Showing posts with label Heather Lake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heather Lake. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

September 17, 2019 - Park Ridge Lookout



Title: September 17, 2019 - Park Ridge Lookout
Hike Info : DescriptionBackground 


Trail head: Park Ridge Lookout
Hike Info:
Type: Lookout

Description:
I got up around 0515 this morning. Sherri has an OSHER class this afternoon and will also be picking up a friend at the airport. So I will be up at Park Ridge Lookout alone. Maybe a bit nervous about my stamina-after all, I am used to taking naps in the afternoon. I had gotten most everything packed last night, so I was able to dilly-dally around the house some. I still left a little before 0700.
I get up to the Visitor Center pretty early-stop in to say, Park Ridge Lookout is open today. They promise to send some visitors. Then it is up to the lookout I go. I get in at 0840. It seems like I have a lot less stuff to take up to the lookout. On the other hand, there is just me, so there should be less and just one day up here. On my third hand, there is only me to sherpa the stuff up. I get myself situated before 0900.
After taking the weather, I set up Celeste so it would be ready for duty. At 0929, I go in-service with both Ash Mountain and Porterville. Today the air is clear and I take a look with Celeste at what appears to be a cloud. With Celeste’s eyes, I pretty much confirmed it is a cloud. At 1000 I hear Porterville’s weather and staffing. But then Ash Mountain starts in with their staffing, I catch what I need from Ash Mountain, but I will need to get a bit more used to it.
You know that clear air I was so happy with earlier? I am in a cloud-I know, some of you will say that I am perpetually in a cloud. But this is a literal clouds. Fun watching the mists starting to swirl to the south of the lookout. But then they no longer are swirling, but are surrounding the lookout. I call in to both Ash Mountain and Porterville that I am now lacking visibility. I can see the trees in front of the cabin, but nothing more than a quarter of a mile. What use is a lookout who cannot see?
Looking towards a cloud covered Eshom area
What use indeed! I get out my “favorite” lookout activity-cleaning the windows. I got done the west windows when a couple of visitors from Illinois came up. Without the sun and the moisture from the cloud around the lookout, inside the cab is definitely warmer than outside-I think our outside temp barely got above 50 anytime during the day. They were interested in all aspects of a lookout, so we spent an hour or so talking about things, ranging from the firefinder to what are the best hiking trails around-my stock answer is the one I am on now-of course, I am not on a trail, … But then gave them some ideas, such as Redwood Mountain/Canyon. Right before they left, the clouds lifted and you could see to the west and north. That was a proper send off. They were so impressed that they wanted a picture with me. I almost feel like a celebrity.
Big Baldy basking in sunlight
The Illinois group parting words were they would probably be the last visitors I had today. But about 10 minutes later-just enough to finish a scan-I had a group of four. After talking with them I found out that they were a group of engineers who used to work together at Port Hueneme. But that was 30 years ago and now they are scattered around the United States-from Redding to Virginia. They come out to hike with each other once a year. They ask all kinds of questions, such as is it wetter now than before (not really, we have had drought years 6 out of the last 8). That lead into the Rough Fire-they had been to Cedar Grove and noted the devastation along the Ten Mile Creek area, where are the best places to hike-I got that question a lot today. After about 20 minutes, they went down below and had lunch.


