Sign up, and you'll be able to customize your font size and more! Sign up
Jul 24, 2024
9:42:49am
TheLoneCougar Adrielle?!
My 15yr old son and I just completed the John Muir Trail in 14 days. Here is a (brief) summary with pictures:
I had this in my FO and the Outdoor Adventures Premium Group, but was encourage to share in GenPop. We actually finished a little over a week ago, but took some time to compile my thoughts. We started hiking July 1st out of Yosemite (Happy Isles) and finished on top of Mt. Whitney on July 14th.

This is long, so hopefully it is enjoyable to read. A brief thank you to Doctor Rosenrosen and Turd Ferguson for some advice and encouragement.

So the TL;DR is this trip was absolutely fantastic. It was everything I thought it would be, and more. It was an amazing 14 days filled with everything you could think of: Fun, Beauty, Heat, Mosquitos, Thunderstorms, Pain, Twinges, etc. etc. etc.

Mostly my takeaways were this: This is some of the most beautiful country in the world. God is an amazing creator. I am so fortunate and blessed to have spent 14 days in the backcountry with my oldest son. Our young people CAN do hard things and not just succeed but thrive, WE HAVE to give them opportunities to do it.

How it started:
1e4c8932dba8795c3cb7fd6e11355c13.jpeg

How it finished:
14ddd6f7622f17803f6444bdaf0d734b.jpeg

June 29th:
Drove from Utah County to the Whitney Portal, dropped off cars, carpooled to Mammoth and spent the night there.

June 30th:
Entered Yosemite through the Tioga Pass, got our permits, drove down to Yosemite Valley, got dropped off, hung out at the Backpackers Campground and walked around the touristy places

Day 1: 18.86 miles and 8,057ft of elevation gain
Started: Yosemite Backpackers Campground
Ended: Ridge before Sunrise High Sierra Camp
fce3b4081e65ee6037e5be0400a3f3b2.jpeg

This was a really hard day coming out of Yosemite Valley. 8k feet of gain should tell you all you need to know. We got Half Dome permits as a part of our JMT Permits, so we added that onto the trip. It was really cool! Those cables are no joke!
79c678136a84eb33a42c2d5f09ed2f4f.jpeg

cce2e211875f8145239f4b327294461c.jpeg

The hike after Half Dome up was not fun. After the Clouds Rest junction there are many miles of burnout. A fire came through that area a number of years ago, so while the undergrowth was thriving, trees have not started to grow back. So it was hot and very exposed. It was a relief to get to camp finally. We did about 2 miles more than planned to make Day 2 a bit easier.

Day 2: 18.88 miles and 1,910ft of gain
Started: Ridge before Sunrise High Sierra Camp
Ended: Vogelsang Trail Junction (Lyell Canyon)

Day 2 was an easier day, once we crested the ridge it was pretty much all down hill the rest of the day with a gradual incline through Lyell Canyon. We hit 9 miles by 10am (we'd wake up around 5am pretty much every morning) but we were also feeling it from the day before. Achilles pain, IT Band pain, feet, ankles, etc. I was nervous about how today and tomorrow would go (first pass) as a result of how hard we pushed ourselves.

Walking past Cathedral Peak and Cathedral Lakes were pretty amazing.
4de9d352c174e12de266202ba0579497.jpeg

We stopped in Tuolumne Meadows at the post office to pick up a 4 day resupply and charge some of our electronics then finished the last 7-8 miles to the Vogelsang trail junction. We met a few PCTers there and another South Bound (SOBO) JMTer named Flo (Florian) from France. We'd spend a lot more time with Flo toward the end of the hike.

Day 3: 14.81 miles and 3,127ft of gain
Start: Vogelsang Trail Junction
End: Thousand Island Lake

Day 3 brought our first pass, Donahue Pass. It was super buggy with Mosquitos on the way up. I don't know if it was because it was our first pass, but it was not a fun one at all. The mosquitos played a big part in that but it also wasn't super scenic either.
4a48537e6a5d57989ec5f08bb121fced.jpeg

This pass also marks the boundary out of Yosemite National Park. I don't remember much of the day except we made it to our destination pretty early which would be the theme of the trip. We'd get started early (because of the heat dome), get a good amount of miles in, and arrive at camp somewhere between 1-4pm. It was actually really nice to get to camp early and just relax, get into the lakes or streams, and soak our aching feet, take creek baths, and/or do creek laundry.

