Showing posts with label Wilsonia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wilsonia. Show all posts

Sunday, July 9, 2023

July 9, 2023 - Park Ridge Lookout

 


Title: July 9, 2023 - Park Ridge Lookout
Hike Info : Description :   Flowers and Plants

Hike Info:
Type: Lookout

Description:

I woke up at 0515 with the eastern sky turning colors. It is easy just to lay in bed and enjoy the serenity up here. So I do that for a while, reading and enjoying my sleeping bag. When I do get up, I start cleaning up and getting packed. Now it is time to go for my walk.

Trail through yellow
I do the same loop as yesterday in reverse. Only thing is that I put on my boots instead of tennis shoes. With the first stretch being uphill, I wonder about the wisdom of this. But then I started seeing little flowers along the way. As I wander among these colorful, but low lying flowers, I start getting filled with wonder and awe. Not for their greatness, but their humbleness. By lying low, it raises them up. A lesson to learn. The way up is down-I am not the first to discover this.

The reason being is that humility points me to the Creator of these humble flowers. From this I am filled with wonder. Like Jesus once said, that God takes care of these small things, so much more he will take care of us. We truly serve a great God!

Log Creek Meadow
As I was walking, I was wondering if I am feeling this sense of awe because I recognize I am seeing my God at work. What does a person who says there is no God see in all of this? In talking with some of my fellow hikers, I get a sense of beauty, but not attribution. Is that what creates awe?

I get back to the lookout at 0820, about a 70 minute walk. I get my breakfast ready-how much prep does granola need? By 0900, I am ready for the day. So I started cleaning windows. Then take the weather and go into service by 0930-Delilah beats me by a minute.

At 0950, my first visitors come and I get tied up until 1040 when I notice I did not hear the weather and staffing-it is the staffing which I miss as I can get fire weather online. Oh well, I did have a good discussion about Half Dome and Whitney with a couple of visitors. And then there are visitors from Texas and Poland. I feel like the last couple of days I have been to a European convention.



Another Day and More of the Inversion Layer

You may have noticed in yesterday’s sunrise pictures a few drips and streaks in the picture. I had noted that there was some dirt on the windows. There was not enough time, nor energy, to clean the windows. After going in service, I start cleaning. Of course, I got interrupted every once in a while by visitors. But by the end of the day, the windows are cleaner, but they really could do a second going over.

Hershey Kiss, Mt Brewer and North Guard
One set of visitors, a father and son, comes in after lunch. They are from Ohio, but he works out of Lancaster. What interests me is that he is part of a team which flies planes which look for fires. I have heard them on the radio before and everybody seems to be in awe of the abilities of this plane to find what we are looking for in the lookout: fires. We talked a bit about this. His son also seems pretty attentive to this conversation but also inquisitive about the lookout as well.

The afternoon is coming to an end and so is my time at Park Ridge. No smokes seen. But between the 19 people today, 65 people have passed through the lookout.I think I have done my job. At 1800 I went out of service. It takes a couple of trips down the stairs to load everything in the Ranger. I also let Wendy know the status of how I am leaving the lookout.

Mitchell and Maddox Peaks
 

 

 

I drove the same road I walked this morning. But when I get to a place where I look over Wilsonia, there is a column of smoke beyond that. Of course I stopped. But at that point I did not have any reception.. I am suspecting this is from the Needle Dump. But I do not have a good idea where the Needle Dump is from this area. Then the column disappears. I look for a while longer and it does not reappear.

Besides getting behind a slow vehicle going down 180, it is an easy drive back. There was a truck which was impatient to pass me in the Park. He did at the entrance station, rather vigorously. But he also got stuck behind the slow vehicle. Sort of a karma situation. I also joined in on our family’s Zoom call on the way down. Got back home about 2000. Glad to take a shower.

 




 
Flowers and Plants






Sunday, October 9, 2022

October 9, 2022 - Park Ridge Lookout

 

 


Title: October 9, 2022 - Park Ridge Lookout
Hike Info : Description : Extra Photo's 
Hike Info:
Type:Lookout
 
Description:

Clouds to east
Another late morning for me, getting up at 0700. I think I need it. I do wake up feeling much rested. Of course, it helps going to sleep at 2130 last night. We take down much of our excess stuff from the cab, since we are leaving today. Things like sleeping bags and mat, dirty clothes and a few odds and ends. And then we are ready for breakfast: oatmeal and cinnamon rolls.

 

 

 

Logging taking place
By the time 0930 comes around, we are ready to go into service. We have already done a scan and taken the weather. We also heard
Fire Finder reflections
Delilah go into service-this was the first time we have heard anything from that lookout. Buck Rock will be coming in much later, when she arrives.

