Friday, December 13, 2019

TCT #25 -- Trips to Take

Snowshoeing @ Pinecrest, March 2011
Trail Heads, we're gonna go snowshoeing!  Our first outing of 2020 will be on Saturday, 1/4 (remember, our hikes are FIRST SATURDAYS year-round rain or shine).  So far, the outlook looks promising for a snowshoe hike.  If somehow all the snow melts by 1/4, we'll take a hike to Catfish Lake, east of Pinecrest.

You'll need to provide your own snowshoes.  Here are some FAQs about snowshoes:
  • May I rent snowshoes locally?  Yes, at Sierra Nevada Adventure Co. (downtown Sonora, Murphys, and Arnold) or Heidi's (Cold Springs).  Also, try borrowing by putting the word out within your social network.
  • Are snowshoes big and bulky?  The comical snowshoes of Saturday morning cartoons are long-gone.  Today's snowshoes are light and easy to walk in, and there's usually crampons in the toe at least to help with traction.  I use a pair where each "shoe" is about 8" wide and about 26" long.
  • Do you need special shoes or bindings for snowshoes?  No.  Actually, "snowshoes" is kind of a misnomer; they probably should be called "snowframes."  They're really just a wide platform with built-in bindings that attach to your snow boots and keep you aloft as you walk in unpacked snow.  You can also wear galoshes or your regular hiking boots with waterproof gaiters.  You step into the binding attached to the snowshoe frame and tighten it onto your foot using clips or straps.
  • Is there any other gear I need to snowshoe?  You should bring your hiking poles with the tips converted to snow baskets.  You'll need these to help you get up if you fall -- which I invariably do!
We lucked out on our December 7 hike on the Lakeside Trail
at the Blue Oaks Recreation Area at Don Pedro Lake near La Grange.  We dodged the expected atmospheric river and had a largely rain-free outing under dramatic clouds.  Our reward:  A double rainbow!  The trailhead for the Lakeside Trail is adjacent to the Blue Oaks Group Area at Don Pedro Lake near La Grange.  If you go, be aware that there is a $10/vehicle parking fee and dogs are NOT allowed.  The trail skirts the lake's high-water mark.  It's fairly easy with some hills but no appreciable elevation gain.  It ends at Buzzard Point, for a one-way distance just shy of 6 miles.  Our friend Seth Connolly from Tuolumne River Trust and a couple of interns, Jenna and Caitlyn, joined the trip.  They shared info about the lake's natural history and construction.  Seth says TRT will be hosting some snowshoe trips at Pinecrest this winter.  Keep up with TRT's news and activities through this link to the Tuolumne River Trust webpage: tuolumne.org
As the year ends, I have a lot thank yous to people who helped make this project successful, starting with interviewees and resources: Diana Fredlund, Molly Day, Curtis Kvamme, Sabra Purdy, Leslie Smith, Guy McCarthy, Joel Silverman, Hilary Maxworthy, Pat Sanders, Karie Lew, Lisa Murphy, Erin Naegle, Kathi Joye, John Buckley, Anca Husher, Tom Hofstra, and Jeff Tolhurst.  Thanks to Diana Beasley for her fantastic art work which yielded our great logo and cool t-shirt design.  I'm grateful for friends who joined me on special hikes:  Sheri Betz, Ann Thompson and Sabine Wahl-Berry, Andria Hernandez, Corinne Grandstaff, Shelly Davis-King, Gary Stockel, and Barbara Balen.  To Trail Head Brian Burns, thanks for all your help with the human herding!  Super-special thanks to Ellen Stewart and fond, loving memories of David Purdy, KAAD'-LP's mom and pop.  Thanks to Robin Eschner for permission to use her late husband's composition for our theme music; when you hear "Switchback" by Bill Horvitz, it's time for TCT!  Big love and endless thanks to my husband, Dean Zaharias.

Wendy & Rebecca
A bittersweet thanks and farewell to Rebecca Andrade.  Getting to know Rebecca better and to work with her was one of the highlights of my year.  She's moving on, though, in a full-circle way: she'll be working with the California Conservation Corps., where she started out in her wilderness career, up in Humboldt County, where she went to college.