Shell Mountain
 As the group of engineers left, I noticed two people coming up the road-they were walking at a pretty good clip. I figure that soon I would have more company, so I did a scan-did not see any smoke. The two of them ended up eating lunch at the RAWS station, just under the south east corner of the lookout. I noticed that they were using hand signals, like deaf people use. Usually we will shout down to encourage people to come up to the catwalk and look around. But this seemed a bit inappropriate. So I went down to them-it is only 20’ after all. Would I have gone down at Delilah? I made some hand signs-definitely not sign language stuff, but it seemed to be effective in communicating-that it was OK to go up to the tower. I returned to the cabin to continue my looking around.
Southeast of Park Ridge
After they finished lunch, they came up. This was possibly the start of my best time with visitors. It turns out that neither of them could either hear or speak. Definitely would be an interesting time. And it was. The two women are from San Luis Obispo and are staying at Lodgepole. They are really interested in all things in the lookout. How do I know? We communicate by writing out our inquiries and the answers to them. Of course, they probably had a bit of amusement trying to interpret my handwriting. They asked about the firefinder, radio, how long I had been a lookout, and many other questions. Not being able to speak the answers, forced me to think about the answers and how to answer things concisely. It was a good exercise for me. They asked if I hike or drive in-drive. But I have hiked it several times. They then asked about good places to hike-told them about Crescent Meadows, Watchtower and the Lakes. I drew out where these were on a map. They left after about an hour-seemed like they were pleased with our conversation. I was sorry to see them go. Sometimes you meet people and are happy that you have met them. With these two women, I was glad I was able to talk with them and would have liked them to stay. It would be good to know them better.
Celeste looking
That was the last of the visitors for the day. I could then do my regular lookout activities-you know, scanning, observing, becoming more familiar with the area, taking care of Celeste. You know making sure that Celeste sees the sights around Park Ridge-Buena Vista Peak, Shell Mountain, the General Grant Tree and other scenes. As closing time approaches, I start cleaning up the place-mopping the floor, cleaning the counter tops, and the like. I never did get beyond cleaning the west windows. At 1730, Buck Rock and I have a conversation. She has been silent for much of the day-been away at a meeting at the District office. And now it is time to go out of service with Porterville and Ash Mountain.
Celeste's view of the General Grant Tree


I feel like I had a good day, but one of my main objectives is not been accomplished-to relearn the area. The terrain I have no issues, well maybe only a little bit of issue. But the various populate locales, I definitely do not have down. Such as the Hilltop Church Wendy pointed out to us a couple of years ago-I just could not find it. It will have to wait for another time. This maybe my last time here this year. A prescribed burn is scheduled to take place on or after September 27th which will close down the lookout. On the way home, I stop for a bite to eat at Bear Mountain Pizza. Then I make it back home by 2030.



Background
There are some things which are hard to break. When you learn something in childhood, you use a phrase without thinking about it. One of these is the term “deaf and dumb.” I have always understood the term “dumb” was in line with the older usage of it-that a person could not speak. But there is the new usage which denotes a lack of intelligence. The reason why I note this is that in one of the logs, I noted the two women who came up as “deaf and dumb.” But then on further reflection, I realize that this is probably an insensitive usage. In looking around the web, I was able to confirm this. But I did not come across anything which would be a good replacement. It was mostly things like being sensitive to what a person would like to be called. That really does not help me.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

August 17, 2016 - Wolverton to Heather Lake and the Watchtower


Title:August 17, 2016 - Wolverton to Heather Lake and the Watchtower
Hike Info : Description : Trail Lessons : Background Extra Photo's Flowers and Plants




Trail head: Wolverton
Hike Info:
Type:  Hiking
Trail: Lakes Trail including The Hump and The Watchtower trails
Destination: Heather Lake and the Watchtower
Distance:  8.00 miles
Start Time: 11:02
End Time:   6:42
Travel Time:  7:39 (1.05 mph)
Moving Time:  4:43 (1.70 mph)
Elevation Rise: 2,070'
Maximum Elevation:9,434'


Description:
This one started as an overnight trip to Pear Lake, then a day trip up to Pear Lake. Now it is lets see how far we can go and just enjoy the day out.

Sherri at the start of the trail
By the time we leave Fresno, it is close to 9:30 and we get to Wolverton a little before 11. Sherri takes off. But I stop and talk with a backpacker from Carlsbad. He has a "Take A Hike" T-Shirt which features the three Sierra National Parks: Yosemite, Kings Canyon and Sequoia. He has hit the trail in all three of these and will return back to teaching next week. But he had a grand time. We talk about different places. He mentions the Lost Coast and I tell him it is on  my list of hikes to do.

After talking for 15 minutes, it it time to rejoin Sherri. But she has stopped only a hundred yards up the trail, waiting for me. Foolish woman! You would think that after close to 40 years she would know how long I could chat with someone?

