At 3PM I started my hike up to Tiltill Valley. Again, I anticipated it would take 1.5 hours to climb 3 miles with 1000 ft. elevation gain. This time I was close to spot on, but it is a grueling hike. I counted 30 switchbacks. It was relentless. A girl coming down the mountain said the trail flattens out ahead. She lied. Only in the last half mile or so once you reach the meadow does it actually flatten out.
Tiltill Valley meadow is a swampy mess that you must cross. There are no two ways about it, your feet are getting wet. I quickly gave up trying to find a way around the swamp and just splashed right through it. The water was up to my ankles or thereabouts and it was not difficult, just wet and very cold.
You can see Upper Tiltill Creek Falls from the trail and there is a faint path from the trail up to the waterfall. Obviously people have been here before. I was surprised about this. I was expecting another completely hidden and unknown waterfall discovery. Yet even though people may have been here no one has ever documented it before. I am the first.
This is surprising because Upper Tiltill Creek Falls is a fantastic waterfall, 88 ft. high in two tiers, and it is not difficult to reach. It is, however, very difficult to photograph. There is a ton of brush at the bottom and there is no place or angle I could find to photograph the bottom tier of the waterfall. The creek was not easily crossable but I don’t think the other side would have yielded a better viewpoint anyway. I settled on just photographing the upper (bigger) tier of the falls. You can climb right up to the upper section and it is right in your face with the refreshing mist washing over you. It is a very cool spot. There is a big drop-off right below you as you stand on the slick rock but let’s not worry about that. For now. A little newt beside me was also enjoying the refreshing waterfall as I waited for the sun to go behind the hillside.
The waterfall came into shade at 6PM right on schedule. I took my photographs and then very carefully climbed back down from the upper tier. Back on the trail, I had more time than I did the previous night but once I hit the big downhill section, I jogged all the way down the mountain and I arrived at my camp right at sunset. It was a perfect afternoon in Tiltill Valley at Yosemite National Park.
April 29th, 2025 at 7:33 am
While a lot of people with dogs would ruin it more than a lot of people ruin the backcountry… sure would be nice to enjoy it out there with Journey