Team: Thing One, Thing Two
Date: May 8, 2012
Hike Info:
Trail: Wawona to Alder Creek
Distance: 8 miles
Duration: 4:20
Elevation Rise: 2,568
Description:
We make it to the trail head at Wawona
around 9:40. Then hit the road a half an hour later. Much better than
the last time we were up here.
Same trail, same sun on us. We go a
third of mile when Sherri discovers she left her GPS on the hood of
the car. Steven goes back to get it. Sherri and I continue on.
Dry heat with little breezes at time to
cool us off. When we left the car, it was 70 degrees. At 11, after
going 1.2 miles and 700' up, we stop for an elevense's break. After a
few minutes, Steven catches up with us.
More uphill. I write a little while
longer as Steven and Sherri continue on. I plod after them for about
half an hour before catching up with them. We past the fallen log
where we lost the GPS last time. At 12:15, we have our lunch, 2.8
miles into the trail-just a tenth of a mile from the Mosquito Creek
trail junction. Usual fare of Ritz crackers, Peanut Butter and
Nutella. We debate on how healthy can this be? My thinking, who
cares? It tastes so good and we are doing so much work, it cannot be
too bad.
While reading and resting, we saw a
hawk gliding overhead, riding the warm air currents. It looks so
graceful as he swoops and pivots and swoops again, free from visible
effort. But we get no picture for Capture California.
1pm—we leave our lunch spot and start
in. Shortly we come to the trail junction. After this it is a series
of rolling hills, gradually going up. We pass our campsite from three
weeks ago—completely free of snow. Three Falls is still flowing.
After a spurt of up hill, we top out on the old railroad grade. From
here, the trail is flat. You see remnants of old railroad ties. We
stop at our creek to refill water bottles and take a break.
Then comes the highlight of the
trip—Alder Falls. If Alder Falls was along a road or in the Valley,
it would compete with Vernal and Nevada Falls. But you need to hike
in 5 miles, climb 2,000' to enjoy this view—I like it that way. The
effort makes the enjoyment that much better.
We look and gawk at the Falls. Then
continue on, up Alder Creek. Then the railroad leaves us above the
Falls. The trail is more single file. But gentle. We get to the creek
crossing for Alder Creek. The snow runoff is going strong still. So
we ponder our options. In the end, we decide to stop before crossing.
We have gone 7 miles, with a gain of 2200' in four hours walking. Not
bad. Of course, my brother would not let this stop him. (Later in
talking with him, he thought that we were there to enjoy, not to show
courage.) We have crossed this creek before, just as wet, just as
wide. But it is just as cold now as then. I am getting more cautious
in my old age.
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