Showing posts with label Bear Gulch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bear Gulch. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

November 25, 2020 - Bench Trail

 

Title: November 25, 2020 - Bench Trail
Hike Info : Description : Trail Lessons : Extra Photo's 


Trail head: Pinnacles Campground
Hike Info:
Type: Hiking :  Car
Trail:  Bench Trail
Destination:  About an hour
Distance:  4.16 miles
Start Time: 10:03
End Time:    11:53
Travel Time:  1:50 (2.27 mph)
Moving Time:  1:36 (2.60 mph)
Elevation Rise:  379'
Descent: 209‘
Maximum Elevation: 1,059'
GPS Tracks

Description:

Last night we, Andrea and I, agreed that there was no need to hurry to get up, especially if it was as cold as yesterday. So I stayed in my tent until 7:30. Andrea was probably awake before then and got out shortly after I did. We started breaking camp, letting things dry out. An indication that it is a little warmer than yesterday since we did not have a coating of ice on everything.

Before Breaking Camp


We decided that a repeat of warm almond milk and granola was in order. Evidently the planning on the granola was just right. We finished breaking down camp after breakfast-my tent fly is still wet. By 10:00, everything was packed up. Now what to do?

We are to be out of the Pinnacles campsite by 11, but we think we will fudge a little bit on that. Also neither of us feel like we want to do anything strenuous. That sort of fits the Bench Trail which comes right out of our campground. This is the start of what we did yesterday.

 

Bench Trail and Andrea
The trail is fairly level, so we walk at a good pace. Not sure that there is a whole bunch to stop for, but I manage to take a few pictures along the way. We come to the junction for Bear Gulch and the Old Pinnacles. We take the Old Pinnacles. This goes along the Chalone Creek, so we do a series of minor rises and descents-about 30’ each. Occasionally we met a few people on the trail.

We got to the junction with the Blue Oak Trail which leads to the High Peaks area. At this point, Andrea and I looked at each other and decided that this is a good time to turn around. The walk back is a repeat of what we have just walked through, except there are more people on the trail now. We quickly realize why. The parking lots are full close to the trail heads, traffic has been stopped on the main road, and people are parking lower down.

 

Looking up Chalone Creek

One of these groups of people asked us about the High Peaks Trail. We talk for a few minutes about what it is like. As we make way for a family to pass by, they would have no part of that. They wanted to listen to what we were saying as they did not know the area. I tell them a bit about the trail and where it will go.

Andrea thinks this is so funny, her Dad being the tour guide. Sherri would call it pontificating. Whatever it is, I consider it an act of being kind to help someone. Andrea keeps laughing for the next quarter of a mile. So glad I can amuse my daughter.

Andrea entering the Bench Trail Tunnel

We get back to the car by 11:50. Since we are already packed, we just need to take care of personal business and then be off. Actually, only more item-where do we want to go for lunch? We decided to try SmashBurger in Hollister. Andrea takes the lead and we get there a bit before 1:00. Andrea is still taking care of her Dad. She orders the food and fights through any COVID germs to retrieve our meal. I think she has turned out pretty well.

After eating, it is time to say good bye. What an enjoyable time with my daughter! Glad this worked out. I get home at 4:00pm. It takes me a lot of Thanksgiving to get things put away. But that is because I did not want to rush stuff.

 
 Trail Lesson:  Be kind. Being knowledgeable in your kindness is better.



Extra Photo's

Andrea, the masked hiker

Gary, tired old man

Andrea at the Blue Oak Trail Jct

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

March 4, 2015 - High Peaks at Pinnacles

Title: March 4, 2015 - High Peaks at Pinnacles

 Trail head: Bear Gulch Visitor Center
 Hike Info:
Type:  Hiking
Trail: Bear Gulch, Condor Gulch, High Peaks, Rim, Moss Creek, Bear Gulch Cave Trails and others
Destination: Loop-High peaks
Distance: 6.08 miles 1
Start Time: 9:45
End Time: 3:38
Travel Time: 5:53 (1.03 mph)
Moving Time: 4:28 (1.36 mph)
Elevation Rise: 1,963'
Maximum Elevation: 2,531'
1Inside of the Bear Gulch caves the GPS lost its signal for a ways. There is many false readings. I modified the GPS track try to take out some of the extraneous signals. Also around the High Peaks area, there was a couple bad readings which may have exaggerated the distance.


