WEB GYMOAZ01-20 Yosemite-Annie

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

WEB GYMOAZ01-20 Yosemite-Annie JOHN MUIR’S YOSEMITE BY ANNE GROEBNER As I drove north on California Route 395 toward Sacramento, I was shadowed on my left by the magnificent Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains. Mountain ranges that are so tall that wisps of snow still clung to the tops of ridges even on that warm, late August evening. I knew that somewhere, hidden behind the facade of towering cliffs and jagged mountain ranges, I would find one of the most majestic of the American National Park System — Yosemite National Park. It was a place that I had read about in school and heard about but had never had the chance to see. I was so close that I could have driven past my reservation in Mammoth Lakes and just turned into the Park but the sun had already dipped below the Sierra Nevada horizon and, by the time I got to my hotel, it was dark. I checked into my room, opened up my cooler and ate a sandwich while I studied the Yosemite Guide that I picked up in the Lobby. I only had one day to see the place that John Muir dubbed “the grandest of all His special temples of Nature I was ever permitted to enter…. the sanctum sanctorum of the Sierras.” The next morning, after checking out of my hotel, I drove around the small mountain town of Mammoth Lakes. In the summer, it caters to outdoor enthusiasts including hikers, bikers and mountain climbers but, in the winter, it hosts skiers and snowboarders. It was pretty early and I had read that there was a Schat’s Bakery in town — a smaller version of the gigantic parent bakery located in Bishop, off CA Rte. 395, south of Mammoth — so I stopped in for some coffee and breakfast. I stopped at a gas station for some very expensive gas and then headed for Yosemite. Once I was back on CA Rte. 395, I headed north and drove about 40 miles, past June Lake, until I reached the junction at the small town of Lee Vining and the 120 Road. As soon as I turned onto 120, leading into the park, the sun peered over the peaks of Mount Dana and Mount Gibbs and the Beatles sang “Good Day Sunshine” on the radio and a rush of elation spilled over me at the synchronicity of that amazing moment. I was experiencing more excitement than I had felt in many years — and I wasn’t even in the Park yet. I drove through the Tuolome Meadows and over the Tuolume River — the River that spills into the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir created by the O’Shaughnessy Dam — a dam that was built in 1913 — that John Muir and the Sierra Club fought so hard to prevent. They say that, although it is documented that Muir died from a short illness in 1914 — most likely pneumonia — some say it was from a broken heart over the building of that dam. I watched hikers head out on the John Muir Trail between Fairview Dome and Cathedral Peak and continued past Tenaya Lake which was named after Chief Tenaya of the Ahwahneechee Tribe — the “first people” who lived in Yosemite Valley. It was named by Major James D. Savage of the Mariposa Battalion of volunteers (put together to gather up the tribes and move them to a reservation) but Chief Tenaya told him that they already had a name for the lake — Py-we-ack, lake of shining rocks. “Yosemite” means “grizzly bear” -- or “those who kill” --and it was a name they gave the Ahwahneechee. “They were a peaceful tribe that, when confronted, would fiercely defend their homeland.” — Salcedo, Tracy. Historic Yosemite National Park, Lyon Press. Further on is Olmsted Point, named for landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, a good friend of Muir. Olmsted was instrumental in the protection of Yosemite in the 1860s, as he worked with Senator John Conness of California to designate Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Big Tree Grove as public lands under the protection of the State, preceding the procurement of its National Park status. Frederick Law Olmsted is known for his design of Central Park in New York City among other famous sites.. Yosemite was the impetus for the preservation of wild lands -- thanks to so many people that brought attention to the area. Muir set a precedent with his many writings as well as his treks into the wilderness, guiding such prestigious men as existential writer Ralph Waldo Emerson, Architect Frederick Olmsted, Horace Greely, publisher of the New York Tribune, President Theodore Roosevelt and President William Howard Taft (about the dam at Hetch Hetchy) to name a few. It started with the Yosemite Grant Act that put Yosemite Valley under the protection of the State of California, signed into law by Abraham