Saturday, December 12, 2020

TCT #37 -- Musical Musings

Maggie & Yogi were my most reliable
hiking companions in 2020.
Here we are at Rushing Meadow.

In November, a Facebook memory popped up from 2014.  Apparently, I'd listed my total miles walked/hiked from March to November of that year.  I was curious as to how 2020 compared (I had 200 more miles, wow!).  Of course, that precipitated a lot of list-making and a review of outdoor adventures in 2020.  Many of my outings were with you Trail Heads, but because of the pandemic, plenty of my trips were solo or with just a couple other folks.

This year the physical distancing has accentuated the interconnectedness of our lives and the preciousness of the people in our lives.  The reality of the pandemic was slow to come to Tuolumne County, but we're in the thick of it now.  But humans are resilient, and the vaccine is coming.  A life lesson we learned from hiking -- leave no trace, the golden rule of the outdoors -- applies as we come down the stretch in beating COVID-19.  It's all about the people, and the ripple effect of our actions have on others.  Keep
on flattening the curve, Trail Heads.  The end is in sight!


Ron Edson and Barb Owens enjoying
hot cocoa during our January
snowshoe outing to Crabtree Loop.
How the year 2020 panned out:
Introduction:  song = "Switchback," Bill Horvitz

We started out with COVID as a small blip way off on the horizon.  We were able to pull off three regular "first Saturday" hikes, and everything seemed hopeful as the new year dawned.
    Song = "Farther on Down the Road," Taj Mahal
    Hikes:
  • Snowshoeing at Nordic trails near Dodge Ridge (Crabtree loop)
  • Most of the trails at Tuttletown Recreation Area, New Melones Lake (interpretation by Pat Sanders)
  • Trio of trails at Columbia College (interpretation by Barbara Balen)

Robert, Bridgette, Chai,
Jessica & Billie on the
"Most of the Trails at Tuttletown" hike

Everything changed on March 19 when Governor Gavin Newsom issued the Stay-At-Home Order.  I mainly walked roads in my neighborhood and hiked nearby forest roads.  My doggos were my main partners, but I had a few "corona-bubble" friends who joined me on occasion.
    Song = "One Road More," Butch Hancock and Jimmie Dale Gilmore
    Hikes:
  • Snowshoeing at Sugar Pine Railroad Grade, Strawberry Branch
  • Big crowd of Trail Heads at the
    "Trio of Trails at Columbia College"
    Tuolumne Grove, Yosemite National Park
  • Sonora Community Trail
  • West Side Trail
  • Dragoon Gulch
  • Sugar Pine Interpretive Trail/Confidence Railroad Grade
  • Keltz Mine Road
  • Red Hills Serpentine Loop
  • Table Mountain to Peoria Mountain
  • Lyons Creek Road
  • Neighborhood walks

Stay-At-Home Order relaxed in June!
    Song = "Iceberg Meadows," Crawdad Republic
    Limited-attendance, socially-distanced Trail Head hikes:
  • Twain Harte to Lyons Lake via ditches and flumes up and Confidence Railroad Grade back

  • Arnot Creek Trail off of Clark Fork Rd.
  • Dutchess Mine Trail at northeast side of Parrotts Ferry Bridge, New Melones Lake, Vallecito

Trail Heads on a landing on the flume
heading to Lyons Lake
Yikes!  Memorial Day craziness results in resumption of restrictions.  Back to solo or "corona-pod"  hikes...
    Song = "Dreams Come True," Marcia Ball, Angela Strehli, and Louann Barton
    Hikes:
  • Herring Creek Trail
  • Bear Lake and Camp Lake from Crabtree Trailhead

...and camping and backpacking!
    Song = "California Stars," Billy Bragg and Wilco
    Hikes:
  • Three days and two nights backpacking in the Hoover Wilderness camping near Fremont Lake
    with a monumental 17 mile day hike including Chain of Lakes, Long Lakes, Cascade Falls, Lake Harriet, Piute Meadows, and Long Canyon.
  • Overnight backpacking trip to Summit Creek past Relief Reservoir
  • Car camping in Lee Vining for a weekend of day hikes in Yosemite.  Friday we went to Summit Lake from the Virginia Lakes Trailhead.  Saturday we humped up to the 13,061' summit of Mt. Dana.  Sunday we kept it mellow on the lovely Lyell Canyon trail.
    Trail Heads at Arnot Creek
  • Overnight backpacking trip to Koenig Lake via Pacific Crest Trail at Sonora Pass Trailhead
 
And more hiking and backpacking!
    Song = "Willin'," Little Feat
    Hikes:
  • Sonora Peak
  • Rushing Meadow
  • Four days and three nights backpacking in the Hoover Wilderness near Bridgeport.  Friday we
    hiked in to Peeler Lake.  Friday we walked through Kerrick Meadows in Yosemite National Park over to Iceberg Lake (10,000') then down Rock Island Pass to spend two nights at Crown Lake.  On Sunday, we took a day hike to stunning Mule Pass (10,400') with exceptional views of the Sawtooth Range and Slide Valley.
And in October we were able to have a weekend of limited-attendance, socially-distanced fall color hikes with the Trail Heads with
What large claws you have, Sheri!

interpretation by Ross Carkeet:
  • Saturday:  The Bennett Juniper and Telescope Peak
  • Sunday:  Barn Meadow and Eagle Pass

 Out-of-town hikes near Reno:
  • Snowshoeing at Chickadee Ridge near Incline Village, Lake Tahoe
  • Hiking at Brown's Creek
 
 China Flat to Sand Bar Flat, Beardsley Lake, with a small group of Trail Heads

Wendy, Sue & Corinne at Camp Lake
That's quite an exhaustive list of trails and outdoor adventures in this exceptional, exasperating year of
COVID.  But as fulfilling as getting out in the wild was, the best part of every trip was, and always is, the people.  Song = "In My Life," The Beatles

Please take care on this home stretch as we await COVID-19 vaccinations.  Your actions make a difference!  Song = "Ripple," Grateful Dead





Here is a link to the December 2020 Tuolumne County Trailhead program, TCT #37 -- Musical Musings:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1dzAbTnEv-9ACJsrzaIvZKrf6DmBF0biw/view?usp=sharing 


Sheri & Wendy on the summit of
Mt. Dana (13,061'), Yosemite

Mike on the summit of
Sonora Peak (11,464')

















Rest stop en route to Koenig Lake






Selena & Ann at
Mule Pass (10,500')





Gals' hike on one of the county's ditch trails


Scrambling up to Telescope Peak
(near the Bennett Juniper)

Sabra, Wasco & Lundy in Eagle Meadow

Corinne & Deb at
Chickadee Ridge near Incline Village














Here's to my husband, Dino.
Thanks for your support and
encouragement, Handsome.
I couldn't do any of this
without you!


Sunday, November 29, 2020

TCT #36 -- Ron Good on John Muir

Ron Good in John Muir's "Scribble Den"

For the final radio show of our third season, I had a "glorious" conversation with Ron Good about John Muir.  Ron is a former Tuolumne County resident who now resides in Washington.  Ron was employed by the Sierra Club for many years, founded and ran Restore Hetch Hetchy, and has been an interpretive ranger with the Forest Service in several locations including the John Muir Historical Site in Martinez, CA.  Ron's love and admiration for Muir is discernable even through the less-than-optimum Zoom audio recording.

Muir had many accomplishments and a major legacy is the Sierra Club, which Muir founded in 1892.  Muir also served as the Sierra Club's first president.  This summer, the club's current executive director, Michael Brune, wrote an article called "Pulling Down Our Monuments."  The article appeared to have been motivated by the "2020 Summer of Racial Reckoning" (USA Today, New York Times).  To me, it's worthy to review past actions, to recognize and address shortcomings, and to commit to do better in the future.  After reading Brune's essay many times, I believe this is where he was going.  However, it initially struck the world as "the Sierra Club is

Sequoia planted by Muir

disowning John Muir because they say he was a racist."  And heartache and confusion struck.  Ron and I discussed the issue, though I didn't include any of it in the episode.  I decided a half-hour feel-good radio show about hiking wasn't the place to dig into such complex matters.  I'll talk about it a bit here, and I'll offer you some links and resources to grapple with it yourselves -- if you so chose.

First of all, here's a link to Michael Brune's article:  https://www.sierraclub.org/michael-brune/2020/07/john-muir-early-history-sierra-club.  I suggest reading it at least twice.  There have been a number of comments added at the end, and I recommend reading those, as well.  Of Brune's remarks, Ron said, "I hope when people read and think of John Muir they'll be objective and look at the totality of John Muir... I think he saw all of us as fellow mortals... I think his views broadened as he became an older man and became more experienced... The words of Michael Brune are unfortunate; the way he's characterized John Muir -- he's done a disservice to John Muir, his legacy and to the Sierra Club itself as an institution... he deserved better than what Mr. Brune wrote... I know a lot of John Muir scholars... there's going to be a scholarly response... and I look forward to that, and I hope people can keep an open mind... and value the beauty of John Muir, his writings, and his inspiration...."  The scholarly response has indeed arrived, and Ron has kept me abreast, forwarding articles and letters which discuss, defend, denounce, and deconstruct, an American icon.  Perhaps that's where the problem lies -- deifying a mortal.  There's the tendency to believe the person emerged flawless and eternally kind, understanding, and patient.  How unfair not to recognize Muir's humanity by acknowledging his growth over a long lifetime of travel, scientific discovery, love, art, and contemplation.  Below are links to several essays examining Muir's writings which both condemn and exonerate him.  I subscribe the the one in "Thunderbear:" "Could he have done better?  Of course!  So could we all."

By John Clayton (a Montana-based writer):  https://www.wyohistory.org/blog/was-john-muir-racist 

From PJ Ryan's "Thunderbear" newsletter:  http://workingnet.com/thunderbear/312.html?fbclid=IwAR024fS9FA_CBLGm3Exfz32mSJ8Ep9fWqpHz5nsG94BiXg1eRNxzJxKLskY

By Donald Worster, a Muir biographer:  https://www.californiasun.co/stories/john-muir-biographer-he-was-no-white-supremacist/

By Jacquetta Megarry of Rucksack Readers:  https://www.rucsacs.com/should-the-sierra-club-apologise-for-john-muir/

By Raymond Barnett, retired UC Chico biology professor:  https://vault.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/life/racist-or-admirer-of-native-americans-raymond-bennett.aspx

From the John Muir Global Network:  http://johnmuir.org/native-americans/

From the John Muir Trust (Scotland):  https://www.johnmuirtrust.org/latest/news/1989-inclusion-in-wild-places-addressing-the-past-present-and-future

By Harold Wood, a Muir scholar:  https://vault.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/life/John_muirs_legacy_is_alive_and_well_in_a_world_that_is_one_great_dewdrop.aspx

The article by Justin Nobel that Michael Brune cites in his "Pulling Down Our Monuments" essay:  https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-miseducation-of-john-muir

By Jason Mark in the Sierra Club's magazine, see Ron Good's comments at the end of the article: https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2020-6-november-december/editor/hitched-nature

Here are links to some of the topics Ron and I discussed in the radio show:

The John Muir Papers, University of the Pacific (let's do a field trip once the pandemic ends!):   https://liberalarts.pacific.edu/liberalarts/academics/departments-and-programs/centers-and-institutes/john-muir-center#:~:text=The%20John%20Muir%20Papers%20is%20a%20collection%20of,University%20of%20the%20Pacific%20Library%27s%20Holt-Atherton%20Special%20Collections.

John Muir's writings are available for free here:  https://vault.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/writings/books.aspx

Website of the John Muir Historical Site (Martinez, CA):  https://www.nps.gov/jomu/index.htm

Finally, here's a link to the November TCT radio show, #36 -- Ron Good on John Muir:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/14t1FANV27v2P492nCNpjhEcDdCpBwGoS/view?usp=sharing

Saturday, October 24, 2020

TCT #35 -- The Bennett Juniper

Bennett Juniper at home
in Sardine Meadow
Tuolumne County is home to the Bennett Juniper, the largest living Western Juniper and, aged between 3,000 and 4,000 years, one of the oldest trees on Earth.  In late August, I joined a group of folks knowledgeable about the tree and dedicated to taking care of it on a field trip to its grove off of Eagle Meadow Road.

First, I'd like to expound about the attributes and other attractions of Eagle Meadow Road.  It's also known as Forest Road 5N01 and is located east of Strawberry just before the Donnell Vista.  The road closes in the winter.  It's paved for about five miles then becomes dirt and gravel necessitating a high-clearance vehicle.  Well, not super-high clearance - any SUV should make it; a Honda Civic or a Prius, not so much!  The first of several worthy options (and the only one not requiring high clearance) is the "Trail of the Ancient Dwarves."  This is a fairly easy hike with about 100' in elevation gain.  Observe old dwarf conifers as you walk a portion of the historic old Sonora-Mono Toll Road, an out-and-back of about 2 miles.  (To get there, just after turning onto Eagle Meadow Road, turn left on Forest Road 6N24 and drive through the Niagara Creek Campground.  The road ends; park and cross the footbridge over Niagara Creek and you're on your way.)  If you have a high clearance vehicle, you have access to the full extent of Eagle Meadow Road and the treasures on its unpaved portion.  Continuing toward Eagle Meadow, you'll have views of the Dardanelles and drive through Aspen groves which are quite colorful in the fall, making this a prime autumn outing. 

Aspen Grove along Eagle Meadow Road
Photo by Barbara Dresslar

Just off Eagle Meadow Road, a short dusty, bumpy ride on Forest Road 5N15X is Barn Meadow, a gem where Basque shepherds once camped. 
Trail Heads in Barn Meadow


There is a horse camp at Eagle Meadow which is also a trailhead for hikes at Eagle Meadow and up to Eagle Pass.  The fall colors can be stunning, so get out of your car and take a walk.  The Eagle Meadow loop, at just over 2 miles, is easy-to-moderate.  Eagle Pass trail is a strenuous eight mile round trip out-and-back trip.  It has color pockets of its own, and there are great views down into Eagle Meadow and of Eagle Peak.  Once you're up at the pass (just under 9,000'), be sure to trek to the east to get a breathtaking view of the Three Chimneys.  See this link for details and the GPS coordinates to the Eagle Meadow Horse Camp Trailhead:  https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/stanislaus/recreation/horseriding-camping/recarea/?recid=81681&actid=30

Back to the Bennett Juniper!  The Bennett Juniper is about five miles past Eagle Meadow; the adventure getting there starts immediately as you drive through Eagle Creek then Long Valley Creek a few miles later.  To help you get there, here is a link with a description of the tree and its GPS coordinates:  https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/stanislaus/recreation/hiking/recarea/?recid=81692&actid=50

Ken Brunges, longtime caretaker of
the Bennett Juniper.  Ken has retired.
Photo from Summer 2016

While it felt a little audacious -- people discussing the future of a tree -- everyone at the August meeting was respectful and earnest.  Here are the folks who attended and who you'll hear in the radio show:  Ross Carkeet, retired Columbia College Forestry professor; Ellie Routt, Executive Director of the Mother Lode Land Trust; Chris Wright, MLLT Board President; Anthony Castanos, Land Stewardship Manager at Save the Redwoods League, Faith Rumm, artist; Brian Kermeen, Tuolumne County Land Trust; Peggy Dylan and Steve Brougher, nearby cabin owners; John LaTorre (carpenter) and his girlfriend Sharon.  Here's a link to the radio show: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oPD9qQDfo0Z5re7vMvD-AEOcRekF4nwL/view?usp=sharing

The Bennett Juniper is considered by the Tuolumne County Historical Society to be one of the "21 Wonders of Tuolumne County."  Here's a link to their list of natural and manmade wonders.  How many have you visited?  https://tchistory.org/TCHISTORY/Wonders_of_TC.htm

If you've been so moved, you may make donations to benefit the Bennett Juniper to the Mother Lode Land Trust.  Here's a link to their donation site:  http://motherlodelandtrust.org/.  And remember, Ellie mentioned that a percentage of your donation is matched on Giving Tuesday (the Tuesday after Thanksgiving).

October 2020, Trail Heads at
Telescope Peak, an
uncataloged peak at about 9000'
near the Bennett Juniper.
Pictured:  Mike, David, Wendy,
Gary & Ross. Photo by Barbara Dresslar





Saturday, September 12, 2020

TCT #34 -- Cate Culver


 

"The Untold History of Sonora Pass and Its People 1860 to 1960" by Cate Culver is a beautiful new resource for folks who love the Tuolumne County high country.  Cate is a local, and I tracked her down for a fun, extensive interview which is the focus of September's episode of the Tuolumne County Trailhead.  Give a listen:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uXGI3cMxK0sAOgwRWlK3DQEDc41li7Mc/view?usp=sharing
The book is available at the stores at Dardanelle and Kennedy Meadows.  Pack a lunch and take a drive up the Pass for a bit of nature therapy.  Buy the book and page through at one of the picnic sites -- maybe you'll even get out of the smoke!

Send fan mail or inquiries to Cate at sonorapasshistorybook@gmail.com
At the peril of sounding like a parent who always says "maybe" when the kids know it means "never," I'm hatching an idea for some hike/s in October.  Maybe our patience and compliance through forest closures for fire safety and physical distancing for pandemic reduction will be rewarded with some fall color.  Stay tuned!

Saturday, August 8, 2020

TCT #33 -- Steve Weldon


Steve Weldon in Redwood National Park

In late spring, I was on track to do a 4-day, 3-night backpacking trip on the Trans Catalina Trail.  Disappointingly, the COVID-19 pandemic shut down that plan.  Luckily, I live in a recreation wonderland and have been able to hike and backpack close to home.  So far this summer, I've gone on two memorable backpacking trips -- one in the Emigrant Wilderness and another in the Hoover Wilderness.  Mosquitoes and incredible scenery were plentiful!  I was also able to take a bucket-list day hike:  Mt. Dana in Yosemite National Park.  The view at the 13,000' summit brought me to tears (and even a little press!  See Guy McCarthy's article here: https://uniondemocrat.pressreader.com/@Reader13800290/csb_J-7a1dqPdaovGRW7ycr233vuHE9eCFa85jKWk8Ijro1OfSrl8uGPMyY21NJ6gxIR?fbclid=IwAR0dVn0jXZn-SpRpjvwwdl7OPRJH5chczIetB5OrwaKBTQ4avbbgn1By3RU).


Still, the Trans Catalina Trail trip was the hiking version of "the one that got away."  When I learned that there was a TV show about it -- an episode of a program called "Walkin' California" -- I jumped on the chance to experience the route virtually.  To my surprise, I recognized the name of the host:  Steve Weldon.  Steve is a Tuolumne County personality having hosted a radio show on KKBN (Twain Harte) years ago then running "Doc's Dogs" hotdog stand outside Cost-U-Less grocery and "Doc's BBQ" restaurant on Stockton Road in Sonora.  It seems Steve (Doc) has retired -- to hiking and hosting at TV show!  All of a sudden he was everywhere I looked, and listened.  Steve's back on the radio on Monday and Tuesday mornings from 7-9am on KAAD-LP's "Gold Country Gold" show when he spins classic country records (yes, records.  He's old-school!).  So, I used all my wiles (meaning, I wrote to the station manager) to line up an interview.  Steve was more than willing and went above and beyond what with an original song AND commitment to provide a "dividend" for $1000 donations to the radio station!  I've gotta say, it's the most fun I've had with my hiking boots on in a while!


Steve says the Walkin' California website is down for maintenance but there's a work-around if you want to watch any of the episodes (there are 7:  Yosemite, Redwoods, Murphys, Catalina Island, Placerville, Pismo Preserve, and Montana de Oro).  Do a Google search for "Walkin' California," and the videos all come up at the top.  I accessed them through the PBS source:

Trail Heads, stay safe during these days of COVID-19.  Entice your immediate-household members out for a walk on hiking trails near your home and be sure to slip your mask on for close encounters with other hikers.  Let's not lose anyone so we can all get out together again soon!

Monday, July 20, 2020

TCT #32 -- Buzz & Karen Eggleston

Karen & Buzz Eggleston


The "Tuolumne County Trailhead" radio show for July 2020 features an interview with Buzz and Karen Eggleston of San Andreas.  Buzz and Karen talk about their travels and interest and growing expertise in the petroglyphs and pictographs of the Indians of the Southwest, especially at Casa Grande and Mesa Verde.  We also talk about Mother Lode geology --  Buzz is writing a book about the subject.

