Waterfalls Burning

The Robbers Fire is currently burning out of control in one of my favorite stomping grounds near Colfax and Foresthill, only about 20 percent contained as I write this. I’m not sure exactly what has burned, but I believe up to six waterfalls may be burning right now: Devils Falls, Shirtail Creek Falls, Mexican Gulch Falls, Indian Creek Falls, Upper/Lower Chamberlain Creek Falls, not to mention the fabulous wildflowers on Windy Point. Once this fire is out, it will be interesting to see what has burned or not. I maintain that forest fires are a healthy and natural thing (though I have heard that this fire may not have started naturally, which is very bad), and among other things they clear out all the brush and undergrowth, which is desperately needed; but of course we certainly pray that no one will lose their homes because of this fire, and they say this could happen if the fire jumps the river, and I also sure don’t want to see that beautiful wildflower area burned up, which would also be sad.

Anyway, back to Horsetail Falls. After shooting the main section of Horsetail Falls I retreated back down the mountain semi quickly because I wanted to get back to Lower Horsetail Falls, which I have only been to once before.

I like that whenever I am here I am always the last one off the mountain. Considering how very busy this trail is during the day it is not so easy to accomplish. It is like a special bond or something I have with this mountain, always being the last one down. Well I did end up being the last one down again but I had to battle it out with some other people this time. I passed up a couple older people coming down from the top of Horsetail firstly (then they passed me when I took a detour to the lower falls). When I arrived at the lower falls there was (very surprisingly) another photographer there shooting the falls. I do not normally see other photographers unless I am in a popular location such as Yosemite. He was in my way so I had to wait for him and he was taking a sweet old time but I waited patiently, and while I waited I thought hard about how I could possibly get down to the lower section of this waterfall. The upper part (shown here) is 35 ft high but there is a lower part as well, which is just as big or bigger. The only way to get to it would be to cross the creek but this is impossible to do when the creek flows strong (which is most of the year). Perhaps in late summer? I’m not sure but I’ll figure out a way. Well all that thought strained my brain but the other photographer finally moved out of the way so I made my way down to creek level and started taking some photos of this cool looking slide. It was a great evening in the Desolation Wilderness.

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Something different?

This weekend I did not feel much like going out in the heat for a long difficult hike, or getting up super early. Heck, I did not even feel like going out at all, but I forced myself to go out Saturday afternoon for at least an easy hike. Horsetail Falls was a good ticket. I have been here many times before of course, and have some good photos of it already, so I told myself I would look for a different shot of this falls this time.

The trail was very busy as per usual as I hiked up to the falls on Saturday evening, with lots of people coming back down. It was hot, very hot. There were no mosquitoes, well not too many. I did have to don bug juice for the hike back down later that evening. The waterfall was flowing pretty good, as I expected. Horsetail Falls has great flow for most of the summer, even in a bad snow year.

I arrived at the waterfall probably a bit later than I should have. The falls was already in shade at 5:30PM, and the best light is really immediately after it first goes into shade, so I should have been there a bit earlier, but I think I got a few good photos while it was still in some good warm light.

The trouble with finding a different composition of Horsetail Falls is that there is none. The comps I was examining that I liked were just far too dangerous to try to get to. The rocks are slick around this waterfall, and this is not a waterfall where you want to go swimming.  I tried this composition a bit further back. I think I have photographed from here before, but did not get anything I liked, so I tried again, and I do like this shot this time around.

I was the last one off the mountain at the end of the day, though I did encounter a few latecomers on the way back down. I took my time on the way down, went to Lower Horsetail Falls as well. It was a lovely day, and I was glad to get out and enjoy it.

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Independence

Happy 4th everyone! I have not been out hiking lately. I find it very hard to get motivated when it is hot out, and it is only the beginning of July! So anyway, enjoy this image from the Tuolumne River, Yosemite. This is one of many small waterfalls on the river below California Falls, but this is one of the nicer ones, 34 ft. high, which I call Lower California Falls.

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Upper Foggy Falls

It has been a busy week in our house with our littlest one. Nekoda (only 7 years old) is on the Senior Dance Company team at Tricks Dance Studio. She had performances this week at the Placer County Fair, as well as four dance performances at their summer recital on Tuesday, and another two dances on Wednesday. It was a crazy week (especially for Dance Mom Tara), but she and her group did very awesome! I did not have my video camera (5D MK II) back for the performance on Saturday, but I did have it back for the recital on Tuesday, which I was very happy about.

This is Upper Tadpole Canyon Falls, one of two or three small waterfalls on this creek before you get to the big one. It is only about 15 ft. high, but it is a pretty one, and especially moody with the fog in the background.

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A Perfect Summer Day

A rainy, foggy day in the summer. Now that is a rarity around these parts, and when it happens on a Saturday, you know I am going to be out enjoying it. No mosquitoes, no heat. A new 150 ft. high waterfall found, with a fantastic viewpoint, and a strenuous off-trail hike to reach it. For me, this is truly a perfect day.

