Day 21: On top of Mt Whitney

0.4m north of Guitar Lake to Whitney Portal

Mileage: 16.8 miles, total 210.4 miles

Max elevation: 14,505 feet (Mt Whitney summit)

I woke at 3.15 AM to the sight of headlamps snaking their way up the mountain. It reminded me of Kilimanjaro and, whilst I briefly wanted to charge up there after them, I was happy with our decision as otherwise we would have had to rise at midnight. This way we got some sleep at least.

The trail initially climbed up via some steep switchbacks. It was nice climbing by the light of our headlamps and that of the moon but the day soon brightened enough that we could walk by the oncoming dawn.

The switchbacks were nice and long and easy but we kept our pace as slow as possible given the altitude we were climbing to. We came across a group who said they had bumped into a pair of hikers earlier who had to abandon their attempt on Whitney due to altitude sickness. In addition, we came across blood which had dried on the trail apparently from someone’s nose bleed, another sign of altitude sickness.

Continue reading

Day 19: Forester Pass

Vidette Meadow to Tyndall Creek

Mileage: 12.3 miles, total 194.8 miles

Max elevation: 13,124 feet (Forester Pass)

Campsite elevation: 11,041 feet

Today was a day we were both excited about and a little nervous as we would be climbing to the highest point on the Pacific Crest Trail being Forester Pass at 13,124 ft. Forester is a little notorious for both the steep, precipitous drop offs on it southern side as well as the ice chute where hikers cross a 50 degree snow field with a drop of close to 200 ft.

We started the day approximately 7 miles from the top of Forester so began our climb slowly as we gained elevation. When we climbed Kilimanjaro in 2012, the guides would insist on a slow pace (pole pole in swahili meaning slowly slowly) and on drinking lots of water. We tried to take this into account on the ascent taking it nice and easy.

The trail continued through the pine forest for a while before reaching tree line. There were some beautiful views as we climbed up.

Continue reading

Day 18: Back over Kearsarge

Onion Valley Trailhead to Vidette Meadow

Mileage: 9.5 miles, total 182.5 miles

Campsite elevation: 9,927 feet

We had a busy day today getting our final bits of packing done as we were being picked up at 9 AM. After breakfast and checking out, we were picked up by SherpaMax which is a service which ferries hikers between towns and the various trailheads.

From Lone Pine, it is a 40 mile drive north to a small town called Independence, so named because it was founded on Independence Day. Like many small towns, it has an impressive courthouse whose grandeur is completely out of place with the smallness of the town.

Continue reading

Day 11: Tahoe Tim Trail – done!

Round Lake to Kingsbury S Trailhead

Mileage: 27.0 miles (inc 0.8m side trails), total 171.0 miles

Elevation: 6,463 feet

Last night was quite cold at our campsite at Round Lake. The wind was blowing quite strongly off the lake and, unfortunately, single wall tents are not the best at excluding drafts.

After breakfast, we had a nice downhill stretch to warm up with. The trail was quiet apart from one group we passed who were playing music and asked if this was the way to Sacramento.

Continue reading

Day 10: Goodbye Pacific Crest Trail

Tamarack Lake to Round Lake

Mileage: 18.9 miles, total 139.3 miles

Campsite elevation: 8,100 feet

It was good to see the dawn slowly breaking as it got light around our campsite. I was the first person awake at around 5.30 AM and took the opportunity to admire the view down towards the lakes.

After breakfast, we left before much of the campground was stirring. There was a short 0.3 mile hike back to rejoin the TRT which then led down towards Echo Lake. The terrain underfoot was very rocky and this made progress slow.

Continue reading

ZPacks Hexamid Solo review

I have recently been trialling the ZPacks Hexamid Solo. The Hexamid has been around for a few years now and has had various iterations through its life as Joe Valesko and the ZPacks team have worked upon the basic design and improved it.

I formerly owned a Hexamid a few years ago which was the version where the extended beak came standard but before the split beak of current models was introduced. I sold that model and actually regretted it later. The tent is super lightweight and, although it most definitely has limitations, it can find a useful place in any ultralight hiker’s gear list.

2013-06-02 at 08-21-28

ZPacks Cuben Fibre 2013 in blue

Continue reading