DAY 1. ALL ROARING ON THE WESTER FRONT

I had a permit for Yosemite this weekend and once again, I was not able to go. I think God does not want me to go to Yosemite this year. Tioga Pass Road was still not open on July 8. I thought for sure it would be open by July 4. Frankly, I am very disappointed. I know we had a huge snow year but all the other passes have been open for a long time now. Only Tioga Pass is still closed. Sigh. Well I already had the days off work. I should go somewhere else.

    New plan: Mokelumne Wilderness.
      I went into this area in early July 2019 to Cole Creek Falls. I found it very difficult because of all the snow. 2019 was a big snow year but not as big as 2023. How would it compare this year? Well …
        The snow levels were about the same as before. Some spots had more snow than before, others had less. (kinda weird). Bottom line, this was going to be a very difficult hike. I was going much further than Cole Creek Falls this time.
          I started out an hour earlier than in 2019. That year it took me 5.5 hours to hike 8.5 miles. This year it took 6 hours. Once again, I was spent. It is very hard walking on snow. Twice as hard as on a trail. It is never flat. There are a lot of ups and downs. It is extremely tiring. I was not even finished. I still had another 2.5 miles to hike.
            I was not really expecting so much snow. It looked completely clear on the satellite after you got to the top of the ridge, but there was snow all the way down in the canyon. This made the trail impossible to follow (in addition to it being so tiring).
              A couple other things I was not expecting: (1) no mosquitoes. I really thought they were going to be horrendous at 7300 ft. elevation. However, I found a small but lovely campsite out in the open beside the creek and no buggers. There were a few that came out in the evening but nothing to write home about. (2) Wester Park Creek was massive and definitely not crossable (thankfully I did not have to cross it). It is well past peak flow now, so I was certainly not expecting it to be like this. Should make for a great waterfall anyway.
                I relaxed in the afternoon and chatted with my wife (I had one bar of service on my phone). In the evening I went down to see the waterfall. Another thing I was not expecting: the waterfall was absolutely huge. Upper Wester Park Falls is 191 ft. in total height. A big cascade of 63 ft. followed by an enormous 128 ft. drop. It was very easy to get down to them. You could walk down right alongside the upper cascade, then it was an easy scramble to the bottom of the lower drop. I chatted with my wife some more while I waited for the sun to go down before I could take photos.
                  I returned to camp and went to bed. I was incredibly tired. But if I thought this day was a frustrating and tiring one, tomorrow would be far worse …
                    2 Comments

                    2 Responses to “DAY 1. ALL ROARING ON THE WESTER FRONT”

                    1. Michael Kiyomoto Says:

                      Fantastic waterfall!

                    2. leapin26 Says:

                      it is! thanks Mike

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