Lincoln on June 30, 1864. The Mariposa Grove Act encompassed 2600 acres of the giant sequoias. After Roosevelt’s meeting with Muir, he sanctioned the recession of Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove from the State of California to the new National Park status in 1906. Muir is known as the father of the National Park Service, influencing the establishment of seven National Parks and Monuments including Yosemite, Mount Ranier, The Petrified Forest, the Grand Canyon and Muir Woods. He co-founded the Sierra Club in 1892 and served as its president until his death in 1914. He died on Christmas Eve. After driving the entire length of the Tioga Road to Big Oak Flat Road, I followed it through a tunnel and, just as I was exiting the tunnel, I stopped to take a photo at Tunnel View — one of the most scenic outlooks in Yosemite with an incredible view of El Capitan. Eventually, I ended up in Yosemite Valley and tried to find a parking place so I could check out the Yosemite Valley Visitor Center and Theatre but, by then, the Park was so crowded that finding somewhere to park was impossible. So, I turned around and headed to the main road and back to CA Rte. 395. I was disheartened by the crowds but, after seeing Yosemite, I understand why it attracts so many tourists. Later in November of last year, my family and I were invited by my brother and his wife to visit Yosemite with them during the so-called off-season during Thanksgiving. We rented a house in Oakhurst, California and entered the Park from the southwest side on the 140 Road. Because of several snowstorms the week we were there, we had to put chains on our tires (something that is required in California) so our drive in was slow and bumpy — but the views of snow- covered peaks and ridges were spectacular. We ventured into Yosemite Valley and hiked along the Merced River with views of Half Dome in the background. The crowds weren’t nearly as bad as my previous visit that summer but it still took a while to find a parking place at the visitor center. According to the statistics from the Yosemite website, there were 5,414 visitors in 1906 when the Park was first established. In 2018, there were 4,009,436. When I visited the park in August of 2019, I was one of 584,664 visitors. In November, there were 230,598 — that is considered off-season. I guess they all paid attention when Muir wrote: “Climb the Mountains and get their good tidings. Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into and the storms their energy, while cares will drop away from you like the leaves of autumn.” — John Muir Yosemite may be crowded but, thank goodness, no one is taller than the mountains. The majestic views make the trip worth it. Next time, I will head further into the woods and experience more of Muir’s “sanctum sanctorum.” The Mountains are calling and I must go and I will work on while I can, studying incessantly.” — John Muir. .
Recommended publications
  • Yosemite Guide @Yosemitenps
    Yosemite Guide @YosemiteNPS Yosemite's rockclimbing community go to great lengths to clean hard-to-reach areas during a Yosemite Facelift event. Photo by Kaya Lindsey Experience Your America Yosemite National Park August 28, 2019 - October 1, 2019 Volume 44, Issue 7 Yosemite, CA 95389 Yosemite, 577 PO Box Service Park National US DepartmentInterior of the Yosemite Area Regional Transportation System Year-round Route: Valley Yosemite Valley Shuttle Valley Visitor Center Summer-only Route: Upper Hetch Yosemite Shuttle System El Capitan Hetchy Shuttle Fall Yosemite Tuolumne Village Campground Meadows Lower Yosemite Parking The Ansel Fall Adams Yosemite l Medical Church Bowl i Gallery ra Clinic Picnic Area Picnic Area Valley l T Area in inset: al F e E1 t 5 Restroom Yosemite Valley i 4 m 9 The Ahwahnee Shuttle System se Yo Mirror Upper 10 3 Walk-In 6 2 Lake Campground seasonal 11 1 Wawona Yosemite North Camp 4 8 Half Dome Valley Housekeeping Pines E2 Lower 8836 ft 7 Chapel Camp Yosemite Falls Parking Lodge Pines 2693 m Yosemite 18 19 Conservation 12 17 Heritage 20 14 Swinging Center (YCHC) Recreation Campground Bridge Rentals 13 15 Reservations Yosemite Village Parking Curry Upper Sentinel Village Pines Beach il Trailhead E6 a Curry Village Parking r r T te Parking e n il i w M in r u d 16 o e Nature Center El Capitan F s lo c at Happy Isles Picnic Area Glacier Point E3 no shuttle service closed in winter Vernal 72I4 ft Fall 2I99 m l Mist Trai Cathedral ail Tr op h Beach Lo or M E4 ey ses erce all only d Ri V ver E5 Nevada Fall To & Bridalveil Fall d oa R B a r n id wo a a lv W e i The Yosemite Valley Shuttle operates from 7am to 10pm and serves stops in numerical order.