Our December 2019 episode, TCT #25 -- Trips to Take, includes a farewell chat with Rebecca (warning: we met at Serventes, and there's some background noise).  Instead of our regular "3 T" audio trip reports, the Trail Heads who went on the Don Pedro hike share their hiking (and backpacking) wish lists.  We're gonna do our best to hit 'em all in 2020, haha!  Also, we include Anca Husher's smartphone astronomy app recommendations.  Here's a link to the audio of the episode:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/16FkNamgePjbOwTgHQzgSlYX9aZ7W31qS/view?usp=sharing

Sharing some upcoming non-TCT events:
  • 12/14/19, Saturday - Central Sierra Audubon Society Christmas Bird Count - Sonora.  Contact Steven Umland (stevenum71@gmail.com)
  • 12/14/19, Saturday - Geminid Meteor Shower viewing event at New Melones Lake, Tuttletown Recreation Area.  Meet at 6pm at Eagle Point Picnic Area.
  • 12/16/19, Monday - Central Sierra Audubon Society Christmas Bird Count - Groveland.  Contact Steven Umland (stevenum71@gmail.com)
  • 12/21/19, Saturday - Winter Solstice Trail Work Day at Dragoon Gulch.  Contact Kevin Anderson (anderson95370@gmail.com) for details.  (By the way, here's a link to a sweet video about the VO-Cal Dragoon Gulch Trail Extension work weekend: https://vimeo.com/368934792.)
  • 12/28/19, Saturday - Central Sierra Audubon Society Christmas Bird Count - Calaveras.  Contact Keith Maurer (kandsmaurer@goldrush.com) for details
  • 1/1/20, Wednesday - New Year's Day Hike at Peoria Mountain, New Melones Lake.  Meet at 10am at Peoria Wildlife Area, end of Old Melones Dam Rd.
  • 1/25/20, Saturday - Lunar New Year (Year of the Rat!) Trail Work Day at Dragoon Gulch.  Contact Kevin Anderson (anderson95370@gmail.com) for details.



Saturday, November 16, 2019

TCT #24 -- Columbia College





Columbia College campus trails - don't walk un-signed trails alone!


Over the last few months, we've been steering you to events at Columbia College (Bat Night, Madagascar).  Besides a revolving calendar of fun programs to engage your intellect, Columbia always has a variety of recreational venues available to you anytime any day: The Labyrinth for rock climbers, the Fitness Trail/Par Course which circumnavigates the campus and follows the Gold Rush-era ditch, and the Arboretum Nature Trail which showcases rock formations and native plants.  In this episode, we talk to professors Tom Hofstra and Jeff Tolhurst about the trails at Columbia College.  The Arboretum Nature Walk handout is available in our "Pages" section.  We also talk to Columbia College physics professor Anca Husher about another alluring event:  Starry Nights Moon Gazing on November 22 at 4:30pm at the college's astronomical observatory.

Our next hike will be on Saturday, December 7, 2019.  We are going to Don Pedro Lake to walk the Shoreline Trail out of the Blue Oaks Group Area.  This is a little less than 6 miles.  We'll be walking above the high water level of the lake; there will be ups and downs, but no appreciable elevation gain.  If the visibility is good, we have a chance of seeing some high Yosemite peaks such Mt. Lyell.  We'll probably see a variety of waterfowl including Great Blue Herons.  Bald Eagles, Ospreys, and Red-tail Hawks like the area, too.  Dogs aren't allowed on Don Pedro trails, and there's a $10/car parking fee.  We're excited that Seth Connolly, our friend from Tuolumne River Trust, will join us on the hike!