Thousand Island Lake is STUNNING. These pictures are good, but don't do it justice at all.
fb87d28200245bc458f0db53725ca914.jpeg
8771a0c94158e3b1e575857100ee8fa7.jpeg

We met a couple of girls who had just graduated from UC Davis and decided to hike the JMT. They camped with us that night. One of them had never been backpacking in her life, the other had gone on two backpacking trips before...we found all levels of experience on the trail. Another guy from Japan joined us that night too.

Day 4: 19.22 miles and 2,915ft of gain
Started: Thousand Island Lake
Ended: Red's Meadow

Day 4 started beautifully!
e6d67f1e49ce64cfb43e046592d0c0cb.jpeg

We were making great time...until I realized I took us on the wrong trail for 1 mile, all downhill. Ugh. I was so frustrated with myself. We had to go back uphill 1 mile and then continue uphill for the route to Red's Meadow. Even with the additional 2 miles (so upsetting) we felt we could still make it to Red's Meadow "resort" by lunch time and get a meal at their grill for lunch AND dinner. We pushed hard but made it. We passed Devil's Postpile, but didn't get close as we were in a hurry to make it for lunch. A really cool rock formation!
c8cc688ab58b951a13b41cf6acff8748.jpeg

My wife ended up calling Red's Meadow and got us a cabin there for the night! Clutch. I also think it helped my son out who was still having a few physical challenges. The food really helped too, he is definitely a food motivated kid! So we gorged on lunch and dinner there and were able to sleep in beds that night and do some laundry. Red's Meadow has a bus that runs into Mammoth so a lot of hikers come in for food, then head to Mammoth to resupply or stay a night. It was fun to sit and talk with some PCT hikers that evening and hear their experience, nearly 900 miles into their journey.

Day 5: 15.61 miles and 4,096ft of gain
Started: Red's Meadow
Ended: Lake Virginia

We got started especially early this morning because Red's is pretty low in elevation and we knew were going to be climbing a lot. Thankfully the climb was pretty gradual so we were able to make really good time. I think we got to lake Virginia around 11:30am or Noon. It was another great day to just relax by the lake, take a nap, and clean up a bit. There isn't much that happened today. We met a couple older ladies who came into camp around dinner. One of them, Diana, would join us the last few days of the trip similar to Flo.

Here is a pic on our way out of Lake Virginia the following morning.
5dc9d10819cee5a964efb680f567a93b.jpeg

Day 6: 14.58 miles and 1,917ft of gain
Started: Lake Virginia
Ended: Vermillion Valley Resort

Not sure what happened but my watch didn't seem to record the activity on Day 6 so the stats I listed are what we "should" have done according to my route creating. We planned to get into Vermillion Valley Resort for the 4:45pm ferry from the trail, across Lake Edison, to the resort. VVR is a popular place for hikers to stop with two ferries, one leaving in the morning the other in the evening. We planned to stay 24hrs there and rest up, eat, shower, laundry, and relax. My son and I got another room that night and it was nice. We also had our big resupply there for the remainder of the trip, 7 days. We sent big 5 gallon Home Depot buckets with our food and realized all that food would not fit into our bear cans. We both carried a BearVault 500 and had to toss some food away to fit everything. I didn't take any pictures but VVR was a great stop. The food was dang expensive but the sizes/portions were AMAZING. Super grateful to be able to stop there and do a little recovery.

