Disneyland for Hikers: A Walk to Mt Whitney
Base camp sits at 12,000 feet — stark, windy,
unshaded from the blazing August sun, but an otherwise great
place to stop for a snack. Voices echo across cold granite as
the breeze wraps around dozens of tents, backpacks, cooking
stoves, and bear-proof food canisters. An unopened package of
banana chips on my lap is immediately snatched up by a marmot,
unhindered by my presence and unfazed by my pursuit.
Here, the animals, the people, and the barren
granite form a bustling community in the Sierra Nevada
wilderness. The trail to Mount Whitney sees thousands of people
each year, all in pursuit of the highest peak in the United
States (excluding Alaska). The people crowd the trail, the
animals exploit the people, and Inyo National Forest rakes in
thousands of tourism dollars. They say if you want solitude, go
to Antarctica. Mount Whitney is Disneyland for
hikers.
That’s not saying Whitney should be avoided.
Like Disneyland, there’s a good reason crowds all congregate at
one California landmark. Few other places in the world offer a
well-tracked trail to 14,496 feet, where anyone with a pair of
sturdy boots can trek to the top of a country, and a big one at
that. Technical skills are optional on this trail, though
patience and a degree of elevation tolerance is
vital.
The trail begins at 8,368 feet in the
Whitney Portal campground, at the end of a paved road from Lone
Pine. The trailhead is a maze of parking lots, which, in the
summer months, are nearly always filled to capacity.
This is the part of the forest where black
bears rule; they bash in the windows of parked cars and steal
whatever they find. So frequent are the bear burglaries that
people are aggressively ticketed for leaving tempting packages
in plain view.
I feel relieved when I walk into the
wilderness and away from bear country. From the trailhead it’s
over 11 miles and 6,000 vertical feet to the flat-topped
summit, a gradual trail, but not for wimps. Whitebark pine
forests slowly give way to exposed granite over the first 7
miles, then base camp marks a strenuous and rocky climb to
Sierra Crest.
I drafted my dad and his friend Tom, two avid
hikers in their late 40’s, up the steep section of trail
affectionately called "100 switchbacks." I lose count after 75.
Most hikers complete this hike as two to three-day backpacking
trip, but Dad, Tom and I are going to do it in a
day.
Sierra Crest is marked at 13,600 feet,
already higher than I have ever hiked. The elevation puts a
clamp on my lungs, and I feel a vague sense of sleepiness
creeping into my head, even though my heart is pumping. The
trail rolls along the ridge behind sheer pinnacles. You could
stumble and fall 2,000 feet, but the immaculate trail helps
prevent that. Thousands of footsteps per year have worn a nice
groove in the jagged mountain
At this point I’m laboring up the trail, but
it doesn’t matter. I’m a hiker that climbs to look, not
conquer. The green and gold of Sequoia stretches across the
horizon. Deep blue lakes sparkle beneath a cloudless sky. From
here you can almost see the depths of Death Valley - the lowest
point in the United States and only 90 miles from this
point.
Dad and Tom are a ways ahead by the time I
ascend the final slope - a gradual ramp that eventually levels
off. This is the peak - flat, spacious, almost custom-designed
for large capacities. A crowd of about a dozen people are
scattered over the rocks. We plop next to a geographical marker
- "Latitude: 36° 35’ x; Longitude: 118° 17’ x," it says - and
fix some lunch. We have great view of Lone Pine - 13 miles
east, of Yosemite national park, of the expansive Nevada
desert, of the Sierra Nevadas stretching over the
horizon.
A strong wind whips past my head and muffles
the incessant chatter. If I turn my head toward the sheer drop
to the east I almost feel alone. Almost. They say if you want
solitude, go elsewhere. If you want to see the spectacular top
of America’s biggest and brightest, go to Whitney.
Directions: From Los Angeles take highway 14
to U.S. highway 395 north to Lone Pine, about 200 miles. Turn
west onto Whitney Portal Rd. 13 miles to the trail head.
Permits are required for this hike and are somewhat difficult
to obtain. Call Inyo National Forest, Mt. Whitney District,
(760) 876-6200, for more information.
About The Author: Jill Homer is a graphic
artist and freelance travel writer currently residing in
Tooele, Utah. She specializes in outdoor adventure writing. For
more information please visit www.biketoshine.com or contact jill@biketoshine.com
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