Day 0: North Lake Trailhead to Piute LakeMiles: 3.6 mi
Vertical feet: 1458 ft
A fully loaded pack. After getting my permit and trying to kill as much time as possible (Wilson's Eastside Sports... such trouble) in the hundred degree weather in Bishop, CA, I finally decided to go ahead and drive to the trailhead a few days ahead of schedule. After parking my car, I proceeded to explode everything in my car over the parking lot and in the next two hours carefully find every tiny nook in my backpack to try to stuff in just one more thing. Around four in the afternoon my backpack was fully loaded and probably weighed about 55 pounds; I could no longer avoid the inevitable... it was time to start hiking. I started up the trail toward Piute Pass wondering exactly what I was getting myself into and if I just go to a spa for the next two weeks instead.
Day 1: Piute Lake to the Junction of Piute Creek and the JMTMiles: 13.4
Vertical feet: 465 ft
Piute Lake from the top of Piute Pass. After climbing up to 11,000 ft on my first evening, I finally found a camp site at Piute Lake and tried to get used to being in the backcountry by myself. Dinner that night was my first inkling that I might have brought too much food. As I cooked dinner, I found myself stuffed after I had eaten less then half of the chicken and pasta I had made, with no hungry hiking partners to help me finish the last of the food. Despite setting the rest of it aside for breakfast (cold pasta? eew...), I still went to sleep with quite a stomach ache.
Looking back at the west side of Piute Pass from Humphrey's Basin. The alpine area up here was absolutely incredible with wide open expanses looking up toward the Glacial Divide to the south. I can't wait to get back here to explore the hundreds of alpine lakes that are scattered throughout the area.
Hiking 13 miles on day 1? Bad idea. As the trail winded down Piute Canyon toward the South Fork of the San Joaquin River, it felt absolutely endless. Here I first learned the lesson that I kept learning over and over again throughout my hike; hiking downhill can often be just as difficult as hiking uphill. As I stumbled across the scree filled slopes that characterized the lower sections of this valley, all I could think of was how much I wanted a flat place to camp. When I finally fell into camp, I discovered that it is possible to get blisters on ones hips... but food and sleep are the best cures to help make it all better. 
1 comment:
Wow, Piute Lake looks beautiful. I'll have to try that hike sometime...
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