We did go up and over Silver Pass before descending to Lake Edison.
462942f1076b59f6e27742e2c5391c2b.jpeg

Day 7: 8.81 miles and 2,576ft of gain
Started: Vermillion Valley Resort
End: Random camp site over Bear Ridge

We stayed at VVR all day and took the 4pm Ferry out. We didn't do many miles, but wanted to get over a gnarly ridge called Bear Ridge. That was not fun to do in the heat of the day with the sun beating on the ridge. Luckily we had decent tree cover. While in VVR we had WiFi and could see that the temperatures were +17 degrees higher than "average." We first learned here that there was a "Heat Dome" over the Sierras. It made sense now. It was hot and we hadn't had ANY cloud cover since the trip started. Now started the real hike. No accommodations, no "civilization" until we left and got out at the Whitney Portal on the 14th. I was feeling a bit nervous, especially for my son. But boy he ended up being just fine. I left VVR with a pack weight of 32.5lbs (including our food and 2 liters of water) my son was at 33lbs (he carried a 1lbs chair the entire trip!). It was the heaviest we'd be all trip long.

Breakfast that morning:
4f37eeb2f090d04430b72200733452ea.jpeg

Day 8: 19.48 miles and 2,802ft of gain
Started: Random camp over Bear Ridge
Ended: Near the broken bridge on the South Fork of the San Joaquin River

Today was a day I had been anticipating for a while. We'd essentially be going over a pass a day until the end of the trip and we added a bit to our plan on this day to try and ford the South Fork of the San Joaquin River. Last year the heavy snow broke a bridge here and this river is not an easy one to ford. It is pretty narrow everywhere will strong flow. I have been watching reports all spring and early summer long. If we couldn't ford it, we'd be doing Andrew Skurka's "Up and Over" route which would had 2.5 miles and 1,200ft of gain, and was taking on average of 3hrs to complete. As we talked to PCT hikers coming North Bound (NOBO) are fears were calmed. Most people were easily able to ford it, so we did too.

Seldon Pass with the Marie Lake below
52a4999d8a465b497f55e681886c8f27.jpeg

My old college roommate fording the river
dff3f244f9ecc46ae44bb571c57061f4.jpeg

Day 9: 19.38 miles and 4,244ft of gain
Started: Near the broken bridge
Ended: Below Muir Pass

This was the day I was really looking forward to and probably my favorite day. We would be going up Evolution Valley, past Evolution Lake, over Muir Pass and Muir Hut. This ended up being my favorite day on trail. There are three lakes that lead up to the pass, Evolution Lake, Sapphire Lake, and Wanda Lake. It was fun to hike past all of them and watch as they all flow down into each other. It was gorgeous.

7d68bf1baf62ea21c136917aacc8517b.jpeg
604d1fc24d8a128de147711cf4eac603.jpeg

We descended about 4 miles below the pass and hit a few places with snow on the trail, the most we'd see the entire trip. I was grateful to be descending on this side of Muir Pass. Going NOBO over Muir Pass would not have been very fun. It was brutal and relentless for those folks.
d788d9fd233d81e21847d56ea515b2b4.jpeg

Day 10: 15.90 miles and 3,262ft of gain
Started: Below Muir Pass
Ended: Upper Palisade Lake

This was a no pass day, although we made up for it by doing the Golden Staircase right before hitting our campsite. The Golden Staircase is a pretty brutal uphill to reach the Palisade Lakes. The rock is gold in color and the area is 100% exposed, so when the sun is shining it looks even more golden. Anyway, the trail after our campsite and through the valley was beautiful and some of the nicest trail all day long. The scenery was nearly as stunning as the day before.
db44cc04792dabe9f5924db7f266cd39.jpeg

We passed the "Muir Monster" and my son wanted a picture of us getting eaten. He calls it The Whale. It was a fun little break to spend with him there for a few minutes. This is a smaller iconic piece of the trail
b73019aeabe65fb23623e07e032f8e47.jpeg

The trail was nice in the valley
32383d0ef358bf8293015d4223182d9b.jpeg

That night at camp Flo and Diana joined us. We had seem them off and on the past few days, but they decided to stick with us from here on out. It was fun to have other join us. While we hiked different speeds during the day, we all stopped together and camped at the same place all the way to the end.

Day 11: 20.81 miles and 3,641ft of gain
Started: Upper Palisades Lake
Ended: Woods Creek

Today was the second hardest day for my son, outside of Day 1. Within 3 minutes of starting the day we were crossing a stream with a waterfall and my son slipped and fell into the stream a bit. He lost a few things in to the water that I was able to retrieve, but I think it really made him nervous as he could have fallen into a pretty swift moving stream and into a bit of whirl pool. Anyway, he banged up his knee and ankle a bit but came away unscathed, outside of being nervous of "what could have been." It was a two pass day. We did both Mather and Pinchot passes, then descended way to down to Woods Creek and another iconic feature of the trail which is a small suspension bridge which is pretty wobbly to walk across. There were also bear boxes there, so we could put our bear cans in those at night which was nice.