Here's a link to the Don Pedro Recreation Area Shoreline Trail brochure:
https://www.donpedrolake.com/sites/default/files/2016%20trail%20brochure%20web%20version.pdf

As usual, our radio show includes our "Three T" audio trip reports from the trail.  Listen as the Trail Heads share what was trippy, tough, and tremendous about our outing along the Middle Fork Stanislaus River from Sand Bar Flat to Spring Gap.  The easy-to-moderate 7-mile hike is a riot of color in the fall as the deciduous trees drop their leaves.  The adventurous aspect of this hike was the drive to the trailhead, over 10 miles on a warren of unpaved, 4WD, high-clearance-required forest roads.  Put "Sand Bar Flat Dam" (or GPS coordinates 38.1844, -120.1565) into your navigation, and you'll get there.  Basically, though, you take Highway 108 east toward Cold Springs, Turn left on Fraser Flat Road.  It will be 45 minutes to the destination from here.  Cross the bridge and pass the campground.  Then the pavement ends and you'll take the following forest roads: 4N42, 4N01, 4N88, and finally 4N85.  Please review the route on a map before and as you travel!  Here are some photos from our fun outing:
Connie, Deverie, Brian, Dexter, Gay, Robert, Steve, Gary, Katie,
 Sue, Ruben, Brett & Mike
For scale: the boots are size 9.5!










Middle Fork Stanislaus River


Deverie and the
"Dalmatian Tree"
Ruben made a flute!

Dexter and Gay



Here's a link to the program, TCT #24 -- Columbia College:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nzYMtoLDW8lNNC2TqXCLvZbV7CJS93PT/view?usp=sharing

Friday, October 11, 2019

TCT #23 -- John Buckley


Middle Fork Stanislaus River,
east of Sand Bar Flat
A palette of autumn colors will please your eye on our November 2, 2019 hike up the Middle Fork Stanislaus River from Sand Bar Flat (near Cold Springs) to Spring Gap, a 7-mile round trip.  It's hard to say what's the most compelling attraction:  the river (always!), the Dogwoods and the Big-leaf Maples (duh!), the bright, pillow-y mosses on the rocks, the wildlife (all possible: Osprey, American Dipper, bears, river otters), or the remnants of hydro-electric infrastructure.

Listen to TCT #23 -- John Buckley for more about this hike which has become one of my annual fall traditions.

Nature journal!
As the episode title suggests, the program features an interview with John Buckley, the Executive Director of the Central Sierra Environmental Resource Center (CSERC).  John discusses the organization's beginnings, challenges, joys, volunteer opportunities, and advocacy work.  We also hear three-T trip reviews of the South Grove Calaveras Big Trees hike.  On that hike, Rebecca introduced us to nature journaling.  Listen as she shares reasons why keeping a nature journal enriches your experiences on hikes and in the wilderness.

Here's a link to the Central Sierra Environmental Resource Center (CSERC) webpage: https://www.cserc.org/

Here's a link to the radio program, TCT #23 -- John Buckley:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/1idf66wxIZ-G3pb6VGcpNU-kHiYDI4KnN/view?usp=sharing

Trail Heads at the Big Trees



















Donna & Sharon
Also, on 9/21, we took a "bonus hike" to the flank of Stanislaus Peak (via St. Mary's Pass Trailhead).  Here are a few photos:
Trail Heads @ 10k'


Brian

Friday, September 13, 2019

TCT #22 -- Summer Round Up

Wendy at the Shoshone Geyser Basin
August was a whirlwind of end-of-summer activities.  I was off in Yellowstone National Park's back country.  One of the group suffered back trouble, so we cut our 100-mile trip by A LOT.  We ended up doing a 25 miles in 4 days and 3 nights.  We returned to sivilization and followed up with two more day-hikes west of the Tetons and a tourist day in Jackson.

Many other Trail Heads took hikes and backpacking trips on their own.  And the group went up to Inspiration Point near Lake Alpine for stupendous trip.  If you missed it (as did I) watch for a "make up trip" in the near future.

Trail Heads at Inspiration Point
In early September we took a hike out of the Clark Fork Trailhead.  This was cause for celebration, as many trails in the area have been closed since last year's devastating Donnells Fire.  We had a robust group of 19 who enjoyed a picture-perfect day on the trail.

