASONALITY OVER THE LAST THREE MILLENNIA AT JUNE LAKE, EASTERN SIERRA NEVADA (CA)" (2019). Theses and Dissertations--Earth and Environmental Sciences. 70. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/ees_etds/70 This Master's Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Earth and Environmental Sciences at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations--Earth and Environmental Sciences by an authorized administrator of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STUDENT AGREEMENT: I represent that my thesis or dissertation and abstract are my original work. Proper attribution has been given to all outside sources. I understand that I am solely responsible for obtaining any needed copyright permissions. I have obtained needed written permission statement(s) from the owner(s) of each third-party copyrighted matter to be included in my work, allowing electronic distribution (if such use is not permitted by the fair use doctrine) which will be submitted to UKnowledge as Additional File. I hereby grant to The University of Kentucky and its agents the irrevocable, non-exclusive, and royalty-free license to archive and make accessible my work in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known.
    [Show full text]
  • 4.4 Biological Resources
    4.4 BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES INTRODUCTION This section describes the existing biological resources that occur or have the potential to occur within the Project Area and vicinity. In addition, a description of applicable regulations is provided. The analysis evaluates the potential impacts to biological resources that could occur in association with the development of property in the commercial districts and the implementation of the Mobility Element. The Land Use Element/Zoning Code Amendments would modify the development regulations and no specific projects are proposed at this time. Likewise, the roadway and trail alignments are conceptual in nature. Therefore, the analysis is evaluated at a program‐level. With a programmatic study, such as this EIR, subsequent projects carried out under the proposed Land Use Element/ Zoning Code Amendments and Mobility Element Update may warrant site specific biological assessments and surveys once plans have been prepared. 1. ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING a. Regulatory Framework As part of the proposed Project’s review and approval there are a number of performance criteria and standard conditions that must be met. These include compliance with all of the terms, provisions, and requirements of applicable laws that relate to Federal, State, and local regulating agencies for impacts to biological resources. The following provides an overview of the applicable regulations with regard to the biological resources that may be present within the Project Area. (1) Federal (a) Migratory Bird Treaty Act The Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) protects individuals as well as any part, nest, or eggs of any bird listed as migratory. In practice, Federal permits issued for activities that potentially impact migratory birds typically have conditions that require pre‐disturbance surveys for nesting birds.
    [Show full text]
  • Mammoth Facts
    Mammoth Facts Town of Mammoth Lakes Fact Sheet Overview: The Town of Mammoth Lakes is a small but lively region of only four square miles, filled with a special brand of people (population 7,093 year round residents – Census 2000) who have chosen to leave behind their urban lifestyles and experience the unique attributes of the Eastern Sierra. Incorporated in 1984, Mammoth Lakes is a relatively young town. Mammoth Lakes is located in the Inyo National Forest, of Mono County. The town is surrounded by acres of forest and is bordered by the Ansel Adams and John Muir Wilderness Areas. Yosemite National Park's eastern entrance is located just 32 miles north of town and its short 100-mile drive to the valley floor. The town occupies a site in the southern half of Mono County, a stunningly diverse region of eastern California. Comprising 3,018 square miles, the County's area is marked by the startling contrast between its eastern and western boundaries. Bounded on the west by the Sierra Nevada crest, this region is characterized by its mountains, lakes, streams and forests. Unlike the gentle, rolling escarpment west of the crest, the eastern slope of the Sierra plunges dramatically to the valley floors. This is probably the characteristic of the Eastern Sierra most obvious to the first-time visitor. The Town of Mammoth Lakes is situated in the southwestern, mountainous region of the county, and many of its trails, campgrounds and roads either abut or cross the crest of the Sierra. Included within is one of the finest ski resorts in the western United States - Mammoth Mountain Ski Area.
    [Show full text]
  • Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Subaerial Volcanic Regions Two Decades in Review Cynthia Werner, Tobias P
    8 Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Subaerial Volcanic Regions Two Decades in Review cynthia werner, tobias p. fischer, alessandro aiuppa, marie edmonds, carlo cardellini, simon carn, giovanni chiodini, elizabeth cottrell, mike burton, hiroshi shinohara, and patrick allard 8.1 Introduction Volcanism and metamorphism are the principal geologic processes that drive carbon transfer from the interior of Earth to the surface reservoir.1–4 Input of carbon to the surface reservoir through volcanic degassing is balanced by removal through silicate weathering and the subduction of carbon-bearing marine deposits over million-year timescales. The magnitude of the volcanic carbon flux is thus of fundamental importance for stabilization of atmospheric CO2 and for long-term climate. It is likely that the “deep” carbon reservoir far exceeds the size of the surface reservoir in terms of mass;5,6 more than 99% of Earth’s carbon may reside in the core, mantle, and crust. The relatively high flux of volcanic carbon to the surface reservoir, combined with the reservoir’s small size, results in a short residence time for carbon in the ocean–atmosphere–biosphere system (~200 ka).7 The implication is that changes in the flux of volcanic carbon can affect the climate and ultimately the habitability of the planet on geologic timescales. In order to understand this delicate balance, we must first quantify the current volcanic flux of carbon to the atmosphere and understand the factors that control this flux. The three most abundant magmatic volatiles are water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), 8 and sulfur (S), with CO2 being the least soluble in silicate melts.
