Thursday, July 7, 2022

Sierra Impressions

 

Creek Near the Bottom of Blue Canyon
(Click images to view larger.)

I reached the trailhead to Blue Canyon Lake near Sonora Pass at about 8:45 a.m., after making a little detour on the way up. I briefly lived in Sonora back in the late '80s, before the Hwy. 108 bypass went in, so I took a quick side-trip to check out the old route along Mono Way, hoping to grab a bite to eat at one of the fast-food joints I remembered. 

Well, wow. The Wendy's wasn't there at all, and the Burger King was boarded up like the remnant of an old ghost town. I didn't linger to sort out my memories of what else had changed; the East Sonora Bypass opened in 2013, yet this was the first time I'd ever been curious enough to check out the old route. (I had also noted that the Jamestown Frosty was still there, although it looked, upon brief glance as I drove by, surprisingly decrepit, perhaps a casualty of the pandemic.) Farther up the highway, among mountainsides quilled with the charred remains of a fire-ravaged forest, the Dardanelle Resort was at least partially open again. Talk about resilience: the Donnell Fire (a campfire that turned into a 36,000-acre, $30 million, conflagration) wiped it out in 2018, and then a microscopic virus practically shut down the whole planet for a couple of years, but folks are bringing Dardanelle back to life.

I was also surprised by the changes I noticed as I stepped into the wilderness at the base of Blue Canyon Lake. Although spring has arrived, it's still a long way from the peak I experienced when I was last there in mid-August 2017. I encountered a fair amount of snow and ice on the lake back then, but none on this trip. The red-colored green algae (Chlamydomonas nivalis), so much in evidence on snow patches back then, had yet to become visible this season. As that blog post reminded me, I also passed through Yosemite back then, whereas this time I had to pass it up because reservations are required, even to just drive through, between 6 a.m. and 4 p.m.

I spent about three-and-a-half hours hiking up to Blue Canyon Lake and back, doing all my photography on the way up. I didn't plan it that way, but it's nice to take little photo breaks on the way up to the 10,056' elevation lake, especially if your lungs are accustomed to life at sea level. The slower travel, the newness of the landscape, the better light and lighter wind, all conspire to favor doing photography on the way up, leaving you to just take in the views and enjoy the relatively easy hike back down. 

Although this rocky High Sierra trail in the Emigrant Wilderness is a long way from Mt. Tam in several respects, the distance suddenly closed when I caught the familiar song of mountain bluebirds, which sound much like our western bluebirds here on the coast. I never actually saw the birds, and about the only animal I did see along the trail was grasshoppers. I had to wonder how in the world those little critters survive the winter, and according to Bug Guide, they "apparently overwinter as eggs." I did see several marmots sunning themselves on boulders near the trailhead parking area, but not so much as a chipmunk along the trail. I once photographed a mule deer near a fiddleneck meadow high up the trail, but that was in September 1992, and I haven't encountered a scene like that in the thirty years since.

Another solo hiker reached the lake just as I was heading back down, and I ran into a group of three adults and two small children resting on the way up. They had not reached the slightly tricky creek-crossing and rock-scrambles yet, and one of the adults, a very jovial fellow, was carrying a long fishing rod despite the lake at the top of the trail being fishless. High Sierra lakes do not naturally have fish, so those that do have been stocked by the California Department of Fish & Wildlife, and Blue Canyon Lake does not get stocked.


Flush of Trailside Lupines


Scarlet Gilia and Mule Ears


Pale Columbine Flowers


Waterfalls Below Blue Canyon Lake


Wallflowers in the Rubble
(with view of Sonora Peak)


Weathered Pine Wood


Alpine Fleabane in the Lake Basin


Sierra Beardtongue Licks the Rocks to Find a Toehold


Leavitt Meadow
(on the east side of Sonora Pass)


Mono Lake Overlook on I-395


Hiking up Blue Canyon was a great way to break up the long drive to my farthest destination of Onion Valley, in the Eastern Sierra above the town of Independence. The only other time I've been there was when my wife and I spent a night in mid-July of 2010. We were the only campers there, and my wife found it kind of bleak. I figured on this trip that I could easily snag a campsite and hike up to Kearsarge Pass the next day. 

Nope! Not only were the wildflowers different on the way up the mountain (not as prodigious, that is), but I didn't even recognize the place when I finally arrived. There were cars galore parked near the trailhead, and the campground was fully reserved (and cost $29/night!). It was about 5 p.m., so I decided to just hike up to the first lake, about one-and-a-half miles up the well-graded trail. It was much easier to keep a steady pace up those switchbacks fit for horse travel than it was to hike the scree of Blue Canyon. The forest and surrounding mountains were beautiful, especially University Peak (13,589' elev.) which looks a little bit like the east face of Mt. Whitney.

