Hike Info:
Type:
Snowshoeing
Trail:
13S55 and 13S99
Destination:
As far as we want to go
Actual
Destination: about ¾ of a mile on 13S99
Distance:
2.12 miles
Start
Time: 1:16
End
Time: 3:18
Travel
Time: 2:01 (1.05 mph)
Moving
Time: 1:20 (1.49 mph)
Elevation
Rise: 388 ' 1
Descent: 359‘
Maximum
Elevation: 6,530'
1GPS
did not measure the elevation. Elevation came from Google Earth.
Also, Google Earth has the track going 1.96 miles.
Description:
This
is the first time snowshoeing this year. With my current state of
fitness, today should be pretty short and easy. Consequently, we are
not in much of a rush to be off. We thought of leaving by 9:00am, but
we sort of dilly-dallied until I realized I needed to go on the
garage roof and patch a leak. By the time we leave the garage, it is
about 10:45.
|
Gary and Sherri at start |
Except
for stopping in Dunlap for coffee-Sherri, not me-the drive is
uneventful. We stop at the Grant
Grove
visitor center. There we met some new friends. The volunteer at the
visitor center and Skylar, a park ranger. We asked about snow
conditions on Forest Service land. But no information. We do talk
about various backpacking routes. Also buy a book, Muir's
Temples: A Natural History of Sequoia Grove Plants
by Michael Kunz.
|
Our ridgeline and beyond |
We
head north. Our usual place to ski or snowshoe is pretty thin and
rutted. So we go on, wandering on down Highway 180. I am wondering if
the road into the Boole
Tree
might be more sheltered. When we get there, we see the road is pretty
much covered, but looking closer, it looks about 6-12” of snow-not
deep, still it is enough to do. So we decide to try it.
|
Looking into the South Fork of the Kings |
We
park at a turnout about 100’ south of the 13S55 road. So we get
ready by the car, cross the road and put on our snowshoes. After we
go around the gate, we start walking the road. The road goes up, but
not much. The snow is packed, so I suspect that even without the
snowshoes we would not have sunk. After a quarter mile we come to a
junction. The road to the Boole Tree goes down, the two other ones go
up. I am dis-inclined to go up on a return trip, so up we go on the
south road. The most obvious road is road 13S99.
|
Road 13S99 |
Not
a steep road, but then we hit a clearing and we can see all the way
to the spine of the Sierra to the east. I normally try to play a game
of what peak am I seeing? I can name the drainages, but with the
peaks covered with snow and a different perspective, I am not sure I
am naming them properly. But then why do I need to name them? Just
accept them in all of their faboulousness. Gaze upon them and praise
God. Sometimes I wonder if these mountains have such beauty, what is
it’s creator like?
We
look around for a good 15-20 minutes. This is both from the
perspective of just enjoying the sight as well as giving my body a
few minutes to recuperate. Once I get my breath back, we continue to
top the ridge the road is on. It looks like it will go down gently.
But we decide to go to the top of the rise above the road-only about
20’ above us. From there we are able to see more North and
Northwest.
When
we go down, we practice a bit descending and ascending in snowshoes.
Nothing death-defying, just how to walk with them. I go down a little
ways further down the road, but it looks like it will be going down
more than I want to now. So I return. In the meantime, Sherri has
found some interesting shadows and is trying her hand at capturing
them with her iPhone.
|
Shadow Figures |
|
Gary and the Borrow Pit |
When
we return, I look again out from our rise to the east. But what
captures our attention is a place on the map called Borrow Pit. I am
expecting a mining pit or something like that. But it looks like it
is a place the Forest Service has dumped its wood it needed to take
care of. Sort of eerie. Going back is a lot easier and we make good
time.
At
the car, it is time to get our snowshoes off and back into normal
gear. On our way back, we stop at the Visitor Center to give a trail
condition report to our new friends. Now where do we want to eat?
DNC? Bear Mountain? No we decide to go back to Fresno and eat with
our son at Bobbie
Salazar.
A good way to end the day.
|
Borrow Pit |
Background
Borrow Pit. According to
Wikipedia,
a Borrow Pit is not so much named after a person, but more as the
action being taken. The contents of a pit is to be used elsewhere,
such as on a road bed. It is a term used in construction or civil
engineering. The hole left may be used for some other purpose.
|
Gary on the road |
|
Sherri on road 13S99 |
|
Sherri concentrating on her steps |
|
Gary on the road again |
|
Looking into the Middle Fork of the Kings |
|
More Middle Fork of the Kings |
|
Converse Mountain |
|
Looking East |
|
Looking East |
|
Nelson Mountain and Eagle Peak |
|
Gary |
|
Maybe North Guard and Road 13S99 |
|
Study in shadow |
|
Tree and snow |
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