Description:
Back to back hikes-I am getting too old for this, particularly with the long three hour drive both ways. Thankfully Sherri is driving this morning. DD and Betty are in our car and we have a good, wide ranging conversation on the way over.

We stop at the closed Visitor's Center to pick up a park pass. We also mill around for awhile. Then we pass by the entrance station, when one car, a blue RAV4 with bike racks on top, realizes that a park pass was not picked up. So back they go and get legal. We get to the Bear Gulch parking lot around 9:30 and hit the trail at 9:45.

Bear Gulch Trail
Our first trail is the real climb up: Bear Gulch Trail. Compared to some High Sierra passes, it is not much. But it does get your legs working and wondering what else are you in for, Our destination rises in front of us: the High Peaks. They do not look formidable, but they will provide their own challenges. So it is best to be on our way.

But to be on our way is easier said than done. We come across several good vistas which any good hiker will pause to ponder. Not only that, I stop and talk with a couple of NPS rangers who are tracking bird. Not just any birds, but one is finding raptors; the other is on California Condor watch. I think we talked with one of them a couple of years ago. But something which Sherri and I find more and more is that hiking is a social event as well.  A little while later we come across a couple from the city of Mt Shasta. Turns out he is retired from running a small airport. He also ran a business which supplied CalFire with aircraft for fire suppression. It was interesting talking with him from our limited experience up in a fire lookout tower.
Looking down a Bear Gulch
Machete Ridge

But now we are far behind, so we hurry up to catch up with the rest of the group. We do catch up with with the tail end as we came to a junction. They were resting under a tree, enjoying the view to the north. The two most prominent features are Machete Ridge and the Balconies. Between the two of them are a complex of boulders which create more cave like caverns. The Balconies provide refuge for birds, including condors.

On our wandering as we climb towards the spine of the Pinnacles, we see rock formations which fascinate us. I guess that is why we travel three hours to walk these trails. There just is not much like them anywhere else.


Climbing up towards High Peaks
But as we reach the pinnacle of our hike-sorry, could not resist the pun-we encounter the part of the trail which makes this whole hike fun. Well, at least for some of us. At the top, you climb these steep cement steps which have only a toe-hold and a grab bar to get you up. This is definitely not a place for those with vertigo. But we all make a go of it. It is really fun watching how people conquer their fears and move on. A good case in point is Maria. Two years ago, she was at the point of refusing this section of trail. This year she just went right up the stairs and down the other side. Sooo good! Still this section is either fun or scary, depending on your disposition.
The Big Squeeze
After doing a short descent from the high point, we have a break on top of the ridge which High Peaks reside on. Nothing special, just a time of rest before we start our return trip.

Lava Flow
The first part of the trip down is pretty steep and some do a butt drag maneuver. My preference is a crab crawl facing the slope rather than looking out. Each conquer their fears their own way. After this section, we head down and the trail becomes more trail like than an exercise in going down a slot.


Sample of trail
 Like the rest of the Pinnacles, we get to enjoy more formations and even some lava flows, and of course, many outcroppings. At a junction some people would like to go the more direct way back to the cars, but in doing so, they would miss a couple highlights of the trip. There are even some surprise highlights, like a field of purple flowers gracing a small water shed. Will the Pinnacles ever quit showing off its wonders? Annie Dillard talks about this in The Pilgrim at Tinker Creek:

If the landscape reveals one certainty, it is that the extravagant gesture is the very stuff of creation. After the one extravagant gesture of creation in the first place, the universe has continued to deal exclusively in extravagances, flinging intricacies and colossi down aeons of emptiness, heaping profligacies with ever
fresh vigor.


Bear Gulch Reservoir
It is by God's grace do we get to experience these gestures in this world. Maybe it is just me, but I am the last one down to Bear Gulch Reservoir, but I do enjoy my doodling along the trail. Once we all gather there, it is down into the caves. Much to explore, and there is excitement of what these caverns have to offer. Most of us go through the lower ones, but a group come out of the upper ones, trying to draw the rest of us back up. But those of us in the rear are ready for the car and can now rest on our enjoyment of what we have seen.