I reached Little Pothole Lake as the sun was about to dip behind the western peaks, so I took a few pictures and gave a little blood (to swarming mosquitoes, that is), then headed back down to my car. A few clouds made for a nice sunset over the Eastern Sierra escarpment, and I pulled off the highway to snap a few frames on my way to visit the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest.


Little Pothole Lake & Sierra Peaks

Kearsarge Pass Trail

View from Onion Valley

Sunset Silhouette


It was fully dark when I reached Grandview Campground. I drove to a favorite and familiar campsite, but it was already taken, so I had to poke around in the dark to find something suitable. Thankfully this campground is still wild, still first-come, first-served, and there is no camp host like at Onion Valley. After making a couple of wrong guesses at campsites that were, in fact, occupied, I finally found a little cove of my own and set up my tent by the blazing light of my headlamp (whose batteries I had recharged before leaving home).

Although the moon was waxing to about half-full, the stars were great, and the arc of the Milky Way traversed the night sky. It was directly above me the first time I woke up and looked, then quite a bit lower the next time. I didn't look at my watch either time, and I quickly dismissed any thought of trying to photograph it. I believe you can use Photographer's Ephemeris to plan Milky Way shots, but not on the free version I have. Once you have your plan, all you have to do is roust yourself out of your sleeping bag at the appointed wee hour.

I was the first to arrive at the Visitors Center parking lot to begin the four-mile loop around the Methuselah Trail. I decided to hike it earth-wise, which is counter to the posted signs. I didn't have a brochure for the sixteen or so trail markers anyway, and the part of the forest I was most interested in photographing is at the end of the counter-clockwise route. I didn't note the time I began the hike, but it was probably around 7:15 a.m., and by about 8:30 the light had gotten too harsh for my taste. The Visitors Center, which opens at 10, was still closed by the time I'd completed the loop. I hadn't noticed  the sign when I arrived, but they've introduced a new $3 day-use fee.


Bristlecone Pines on the Methuselah Trail


Bristlecone Pine Forest


Small Living Branch on Ancient Bristlecone Pine


Bristlecone Pine with Column of Dolomite


Earth Hugging Plants
(It looks like moss, but it produces small yellow daisy-like flowers.)


Cliffhanger


Bristlecone Pines Trying to Look Scary


Bristlecone Dancer


Purple Sage
(without riders)

About half-way through the Methuselah Trail, I started to feel a little like old Methuselah myself. I'd been proud of my high-elevation hiking stamina so far, but rather suddenly my legs began to feel very tired. I needed a rest day, so I descended back to the town of Big Pine and went up the other side, up Glacier Lodge Road (which starts out as Crocker Avenue off Main Street). I'd never been up there before, and it was gorgeous, but again my lack of planning wasn't panning out, as the area's campgrounds appeared to be full. There was only one car parked at the no-shade trailhead which was situated below some daunting mountains. I'd hoped to hike up toward First Lake at just under 10,000 feet, but I didn't think my legs were up to the job, so I'll have to check that out on my next visit. Maybe go up with my wife and rent a cabin at the lodge ($185/night) to do it in style and comfort.


Sonora Pass Vista Point
(looking northwest)

Same Sonora Pass Vista Point
(looking southeast)

Fire Scarred Landscape Along Highway 108
(from bridge over the Middle Fork Stanislaus River east of Dardanelle)

It's too bad it's all such a long drive away. I'd love to go back soon, and I know Pam would dig it and want to do some painting (she's away at an art retreat now). Gas was expensive of course, but not by San Francisco standards. Bishop had the cheapest gas, and was the only place you could score a gallon for less than six bucks. Lee Vining and Bridgeport had the highest prices (as always), and the only prices higher than San Francisco's. Both towns' gas stations clocked in well north of seven bucks. I cringed as I watched a huge RV start to pull into the gas station in Lee Vining, only to feel relief when he realized his mistake and continued to the RV park entrance next door. I was able to fill up in Bishop and get all the way home (via Sonora Pass) with about a third of a tank remaining in my Mazda 3. The only bummer is my bum, which did not like being in that seat for so long (anything more than about four hours gets tough). And speaking of cars, in the old days if a vehicle blew past me on the freeway at 90-100 mph it was the CHP; nowadays it's just about anybody (I was traversing the valley at around 8-10 p.m.).

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Saturday, July 2, 2022

FZ80 Impressions

 

Fog & Forested Ridges

I've been getting my new Panasonic FZ80 dialed in to my own nature photography needs -- setting up single-point focus and AF/AE lock, figuring out the distance limits for close-up shots, and especially turning off the touch screen so my nose doesn't change the focus point whenever I compose in the viewfinder! 

