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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Da' Beach
Posts: 2,957
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Mmm...I actually also prefer the high trails to be closed....then no one can guilt me for not going on them....
I love to walk. All over. Flat land. Slightly elevated trails. Good times. ![]()
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#2 |
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I throw stones at houses
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Location: Location
Posts: 9,534
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I suggest lots of vacations in the Netherlands
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http://bash.org/?top "It is useless for sheep to pass a resolution in favor of vegetarianism while wolves remain of a different opinion." -- William Randolph Inge |
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#3 |
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Kink of Swank
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Here's the deal, and it's mine personally. I won't go to Yosemite again with a newbie that I can't introduce to the Mist Trail and the Fissures/Sentinal Dome hike. These are the most beautiful expeditions in beautiful Yosemite, in my most humble but keen-eyed and Yosemite-experienced opinion.
My impetus for doing Camp Swank in Yosemite is to share the glorious Nature Temple with friends, but in large part to make sure that good friends who have never experienced its wonders get to do so at last. I really have zero interest in a half-hearted stab at that. So if the stuff that, in my blah blah opinion, is not available ... i could not find it in my heart to go with newbies. Also, since the last time I was there myself was in early Spring when these fantastic elements were off-limits, I have no desire to have my next visit there be under the same too-limited conditions. Again, that's just me. But if anybody's up for Yosemite in early June, I'm all for that being this year's Camp Swank. Otherwise, yeah, I also want to camp in King's Canyon. But won't that be too freaking freezing in April anyway? |
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#4 |
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HI!
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If we do Kings Canyon, that would be June or even July. It's a ghost town most of the year.
Regarding Yosemite, keep in mind that MANY people would not be able to even handle the Mist Trail. It's a strenuous hike (6 miles and 1000 ft elevation gain) and INCREDIBLY slippery - especially when the water is flowing. You also get soaking wet which is not comfortable in April. I've done it several times and I don't know if I could do the entire hike at this point in my life. Sentinel Dome is also a difficult 6 miles that, again, not all people would be able to do (not to mention that the starting elevation is 7200 feet). Besides the fact that the Glacier Point road MAY still be closed in April. (I believe they opened early last year.) |
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#5 |
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SQUIRREL!
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: On the curbside.
Posts: 5,098
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Early June in Yosemite sounds great to me.
Or, we could do the Joshua Tree thing in March this year, and save Yosemite for next year... |
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#6 |
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Kink of Swank
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Joshua Tree's not really a camping thing. (But, ask the mousepod clan, it would be a great thing to rent a house for the weekend and explore. I love Joshua Tree. It's nearby and I intend to go more than once this coming Spring.)
And of course, not everyone would be amenable to every hike in Yosemite. The Fissures/Sentinal Dome hike is a mild hike ... yeah, until the final push up Sentinal Dome ... but I've seen folks of every age, stamina, and build do that hike ... and love it. The Mist Trail, ditto. Not flat ground, but hardly a mountain climb. Ok, not for everyone. So??? But yeah, the Glacier Point Road closed, the Mist Trail still closed. Yosemite in April is less than ideal (not that I didn't enjoy it ... ask zapppop how i thrilled to finally seeing the dozens of tiny waterfalls that only flow in early Spring. There was nowhere you could go in the entire Valley that did not have at least one waterfall in view. It was like being in Rivendell.) That said, the big impressive falls, five - count'em - five of 'em - are flowing in June, and I feel the supreme majesty of the Mist Trail and the Sentinel Dome Trail should be available if and when we go ... and that newbies especially should behold these wonders with their own eyes. |
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#7 |
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I throw stones at houses
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Location: Location
Posts: 9,534
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June works, that's about when we went camping last year.
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http://bash.org/?top "It is useless for sheep to pass a resolution in favor of vegetarianism while wolves remain of a different opinion." -- William Randolph Inge |
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#8 |
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check your head
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 4,174
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not when my tent actually sets up in the back of my truck. Im betting they would frown of me driving my tent into the communal area for the night. :P
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#9 |
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Kink of Swank
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I agree, but I've never seen a National park with such camping.
National Forests, yes. It's not that I would be against camping in a National Forest, just that the National Parks have the spectacular stuff that I'm drawn to see for the trouble of camping. I want both elements. I love our camp life, and would enjoy it if we did it in some nameless forest in the middle of nowhere with nothing around. But I also love the excursions to some of nature's most splended offerings. I'm sure many of those can be found in National Forests ... but ever since I found out some of our pals who live in California haven't been to freaking YOSEMITE ... I've had a keen yen to remedy that pronto. Maybe we can invest in a bunch of camoflauge nets and drape them over all the vehicles!! |
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#10 |
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.
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 13,354
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There are a couple "walk in" campgrounds on the valley floor but they are still pretty much in the thick of things. The most prominent is Camp 4, but while the cars may be farther away the campers are dense enough that you won't be any more likely to feel particularly natural.
On the other hand, it is the primary campground for the mountain climbers so the people watching is pretty nice with very toned bodies and people scurrying around in place people shouldn't be. |
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