-
California Section J: Sonora
Pass (Hwy 108) to Echo Lake
-
Canada: 1637 miles
Mexico: 1013 miles
-
Echo Lake: 76 miles
-
-
Rejuvenated and resupplied, we headed north
from Sonora Pass. We quickly ascended,
wove around to the north side of the mountains, then started down.
Somewhere on a snowbank 4 miles north of Sonora Pass, the trail passed
below 10,000 feet. It would never again climb above that altitude.
Donna had an altimeter on her watch. We made sure we didn't miss
the event.
The trail continued down the Carson River canyon and eventually reappeared
from under the snow. We decided to hike late that night since we
got a late start (which later turned into a self-perpetuating cycle).
We climbed up a canyon and slept on a ledge at the top.
-
We thought we had finally seen the last
of the serious snow fields. The trail was getting lower, and the
mountains to the north looked free of snow. The mountains tricked
us again. We were looking at the south sides of all the mountains
ahead. Whenever we were routed to a north face, the trail disappeared
under the snow again. By this time, any novel joy of having snow
on the ground had worn off. Whenever we saw snow, we'd roll
our eyes, pull out our maps, take a deep breath and move on. The
trail took us through a series of snow-covered mountainsides. It
was slow going, and by this time it was very frustrating.
-
At one point, we noticed some huge fresh
bear tracks on the snow. They kept going in a line - the same direction
we were headed. "Hey, he's hiking the PCT", I mentioned to Donna.
I hiked ahead of Donna, took a break at a saddle near Tryon Peak, and waited
for her to catch up. She was taking longer than usual. Just
about when I'd lost my patience, I saw her coming up the trail. "Did you
see that bear? It was right on the trail!". I hadn't seen it.
Donna was only about a minute behind me when she saw the bear. She
said it was fat, and slowly lumbered away from her. Apparently, I
had walked right by the bear... never noticed it. The trail continued
on down across Noble Canyon
and Noble creek. We climbed out of the canyon in the dark and camped.
-
The next day started out as more of the
same - route finding in the snow. We quickly passed Ebbett's Pass
and saw an interesting trail sign, it read, "Scenic View--->". Were
they kidding? The whole damn trail was a scenic view. Still,
we had to go see what prompted someone to erect the sign. We got
there and had a wonderful view of... Highway 4 through Ebbett's Pass.
To each their own.
-
A little way past Ebbett's Pass, the trail
broke out of the snow once more. We were hiking below a magnificent
ridge to our immediate left. The landscape here was unlike any we'd
hiked in previously. The tops of the steep green mountains were pierced
by jagged pillars of rock.
Every few hundred yards, our viewing angle would change, and we'd see new
intricate formations.
I felt like I was walking on the planet Vulcan or something. It was
so cool that I exhausted my supply of film while trying to capture the
feel of the place.
Damn. I thought I had another roll, but apparently I miscalculated.
-
We continued dipping in and out of river
canyons which started at the top of the ridge. I spotted a huge hawk
streaming across the sky. As it got closer, I realized that it wasn't
a hawk at all, it was a golden eagle. The wind was blowing hard and rising
up over the jagged ridge. The eagle was riding this cushion of air
back and forth. With a simple tilt of its wings, it was able to achieve
incredible speeds. One moment it was on the other side of the canyon, the
next it was soaring over our heads. It wasn't hunting or defending
its territory, it was just having fun and enjoying the freedom of the air.
-
We kept going at our own incredible speed
of roughly 2.85mph and eventually had to stop at yet another steep snowbank.
There was a 30 foot long wall of icy snow covering the trail. The side
of the mountain was steeply sloped. The snow wall continued down a couple
hundred feet and ended in a pile of jagged rocks. There were some
shallow footprints in it, but not enough to gain a foothold on. So,
I took out my ice axe and began the tedious process of chopping steps.
I chiseled away for a good half-hour, making steps which would fit an NBA
center. I was pretty proud of my work, but I had no way to sign my
name to it. Oh well. We headed down a mountainside, and camped
in a flat wooded area called wet meadows.
-
We awoke the next morning to two PCT hikers
zooming through our little camp. They didn't say anything to us.
They splashed through a little stream which crossed the trail, not even
taking a precious few seconds to cross on a nearby log. They had
home-made packs that weighed 15lbs, k-mart sneakers, nylon shorts. Yup,
"Jardinites". I never did meet these two. I've always felt
that everyone should "hike their own hike". I'm not sure if "hiking
Ray Jardine's hike" counts though. (Among other things, Ray Jardine hiked
the PCT 3 times. He wrote a book on his lightweight backpacking style -
"the PCT hiker's handbook".) I hoped they were having fun. I sure
was... I didn't start hiking till 9am.
