Monday, February 2, 2015

CR2014: Wiwaxy Gap, Huber Ledges, Yukness Ledges, and a Show

July 26th dawned cold, and clear as only mountain skies can be. The slopes around Lake O'Hara were tinted blue -- from the shadows, not the cold.
In the lodge first breakfast had been laid out. This included juice, muffins, fruit, yogurt, hot oatmeal, and Joan's favorite-in-the-whole-world berry buffet.
During first breakfast the staff comes by your table and inquires about hot breakfast, which can be the special of the day, or eggs (any style), meat (bacon or sausage?), hash browns, and toast. At some point during breakfast you're asked what kind of sandwich you'd like for a trail lunch, if you're not lunching at the lodge. There are three choices: a vegetarian offering, a meat offering, and a classic Lake O'Hara peanut butter, banana, and honey sandwich.

At the end of breakfast the buffet is cleared and sandwiches in tupperware are set out, along with muffins, cheeses, trail mix, carrots/peppers, lemonade, and the Best Cookies In The World. Three kinds. Rotating each day. Pack a lunch, and head for a morning of hiking!

Joan and I started out for the Wiwaxy Gap trail. The sun had risen over Lake O'Hara.
The hike to Wiwaxy Gap is something we tackle every year; in this 2011 blog post I discuss the route in some detail. This year, a distinguished promontory and photo-op is the only en-route image.
Depending on our conditioning, and time at altitude, it takes Joan and me about an hour and a half to reach the gap. Our pigs didn't even break a sweat.
There is a small knob to the north of the pass, in front of the Wiwaxy Peaks.
I took this panoramic image from the knob. I've admired this view several times, and never tire of it.
Using the full zoom of the camera I photographed Sleeping Poets Pool, on a ledge above the Yukness Ledge trail. We plan to visit it today.
Below, others have almost made it to the gap.
Then they reached it.
Joan and I continued on the Huber Ledges trail, towards Lake Oesa.
It's the sole route out of Wiwaxy Gap, except to go back the way you came, steeply downhill. Others followed us; in this picture the camera is looking back the way we've come.
Our next goal, Lake Oesa, is the large body of water at left.
The past two days of drizzle have left a fresh dusting of snow on the surrounding heights.
In this photo we've drawn close to, but are still above, Lake Oesa. The rocky "picnic ground" at the edge of the lake invites people to linger, to sun, and to lunch. Click on the image to enlarge, and you'll spot some.
From this point we also saw climbers making their way down from Abbot Hut, at Abbot Pass, 9600' altitude. To reach the hut requires genuine climbing skills and equipment, including helmets. Probably not for us! Here, on the way down, the climbers are past the scariest parts.
After enjoying our lunch -- including, as I said, The Best Cookies In The World -- at Lake Oesa we continued on the Yukness Ledges trail. A short distance before Yukness joins the East Opabin trail a scruffy track leads up to Sleeping Poets, our next goal. Here, we look back at Oesa.
Halfway along the Yukness Ledges our plans vanished. Just ahead of us, an older man missed his step and fell among some rocks. Joan and I reached him just before his grown son turned around and came back to join us. The older man was a physician, and decided, once back on his feet, that he was bruised but nothing was broken.

But he was shaken and unsteady on his feet. The father and son pair were moving very slowly. The son insisted that they would be OK, and the father insisted on continuing around the Yukness rather than returning by Oesa. Joan and I moved ahead, but only a short distance. And waited. At the pace the two were traveling, we were uncomfortable leaving them high on the ledge. A few other hikers came by, but had little to report.

When father and son came into view it didn't look good. Dad needed frequent breaks, and wasn't steady yet. Joan and I offered assistance again, and what we hashed out was this: Joan and I would go along the Yukness to where the son's wife and two daughters would be waiting for the pair, at East Opabin, and tell them what had happened. Then we would continue to the lodge and tell the staff what had happened -- but, grandfather repeated, do not summon a helicopter. No helicopters!

When we reached the rest of the family, Mom decided to walk back to join grandfather and husband, and the girls were to go back with us. Joan had slipped once during our dash across the ledges and her knee was twinging, so I conducted a forced march with the girls and let the staff at the lodge know what was up. I got a long, cold drink of lemonade and another to take back to Joan, who I met along the shores of Lake O'Hara.

Grandfather must have continued his recovery and returned more or less under his own power. There were no helicopters, and his son thanked us at dinner for our assistance. They were more than welcome to it; the very thought of someone being stranded on the cold alpine mountainside gave me the shivers. Sleeping Poets Pool? Next year.

Tonight was Saturday night. Showtime. Every Saturday night the staff puts on a show for the guests, never the same twice. It consists of a series of acts, some involving one person,
some a small group, such as this edition of Marmot Talk,
or a larger group, such as this fabulous rhythm band, joined by a great fiddler,
or the whole ensemble.
What a day it was!

3 comments:

  1. How nice of you forego your plans and help that family. I loved the photo of the pigs on the sign!

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  2. Kudos to your detailed share of your personal experiences on the trail. It’s awesome to read your blog. I would like to know if you can tell how hard the walk from lake Oesa up to the wiwaxy gap using the Huber ledges trail would be... Unfortunately we will not be able to make the full alpine circuit and we don’t want to exhaust ourselves by doing the wiwaxy gap trail in clockwise direction. But nevertheless we would love to get this amazing panoramic overview from higher ground towards Yukness Ledges ... In a trail descriptions the Huber ledges trail is mentioned with 1,7 km with an aprox. of 50mins... We want to hike to opabin Plateau then to lake Oesa via the Yukness ledges trail. And depending of how good our stamina will be we would love to make the Huber Ledges trail and then descending back to lake Oesa and lake o O‘Hara...

    Thank you in advance for a short answer...

    Dieter

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    Replies
    1. We did the Huber Ledges both way in 2016 -- https://anothersideofthislife.blogspot.com/2017/02/cr2016-huber-ledges-round-trip.html . Definitely better to return to Lake Oesa than to attempt to go downhill from Wiwaxy to Lake O'Hara; we did that once and the steepness makes it very taxing. The Huber Ledges are not physically difficult but there are a few spots where you must pay attention to the blazes and watch your footing, which of course you should be doing anyway. Going both ways on Huber does yield fabulous views.

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