Time: Oct 8-9, 2016
Place: Eastern Sierra (via Yosemite)
Company: Wife and Daughter
Highlights:
Day 1: We left the house early at about 8:15 am and headed east towards Yosemite. Tontu was little scared of car-sickness and was not keen on this vacation but somehow we coaxed her that she will be fine, and miraculously nothing happened to her despite some steep winding curves. There were no traffic issues and around noon we entered the Yosemite National Park. Our last time here was in May 2012 and scenery was lush green all around. Now, since summer was ending, the scenery was different. We went via the same tunnels, the breath-taking view of the valley and down all the way to the Bridal Veil Falls. It was more of a mist now than a falls. After a quick lunch, we headed to the loop road at the very end of the valley. On the way, we passed couple of deers, munching grass very close to us! We then took a small hike to a small stream (Merced River actually) and then took the shuttle bus around the loop.
Then took the car again and parked somewhere on the curb to
take some pics in front of the huge rock structures especially the half dome. After
that, we drove around and parked near the El Capitan for some more pics. This
place is really cool with two huge granite cliffs and a vista in between. We
had missed this last time we were here. It is like being surrounded 360 degrees
by towering mountains. Apparently the Merced river flows through this vista but
since it is trickling these days, we couldn’t even see it. We spent some time soaking
in the magnificent views and scenery until almost 4 pm. Then we left the valley
and headed to the exit. There was one more place where we wanted to go – the
Glacier Point – but we were hard pressed for time and hence we ditched it. Our
main destination was the Eastern Sierra Fall colors and anything in Yosemite was a bonus,
especially since it was second time!
Thankfully, we reached a vista point called "Olmsted Point" where we could get down
and stretch and take some pics. Olmsted was the landscape artist who designed Central Park in New York. I first read about him in an Erik Larson novel. This vista point was a beautiful place where we could see the
half dome cliff, some strange looking glacial rocks and even hike up on them.
It was chilly, yet sunny and all around were great views. After some time
there, continued on the Tioga Road and soon reached the Tioga Pass. This Pass
is another awesome place, with mountains all around and the road carving
through the mountain pass. Superb scenery and great driving route. It reminded
us of the Eastern entrance of the Yellow Stone – which is akin to this Eastern
entrance of the Yosemite! The road here really climbs down at an extremely
rapid rate and very soon we were on the Mono Lake.
Mono Lake is a strange lake in the sense that it does not
contain fresh water lake. It contains salt water with no outlet and hence it is
extremely pungent to smell. Kind of stinky too! There are some strange looking
standing structures called Tufas, and those are due to the salt contents that
got deposited when the lake had a higher depth. We took some nice pictures and
with the setting sun, the pictures came out really well. However, it was again
very chilly.
Our final stop for the day was at our motel – Willow Springsmotel near Bridgeport. The road to Bridgeport from Mono Lake is also super
awesome. The road has a steep ascent and once again climbs up to over 8500 ft
in elevation and then descends quickly too. But by this time, it was pitch dark
and we could not see anything. We could only feel the climb and the descent.
Thankfully, we reached the motel soon enough, had a quick bite of homemade
dinner and retired for the night. It was a long day of driving – almost 300
miles – and we were all exhausted.
Day 2: The goal of this vacation was Fall colors, and we
hoped to see fall colors in Eastern Sierra, based on the information given in
this website. There were too many places to see here and hence we shortlisted
on a few of them – The Lundy lake, The June Lake loop and the Mammoth Lake. Our
expectation though was in the opposite order – with Mammoth Lake having the max
colors and Lundy being the least. However, when we went to Lundy lake, we were
surprised with beautiful yellow colors. We spent some time taking some pictures
and then headed to June lake loop.
Our first stop on the June Lake loop was the Silver lake.
The superb yellow on this lake was reflecting on the lake and it was an
excellent photo-opportunity. The lake too looked very serene. We had high hopes
on June lake but that lake had absolutely nothing! We were wondering if we
should proceed to Mammoth Lake or not because so far, we had not seen any
orange/red colors yet. After some assessment of where we were and how much time
we had, we thought we might as well continue on for some more time until we
reached Mammoth Lake and then head back home.
We went to ML via the ML scenic loop road hoping there were some colors. However, there were no colors. It was scenic, yes, with superb trees but no colors. We then started climbing up the Mammoth mountain but still could not see any colors in the horizon. We realized these trees had not peaked yet and so headed to the visitor center to check if there were any nearby places to see some more good colors. We had to stop at a couple of places to know where the VC was located but finally found it.
At the VC, we were told that the Lundy lake and the Silver
lake were at the peak and Mammoth was still at 10%-25%. That meant we had
already been to the peak colors of this region and there was nothing much to
see. There were more but they were far and apart or had to be hiked.
Considering it was already noon and we were a long way off from home, we
decided that it is better to head back home, and we were done with the colors for
this season!
After a quick stop at dominos where we had nice pizza, we
started on our way back. It was almost 1 pm. Just as we entered the Tioga Road,
there were more colors and we stopped at a couple of places to take more
pictures. Satisfied, we re-entered Yosemite National Park and headed to the
Tuolumne visitor center to collect a souvenir. None available, we were told to
get them at the Western entrance visitor center. So we continued on the Tioga
road for about an hour or two more. Once at the Western entrance visitor
center, we got our souvenir and headed back home out of the National Park
boundary.
Rest of the journey was uneventful. Tontu never slept the
entire journey (lasting over 600 miles) nor did she seem bored (albeit
occasional Are we there yet?s). She didn’t even see iPad nor read any books, just kept playing with her "Teddy Rao"!! And despite winding roads, she didn’t get car sick. It was miraculous! We got
stuck in the traffic a little as we neared the east bay area, and we all were
tired sitting for such a long time. At Dublin, we stopped for dinner and that
was refreshing. Finally, we reached home at about 10 pm.
Overview: We always felt that we had missed some key points
in Yosemite when we went the first time – like the Tioga Pass, the El Capitan
views and the Glacier Point. We could do two out of the three this time. And
clubbing this with the Eastern Sierra Fall colors was good because that would
allow us to go via the Tioga Road. We were lucky to get the motel near
Bridgeport for less than $100 at such short notice (booked only one day in advance).
All in all, a well-packed two-day trip. Would have been nice
if there were more colors though. It was mostly yellow and not much orange-red.
There was one thing we didn’t do right – not going to the visitor center first
instead of last. If we had done that, then we could have planned the road trip
on day two better. But anyways, we visited two out of three peak areas which is
good. This was our fourth vacation in four consecutive months. Will there be a
fifth?!
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