Mather Pass
1f6c832d81fcb82616f06a56f6045666.jpeg
9e965de0896144b9a3c6fb1fd0b22245.jpeg

Luckily the descent from Mather didn't take us very low in elevation so the climb up to Pinchot wasn't terrible. However about 1 mile from the summit my son, who I always kept ahead of me, turned and had blood pouring from his nose. I don't think he'd ever had a bloody nose before so he had no idea what to do. He had toilet paper in his pack so I set him down on a rock and told him to pinch it. After sitting for a while he said he was going to faint. He eyes were getting black and his hearing sounded like he was under water. I took his pack off of him and had him lean back on a flat rock. I was getting nervous. I didn't know what was going on and hoping that elevation sickness was not a problem. We still had another 12k foot, 13k foot, and 14.5k foot passes/mountains to do. There wasn't any easy way out either if things got serious. Once his nose stopped bleeding and he felt a bit better (we ate and drank a bunch) I had to exercise a lot of patience and just allow him to hike at his pace. We didn't stop on Pinchot Pass, just took a quick picture, then descended quickly. Ultimately things worked out just fine, but I was a bit nervous with the two events that day.

Pinchot Pass
dab2ea482264e2539ba64d0100bed14e.jpeg

Day 12: 16.24 miles and 4,920ft of gain (BIG DAY)
Started: Woods Creek
Ended: Bubbs Creek

There was a lot of gain on this day even though the miles were a bit smaller. We left Bubb's Creek and immediately hit about 2 miles of blow down/avalanche area where trees were all over the trail. It was challenging to find the trail in a few places while climbing up and over trees.
436280cf95a596a05ed4ef730ed1c22b.jpeg

We were climbing up toward Glenn Pass and I was excited to go past the Rae Lakes which is a very popular and beautiful place to stay. We didn't stay there but the mosquitos were absolutely atrocious during this stretch. The Rae Lakes were absolutely stunning though.

This is Upper Rae Lake and we stopped here for breakfast.
2ab4dc3601b5e88cf3c43f493635ee85.jpeg

The ascent up to Glenn was a bit of a slog. I think part of it was that we couldn't see the summit until we were right near the top. The height and the ascent were terrible, just couldn't see much and didn't know when this would end.

Glenn Pass
a727375a35b013e93629f7f4f36c57a5.jpeg

Nothing remarkable descending Glenn Pass to Bubbs Creek. Just pretty country and Bubbs Creek also had a bear box to put our stuff in. We met a woman there doing the PCT in sections. She was just retired from some Canadian government organization but she was likely quitting as the Sierra's were just too much for her. She was certainly older and not in the best of shape, but I was impressed nonetheless with her determination.

Day 13: 21.28 miles and 5,171ft of gain (HUGE DAY)
Start: Bubbs Creek
End: Guitar Lake

This was our biggest day. We had originally planned to stop a few miles short at Crabtree Meadows and camp there, but decided to do a few extra miles to Guitar Lake and set ourselves up to sleep a little more before a sunrise summit of Whitney. The heat dome had passed the day prior some temps were a little cooler and clouds had moved in. I had been getting weather reports through my Garmin InReach Mini 2, and there were chances of rain and thunderstorms that I was a bit nervous about.

As we started climbing up Forrester Pass (13,200ft!) we could see clouds starting to build that didn't look nice. The ascent was pretty mild actually with longer switchbacks that were not terribly steep, but about 10 minutes from the top the storm hit. We were getting hit by rain and cold weather ascending the switchbacks, luckily no lightening or thunder. It was cold, wet, and windy. I tried to take a picture of the pass like I have done on all of them, but in my haste ended up taking a screen shot instead of a picture. It was nuts up there.
cdb563314dd88f7e965c75b6a056f55c.png

However, as soon as we crested the summit and dropped to the other side the weather was amazing with a beautiful rainbow.
9c3f3d9a359fbc5442b53e8ac0932887.jpeg

We descended Forrester and ran into a lot of people that day. We went through the Big Horn Plateau and stayed at pretty high elevation. Once we hit Crabtree Meadows, we let my son decide whether to stop for the day or go onto Guitar Lake. One of the guys in our group offered him a Snickers and an extra backpacker's pantry breakfast, so after a little rest he decided to take the food and head to Guitar Lake.