As I drove up Foresthill Rd in the early morning hours, I was driving through a steady light rain, and a thick dense fog. I was driving very slowly due to the fog and not having very much visibility. As I got closer to the Beacroft trailhead, a truck was coming from the other direction and the driver stopped me. The old man was telling me how awful the fog was up on the road, and he couldn’t see a thing, and that I should not go up there, and please drive extra careful. Ok, thanks Grandpa. Seriously, he was a nice old man, but I could not figure out why he was coming down the hill at this crazy hour, and even more strangely, why he said he had just driven up there earlier in the night. Now that makes no sense, but I figured it out later. This was the day of the Western States 100 mile endurance run, the single busiest day of the year on Foresthill Rd. The old man was a race volunteer probably. As I drove home later that morning, the traffic coming up the road was crazy (relatively speaking of course – it certainly was nothing like rush hour in Sacramento).

Anyway, I arrived at the Beacroft trailhead at first light, and began my hike in the light rain. The rain was pretty much steady for the entire hike, though there were a few breaks now and then. I was soaking wet by the end of the hike. My waterproof boots were squishing out water as I walked, my waterproof gloves were soaking wet on the inside, I was a drenched dog. It wasn’t so much the rain falling though that was the issue, it was the off trail hiking I was doing, plowing through wet brush for much of the hike. That is what really got me soaked.

The trail starts off nicely as it cuts over on the old Iowa Hill ditch. Construction on this old canal dates from around the year 1882 and was stopped in 1884, never finished thankfully. If it was in operation today, it would be sucking water horribly from several waterfalls, included among them Tadpole Canyon Falls. Today (in theory) you can follow this old ditch from Beacroft to Tadpole and beyond. But after about a mile of hiking, I came to a washed out section due to a slide, with a massive deadly dropoff on one side. I knew this was here because I had come down this route last year, and I had to bypass it by climbing above this section, and I did the same this year as well. This makes the hike much more difficult as you have to climb up steep terrain, but it is also much safer, and I like safer. The forest fire which raged through this area in 2008 makes the going easier in this section, as there is no brush on the forest floor to whack through. Indeed, it may have been impossible to hike this way before the fire. When I got over to Tadpole Creek, I began to have doubts. The creek was easily rock hopped across, but then what? The terrain on the other side looked just too steep to climb. From last year, I remembered seeing the canal on the other side had more washed out sections with steep dropoffs, and I did not think that looked like a good route. I could not see it on this day because it was so foggy. I made my way down to the creek, and further downstream. I came to a nice little 15 ft. waterfall, climbed down it, then found a place that looked easy to cross. A “trail” continued up the ridge on the other side. Maybe this would be do-able after all, but then I came to the brush. The late Russell Towle talked about a Big Brush on the other side of Tadpole that was completely impassable, even after the forest fire. This was not the Big Brush, but I think it was the beginnings of it. Again, I thought of turning back, but I was close now, so I pushed through it. Then all of a sudden, the going got a lot easier, and the brush was not as thick. I came to the ridge where I figured on my map that I should cut down to the waterfall. In short order, I made my way down to the end of the ridge, where I found a stunning waterfall and a fantastic viewpoint. This is why I love waterfallin! Wow, I was in awe. The only problem was that it was so foggy I could barely see the waterfall, but really that is what made this so awesome for me. It was the eeriness of this scene that really got me.  It was magical, peering though the fog into nothing, then seeing a white line of falling water appear out of that nothing.

It is a remarkable feeling standing in a spectacular place where so few people have been before. I know Russell Towle had been here, though his description did not mention a stunning waterfall or spectacular viewpoint. Nonetheless, I am pretty sure he had been to this very spot. But who else has been here before? Who else would even know there was a waterfall down here? It is a remote location and access is difficult. Perhaps now it may get more traffic that it is up on my website? But only for the real die-hards out there.

I set up my camera and began taking some photos. I had to use my old 5D camera, because the 5D MK II is not back from repairs yet. Surprisingly, the old 5D still works. I say that is surprising because it was not working before. I had sent it in to Canon for repairs, but it turned out to be too costly to repair it, so they sent it back to me un-repaired, but I think they actually did fix it for me anyway, at no cost. Speaking of no cost, Canon is not charging me to fix my 5D MK II either! I am not sure why, but I am not complaining. Thanks Canon, I will not be switching over to the dark side yet!

As I stood there taking photos, amazingly the fog lifted slightly for about 10 seconds. I took this photo. Then the fog rolled back in over the waterfall, and it did not lift again, though I waited for quite a while. Thank you God. Finally, it was time to start the wet climb back up to the car. I stopped off at the small upper falls to take some photos of that one, then continued across the creek and back to the car in quick time. It was a perfect day.

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