Jawbone
I slept in my vehicle in a campground in the area. If sleeping in my vehicle, I could sleep anywhere, but I prefer the safety of a campground. If I were out on some remote road, I would not get any sleep at all, as I would be worried about crazy people coming by, bears, cougars, sasquatches, that sort of thing. In a campground, I do not need to worry about anything, and thus I can sleep much easier, but after paying the $20 for the campsite, if I had known that all they had for services was a simple outhouse, then I think I would have braved the sasquatches. Geepers, $20 for a parking spot and an outhouse!
I got up super early in the morning and drove up Cherry Lake Road to my first destination. I was surprised to learn that all the Forest Roads up here were paved, I was definitely expecting a much rougher route to Jawbone Falls. That made the trip much faster and I arrived at Jawbone Falls a bit before sunrise. In Danielsson’s Northern California Waterfalls book, he describes this waterfall as “just a small cascade”. Yeah, I do not think so. He obviously did not even visit this waterfall before writing his guide book! Jawbone Falls is a large horsetail waterfall, 52 ft. high. This is not a “small cascade” in any shape or manner. It is not a huge one by any means, nor a spectacular waterfall, but it is certainly a good one. You do need to be here early in the spring though, as Jawbone Creek has a small drainage, so once the snow is all melted, it will reduce to a trickle.
Speaking of snow, I did find some on the road past here, as I continued past Jawbone Falls to attempt to find another waterfall. At about 5500 ft., I had to turn around as there was too much snow on the road to continue. Strike one. This was the beginning of my bad day after visiting Jawbone Falls (Jawbone made my day start out very nice, but it would not continue that way).
For my second hike of the day I was in a bit of a dilemma where to go. It was a sunny day but I was really hoping to get to a second waterfall location before the light got bad. There are other falls on Jawbone Creek but they all get early sun so I had no chance for them. There were some on Granite Creek that got later sun or one on Cherry Creek. I chose Cherry Creek because that was first on my way back down the road. Bad choice. The hike started out very well, following a nice trail along Cherry Creek canyon. Apparently I was not the only one who thought so because I was following some fresh tracks all the way down the trail. At first I thought they were bear tracks (I am not very good at identifying animal tracks!) and when I got down the trail further into a clearing I could see bear poop (fresh and old) everywhere. Okay then it must be a bear I was following. The poop was definitely bear but when I looked at my animal tracks app later I realized that the tracks resembled much more like a mountain lion! If I had realized that at first, would I have continued hiking down that trail??? Well I did not make it far down the trail anyway. The trail ended quicker then it should have as it was supposed to descend much further down the canyon, but it ended up being much too brushy and overgrown with manzanita. I was forced to go back. Strike two. I am not sure where the bears and cougars went either.
The sun was up by the time I got back to my car, disappointed that I did not get to a second waterfall location. I made my way down to Granite Creek and I was surprised to find a steep trail descending from the road down into the canyon. I had never seen photos of this waterfall so I figured it was impossible and much too steep to get to. Should I go down? I decided to try it. It was incredibly steep but not exactly dangerous though there were a few tricky sections for sure. The trail continued down so I did as well. There was a lot of poison oak and I ended up getting the itch quite bad from this hike, as well as a tick bite (though that was probably from a later hike). It got more cliffy as I got down closer to creek level, and as I was scrambling down my hat came off and tumbled down the hill just stopping at the edge of the cliff. Oh gee, how would I get that? I went down as close as I dared but was still too far away to reach it so I grabbed a long stick and reached out to drag the hat back up to me. Whew. After this I made it around the cliff and down to a long sliding cascade; the sun was already on the falls but I took a quick shot. I realized that I was still too far downstream from the actual waterfall so I made my way upstream through the poison oak and finally came to the waterfall which was a big one but really impossible to shoot as it was hidden up in the canyon and only the lowest and smallest drop could be viewed. Strike three (sort of) for Granite Creek. I took some shots and this is when I realized my 24-105 lens was not working. Why? I did not drop it or anything, it just stopped working. I sent it in for repair when I got home. $300 to fix. Ugh.
January 22nd, 2015 at 10:35 pm
Thankfully don’t have a removable battery?