We got there with about 90 minutes to spare. We set up camp, filtered water, got dinner going, and hunkered down as a big storm came through. Guitar Lake sits at 11,500ft so we had no cover from this storm at all. Lots of rain, wind, and there was definitely lightning and thunder. It was at a 6/10 on the nervous factor and was wondering if my son was going to be ok. He ended up being just fine and was more annoyed that he couldn't get to sleep, haha! We were planning on waking up at 1:30am the next morning, so he just wanted sleep.

Here is a shot at Guitar Lake and we camped just up from the grassy area you can see.
aefc991348e472b4c04051e84e21924e.jpeg

The storm lasted about 2hrs them blew away and the rest of the night was just fine.

Day 14: 16.2 miles and 3,481ft of gain (LAST DAY!)
Start: Guitar Lake
End: Whitney Portal

We got up at 1:30am and started on the trail about 2am. It was a slog in the dark to get going, especially since you can't see too much. We saw a headlamp or two above us, but hard to see how the trail got from where we were to where the headlamps were. Anyway, there was a bit of a climb out of Guitar Lake but after that the switchbacks were super long and not very steep which was so nice. We eventually got the junction where the trail from the backside of Whitney and the trail from the frontside come together. That was at about 13,300 feet. The junction is a nice place to drop backpacks and hit the last 1.9 miles up to the summit. I had my son drop his pack. I carried water for him and a few snacks. I dropped my bear can which i put some of my heavy stuff in, so my pack was pretty dang light going up to the summit.

We got the summit at about 5:20am which was 15-20 minutes before sunrise. It was amazing (and cold)!
e8d578162ddb0bca663968b6d9ddd7b7.jpeg

This is our group of four with Flo and Diana.
8e8eb32f88d4df13c30d5e0ef220be86.jpeg

The descent was absolutely terrible. 8.7 miles down and over 6,000ft of descent. There is a section called the 99 switchbacks and my son counted 97. It was rough. Lots of people going up. The trail was beautiful though, I just felt really bad for all the people going up!
3d838222cbd2e81aa4adb37c34c7a796.jpeg

My two buddies made it down about 20 minutes before my son and I. We finished at 10:30am and it was glorious. There is a grill there at the bottom that we made it to right in time for lunch, I kept baby wipes in my trunk to clean off with a clean set of clothes, we took Flo and Diana down to Lone Pine, and then we took off.
dd32d78490aa86b71c658cb2c3cc6592.jpeg

We drove from Whitney through Death Valley (my car said it hit 118 degrees!) through Vegas, and then finished in Ivins where my dad has a condo. We stayed there and showered and just crashed. I worked for about half day before getting in the car and driving back to Utah County.

Am amazing trip! I won't say once in a lifetime as I would love to do this again, but doing it with my 15yr old son was pretty amazing. I have no idea if he will want to do anything like this again or not. Hiker amnesia needs to set in. I've noticed after these trips that I don't want to touch my gear or even think about backpacking for a few weeks, but then the "amnesia" kicks in and I start planning the next one.

I don't know what else to really say as this is a novel, but feel free to ask my anything. The trip is still distilling on me and I am trying to process all of it. It was an incredible spiritual experience for me as well, but that is a totally different story.

If you are still hear and reading, you deserve a gold star! Thanks for joining me on the journey, hope this is fun for you to read.
TheLoneCougar
Bio page
TheLoneCougar
Joined
Dec 10, 2015
Last login
Sep 19, 2024
Total posts
22,551 (4,736 FO)
Messages
Author
Time
Jul 24, 9:56am
Jul 24, 10:46pm

Posting on CougarBoard

In order to post, you will need to either sign up or log in.