Cathey has organized a pot luck where there is enough food for all. Around 5 we break up. Some want to go south to explore the route through Coalinga. Sherri and I did that last time we were here, so we go north as it is the quickest back. Also it will be dark before we get back. So off we go, content with our day.



Machete Ridge

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

February 20, 2013 - High Peaks Trail, Pinnacles


Trail head: Bear Gulch Parking Lot

Hike Info:
Trail: Condor, High Peaks, Rim, Bear Gulch Trails, also the Bench Trail
Distance: 8.8
Travel Time: 7:00 (1.26 mph)
Moving Time: 4:03  (2.17 mph)
Elevation Rise: 2,450'
Maximum Elevation: 2,623'


Description:
When I got up, a bit late, went out for a short walk up the Bench Trail to a fire access road. Cold. How cold was it? The rain drops on the bushes from last night's rain were frozen to them; frost was layered on the cars. But it was beautiful and clear.

Sherri and Andrea taking a break
Once everyone else got up, we fixed oatmeal for breakfast. Then got ready for our hike with the meet up group. We were there shortly after 9, at the appointed time. After waiting awhile, we were talking about what our plans should be since we were not seeing them. But about the time we were going to leave, we heard a caravan of cars coming up the road-our wonderful companions from Fresno, all 18 of them.

Condor-look close--it is tagged as #59, same as our campsite
After getting some instruction, we hit the trail. It is a pretty good incline. One person in the group asks parenthentically, is this an easy to moderate hike? But the morning is cool and the group is good, so the adventure is fun. We sort of split into two groups-those have the ability to go fast, and those of us with the ability to observe the small things on the trail. I have been noticing that I fall much more into the later group these days. There is still hail on the ground from yesterday. One of the things which makes us forget any incline is watching the condors gliding overhead. Such grace!
High Peaks

As we hit the top of the ridge, we have the chance to enjoy the view of the park. We descend a short ways on the west side of the ridge, and that is when the trail becomes interesting. You get to climb up steps cut into the rock, not regulation type of steps, but just a little bit more than toe holds. There is a rail to help steady us. But this only makes it a bit better to climb. Some in our group have thoughts of turning back, but to their credit, they continued on and overcame their fears. That is courage. The worse part was coming down steps on the other side. I went down facing the rock, seemed much more like coming down a ladder that way.

Sherri and Andrea on our rock
Close to the top, we meet a guy who is monitoring the condors. He is very informative. We stopped for a lunch-mine was the other half of the Subway sandwich we bought yesterday. Tasted even better the second day. We came to the junction of the High Peaks and Rim Trails. This is where Andrea and I went down to Moss Springs yesterday. We go the opposite direction today. Still nice, maybe even better in the sun.

Moss and Sherri
At the reservoir, Andrea takes off down the Cholane Peak Trail. she still has a lot of energy. Sherri and I go down the trail back to Moss Springs. Some of us, go through the caves, others go around it. Sherri, John and I are the last people. We back-track a few times, but nothing too serious. We get to the Bear Gulch parking lot a few minutes after everyone else does. We all enjoyed ourselves, I think. The meetup group takes off for dinner in San Juan Baptista.

Creek through cave
Sherri and I decide to walk back to camp, about two miles. Mostly flat, but a little downhill in one place. We start getting dinner ready and Andrea comes in shortly after us. It has been a pretty good day. Andrea starts a fire, and we enjoy our spaghetti, chicken, white sauce concoction.by the time the fire burns out, it is close to ten and I am ready for the comforts of my sleeping bag.




Sherri caught in the smoke

References:
Feb 19th Hike
Feb 21st Hike














Friday, January 2, 1970

Places: CA-Bear Gulch


Bear Gulch-988' (North Chalone Peak)   (36.4838536,  -121.1660322)
Bear Gulch Dam-1,654' (North Chalone Peak)   (36.4727428, -121.1868668)
Bear Gulch Reservoir-1,644' (North Chalone Peak)   (36.4723476,    -121.1892825)
Bear Gulch-988' (North Chalone Peak)   (36.4838536,  -121.1660322)
Bear Gulch-988' (North Chalone Peak)   (36.4838536,  -121.1660322)

Description:


Trips:
  • March 11, 2015 - Meetup group day hike where we went through the caves

References:
Pictures: