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Hetch Hetchy, July 2004
Day 3
Our third day started with a serious climb to our
second and final high point so we hit the trail before 6:00 am to beat
the heat and mosquitoes, succeeding in the former but not the latter (It
should be said that getting up that early was no hardship since we were
going to bed once it got dark, around 9:00 pm, giving us 8 hours of
sleep assuming we woke up at 5:00 am). It wasn’t until we reached the exposed and breezy rock of the
summit that we stopped for any kind of a break, in this case we ate
breakfast as well. No
sooner did we leave the sanctuary of the breezy rock when we once again
descended into forests with the accompanying mosquitoes.
With no relief in sight we kept going, and going, and going.
At one point I sprayed DEET in my eye, ouch!
We planned to stay in Tiltill Valley but Henrik and I, each
independently, decided that given the heat, drinking water choices, and
mosquito potential,
we would be better served heading down to Rancheria Falls. This
was the best decision of the entire trip. It was a long walk to
get there but all fatigue vanished upon jumping into the pools around
the falls and footbridge upstream of it.
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| I can describe this section of trail as walking through a
field you would encounter in your dreams. The flowers
where everywhere, shoulder high, and the trail was only inches
wide at times. Plus, after an hour of hard climbing from
camp we had reached the high point of the entire trip (probably
around 8,600 feet) and for many hours today we walked down a
gentle slope on hard, dirt trails. It was quite wonderful
except that good water sources where not to be found, only
stagnant lakes, and the mosquitoes where bad.
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| In my opinion, the best picture of the trip with Tiltill
Valley below and Hetch Hetchy beyond. I also took a
picture of Henrik in the same spot but since this is
CaseyandEmily.com...
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| And from the great vantage point of the previous picture,
we finally made it down into Tiltill Valley. Parts of the
trail down, with giant boulders and oak trees made us think we
where at the bottom of the trail up to Yosemite Falls.
Only 10 minutes after this picture was taken Hannah would fill
her bladder with questionable water that she would later drink
without treating since I had the chlorine dioxide in my pack and Henrik and
I had walked ahead.
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| Some pictures get to break my Lhorizontal > Lvertical
rule, but it has to be something special like this. We
spent quite a bit of time here, at the footbridge above
Rancheria Falls. James, our co-worker, came here over
Memorial Day in 2003 and found the water level to be
substantially higher, to the extent that going in would most
likely result in death.
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| Just as with the photo above, this one was taken below the
footbridge and looking downstream. To get the shot of Mr.
Dahl I had to take it from the middle of the river. I love
the "infinity pool" effect. It looks like he
could be standing out of the water but actually he is sitting in
the middle of it.
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| This is another way to get around my Lhorizontal
> Lvertical rule, if you can put two vertically
orientated pictures side by side. In this case, the
picture on the left is looking upstream from the bridge while
the one on the right is looking downstream. We went
upstream until the falls petered out, just a few minutes beyond
what you can see in the picture and also explored downstream to
the top of Rancheria Falls.
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| Speaking of Rancheria Falls, here it is with the footbridge
just barely visible. This photo was taken very to close to
where we camped.
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| Hannah collects water at our final campsite, with soft sand and no mosquitoes. |
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