A short time later, a couple comes up the trail, but decides not to come up to the lookout. In talking with them, he was a lookout at Park Ridge 20 years ago. She was a lookout at Delilah and worked at Grant Grove for a while. They are staying at a cabin in Wilsonia. We talk for ten minutes, then they go on to east.

 

Looking eastward

 We continue doing our lookout thing. Evidently Porterville is not believing in reporting the weather-nothing at 1000 and then later, no report at 1600. But that does not stop us from doing our assigned tasks. Still no smoke to report, so things are pretty quiet.

And then a whole group of young people comes up. Turns out that they are students at UC Berkeley.

They are up for the weekend and did this hike. They are amused by my explanations of what happens in lookouts, even my puns and humor. I think I have found my audience for my humor-they are all Ph’d candidates in microbiology. They seemed pretty satisfied by what they heard

 

.

Which one is the General Grant Tree


There is a game we play as lookouts called, “What is that?” You have to find what the person is talking about, give the azimuth and distance and a location. Evidently my eyes are better than Sherri’s as I see just before the Hogback where there has been some logging done. Then we have a discussion with no resolution about which of the trees towering above a ridge is the
Looking down into Grant Grove/Wilsonia
General Grant Tree. Our lookout visual book says one thing, Sherri says another and I am hedging on a third, but I think Sherri may be closer to the actual. Finally, I am seeing the parking lot at the Grant Grove Visitor Center. After Sherri gets properly oriented, so does she. Then there is the fire station at Wilsonia which we can pick out.

We get a few more visitors. But all in all, it is a quiet day. At 1800 we go out of service with both Porterville and Ash Mountain Fire. With the later, we just barely caught them before they left. By the time 1820 hits, we are on our way out and get back home by 2000. Glad I was able to catch a few days at Park Ridge before it closed for the season.



Extra Photo's


Virga or does this precipitation touch the ground?

Clouds and Virga around North Guard and Mt Brewer

Early morning view

Sunday, July 18, 2021

July 18, 2021 - Park Ridge Lookout

 

Title: July 18, 2021 - Park Ridge Lookout

Hike Info:
Type: Lookout
 
Locks on entry gate
Description:

Today will be something new for me. I will be putting in the first day of training for a new lookout volunteer. Each lookout volunteer is put through a minimum of two days of new lookout training. Today will be about general skills. These include radio skills, map reading and using the Osborne Fire Finder. Hope I do not damage this new lookout too much.

I wake up around my usual time, 0545. I have most of the stuff in the truck already, so it will be a relaxed getaway. Sherri will be sleeping in and coming up later. I got going around 0700, the time I was aiming for. It takes between an hour and a quarter to an hour and a half to get to the Grant Grove Visitor Center. I talk with the information ranger, telling her that Park Ridge will be staffed for several days. Then my trainee meets me. We talk about the plan for today and the possibility of lightning and what that means. Then we head off to the tower.

Then it is off to Park Ridge Lookout. Part of the training is just getting into a tower. In this case, there is a gate to a service road. He passed the easiest of tests-opening the gate. Then driving in, we stopped at Manzanita Point and looked down on Wilsonia to get an overview of where things are-you get a different perspective looking straight down on the village. Finally we arrived at the tower.

Overcast skies to the east

Once inside, I show him how we “take the weather”. The important parts of that is how clear it is-not very, what is the relative humidity-good, wind-low, and visibility-moderate. Then we go into service. I coached the trainee on the words to say: “Porterville-Park Ridge Lookout-Inservice”. And then what he will hear. He does well on both the Forest and Park-no radio fright here.

We do a scan and then it is time to listen to the weather and staffing. I show him a minor cheat-use the recorder on his phone to record the weather. He makes good use of it. It does take him a while to get the weather down. But this is a bit unnerving when you first hear the weather. While he does this, I do a scan or two.

 

 

 

 

Dismal looking sky to the west
The big concern is the LAL of 6-that is the Lightning Activity Level. This says we may get a high level of lightning activity without any rain. So the next thing we talk about is safety up in the lookout. The lightning stools, when to start escorting visitors out of the tower, and when to turn off the electronics. It is one of those things which does not happen often, but if it does, you want to know what to do.

We go through more stuff with the radio-how to switch scan’s and priorities. There are cards in each lookout on how to do this. Also showed him how resources are called out for a fire-there are “run” cards for each area. These are who get called for a fire depending on the conditions.

The trainee also got to hear what the forest does on a “typical” day. Things like removing a rattlesnake from a campsite, tracking a helicopter, and how the various personnel get moved around. I think it was enough there to give a taste without being overwhelming.