Here's a link to the program:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/11A_1wljGVsxBAsuTN5P2_UD0CrH1NaR_/view?usp=sharing

TCT #31 -- Tyler Summersett


Directional sign at 
the Sonora Community Trail
In this month's Tuolumne County Trailhead radio show, we catch up to Tyler Summersett about improvements on the Sonora Community Trail, a sweet little figure-8 loop trail of just under a mile in length.  The trail is behind the Sonora Main Branch of the Tuolumne County Library on Greenley Road.  Tyler, a Senior Transportation Planner/Trails Coordinator for the Tuolumne County Transportation Council, hopes for a trail work day and grand opening in the not too distant future -- pandemic permitting.


Springtime view to the north from the Sonora Community Trail.
Trail Heads & cool clear ditch water
Also, we went hiking in early June!  The pandemic eased and the stay-at-home order was modified.  We offered three hikes with group sizes limited to 10 per outing.  On Friday, June 5, we did a 13.5-mile loop from Twain Harte to Lyons Lake.  We walked up the ditch and flume trail and back via the Confidence Railroad Grade.Confidence Railroad Grade.








Trail Heads at Arnot Creek in the Donnell Fire Burn Scar
On Saturday, June 6, we hit the high country with a 6.5-mile hike on the Arnot Creek Trail, off of Clark Fork Rd.  Highlights included crossing the creek on a massive downed log, the largest and healthiest population of Pussypaws (a wildflower) I've ever seen, and a tree whose bark had been shredded by a bear!










Doggos and peoples alike enjoyed the hike
On Sunday, June 7, we opted for the short, strenuous Dutchess Mine Trail.  This trail starts at the north east side of the Parrotts Ferry Bridge and scales Table Mountain gaining 1000' in a short 1.5 miles (a 3 mile loop).  The views were spectacular!

Looking toward Murphys from the top of Table Mtn.




Since we'd taken a hiatus from hiking for a couple months, our programs have been lacking the "Three T's," real-time trip reports from hikers on the trail.  I'm thrilled that in TCT #31 we have my favorite feature back!  Give a listen:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZotXgSDkj_l8BNA0eADhWwlR4KFaMUVC/view?usp=sharing


Sunday, May 24, 2020

TCT #30 -- The Four Founders

Three of the Four Founders -- Robert Swift, Vonna Breeze-Martin & Deb Campbell (not pictured: Wendy)
On the Sugar Pine Railroad Grade-Strawberry Branch [Fraser Flat], July 2009
Tuolumne County Trailhead as an interactive radio show/hiking group is about three years old but actually was born 11 years ago, as a Facebook group.  It was intended as a meet-up space for hikers looking for partners.  Our first hikes were at the Red Hills and Fraser Flat with a core I've come to call "The Four Founders":  Vonna Breeze-Martin, Deborah Campbell, Robert Swift, and me.  The COVID-19 pandemic shelter-in-place order aroused fond memories of getting together with you Trail Heads.  Naturally, my mind drifted back to TCT's beginnings, and I decided to get the old group together again -- for a Zoom conversation.  Listen to us chat about the good old days, wax philosophical about the mental benefits of being in the outdoors, our plans for future adventures, and more.  Here's a link to the radio episode "TCT #30 -- The Four Founders": https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CGKy4SCqlTHGUxzKyiegacFBJVAExPas/view?usp=sharing

Robert on a
recent TCT hike

Deb at Angels Landing, Zion NP                                                Vonna



Also, hang in there Trail Heads -- Wendy's working on a plan to get out together:  more hikes in small groups.  Stay tuned!


Here's a link to the "On Being" podcast Vonna mentions in the program:
https://onbeing.org/programs/john-odonohue-the-inner-landscape-of-beauty-aug2017/