-
The wind picked up more and more during
this day. We hiked a good few miles on the slopes of an exposed mountain
appropriately called "the nipple". It was a big round mountain with
a giant boulder on top. The wind nearly blew us off the trail.
I was glad I had my hiking poles to stabilize myself. Eventually,
we had to head down yet another snow-covered mountainside. By this
time, we were getting pretty good at finding the trail. It was kind
of a game actually. I chuckled every time I noticed footprints in
the snow going the wrong way. "Ha, that guy is headed into the swamp.",
I'd say to myself. We climbed up the other side of the valley.
-
The next little bit of trail was one of
those sections that had me swearing out loud. The trail headed up
a small mountain called "Elephant's Back". Every time we thought
we were at the top, we were rewarded with a view of the trail headed further
up the mountain, to a summit we hadn't seen from below. This happened
3 or 4 times. Finally, after cutting across another steep snowy slope,
we made it to the top.
-
It was all downhill to Carson Pass.
On the way down, we passed multiple groups of well-dressed day-hikers.
I'd get a whiff of some deodorant or shampoo, say "Ahhh", and move on.
We finally made it to the pass - Hwy 88. At the road, there was a
small ranger station / store and a big parking lot half-filled with cars.
I headed into the building, it was run by a downright nice elderly couple
(unfortunately, they didn't sell any film). While Donna and I were
sitting outside cooking a meal, they brought us some fresh fruit.
It was a brief visitation by more angels of the trail... We thanked
them and devoured their gifts.
-
We headed up the PCT, determined to get
as close to Echo Lake as possible that night. The trail went up and
down the mountains north of Carson Pass. We waded across the headwaters
of the Truckee River, up yet another snowy mountainside, and arrived on
a flat, snowy, forested mountain ridge. The trail was only visible
in small segments every 50 yards or so. The rest of the time, it
was buried under huge snowbanks, some of them over 10 feet high.
So, up and down and up and down the snowbanks we went. It was "find
the trail" at its highest level. There were very few landmarks to
look for, just a flat expanse of forest. We finally stopped when
it got too dark to continue. That night was cold, windy and miserable.
-
The next morning, we continued our game
of "find the trail". We'd had enough, when was this sh*t going to
end!!!? It was July, and we were still walking on huge snowbanks at 8000
feet. We had walked on at least some snow every day since leaving
Kennedy Meadows a month ago. We managed to stay on the trail though.
One last steep snowy slope took us down the ridge and out of the snow.
The rest of the trail to Echo Lake was mostly through the human sprawl
which surrounds Lake Tahoe. A couple small ski-hills, backyards of
some rental homes, we kept going through the woods until we arrived
at Echo Lake.
-
I was initially happy to be at Echo Lake,
I was looking forward to a couple days off. It was the 4th of July
weekend, and Donna's boyfriend was coming up from San Francisco to meet
us. My mood turned sour once I started dealing with the people who
ran Echo Lake resort. They couldn't find my resupply package.
I made them look twice, until they started to get angry with me, "it just
isn't here!". I couldn't figure out what happened, I'd never had
a problem before. I would have cut them some slack if they were just
doing a favor by holding hiker packages, but this place was a licensed
US Post Office. They acted thoroughly un-professionally with me.
They seemed to view all the hikers as an annoyance - we weren't renting
any rooms there, and I'm sure they preferred that we just went elsewhere.
-
The place was packed full of weekend vacationers,
most of them looked hurried and frazzled. THIS was a vacation?
People galore, whining kids, and overpriced crappy food? Still they
kept reassuring themselves "Isn't it great that we're here?". It
was so windy that they had to cancel a scheduled outdoor picnic.
I heard stories of sailboats on Lake Tahoe that went careening into lakeside
restaurants (most likely rich city folk, who took their boat out twice
a year).
-
A few hours later, Donna's boyfriend arrived
and rescued us from the chaos. He rented a house in South Lake Tahoe,
and we took the next 4 days off. It was a nice and welcome break.
We enjoyed the fireworks from a boat on the lake, saw a couple movies,
went golfing, and just relaxed.
I bought some new gear, and sent some other stuff home. By the end
of 4 days, I was more than ready to hit the trail again.
-
-
-