I took it along when I biked up to Mt. Tam on Friday to swap out the memory card in my trail camera, and it was fun to poke around the creek areas and snap a few frames of the local flora and fauna. Sometimes it's fun to just go out and shoot without a tripod and remote release, without mirror lock-up, without diffusion screens or focus rails, without a backpack full of gear, and without making the kinds of investments of energy involved in using my "real" camera. Of course, all those cut corners show in the resulting images, and that's okay. Sometimes I just want to grab a bite to eat, not make a fancy meal.


Two Hikers on the Landscape


Skipper on the Gumweed


Acmon Blue on the Gumweed


Buckeye in the Grass
(instead of on the dirt trail, its other preferred camouflage)


The Pencil Thin Garter Snake I Almost Stepped On


Some Sort of Dragonfly Nymph or Mayfly?


California Newt
(with out-of-focus water boatman above its tail)


Even Pesky Horse Flies Need A Drink of Water Sometimes
(fortunately they were not biting yet; maybe they don't go for blood
until it's time to reproduce)


Grappletail Basking In The Weeds


Leopard Lily With Cooper's Hawk Feather


Chipmunk On The Move
(the autofocus is quick, but there's a lag in the viewfinder after you take the picture,
so it's not possible to smoothly follow a moving subject)







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Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Sierra Buttes

 

Morning View of Sierra Buttes

Somehow I had never been to Sierra Buttes before, or anywhere on Hwy. 49 north of Tahoe for that matter. (Another first: being stuck in 102-degree heat during a traffic jam caused by an accident near Nevada City). I had to cut short my photographic exploration of California back around 2012-13, in part because I was spending too much money on gas, especially since I had been driving a Jeep Cherokee. I recall being horrified to be charged more than $4/gallon back then. On my return from Sierra Buttes on Monday (in a much more fuel-efficient Mazda 3) I felt lucky to get gas for under $6/gallon ($5.89 at a Pilot Flying J near Sacramento).

The trip to Sierra City was more of a much-needed R&R for my wife and I than a photo safari, but I did get a chance to do some photography while my wife enjoyed plein air painting in the relative cool of the mornings. We stayed at a place called the Sierra Pines Resort on the North Fork Yuba River. I was a little taken aback by how rustic the cabin was at first, dark and cave-like, but it had a kitchen and was in earshot of the river and close to the Buttes. 

Alas, we endured two days of PG&E power cutoffs that lasted several hours each time. When the power died, the soothing wind- and bird-song of the forest was immediately replaced by the noisy growling of a diesel generator which, to add insult to injury, only powered the restaurant, not the cabins. On our last morning I blew a circuit breaker when I ran the coffee pot, microwave, and toaster all at the same time. The front office was closed, but Pam found the breaker box hidden behind a framed picture on the wall near the front door, and breakfast was soon served. Hey, it was still more comfy than camping, especially given the afternoon heat all week.

We didn't do a lot of hiking despite being very close to the Pacific Crest Trail, but the one main hike we did was outstanding -- a short two-hour cardio workout to the Sierra Buttes Fire Lookout. The return trip, all downhill, only took an hour. Another time we took a very short walk on the PCT to reach a small waterfall in a lovely canyon close to the highway. As we left Monday morning, the Sierra Pines restaurant was doing a brisk business feeding PCT hikers who were loading up on pancakes and such before heading back out on the trail.

I was going to break up all these shots into multiple posts over several days, but I don't want to have to return to the computer so much this week, so I'm spilling 'em all at once. Click to view 'em larger.


Afternoon View of Sierra Buttes


Enjoying the Lakeside Breezes


Mule Ears & Larkspur Along Gold Lake Highway


Down by the River #1


Down by the River #2


Down by the River #3


Sierra Garter Snake Resting By The River



Exhibit at Kentucky Mine Museum

Lake Trout

Paddling Her Own Canoe

Painting by the Pond

California Camas


Trail to the Fire Lookout


Stairway to Sierra Buttes Fire Lookout


PCT Hiker Boxes


Google Maps Must Have Thought I Still Had The Jeep


What The Sign On The Right Said


Mountain Pride Penstemon


Near the Fire Lookout Trailhead


Paintbrush & Buttes


Paintbrush With Mariposa Lily


Paintbrush in the Mule Ears


Lorquin's Admiral Butterfly on Bitter Cherry Flowers


Three Wallflowers


Mariposa Lily with Jeffrey Pine Cones


Close View of Mariposa Lily


Three Mule Ears


Close View of Mule Ears

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