Listen to reviews of both Inspiration Point and Clark Fork River/Meadow on this month's TCT
Trail Heads at Clark Fork River Falls Overlook
episode.  We also hear about Rebecca's historic trails hike in the Carson Pass area which tied both trips together.  We catch up with Karie Lew about the upcoming Dragoon Gulch Trail Project (in Sonora on 10/12 and 10/13).  If you've been thinking, "I want to volunteer for that," well, now is the time!  Early commitment will aid in planning.  Here's the link: https://www.signupgenius.com/go/5080b4fa4a823aafc1-dragoon

Wondering where we'll be going for our October 5th hike?  South Grove Calaveras Big Trees State Park.  Mark your calendar!

Here's audio of the radio show:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nDA0dfIOdPrSaWZVtliI0AIAf95cJuNB/view?usp=sharing

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Evening Bat Hike, Jamestown - 8/20/19

Lisa Murphy, Erin Naegle & their bat gear
Hello, Trail Heads!
Next Tuesday, 8/20/19, we're having an evening activity:  a "Bat Hike," led by Lisa Murphy and Erin Naegle of Gold Country Bat Project (https://www.goldcountrybats.org/; interviewed in TCT episode 19, June 2019, available on demand here).

The "hike" is really more of an activity.  We've secured permission from Tuolumne Utilities District to use Quartz Reservoir, in Jamestown.  The hike will be a short, easy one along the gravel access road.  The focus is the bats!  We'll meet to carpool/caravan at 7; program starts at 7:30 and will run until about 9pm.

To receive meet-up instructions, email Wendy (wendylhesse@gmail.com) by 8:30pm Monday, 8/19.

If you miss this TCT event, don't fret!  MARK YOUR CALENDAR for Thursday, September 19.  Erin and Lisa are doing a bat program that evening at 6:30 at Columbia College.  The event starts with a short lecture in the Dogwood Forum then moves to the campus lake (San Diego Reservoir) for observation.

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

TCT #21 -- Kathi Joye

Kathi Joye & Stefano (a few years ago)
Wendy took a ditch walk with Kathi Joye, author of the "Day Hikes Along the Highway 108 Corridor" guide books, AKA, our bibles!  Most of the episode is devoted to Kathi's insights on writing guidebooks, favorite trails (it's hard to pick just one!), Leave No Trace, and staying found and safe when hiking.

Shelly Davis-King & Mi-Wok dwelling
Last November, we observed Native American Heritage Month with an interpretive presentation by Shelly Davis-King at the Shadow of the Mi-Wok Trail at Pinecrest (followed by a hike at Bell Meadow).  Shelly's talk was informative and evocative.  You Trail Heads responded with your hearts when you saw the disheveled state of the exhibit, a replica of a Mi-Wok village.  We're dedicating $5 of each T-shirt and sticker sale to whatever it takes to refurbish the site.  We've been in touch with Diana Fredlund, Public Information Officer for the Stanislaus National Forest.  Diana reports that there's major traction on the project!  She already has a team of volunteers set up for a trail service day in August (willing Trail Heads are welcome; we'll post dates and details here and on the Facebook page).  Over the winter work will be completed on new interpretive panels (this is where the money we raise will go).  In spring there will be a re-dedication ceremony.  Thanks for your generosity, Trail Heads!  We'll take orders for T-shirts again soon, and we'll provide contact information if you want to donate directly.  Photos of the merch below:
T-shirt front
T-shirt back


Slap a sticker on your car,
water bottle, or bear canister!















Iceberg Meadow
A year after the Donnell Fire raged through the Highway 108 high country, Clark Fork Road is open.
  Not all the trails are open to hikers, but the Clark Fork Trailhead is open, and it leads to a couple of worthy destinations -- Boulder Lake and Clark Fork Meadow (you can also access the St. Mary's Pass trails via cross-country route-finding).  We've been eager to take the Trail Heads into this area and are happy to be able to announce that our September 7 hike will be to Clark Fork Meadow, about an 8 mile round trip that starts in scenic Iceberg Meadow, climbs via switchbacks, then follows the Clark Fork River, leading to lovely Clark Fork Meadow.  We're thinking of offering car camping at a nearby campground then adding a second bonus hike/drive the next day -- maybe to the Bennett Juniper or Eagle Meadow.  Again, "watch this space!"