    [Show full text]
  • Campground in Yosemite National Park
    MileByMile.com Personal Road Trip Guide California Byway Highway # "Tioga Road/Big Oak Flat Road" Miles ITEM SUMMARY 0.0 End of Tioga Pass Road on Scenic Tioga Pass Road on State Highway #120, ends at the junction of State Highway #120 Big Oak Road just outside Yosemite Valley within Yosemite National Park, California. Altitude: 6158 feet 0.6 Tuolumne Grove Trail Tuolumne Grove Trail Head, Tioga Pass Road, Tuolumne Grove, is a Head sequoia grove located near Crane Flat in Yosemite National Park, California Altitude: 6188 feet 3.7 Old Big Oak Flat Road South to Tamarack Flat Campground in Yosemite National Park. Has 52 campsites, picnic tables, food lockers, fire rings, and vault toilets. Altitude: 7018 feet 6.2 Old Tioga Road Trail To Old Tioga Road, Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, lies in Hetch Hetchy Valley, which is completely flooded by the Hetch Hetchy Dam, in Yosemite National Park, California. Wapama Falls, in Hetch Hetchy Valley, Lake Vernon, Rancheria Falls, Rancheria Creek, Camp Mather Lake. Altitude: 6772 feet 6.2 Trail to Tamarrack Flat Altitude: 6775 feet Campground 13.7 Siesta Lake Altitude: 7986 feet 14.5 White Wolf Road To White Wolf Campground, located outside of Yosemite Valley, just off Tioga Pass Road in California. Altitude: 8117 feet 16.5 Access To Luken's Lake, Yosemite Creek Trail, Altitude: 8182 feet 19.7 Access A mountainous Road/Trail, Quaking Aspen Falls, is a seasonal water fall, that stream relies on rain and snow melting, dries up in summer, located just off Tioga Pass Road, in Yosemite National Park, Altitude: 7500 feet 20.3 Quaking Aspen Falls East of highway.
    [Show full text]
  • Merced River Hiking
    PACIFIC SOUTHWEST REGION Restoring, Enhancing and Sustaining Forests in California, Hawaii and the Pacific Islands Sierra National Forest Hiking the South fork of the Merced River Bass Lake Ranger District Originating from some of the highest ranges in Bicycles and horses are not allowed on the trail. As the Sierra, the Merced River begins its journey you meander along the trail, you will discover the from Mt. Hoffman and Tenaya Lake on the north, remains of the old Hite Mine that produced over $3 the Cathedral range on the east and the Mt. Ray- million in gold and a gold mining town that once mond area south of Yosemite. It has two stood on the banks of the river. Please remember branches: the main fork and the south fork. The that historic and prehistoric artifacts are not to be main fork flows through the Sierra National For- disturbed or removed as they are protected by est and Yosemite Valley. The South Fork flows law. Violators will be prosecuted. through Wawona, winding its way through the Sierra National Forest to Hite Cove where it joins DEVIL GULCH the main river at Highway 140. Road (3S02) to the South Fork of the Merced River. This section of the trail is 2.5 miles long and HITE COVE TRAIL fairly easy to hike. Dispersed campsites are at Devil A spectacular early spring wildflower display is Gulch, the river and Devil Gulch Creek both need to along the Hite Cove Trail from February to be forded in order to continue on the trail. Caution April, with over 60 varieties of wildflowers along during high water spring runoff.
    [Show full text]
  • [PDF] Tenaya Lake, 27(12)
    VOL. XXVII DECEMBER, 1948 NO. 12 Yosemite Nature Notes THE MONTHLY PUBLICATION OF THE YOSEMITE NATURALIST DIVISION AND THE YOSEMITE NATURAL HISTORY ASSOCIATION, INC. C . P . Russedl, Superintendent D . E. McHenry, Park Naturalist H. C . Parker, Assoc . Park Naturalist H . N . Mclntrye, Asst . Park Naturalist VOL . XXVII DECEMBER, 1948 NO. THE NATIVE FISH FAUNA OF YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK AND ITS PRESERVATION' By Carl L. Hubbs, Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Orthello L . Wallis, Ranger Naturalist, 1948 Except for some studies and stories included in "Yosemite Ranger Nat- on the trout, the fish fauna of Yo- uralist Manual " (1929). The fourth semite National Park has been made and mcst important was a pamphlet known in only four publications . entitled "Fishes of Yosemite Na- The first, a book by J . M. Hutchings, tional Park." It was prepared by . Evans, as a result of ob "In the Heart of the Sierras" (1886), Willis A contained a very brief statement on servations that he made while sery . mg as Ranger Naturalist in 1941, the fish life of the Merced River The second was a chapter on "The and it was issued as Volume XXIII, : Yosemite Nature Notes Fishes of Yosemite National Park," Number 1, of . The paucity of reports on the by Barton Warren Evermann, in (1944)fishes of Yosemite contrasts glaring- Ansel F. Hall's "Handbook of Yo- ly with the thorough treatment of the semite National Park" (1921) . The terrestrial vertebrates and reflects third was a brief treatise on "Fish the limited study that has been made and Fishing in. Yosemite National of the underwater life in this and Park," written by H .