And then we got some attention. Ash Mountain Fire inquired about the weather. I responded with overcast, no lightning and only a few sprinkles. I then had the trainee change call Delilah because he thought he was seeing some smoke or haze over towards Cherry Gap. We worked through the location. Then he called and Delilah and the Trainee worked through what it possibly could be. A good real life situation where he got to use some of the skills. Buck Rock also got into the weather game with reporting that they were starting to get some precip.



Around 1730, the Trainee went home. Shortly after that Sherri came up. At 1800 we went out of service with Ash Mountain Fire, but Porterville was having extended hours. So Sherri and I were still on duty. We did have our lasagna dinner. But we did not have a corkscrew to open Sherri’s bottle of wine.

At 1837 Porterville called out a Bald Fire in Miramonte close to Sand Hill Creek Road. We looked, but no visible smoke-so we reported that. Shortly after that the Forest was called off of this incident. Then it was a quiet rest of the day. We went out of service at 2000.

The evening light was quickly drawing to dark. We put things up for the night. By 2115, we were tucking ourselves into our sleeping bags. A lot cooler than Fresno-we appreciated this.

 
 Extra Photo's

Sunset

Sugar Pine Sunset

Animals





Wednesday, March 31, 2021

March 31, 2021 - Azalea Trail Snowshoe

 


Title: March 31, 2021 - Azalea Trail Snowshoe
Hike Info : Description : Extra Photo's : Animals : Flowers and Plants

Hike Info:
Type: Snowshoeing
Trail: Azalea and Park Ridge Trails
Destination: Park Ridge Lookout
Distance:  5.83 miles
Start Time: 9:33
End Time:   5:02
Travel Time: 7:28  (0.78 mph)
Moving Time:  6:04  (0.96 mph)
Elevation Rise: 1,465 '
Descent: 1,503‘
Maximum Elevation: 7,550'

GPS Tracks

 
 
 
Description:

Start of Azalea Trail
Betty and Rose have commitments this Wednesday. Sherri and I got our second vaccine Sunday. I ended up with just a sore arm, but it has taken a lot out of Sherri. So I am the sole remaining hiker for this Wednesday’s hike. So what do I want to do? I figure there might be three places depending on what I find:

I leave a bit later than I was hoping at 8:15. It is a clear day without much issues going up. Above Dunlap there is a prescribed burn going on McKenzie Ridge

Waterfall on log
, but I do not see smoke. I get into the park at 9:00. The beginning of the Azalea Trail is the entrance into the South Boundary Trail/Needle Dump road. There is a wide area to park, so I stop here to see about walking it. It looks like the first part is mostly dirt with patches of snow. So this is what I will do today.

 

Snow covered trail above the creek
 

 

 

The first part of the trail is about half and half dirt and snow. But the snow is set up pretty well, so no need to put on the snow shoes. I go up pretty well and my lungs can feel it. After about ⅜ th of a mile, the snow becomes more continuous, so I put on my snowshoes. Shortly afterwards, I come to a tributary of Sequoia Creek-the one Ella Falls is on. There has always been a nice little creek here. A log has fallen across it a long time past so the water trickles underneath it, creating a peaceful waterfall-one which you might like in your garden.



Final Hill

The trail crosses the creek, with a nice little platform bridge. On the other side of the creek, I come across some coyote tracks-I think they are a bit smallish, but then again, I am no judge. It does remind me that even though I am hiking by myself, I may not be alone.

About ten minutes later, I hear a single bark, maybe hundred yards away. That really means I am not alone, am I? But that was the last definite sign that something else besides the birds were around me. I kept imagining I heard something throughout the hike, but when I would stop, I would only hear the sound of my breathing.


Park Ridge Lookout



It has been a pretty easy path to follow, even if the route is covered by snow. Of course, I have been up this trail several times, and I look for signs which I know, such as a fallen tree or notches in the ground. I do feel the grade and stop to take in breath.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shell Mountain
Eventually the trail leaves the creek and starts climbing the ridge. I know that it will be a pretty good rise from here to the saddle. It is a pretty continuous climb, some of it is exposed so I wonder if I will be taking off my snowshoes again. In the meantime, it is really nice walking up this slope, enjoying the view over the trees, not seeing distance yet. 

 

 

Bald and Bear Mountains
When I come to the long switch back up to the saddle, there is a large tree across the path-both sides of trail has bush or is pretty steep. I am not sure I can easily get under the tree either. I decide to go around and down the log. While doable, it did drain a lot of energy out of me. But I continue on. Shortly afterwards, there is a long stretch of dirt. So off comes the snowshoes. I walk the last quarter of a mile up to the saddle this way.