And here's audio of the radio show:  https://drive.google.com/open?id=10Zuek420YosGEOxN9gWv2xjasGQ50dap

Friday, July 19, 2019

TCT #20 -- Excited


View from Inspiration Point (by R Andrade)
It's summer, and it's exciting!  Roads and trails at the higher elevations are opening and trip-planning options are expanding.  Be careful out there, though.  The snowy winter means lots of runoff with streams running fast and full.

In this episode:

  • We get three T (what was tough, trippy, and tremendous) trail feedback about our acrobatic journey on the Tuolumne Main Ditch and Flume.
  • We have a couple of updates from Lisa Murphy and Erin Naegle (both biology teachers at Columbia College) Lisa has sad news from the Gold Country Bat Project -- White Nose Syndrome has been detected in California -- be sure to clean yourself and your gear when going in and out of caves that may contain bats!  Erin gives us an update on the fundraising effort, "Skip a Latte/Lager; Save a Lemur."  The goal is to bring Gerard Bakarizafy of Lokobe National Park in Madagascar to the US (and Sonora!) to attend the International Seminar on Planning and Managing Tourism in Protected Areas hosted by Colorado State University and the US Forest Service.
  • Rebecca talks about going to an off-the-grid wedding in Montana and how Independence Day was celebrated in 1850's off-the-grid Columbia.
  • Wendy talks about the bonus hikes and training for her long backpack trip on the Continental Divide Trail.
  • Finally, we divulge the destination of our August 3 hike: Powell Lake -- HOLD THAT THOUGHT!!  The trailhead for Powell Lake, Gianelli Cabin, is still closed, so our Plan B hike will be Inspiration Point at Lake Alpine.  Since the program gives no info about the hike, we'll share some of the reasons Rebecca landed on this hike: "The hike features the Emigrant trail following the shores of Lake Alpine, at 7350'.  The difficulty level varies along the hike.  Around the shore is easy, leading up to Inspiration Point is moderate, and getting on top of Inspiration Point is difficult for some (steep and hazardous footing).  Inspiration Point offers incredible views of Dardanelles, lakes and mountains of the Stanislaus National Forest.  Inspiration Point is a lava bluff, which in itself is a geological wonder of the local area.  The unique geology of the lava bluff also creates beautiful varieties of wildlife habitat and vegetation.  I hope you will join me for a fun-filled day, as Wendy is off enjoying her big hike!  I love the educational component of TCT; and, as a former Interpretive Ranger of Lake Alpine, I'm sure we will enjoy exploring together!" 
We'll save Powell Lake for a bonus hike later in the summer or early fall.

Here's a link to the audio of the July program.  Allow a moment for downloading: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MQyIsXfiZnBoard_zXErWCgcZcarqvf_/view?usp=sharing

Here are some photos from the Tuolumne Main Ditch and Flume hike.


The gang (by D. Morgan)


Trail Heads on flume on trestle (by D. Morgan)














Thursday, June 20, 2019

Announcing TCT merch!!!

On Tuesday I ordered our first batch of T-shirts (36!!) and stickers.  I'm hoping they'll be available for distribution on our 7/6 hike (Tuolumne Main Ditch and Flume -- one way from Lyons Dam to Twain Harte).  The fabulous design is by local graphic artist Diana Beasley.  Thanks, Diana!  We love 'em!


T-shirts are $20 for sizes S - XL.  For XXL & XXXL, add $2 or $4 to the cost.  We are proud to tell you that $5 of each T-shirt sale will go to a fundraiser to improve the Shadow of the Mi-Wok Interpretive Trail at Pinecrest.

We will have a supply of stickers available for $5 each.  After recovering the printing cost, the full amount of each sale will go to the Shadow of the Mi-Wok Interpretive Trail fundraiser.
Sticker/Front of T-shirt
Detail of back of T-shirt




Saturday, June 8, 2019

TCT #19 -- Lisa Murphy

Lisa Murphy & Erin Naegle
 & the bat-finding equipment
This month's episode of Tuolumne County Trailhead is short on voices -- I failed to get Three T mini trip reviews (what was Tough, Trip, and Tremendous) on our Pinecrest Lake loop hike.  We were so focused on the stewardship aspect of this National Trails Day hike that I simply spaced it out.  There were a dozen Trail Heads on the hike; as soon as we started walking, they started working, picking up all the trash and litter on the trail and a ways off, too.  Mainly we had plastic bottles and micro-trash, but we also found a wetsuit!  Pinecrest is a lovely destination for hiking (the lake loop trail is a fairly easy 4 miles), picnicking, boating, swimming, and just plain chilling.  It's a year-round recreation area with snowshoeing in the winter.

Here's a link to the US Forest Service webpage for the Pinecrest Lake National Recreation Trail:
https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/stanislaus/recarea/?recid=15077
Gay Hunt & litter haul

Anyway, no Three T trip reviews means more time for our main interview.  That's a good thing, too, because our subject, Lisa Murphy, has A LOT going on!  In this episode we limit ourselves to just three of her projects.  I'm sold on all of them, and I'm sure you'll be interested in at least one:  Bats in the Gold Country, Lemurs in Madagascar, California Naturalist certification at Baker Station.

Here's the link to the radio program TCT #19 -- Lisa Murphy so you can listen:  https://drive.google.com/open?id=1BHCmkHVgE4Fu5XgJMsUJmrqiELiCxW6N

You know, we're gonna do an evening bat hike.  When?  Watch this space!

Here's a link to the High Sierra Institute webpage with a schedule of classes being offered there (through Columbia College) including the California Naturalist Certification:
https://www.gocolumbia.edu/arts_sciences/highsierrainstitutepages/hsi-classe-schedule.php

Here's a link to the Gold Country Bat Project website: https://www.goldcountrybats.org/

Here's a link to the Go Fund Me page for Gerard Bakarizafy:  https://www.gofundme.com/hexfse-skip-a-latte-save-a-lemur-or-skip-a-lager

Flume just west of Lyons Dam
I've got a special treat planned for our July 6 hike:  We're going to walk the Tuolumne Main Ditch and Flume Trail from Lyons Lake to Twain Harte.  This is a little over 5 miles and fairly easy IF you don't have height or vertigo issues.  The ditch system is a remnant from the Gold Rush; it moved water from the high country to the placer mines in Columbia and other "dry diggings."  By now, the historic ditches do double-duty as infrastructure (still supplying untreated water to many communities) and recreation trails.  Some ditch trails are on private property and not accessible.  However, most or all of the Tuolumne Main Ditch is accessible to the public.  It's an adventure to walk it, though -- some of the time you'll be on planks above the rushing water; other times you'll walk on a dirt trail alongside the ditch; occasionally gaps are traversed by trestles.  This will be a one-way hike with a car shuttle setup.




Thursday, May 23, 2019

TCT #18 -- Karie Lew

Yellow Mariposa Lily
A memory came up on my Facebook page the other day:  "While walking the dogs this morning, I came upon a little girl in a tree singing a made-up song that went, 'Will it rain?  I don't know, but if it does, it'll probably snow.'"  Ten years later, we certainly resemble this remark!

Cross your fingers for good weather for our June 1 hike on the Pinecrest Lake National Recreation Trail.  June 1 is National Trails Day, and again TCT is cooperating with the American Hiking Society in a trail service day.  AHS invites us to take the pledge, "We saw how our public lands suffered during the government shutdown.  Together, we'll give back to the places we love and set the world record for the most people improving trails in a single day.  Be a part of history by pledging to clean up a trail or volunteering at a trail service project on National Trails Day."  Our service will be two-tiered:  we'll start with a Leave No Trace education session with Stanislaus Wilderness Volunteers at the Pinecrest Ranger Station; then we'll grab trash bags and clean up the trail as we hike the 4-mile loop around Pinecrest Lake.

Trail Heads on the Green Springs Trail
Rebecca and Wendy, your TCT co-hosts, plotted all this in the May edition of the radio program.  The show also features "three T" mini-trip reports (what was Tough, Trippy, and Tremendous) about the May 4 hike on Peoria Mountain.  We had Ranger Hilary Maxworthy of the Bureau of Reclamation along to provide interpretation about this lightly-visited area of New Melones Lake.  Noteworthy sightings include yellow Mariposa Lilies, poppies, an Osprey nest, and Half Dome!  Yes, we could see Half Dome, 55 air-miles away!