    [Show full text]
  • June Mountain Ski Area Vegetation Management
    JUNE MOUNTAIN SKI AREA VEGETATION MANAGEMENT PLAN Inyo National Forest Mono Lake Ranger District OVERVIEW Background Located on the Mono Lake District, June Mountain Ski Area (JMSA) is one of two alpine ski resorts operated under special use permit on the Inyo National Forest. The ski area is currently undergoing a severe mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae) outbreak which has affected whitebark and lodgepole pine stands on over 150 acres within the ski area boundary. Additional acres are currently infested outside ski area boundaries, both outside and within designated wilderness areas. It is expected the outbreak will continue and intensify based upon the number of new infestations detected this past summer. Forest activities are guided by the Inyo National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan (Forest Plan). The Sierra Nevada Forest Plan Amendment (SNFPA), Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement, Record of Decision, which amended the Forest Plan on January 21, 2004, sets goals and objectives for management activities which will restore natural ecosystem processes while minimizing threats to life, property, and natural resources. Regional Forester direction clarifying recreation management issues related to the SNFPA were issued in a letter dated June 24, 2002. Issues were related to Regional Soil Quality Standards, Incidental Removal of Vegetation and Down Woody Material, and Limited Operating Periods for Pine Marten within developed recreation sites and impacts to recreation-related activities. The first two issues were resolved with clarification; the third issue was resolved with errata to the Plan Amendment. Purpose and Need The purpose of this project is to develop both short and long-term vegetation management strategies for all areas within the boundaries of JMSA.
    [Show full text]
  • Tahoe's Seven Summits
    Birds return to Lake Tahoe, page 4 Summer 2014 Drought offers TAHOE’S SEVEN SUMMITS good news, bad By Jeff Cowen news for Lake Tahoe In Depth By Jim Sloan The Lake may be this Region’s Tahoe In Depth most famous geographic feature, but it is Tahoe’s peaks that define our From the shoreline, a long-term landscapes and, at times, the course or severe drought seems to put of our lives. Daily, we glimpse them Lake Tahoe in dire straits. The water towering over our tedium, indelible recedes, streams dry up and the reminders of nature’s greatness and our shoreline beaches expand to expose own impermanence. Succumbing to a bathtub ring along the 72-mile their power, we climb them. shoreline. Some climbers are peak collectors, But from the water, things don’t “bagging” the major summits one by always look so bad. During a one. Others climb on a lark, impulsively drought, many of the pollutants joining friends and unprepared for the that affect Lake Tahoe’s clarity can’t Photo © Steve Dunleavy experience ahead. Regardless of our Pyramid Peak rises above the fog-choked Tahoe Basin. find their way to the Lake. Droughts paths, once we reach their summits, we slow down the rate of urban runoff, feel at once tiny and expansive, earth and rodents. Trees become shorter and neighborhoods. reducing erosion and the flow of fine and time stretching in all directions wider, until they disappear entirely. Our Climbers of even our most benign sediment and other water-clouding below us, the experience undeniably bodies change too.
    [Show full text]
  • Magmatic Carbon Dioxide Emissions at Mammoth Mountain, California
    Magmatic Carbon Dioxide Emissions at Mammoth Mountain, California By CHRISTOPHER D. FARRAR, JOHN M. NEIL, and JAMES F. HOWLE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4217 7230-21 Sacramento, California 1999 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BRUCE BABBITT, Secretary U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Gordon P. Eaton, Director The use of firm, trade, and brand names in this report is for identification purposes only and does not constitute endorsement by the U.S. Geological Survey. For additional information write to: Copies of this report can be purchased from: District Chief U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Geological Survey Information Services Placer Hall, Suite 2012 Box 25286 6000 J Street Federal Center Sacramento, CA 95819-6129 Denver, CO 80225 CONTENTS Abstract.................................................................................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................................................................... 1 Background.................................................................................................................................................................. 1 Purpose and Scope....................................................................................................................................................... 3 Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]