It is time for lunch-my peanut butter sandwich. I noticed that I have pretty good cell service-wonder if it is from
Wilsonia? I give Sherri a call and I discuss the situation. I am feeling pretty tired, but not sure how I will be after I have lunch. If I do, then I will not make it back to Fresno like I said by 4pm. It has been a lot harder than I expected.


Patterson Bluffs

After resting up for twenty minutes, talking with Sherri, I decide to continue on. After I have done the climb right? And how far away is it? Well in retrospect, my mind may have been clouded by optimism! I decided that going via the road would be easier than trying to follow the trail. I am not so sure now. A little ways up the road, I come across another fallen tree. Not an issue going over this one. Just noted it as I think SEKI might want to know, particularly if service people need to come up here.
Buena Vista Peak-left lower, Mt Silliman
 

There are thoughts of, Should I turn around? I am feeling the energy draining from me. My steps are getting heavy which means I am more plodding instead of stepping. On the other hand, I am really close. Fortunately there is some eye candy of the ranges to the east and north. A couple of familiar curves and I know I am really close. one last hill to climb. I do note a nice field of snow-maybe coming back that would be a shortcut back to the trail.

 

 


North Guard, Mt Brewer-Thunder Mt on Right

Finally, the last pull up the hill to Park Ridge Lookout. The destination does not disappoint. During the summer, our field of view is mostly down into the foothill communities with some views of the mountains to the east and south. But usually there is a haze to dampen our enjoyment in these directions. But today, the air is clear in those directions and the view is magnificent! Even though it is warm, the air is not hazy, the mountains have snow on them, and everything is in sharp relief. So glad I made it all the way up here. I tried to call Sherri-no answer. But in the message I left, I was wondering about being stationed up here during the winter-it is that good.

I rest awhile. It will be a long trip back. Either way, it will be some uphill which I am not looking forward to. That is what makes that long snow field I passed on the way up so inviting. But after checking the topo map, I decided that I could also run into considerable trouble as parts of it look pretty steep. So instead of taking the road back, I will take the trail back to the saddle. Even though there is an initial rise, once there, it is mostly close to level until I drop into the saddle.

Buck Rock Lookout

I thought I would be smart and go up a ways and contour the hill and save a few feet of climb. But I am too smart for myself and now get to circumnavigate fallen logs. I decide it is better to climb up the trail. It is better up there, but being the top I need to pick my way to maximize the snow and avoid rock. It may have been better to trudge along the road. Still it is good to go over different terrain. Just wish I was less tired so I could really enjoy the wonder and wander of being up here alone. Finally the hill drops off and I go down into the saddle.

I stop to rest a few minutes and find out I have lost my Moleskine with my notes. Oh well. I call Sherri and discuss what I am going to do. I have decided to go down the Manzanita Trail a little way-boots on, snowshoes off. There is a ridge which drops down to the Azalea Trail, if I work it right. Sherri says she trusts me. The one thing I do not like about this plan, is that these are my snow boots, not hiking boots, so I am not sure how the traction will be or if I will tear up the soles of the boots. Still I am not wild about either the extra distance of going to the Visitor Center which is where the Manzanita Trail leads, or navigating around the fallen log on the Azalea Trail. So I go with this plan.

 


Park Ridge where the Azalea Trail climbs up

This is an exposed ridge so it is a dry, well at least without snow on it. The slope is not bad and I make pretty fast time down it. Also feeling surprisingly refreshed. Maybe going without trail is my fountain of youth? Towards the end of the ridge, it will drop off steeply so I start looking for the trail to my left. Before long, I think I see a few markings of where I think the trail should be-no visual on the trail. There is a nice gradient here, so I head down. When I get to the creek, no immediate visual, but after a few minutes, I see it across the trail-success! I put on my snowshoes again.

I make pretty good time down the rest of the trail. About ⅜’s of a mile before the end, I take off the snowshoes-about the same place I put them on coming up. Even though the feeling of tiredness has returned, I make good time back to the car. It is 5pm. I guess I have totally blown my 4:00pm return to Fresno. I text Sherri and am off, arriving back to Fresno at 6:30, tired-obviously, and hungry. I eat during the family Zoom call. Then take a shower. Good to be back home.




Extra Photo's


Delilah Lookout

Monarch Range


Bear and Bald Mtns

Cedar Tree

Snow at the Beginning of the Azalea Trail

Wren Peak


Buck Rock Lookout


Park Ridge Lookout from close to the Manzanita Trail


Animals


Coyote Tracks

 
Flowers and Plants


Lichen




Shelf Fungi