Trail Heads on the Peoria Ridge Trail; New Melones Lake on the right

The radio show also includes a lengthy interview with Karie Lew, the Sonora resident who is coordinating an ambitious weekend of trail-building on the Dragoon Gulch Trail in October.  The goal is to add a mile of trail over two days of work.  Karie hopes to recruit 150 volunteers and set a record for Volunteers for Outdoor California (V-O-Cal).   Karie is passionate about this project; you'll want to join her in the project for sure!  To volunteer or donate: contact Karie at dragoongulchtrailproject@gmail.com

Here's a link to the Union Democrat article about Karie's Dragoon Gulch project:  https://www.uniondemocrat.com/localnews/6947187-151/volunteer-group-to-add-a-mile-of-trail

Here's a link to V-O-Cal's webpage:  http://v-o-cal.org/home.html

Finally, Here's a link to the google drive file for the May 2019 Tuolumne County Trailhead radio program, TCT #18 - Karie Lew:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NEQwTSt7IIgxb3cbkep1bbF1OorQhNIT/view?usp=sharing



Tuesday, April 23, 2019

TCT #17 -- Joel Silverman

In this episode of Tuolumne County Trailhead, we get the inside scoop on hiking trails in the Stanislaus National Forest!  Listen to Rebecca and Wendy's conversation with Wilderness Supervisor Joel Silverman about his favorite "secret" trails in our three local wildernesses -- the Emigrant, the Mokelumne, and the Carson-Iceberg.  Joel and Rebecca also give a glimpse into the upcoming Stanislaus Wilderness Volunteers (SWV) annual meeting on Saturday, 4/27.  Rebecca is President of the SWV this year and has committed to a mercifully fast and efficient meeting from 10am to noon at 10 S. Forest Rd. in Sonora.  The group will then travel to Tuolumne to take a Leave No Trace Awareness hike at 1pm on the West Side Trail.  You don't need to be an SWV member to take the hike.  The mission of the SWV is to "preserve the wilderness character of designated public lands through education, example and coordinated effort in direct support of US Forest Service work in the Emigrant, Carson-Iceberg, and Mokolumne Wilderness areas of the Stanislaus National Forest."  The organization provides free training in Leave No Trace education and wilderness preservation and restoration techniques.  There's a membership dues of $50/year (which mainly covers insurance) which may be reduced for seniors/students/low-income.  Here's a link to the SWV website: http://www.swv1.org/


Sutter Buttes Geology
Dean Place, Sutter Buttes
Episode 17 also features a report of a "Remote Possibility" hiking weekend Wendy took with Trail Heads Corinne Grandstaff and Shelly Davis-King.  The threesome took two hikes in the Sutter Buttes: a "Wildflower Exploration" at Dean Place (near Yuba City) and a "Ranch Exploration" at Shaeffer Ranch (near Live Oak).  The Sutter Buttes are billed as "The World's Smallest Mountain Range" and are largely in private ownership.  Four families allow limited hiking through agreements with Middle Mountain Interpretive Hikes http://www.middlemountainhikes.org/.  Middle Mountain is what all the local tribes called the formation which was sacred to them all.


Gary & Wendy at Brushy Peak
Morgan Territory

Our April 6 road trip to Livermore to hike at Brushy Peak and Morgan Territory was lovely but sparsely attended with only Wendy and Gary Stockel making the journey.  Despite predictions of extreme weather conditions, it turned out to be a perfect day, and we explored another area that was sacred to native people.


Peoria Mountain Trail
Finally, for our next hike, May 4, we'll have Ranger Hilary Maxworthy along to guide us on a wildflower exploration of our own at New Melones Lake's Peoria area northwest of Jamestown.  Ranger Hilary has arranged to open the old New Melones Dam Overlook for parking for the hike and picnicking after.  We're planning on hiking a 6-mile loop that includes Peoria Mountain.  Mercifully, approaching the mountain from this starting point provides for a slightly less demanding haul uphill.  Thanks, Ranger Hilary!