Saturday, April 11, 2020

TCT #29 -- COVID-19


Rebecca Andrade, Gary Stockel, and I employed Zoom to produce this month's Tuolumne County Trailhead episode.  We discuss what we've been doing, watching, and reading during the statewide Stay At Home Order:
  • Rebecca offers some nature-oriented websites such as California State Parks PORTS, https://www.ports-ca.us/ and Yosemite Nature Notes, https://www.nps.gov/yose/learn/photosmultimedia/ynn.htm
  • Gary suggests a couple of books: "A Walk in the Woods" by Bill Bryson and "The Death and Life of the Great Lakes" by Dan Egan
  • Wendy recommends some movies: "Wild," "A Walk in the Woods," "Mile...Mile and a Half," and "The Way."
Wendy also editorializes and PROMISES a return to hiking IF we all do our part to bend the COVID-19 pandemic projected infection curve:
  • As Governor Newsom said, "Just assume that you potentially are contagious and act accordingly .. Be a good neighbor.  Be a good citizen."
  • Bear in mind that "Asymptomatic transmission is driving coronavirus epidemic, experts say" (SF Chronicle headline, April 3, 2020)
  • Respected hiking sites (American Hiking Society, https://americanhiking.org/blog/hiking-responsibly-faq-covid-19/) and outdoors organizations (Sierra Club) say to limit your outdoor excursions to your immediate neighborhood with members in your immediate household.
  • During normal times, hiking is essential.  For now, we must sacrifice this simple pleasure out of care, concern, and love of our elderly and immune-compromised family and friends. Out of respect for businesses which closed to keep us healthy and businesses limping along in order to hopefully reopen after all this is over.  Out of respect for laid off workers and essential workers still providing services.  Out of respect for front-line health care providers and first responders.
Finally, we play our theme music, "Switchback" by Bill Horvitz (on his album "Tuolumne Songs"), in full.  No fade ins or fade outs or voice overs.  We need the optimism of this bright, cheerful song!

Please take a listen!  https://drive.google.com/open?id=1i9rl_uZpSUekhMH4ksDUHL8TcjmIssC4

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Stay the bleep at home - COVID-19 non-hiking

"I Stayed Home" badge "stolen" from The Mountaineers
Hello, Trail Heads.
No hiking for us for a while.  We won't carpool; we won't crowd trailhead parking lots; we won't travel to rural areas and potentially impact their limited medical resources.

We will take walks in our own neighborhoods.  We may introduce and/or encourage our spouses, significant others, and housemates to join us in our favorite pastime.  There are predictions of a baby boom 9 months after the COVID-19 crisis ends.  We may also experience a Trail Head membership boom!

Meantime, you may want to seek out hiking or outdoor-oriented books, podcasts, movies, TV shows, YouTubes, websites, and more.  You may want to service your gear.  You may want to plan dream hikes and backpack trips for the future.  You may want to hone your nature journaling skills.  You may want to listen to the back catalog of "Tuolumne County Trailhead" (at the KAAD-LP 103.5 FM program archives:  https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1-tKI43sgIjqTugSua5JH9oYDSJ735zr9).  You may want to support hiking, natural resource, and outdoor-oriented non-profits and organizations.

Wash your hands!  Don't touch your face!  Make a mask out of your bandanna!

Watch this space; I know we'll be seeing each other soon!  Love you, Trail Heads!  -w

Hiking Movies
"Wild," Cheryl Strayed's story about finding herself on the Pacific Crest Trail
"A Walk in the Woods," based on Bill Bryson's book about hiking the Appalachian Trail
"Mile ... Mile and a Half," five friends walk the John Muir Trail in a high snow year
"The Way," after his son dies while walking the Camino de Santiago, a grieving father completes the hike

Hiking Books
"The Man Who Walked Through Time," Colin Fletcher walked the length of the Grand Canyon in 1963
"Salt to Summit," Daniel Arnold hiked cross-country from Badwater, Death Valley to the Mt. Whitney summit in 17 days late one spring
"Trespassing Across America," Ken Ilgunas walked the proposed route of the Keystone Pipeline
"Into Thin Air," Jon Krakauer's classic about the disastrous 1996 climbing season on Mt. Everest

Hiking Podcasts
"The Outside Podcast," from Outside magazine (check out their old "Science of Survival" series)
"The First Forty Miles," Heather & Josh Legler, a married couple from Oregon produced a delightful  214 episodes that ended in December 2018
"Life in 16 Ounces," a fun podcast about outdoor adventure and beer, brought to us by Modesto-area residents Brandon and Paul
"Tough Girl Podcast," since 2014, Sarah Williams has been inspiring and motivating women and girls in outdoors pursuits through interviews with female explorers, adventurers, athletes, and plain folk

Hiking Online Learning Resources and Videos
"Yosemite Nature Notes," a video podcast available through your podcast provider and YouTube
"CA PORTS," California State Parks Online Resources for Teachers and Students
"Smithsonian Learning Lab," free online access to millions of Smithsonian images, recordings, texts, and videos