The thing about this trail is that it is a long and grinding uphill. The trail is not content just to defeat you, but to pulverize you into trail dust. So why do it? Because you know there is rewards to those who preserver. Sort of like life you know, just because there is pain and suffering, is the end result is worth it, you continue to endure. If not, you look for an alternative.

We eat lunch at the Panther Gap trail junction. I also am testing out our SPOT device. It did not function reliably during our abbreviated JMT trip. During lunch, a couple of young women came up-Nikki and Sonya.  They are from Fresno and this is a different Sonya than the one we usually hike with. We talk for a while and then they leave right before we do.

The Hump trail is about a quarter mile from our lunch break and that is the trail we take. It is used during the Spring and until the Watchtower trail is safe from ice. But the disadvantage is that it does go a couple hundred feet higher than going via the Watchtower. Also this is not a trail of grand vistas but through the woods. Also there is no downhill on it. It is all up. And that is what we do, climb to the top of the Hump, and there we start to get our reward.
Looking North From the Hump
Gary enjoying the view
At the top, we stop for a break. Or do we stop to gawk? Either way it was time for a rest. And if our resting spot gave us a view, who am I to complain? From our vantage point, we can see across into the Tablelands. This is a treeless area at the headwaters of the Topakah Creek. No trails go through there, but it is a favorite cross-country route for many people. Another test of one of our SPOT devices.

Then we drop down a couple hundred feet and join the Watchtower trail to Heather Lake. There we met some hikers. One has a good nature comment of, you are close, you are almost there. I apologized in advance and replied I was going to get metaphysical on him by asking "What does he mean 'almost there'? I prefer to think that I am here." He replied that he really liked my comment.

Gary heading towards Heather Lake


But my new friend was right, we made it to Heather Lake in just a steps. While Sherri went off to visit Nature, I stayed by the lake. Our now old friends, Sonya and Nikki then strolled up. We talked for a good length of time while relaxing by the lake. Nothing deep, just friendly. But then it was time to leave.

About this time, we raise the question, have we told Steven, our son who is taking care of my Mom, that we are out hiking? We think so, but cannot think of a specific conversation. Will try to reach him on the way down.


Heather Lake
Gary on the Watchtower Trail
Instead of coming back via the Hump, we will take the more scenic route of The Watchtower. This trail is cut into a cliff, giving a great view of the Tablelands and the Tokopah Canyon area. But it is not for those with vertigo or a concern for falling. One slip and you will have a one way flight to the bottom, maybe a thousand feet down. On the other hand, bring your camera since each step you take presents new opportunities for pictures of the oooh and ahhh quality.



View from the Watchtower Trail




Sherri looking across the Tokopah Canyon

The Watchtower

By the time we reach the Watchtower, it is pretty late. So we do only a brief stop and gawk. Enough to take a few pictures and then move on. It is about 3 miles back to the car and mostly downhill. We meet an older couple who are struggling a bit. but who are taking a small break. They comment about how hard this trip is. Hard yes, but not too bad for those in shape-I only think it, not say it. Am I getting wiser in my old age?

By the time we make it back to the car, the shadows are getting long and I have not been able to reach Steven to confirm that he is taking care of my Mom. I do a final test of the SPOT and place it on top of the car. We decide to see if the Lodgepole cafe is open. It is and we have a hamburger. Sherri calls Steven and finds out, no we have not told him we went hiking. But an intelligent son that he is, he has deduced it. As we pass by Squaw Valley, I hear a thump off of the car, and nothing else. We continue on. By the time we get home, it is after 9pm and we are tired.



Trail Lesson:
Being "here" is much better than even being "almost there."


