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Anyways, he got pretty exhausted after our first day and wasn't really in the mood to do much hiking after that, so we set up a base camp in a really beautiful area (Saucer Meadow) near the junction of two mountain streams, our campsite partway up a granite slope on a ledge overlooking the valley and volcanic ridge across from us. Instead of doing our intended loop, Auntie and I did a day hike up the canyon to Brown Bear Pass, where we had some great views SE into Yosemite and the craggy peaks beyond the Emigrant Lakes. So we had a nice lunch there and headed back to our campsite to join Kate and Banjo for some luxurious swimming in one of the more scenic hidden swimming holes I've seen in a long time. Here I am working up the courage to take the plunge. Yes, we all swam, and boy was it refreshing!
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After swimming we had a delicious dinner of cous-cous, salami, cheese, onion, and dried mushrooms. The dried mushrooms and extra-peppery salami made it quite amazing - I would even make this meal again at home! Here's Kate putting on the final touches.
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That evening smoke from the Telegraph Fire south of us (which had just started that morning) came in pretty thick and made us wonder what was burning and how close it was. Fortunately by morning the air around us had cleared up fine, but here's what it looked like from our campsite Saturday evening, as opposed to the night before the fire:
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Well, the next day Banjo was still hurting, his muscles just all but mush from jumping over 14,000 boulders to follow us up the trail on the first day. So we thought it best to hike out instead of either a) trying to drag him further into the backcountry, or c) spending another night at our same camp. He was able to walk on the flat parts, but the poor little guy just didn't have it in him to get himself over any big obstacles or down steep sections. So, we carried him. Yep, we carried our 18 pound dog seven miles back out to the trailhead. How was such a bizarre feat accomplished, you may ask? Well, Kate started out with a makeshift Banjo-sling made out of the detachable hip-pack from her backpack.
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Later on I took over and we just stuffed the puppa in the top of my pack, his head poking out like, as Auntie observed, a bobblehead turtle.
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Since we had some extra time, we decided to go up the road to Sonora Pass, which we had failed to reach due to snow and a closed road on our earlier infamous boot-losing trip this spring. Kate volunteered to hang out at the very scenic trailhead while Auntie and I hiked North from the road up to a volcanic outcrop. In just a couple miles we saw some interesting features, including this meadow of leafy flowering plants (among other wildflowers) that looked like a garden:
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We climbed up to it and as soon as we stepped into the tunnel the wind almost blew us over it was so strong! I had to hold onto my hat, and it even blew the camera off the rock I had set it on just seconds after it took this picture. Phew! Good thing we're not 10 lbs lighter or we probably would have been blown into Nevada.
So that's that - a quick rundown of a great hiking trip with a great Aunt (and a great dog, yes, we still love him). We hope to go back sometime. Thanks for coming out to go camping with us Auntie!
3 comments:
What an auntie! What great kids! What a poor, little, trooper of a dog! I hope you dont get reported to the SPCA.
Mom
I wonder how Banjo would've liked IcyHot...
Poor little Banjo! I'm glad you didn't make him hike back out. We had a similar experience last winter with Brunswick when we hiked up Mount Cube. By the second half of our hike he would not stop shivering! He was so pathetic. (And all the while, our friend's Bernese Mountain dog would stop every chance he got and relish just rolling in the snow.) We ended up stuffing him in a cozy backpack as well, and he happily bobbed along for the remainder of the hike.
Looks like you had some beautiful scenery on this adventure in any case.
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