    [Show full text]
  • Yosemite, Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks 5
    ©Lonely Planet Publications Pty Ltd Yosemite, Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks Yosemite National Park p44 Around Yosemite National Park p134 Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks p165 Michael Grosberg, Jade Bremner PLAN YOUR TRIP ON THE ROAD Welcome to Yosemite, YOSEMITE NATIONAL Tuolumne Meadows . 80 Sequoia & PARK . 44 Hetch Hetchy . 86 Kings Canyon . 4 Driving . 87 Yosemite, Sequoia & Day Hikes . 48 Kings Canyon Map . 6 Yosemite Valley . 48 Cycling . 87 Yosemite, Sequoia & Big Oak Flat Road Other Activities . 90 Kings Canyon Top 16 . 8 & Tioga Road . 56 Winter Activities . 95 Need to Know . 16 Glacier Point & Sights . 97 Badger Pass . 60 What’s New . 18 Yosemite Valley . 97 Tuolumne Meadows . 64 If You Like . 19 Glacier Point & Wawona . 68 Month by Month . 22 Badger Pass Region . 103 Hetch Hetchy . 70 Itineraries . 24 Tuolumne Meadows . 106 Activities . 28 Overnight Hikes . 72 Wawona . 109 Yosemite Valley . 74 Travel with Children . 36 Along Tioga Road . 112 Big Oak Flat & Travel with Pets . 41 Big Oak Flat Road . 114 Tioga Road . 75 Hetch Hetchy . 115 Glacier Point & Badger Pass . 78 Sleeping . 116 Yosemite Valley . 116 VEZZANI PHOTOGRAPHY/SHUTTERSTOCK © VEZZANI PHOTOGRAPHY/SHUTTERSTOCK DECEMBER35/SHUTTERSTOCK © NIGHT SKY, GLACIER POINT P104 PEGGY SELLS/SHUTTERSTOCK © SELLS/SHUTTERSTOCK PEGGY HORSETAIL FALL P103 VIEW FROM TUNNEL VIEW P45 Contents UNDERSTAND Yosemite, Sequoia & TAHA RAJA/500PX TAHA Kings Canyon Today . .. 208 History . 210 Geology . 216 © Wildlife . 221 Conservation . 228 SURVIVAL GUIDE VIEW OF HALF DOME FROM Clothing & GLACIER POINT P104 Equipment . 232 Directory A–Z . 236 Glacier Point & SEQUOIA & KINGS Badger Pass . 118 Transportation . 244 CANYON NATIONAL Health & Safety . 249 Big Oak Flat Road & PARKS .
    [Show full text]
  • Yosemite Accessibility Guide January 2015
    National Park Service Yosemite National Park U.S. Department of the Interior Photo by Dan Horner Yosemite Accessibility Guide January 2015 Welcome to Yosemite National Park! The park strives for full and equal participation for all visitors and continually upgrades facilities, programs and services to improve accessibility. This guide outlines a variety of accessible services, facilities, and activities available in Yosemite. Within each area, it describes ways for people with sight, hearing, and mobility impairments to enjoy Yosemite. If you do not need this guide after your visit, please return it to any visitor center or entrance station. The Yosemite Accessibility Guide is available at entrance stations, visitor centers and online at www.nps.gov/yose/planyourvisit/upload/access.pdf. For general park information and descriptions of services, programs and activities, see the Yosemite Guide, available at entrance stations, visitor centers or online at www.nps.gov/yose/planyourvisit/guide.htm. We welcome your comments and suggestions on ways to improve accessibility for visitors to Yosemite National Park. Discrimination on the basis of disability in federally conducted programs or activities of the Department of the Interior is prohibited. Contact Information: Accessibility Coordinator 209‐379‐1035 [email protected] United States Department of the Interior NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Yosemite National Park P.O. Box 577 Yosemite, California 95389 IN REPLY REFER TO: P4215 (YOSE‐PM) Message from the Superintendent: Yosemite National Park is a wonderful and beautiful place with towering trees, thundering waterfalls and massive granite formations. Set aside as a National Park in 1890, Yosemite is a place visited by almost four million visitors a year.
    [Show full text]
  • Vacation Planner Yosemite & Mariposa County Tourism Bureau
    YOSEMITE & MARIPOSA COUNTY VACATION PLANNER YOSEMITE & MARIPOSA COUNTY TOURISM BUREAU 866-425-3366 • YOSEMITEEXPERIENCE.COM COULTERVILLE Your Adventure Starts Here While the possibilities are endless to enjoy Yosemite National Park and the surrounding county, this guide will help HORNITOS you take it all in and ensure you make the most of your trip. Visit the must-sees, such as Half Dome and Yosemite Falls, experience Gold Rush history at one of the many museums, bike or hike the nearly endless paths and trails, or just take in the scenery at one of the many relaxing hotels, resorts, vacation rentals or B&B’s. … Happy traveling! 4 | VACATION PLANNER tuolumne meadows Tenaya LAKE YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK YOSEMITE VALLEY Foresta EL PORTAL Yosemite WEST BADGER PASS MARIPOSA GROVE HISTORIC HORNITOS mariposa FISH CAMP CATHEYS VALLEY YOSEMITEEXPERIENCE.COM | 5 Welcome to Adventure County Nestled among natural monuments, vineyards, and historic Gold Rush landmarks, Mariposa County, home to Yosemite National Park, is Adventure County! Located about 200 miles east of San Francisco, 300 miles north of Los Angeles and a little more than 400 miles northwest of Las Vegas, it is a must-see for any California tour itinerary. Alive with possibility, it’s a world-class destination for all seasons that inspires curiosity, refreshes the soul, and proves that you don’t need to be rich to live life to its fullest. The simple pleasures here are closer than you think—less than a tank of gas away for most Californians. There’s a lot to see, but this county is not just for viewing from a distance.
    [Show full text]
  • INDIAN BASKETRY in YOSEMITE VALLEY, 19Th-20Th Century: Gertrude “Cosie” Hutchings Mills, Tourists and the National Park Service Catherine K
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Textile Society of America Symposium Proceedings Textile Society of America 2018 INDIAN BASKETRY IN YOSEMITE VALLEY, 19th-20th Century: Gertrude “Cosie” Hutchings Mills, Tourists and the National Park Service Catherine K. Hunter Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/tsaconf Part of the Art and Materials Conservation Commons, Art Practice Commons, Fashion Design Commons, Fiber, Textile, and Weaving Arts Commons, Fine Arts Commons, and the Museum Studies Commons This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Textile Society of America at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Textile Society of America Symposium Proceedings by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Published in Textile Society of America Symposium Proceedings 2018 Presented at Vancouver, BC, Canada; September 19 – 23, 2018 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/tsaconf/ Copyright © by the author(s). INDIAN BASKETRY IN YOSEMITE VALLEY, 19th-20th Century: Gertrude “Cosie” Hutchings Mills, Tourists and the National Park Service Catherine K. Hunter Background The theme of the Textile Society of America’s Symposium 2018 “The Social Fabric: Deep Local to Pan Global” addresses the impact of immigration and settlers on an already long-inhabited land and how textile traditions were influenced by cultural contact. My topic is American Indian basketry in Yosemite Valley, Central California, and the changes that occurred due to contact with settlers, immigrants and tourists in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This story requires an understanding of local, regional and national history. I selected this topic because of the Hutchings Mills Collection at the Robert S.
    [Show full text]
  • High Sierra Loop Hiking Information
    High Sierra Loop Hiking Information All travel times given are dependent on fitness level! Times calculated by an average hiker speed of 2 mph for moderate trails, and 1.5 miles for strenuous trails. Do NOT drink water from streams or lakes without using proper filtration. From To Difficulty Distance Time Elevation Change Notes The trail is gradually downhill in the first 5.5 miles. The last mile descends 500 feet into camp Tuolumne on a trail that is cut and built with stone step and rocks. This section is slightly technical to Glen Aulin Moderate 8 miles 3 to 4 hours 920 ft descent Meadows Lodge new hikers. Water is available at the Delaney Creek crossing and from the Tuolumne River. The trail climbs 200' out of Glen Aulin to McGee Lake in under a mile. There is a 200' elevation loss over the 2nd mile to Cathedral Creek. From there the trail climbs 1450' over the next 6 Glen Aulin May Lake Strenuous 8 miles 5 hours 1,470 ft ascent miles before reaching May Lake. Water is avaialble at McGee Lake, the Cathedra Creek crossing (seasonal), and Raisin Lake The trail descends 1200' over the first three miles to Tenaya Lake through a combination of granite and forested sections of trail. After a meandering walk for the next two miles, the trail 1,260 ft descent begins to climb switchbacks from Mile 5 to Mile 6. It gains nearly 900' in one mile where it May Lake Sunrise Strenuous 8.5 miles 4.5 hours followed by meets the Clouds Rest junction.
    [Show full text]
  • Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Rock Falls in Yosemite Valley, California by Gerald F. Wieczorek1, James B. Sn
    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY ROCK FALLS IN YOSEMITE VALLEY, CALIFORNIA BY GERALD F. WIECZOREK1, JAMES B. SNYDER2, CHRISTOPHER S. ALGER3, AND KATHLEEN A. ISAACSON4 Open-File Report 92-387 This work was done with the cooperation and assistance of the National Park Service, Yosemite National Park, California. This report is preliminary and has not been reviewed for conformity with U.S. Geological Survey editorial standards (or with the North American Stratigraphic Code). Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government 'USGS, Reston, VA 22092, 2NPS, Yosemite National Park, CA, 95389, 3McLaren/Hart, Alameda, CA 94501, 4Levine Fricke, Inc., Emeryville, CA 94608 Reston, Virginia December 31, 1992 CONTENTS Page Abstract ............................................... 1 Introduction .............................................. 1 Geologic History ........................................... 2 Methods of Investigation ..................................... 5 Inventory of historical slope movements ........................ 5 Location ............................................ 5 Time of occurrence .......:............................ 7 Size ............................................... 8 Triggering mechanisms ................................. 9 Types of slope movement ................................ 11 Debris flows ...................................... 11 Debris slides ...................................... 12 Rock slides ......................................
    [Show full text]
  • California Family – Yosemite National Park
    California Family – Yosemite National Park Trip Summary Stand at the base of a tumbling 2,425-foot waterfall, a soaring 8,842-foot granite dome, a 3,000- year-old, 300-foot Giant Sequoia and experience for yourself why John Muir described Yosemite as “…by far the grandest of all the special temples of Nature I was ever permitted to enter.” Hike, swim, and explore the largest subalpine meadow in the Sierra Nevada. Keep your eyes peeled for wildlife like black bears, bighorn sheep, and foxes. Find out why granite will be your new stone of choice as a rock climber. Discover just how huge a Giant Sequoia really is by standing at the base of one of these forest monsters and looking up skyward. Explore Yosemite National Park with the experts in adventure travel! Itinerary Day 1: Fresno / Nelder Grove / Yosemite National Park Sunday morning pick up in Fresno • Shuttle north toward the famous Nelder Grove of Giant Sequoias where we’ll take a short, peaceful hike amongst these gentle giants • Following lunch we drive into the park, stopping for a picnic lunch and photo ops at Tunnel View and El Capitan • El Capitan, Spanish for The Chief, is a vertical rock formation extending about 3,000 feet from base to summit along its tallest face and is one of the world’s favorite challenges for rock climbers • It is composed almost entirely of El Capitan Granite, a pale, coarse-grained granite emplaced approx. 100 million years ago • Late afternoon, check into Rush Creek Lodge, your home for the next two nights • Overnight at Rush Creek Lodge (L, D) Day
    [Show full text]
  • The Far Side of the Sky
    The Far Side of the Sky Christopher E. Brennen Pasadena, California Dankat Publishing Company Copyright c 2014 Christopher E. Brennen All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language or computer language, in any form or by any means, without prior written permission from Christopher Earls Brennen. ISBN-0-9667409-1-2 Preface In this collection of stories, I have recorded some of my adventures on the mountains of the world. I make no pretense to being anything other than an average hiker for, as the first stories tell, I came to enjoy the mountains quite late in life. But, like thousands before me, I was drawn increasingly toward the wilderness, partly because of the physical challenge at a time when all I had left was a native courage (some might say foolhardiness), and partly because of a desire to find the limits of my own frailty. As these stories tell, I think I found several such limits; there are some I am proud of and some I am not. Of course, there was also the grandeur and magnificence of the mountains. There is nothing quite to compare with the feeling that envelopes you when, after toiling for many hours looking at rock and dirt a few feet away, the world suddenly opens up and one can see for hundreds of miles in all directions. If I were a religious man, I would feel spirits in the wind, the waterfalls, the trees and the rock. Many of these adventures would not have been possible without the mar- velous companionship that I enjoyed along the way.
    [Show full text]