Background
We have two SPOT devices: SPOT Satellite GPS Messenger (Ritto) and a SPOT Connect (Shirley). The devices are named after our pets. In the past they have worked OK, with  80-90% success. But during our JMT walk, Ritto only connected once out of the three nights. So this hike, I wanted to test it out. Below is the results-it is an e-mail I sent my brother. I also sent the contents of the e-mail to the SPOT people.
I am not sure if I have an endorsement of the SPOT or throw it away decision. After our aborted JMT attempt and getting only one out of three signals to be received, I have been trying to get the SPOT Messanger to work. First the endorsement:

We had come back from our hike out of Wolverton in Sequoia NP. I wanted to get one last "OK" message sent. So in the parking lot I set off the "OK" message and set it on top of the car to transmit. It actually did transmit. I also had Tracks on.  But as you might have guessed, I forgot the SPOT on top of the roof. As i am driving home last night, I hear a clink on the roof, but not sure what it is-this happened just outside of Squaw Valley. I get home, do not find the SPOT device. So before going to bed, I look at the SPOT map and there it is at the corner of Lovewell and Hwy 180. I get up this morning and there is a ton of tracks at that location. This morning I drove back out there and was able to recover the device.

So why am I about to throw it away?
1) When out on the trail, two out of three OK messages were not received.
2) Last Saturday I walked around my neighborhood with Tracks on and with trying the OK button a couple of times-55 minutes. Not one was received.
3) Yesterday I set on TRACKS at the start of our hike, around 11am. We finished up a little before 7pm. I pressed OK three times. I got one of them. The first two times was once at lunch around 12:30; the second when we stopped for a rest at the top of the Pear Lake Hump. Both times we were stationary about 20-30 minutes. The one time it did show was the one which I left the SPOT on top of the car. The TRACKS on the trail was only a little bit better. I had six tracks left between 2:30pm and 4:40pm. One wonders what happened to the tracks between 11am and 2:30 and the those between 4:40 and 6:45pm.

While I will not "throw it away", until I understand better why it is not reliable, it will not be relied upon. Sounds like a support call.
On a recent backpack trip I got three out of four messages from "Ritto" and three out of five from Shirley. SPOT support has offered a discount on a new SPOT. But then I also got a notice that SPOT is raising their service fee by about 33%. So I am not sure I will renew. I have a month to think about it.

Extra Photo's
Up the Tokopah Valley
Trail View looking west

Alta Peak on the Right
Trail Through Two Trees







 
Flowers and Plants





Wednesday, July 30, 2014

July 30, 2014 - Watchtower and Tokopah Falls

Tablelands
Title: July 30, 2014 - Watchtower and Tokopah Falls
 Trail head: Wolverton Parking Lot
Hike Info:
Type:  Hiking
Trail: Lakes Trail
Destination: Watchtower
Distance: 6.59 miles
Start Time:  8:29
End Time:   1:24
Travel Time: 4:55 (1.34 mph)
Moving Time: 3:48 (1.73 mph)
Elevation Rise: 1,972'
Maximum Elevation: 8,910'


Description:
When I think of a hike up to the Watchtower, I think of a good climb through forests and then a single place to find a sight worth the climb. But today, I got all of that and more.

I started the morning by stepping outside and immediately decided to go back inside. The sky was dark and clouds were ominous. So I went back inside to get my rain jacket. Now I am prepared, I think. On the drive to Kohl's, saw a couple flashes of lightening-well, maybe not all that prepared.  At Kohl's, picked up Brian W and went ahead to load Bill and Richard on the way. Even driving up, we saw lightening flashing from the clouds down to earth. There was a few drops of water hitting my windshield. After a break at Big Stump, we traveled on to the Wolverton parking lot, the beginning of our hike.
 



Cathey and Audrey walking through meadow
This hike is nearly a consistent uphill coming in. We start with a good climb out of the parking lot until we meet the ridge overlooking Lodgepole. The word overlooking is a bit of an exaggeration as the view into the Tokopah Valley is mostly obstructed by trees. But that is OK since the trees have a tendency to keep this trail cool and are enjoyable to walk through, even in bright sunshine. But today, it is overcast with a bit of concern about rain, not that the rain ever shows up.
Now the more  from above is this: surprisingly there are flowers presenting themselves, particularly in the meadows. Not so much surprising that there are flowers here, but that there are flowers here now, with as little water as we have had this year. There are some Columbines and Indian Paintbrushes. But also several varieties of whites and yellows, with blues. Just an eye opening time. There is more to this trail than just the Watchtower.