Listen to the episode here (be patient while the Google Drive file downloads):  https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g8HNRaQ5m8Yd0vS8R3uaekDfAsdoRAf8/view?usp=sharing

Friday, April 5, 2019

Brushy Peak/Morgan Territory 4/6/19

Hello, Trail Heads!
We're sticking with Saturday, 4/6 for the Brushy Peak Hike.  Gary Stockel has offered to lead a bonus hike of 3 miles after we finish the main hike (7 miles; moderate-to-strenuous).  This will be to a Vulvon village site on Contra Costa Water District property accessed from Morgan Territory Regional Park, a short drive from Brushy Peak.  Unfortunately, dogs are NOT ALLOWED on CCWD property, so if you bring your pooch, you'll be limited to the Brushy Peak hike.  The addition of the hike to the Volvon village will lengthen our day, but will be SUPER-SPECIAL!  Thanks, Gary!

Please RSVP via reply to this email by Friday night.

To carpool/caravan, meet at the Jamestown Day-O between 8:15 - 8:30.  Or meet at the trailhead; hike starts at 10am.  We'll probably be back to Sonora around 6pm.

To get to Brushy Peak: From I-580 in Livermore, exit north at Vasco Road and immediately turn right onto Northfront Road. After about .8 miles turn left onto Laughlin Road and proceed approximately two miles to the staging area at the end of Laughlin Road.

Take care, stay dry & hope to see you soon!  -w

Thursday, March 14, 2019

TCT #16 -- Guy McCarthy

Welcome to TCT #16 for March 2019.  In this episode, we excerpt just a fraction of the crazy fun conversation Rebecca and Wendy had with Guy McCarthy.  Guy is the environmental reporter for the Union Democrat.  He also writes a periodic column called "Out There" about his adventures hiking and in the outdoors.  The program also includes 3-T trip reports (what was Trippy, Tough & Tremendous) about the soggy Old Don Pedro Overlook hike in the Red Hills on 3/2/19.  Wendy and Rebecca spend a little time catching up on field trips in late January and February AND we preview the upcoming hike to Brushy Peak in Livermore (on April 6).  Enjoy!

https://drive.google.com/open?id=13RIAr1xyZim8KOHBTeygmnLhle1Z4Lr6

Saturday, January 26, 2019

TCT #15 -- Leave No Trace

Here's a link to the February TCT radio show in which we talk about dogs on the trail, Leave No Trace, and the government shutdown.  We also chat with Leslie Smith about the Dragoon Gulch Hike and Run in Sonora.  We give trip reports of Dave Moore Recreation Area and Cosumnes River Preserve (Rebecca) and the Devils Slide trail (Wendy).  Finally, we talk about plans for the March 2 hike to the Old Don Pedro Overlook trail in Red Hills.

https://drive.google.com/open?id=1htQz_zEC0zRV0VuO3IDlI54BlrkyCFz6

Sunday, January 20, 2019

TCT #14 -- Angels Creek (hike date 1/5/19)


Here's the January episode of the Tuolumne County Trailhead radio program in which we:
  • Hear Trail Head reviews of the Angels Creek hike (3.5 easy miles at New Melones Lake, Glory Hole Recreation Area near Angels Camp)
  • Learn the plan for the February 2 snowshoe hike at Calaveras Big Trees State Park.  Bring your own snowshoes if you've got 'em.  If not, there are loaners available for free at the park; only cost associated with this hike is $10/auto parking.  We will carpool and caravan and share the cost.
  • Get a rundown of upcoming trail runs including the 2/24/19 Dragoon Gulch Hike and Run in Sonora -- pancakes, yoga, hiking!  Sun or snow!
  • Recommend a fellow KAAD-LP program -- Yosemite Can O Peaches by John DeGrazio.  This show is also available as a podcast.  The recent episode with Yosemite NP Ranger Sheldon Johnson, of "Buffalo Soldiers" fame, is especially notable.
Click this link to program audio on Google Drive:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1kdqAtkaXEMK3StLd-5DSJINPzSf-Bfll