Local Organizations
Tuolumne River Trust
CSERC (Central Sierra Environmental Resource Center)
Stanislaus Wilderness Volunteers
American Hiking Society
KAAD-LP 103.5 FM, Sonora
YExplore
PCTA (Pacific Crest Trail Association)
Friends of the Inyo
Three Forests Interpretive Association
Yosemite Conservancy

Friday, March 13, 2020

TCT #28 -- Brian Kermeen


Our next hike will be on SUNDAY, April 5, 2020 (a deviation to our normal first Saturday schedule).  We're going to Red Hills ACEC in Chinese Camp and will be taking the Old Stage to Soaproot Loop Trail.  There's a long loop and a short loop.  The long loop is difficult due to length (9.1 miles round trip) and elevation gain (approx. 1,200').  At 2.5 miles round trip and a less than 500' elevation gain, the short loop is moderately easy.  This hike will be your choice: for views, take the long loop; for a pastoral saunter, take the short loop.  Since we'll be splitting into two groups, we've marked both trails (thank you, Gary Stockel!).  Regardless of which loop you take, you should see a profusion of poppies and some of the rare plants that are unique to the Red Hills:  Congdon's lomatium, Layne's bitterweed, Red Hills soaproot.  Critter-wise, be on the lookout for Bald Eagles, roadrunners, and foxes.

On Saturday, April 25, 2020, the Tuolumne County Land Trust will host its annual Ratto Ranch hike.  Ratto Ranch, in the Shaw's Flat area between Columbia and Jamestown, is a working cattle ranch and has been in the same family for over 150 years.  Learn more about the Ratto Ranch, the hike, and the Tuolumne County Land Trust in this month's Tuolumne County Trailhead radio program: TCT #28 -- Brian Kermeen:  https://drive.google.com/open?id=1u1etJ7e4-43lYLFeDRTGwxgdSzK3IE30

For more information about Tuolumne County Land Trust, here's a link to their website:  http://tuolumnecountylandtrust.org/

Trail Heads at the historic Columbia Marble Quarry
In TCT #28 -- Brian Kermeen, we feature a trip report about our "Trio of Trails at Columbia College."  Yes, just one trip report.  Things were a little chaotic what with 37 hikers (aged 3 to 80+), intermittent light showers, several trails, and interpretation indoors and outside.  I decided to skip the traditional real-time "3 T's."  Instead, we go in depth with Trail Head Veronica Kristapovich.

Here are a few photos of our outing:
Donna in the Labyrinth

Sean Osborn presents at the
college's Me-Wuk cultural site



Trail between Columbia College and
Columbia State Historic Park

Saturday, February 8, 2020

TCT #27 -- Barbara Balen



Barbara Balen and the Columbia Ditch
Our March 7, 2020 outing promises drama, history, engineering, archaeology, anthropology, geology, and botany.  Sound like a college course catalog?  Well, that's entirely appropriate, as we'll be at college -- the trails at Columbia College, that is.  Listen to TCT #27 -- Barbara Balen for a discussion about the hike and other topics including Tuolumne County's historic ditch system and "wild crafting."  Barbara's doggos even chime in!  The episode also includes real-time audio trip reports from our "Take All the Trails at Tuttletown" trip last weekend which enticed 50 (yep, 50!) trail heads to come out for the event.  Thank you to Bureau of Reclamation Ranger Pat Sanders and her husband Harold for providing interpretation and helping with the human herding!

Here's a link to the radio program TCT #27 -- Barbara Balen: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qvUZD0s-4zAbO43zWS3my-Er_TGB0sqE/view?usp=sharing

We talked with Tom Hofstra and Jeff Tolhurst about the trails at Columbia College in episode TCT #24 -- Columbia College.  TCT #27 and TCT #24 make a nice pair of related programs giving a well-rounded overview of this imminently-accessible community resource.

Here are some photos from the "Take All the Trails at Tuttletown" gathering:

About 50 turned out for the hike at Tuttletown (New Melones Lake)!

Manzanita blossoms attracted hummingbirds

(Bobcat ?) skull

Steve and an errant tire from a wave attenuator

Stevenot Bridge on Highway 49 from shady Heron Point Trail