Across from the Watchtower

We reach the junction with the Panther Gap Trail-the same one we walked with the meetup group in mid-June. But we take a left, and shortly ignore the cross-over Hump Trail to Heather Lake. The rise is still moving us upward, but not as steep, until right before the Watchtower.
Once we climb a few switchbacks, the Tablelands open up for us. This is the area beyond the Watchtower in the upper Tokopah drainage.  Just an amazingly inviting country. Sherri and I have done Pear and Moose Lakes. But the area beyond is calling me. We can see across to Silliman Crest and that area. 
Tablelands
Watchtower cliff













John
The Watchtower is a place just to rest and cogitate, but not if you have vertigo. The trail brings you to the edge of a 1,100' drop straight down. Most of us enjoy the view, but from a distance at least six feet from the edge. The actual Watchtower is about a hundred feet across a chasm. Some of our group go around and climb up it and enjoy that sight.
Now it is time to return back to the cars for more fun. The return trip is backtracking along the trail we just came up. For some reason, it is easier to return going down. But somehow I am now feeling more tired. We get down just five hours after starting. Time for another walk, but this time gentler.



Trail head: Lodgepole Campground
Hike Info:
Type:  Hiking
Trail:  Tokopah Falls Trail
Destination:   Tokopah Falls
Distance:  4.01 miles
Start Time:   1:46
End Time:     4:16
Travel Time: 2:30 (1.60 mph)
Moving Time: 2:08 (1.88 mph)
Elevation Rise: 502'
Maximum Elevation: 7,155'
The Watchtower

Description:
For the second part of the day, we scurry over to the Lodgepole Campground. There is a trail head inside the campground. So we park on the south side of the Marble Fork of the Kaweah River, cross the bridge. The entrance to the trail is just beyond the bridge on the north side. In case this sounds familiar, our meetup group did a hike in March to some falls on this fork.
The trail is gentle, at least compared to the Watchtower.  So this does allow for conversations to occur, rather than the gasping for breath which happens on high altitude climbs. So I walk with a couple others and get into a conversation with Audrey, a third grade teacher with FUSD. Just a pleasant time to chat about people whom we both know.
Tokopah Falls, or trickle








Marble Fork of the Kaweah
But back to the trail. Towards the Falls, we get into granite blocks which we climb through. We come out to the trail's end, where the falls are. Or I should say, where the falls should be. But now there is only a trickle coming down. Sort of a disappointment in the falls. But as John said, you can just imagine how beautiful they would be-he is ever the optimist! People start to leave and I walk back with John and Cathey.
Bear Cub
The hike back is on the same trail. But it amazes me to see how different the same dirt can be going in a different direction. Just the trees and the creek and looking down valley have a different perspective. And a bear cub gently grazing for his huckleberries. Wait! A bear you say? Well really a cub about 30' from the trail. Several of us, and others, stop to gawk and take pictures. I was told that after I left mama and and another cub came up.
Grouse
Not much more after that, except for a grouse posing for a picture. We get back to the trail head and the car. Our car decides to continue back to Fresno rather than stopping for a bite to eat. I get back to home around 5:30.


Trail Lesson:
Prepare to enjoy the beauty you do not expect.





Thursday, January 8, 1970

Place: CA-Heather Lake


Heather Lake-9,268' (Lodgepole)   
(36.6010670, -118.6877318)

Description:
Named in 1925 by Superintendent John R. White, of Sequoia National Park. From Place Names of the High Sierra (1926) by Francis P. Farquhar

Heather Lake is, I think, the most attractive (if also the most ordinary) of the lakes in this area, since it's pleasantly wooded. The other lakes are somewhat more barren-looking, being surrounded mostly by bare granite. For some reason there's no camping at Heather Lake. From Redwood Hikes description

From GNIS: In Sequoia National Park, 1.1 km (0.7 mi) south of Tokopah Falls on Marble Fork Kaweah River and 0.8 km (0.5 mi) west of Aster Lake.

Trips:

References:
Pictures: