|
By: Paul S Cilwa |
Occurred: 7/24/1981 Posted: 7/28/2010 |
|
Page Views: 2,372 |
| Hashtags: #YosemiteNationalPark #California #Camping |
| I recall my first visit to one of my two favorite places in the world. |
| Estimated reading time: 12 minute(s) (2673 words) |
I had been on a lengthy computer software installation for my
Omaha-based employer, Applied Communications, Inc. We were
installing software for Wells Fargo Bank in Fresno, California, for
a new device they had called an "automated teller machine" (ATM for
short). The installation was supposed to take two weeks. However,
due to the minor problem that we hadn't actually completed
the software when we went to install it, the job took six
weeks.
ACI paid for me to fly home each weekend; and, most weekends, I
did. However, I was in California…a place I'd never before
visited…and who knew if I would ever have another chance to be
there? Fresno was rather boring; but I had friends living in San
Francisco, and so one weekend I made arrangements to visit them and
go camping at Yosemite.
I was familiar with the name, "Yosemite", as that had been the
name of the ship to which I was assigned during my brief Navy
career. But I knew absolutely nothing about the park for which it
was named.
The first leg of my trip was by jet from Omaha. The views from the jet of the ground
were spectacular.
My Friday afternoon flight from Fresno to San Francisco was made
on a regional carrier whose name I no longer remember. (I generally
think of it as "Basket Airways".) It was a propeller plane, the
first large one I'd ridden. We were close enough to the ground for
me to actually take recognizable pictures of California scenery from
the air.
I believe I've made it clear in these pages that I am not a fan of
cities in general. But remember, at this time the biggest city I'd
even seen (or at least, the tallest) was Jacksonville, Florida.
Omaha was big but spread out, without many tall buildings. My
friend, Dick (who now calls himself Richard but he was Dick at the
time) picked me up at the airport and treated me to a tour of
downtown San Francisco. And, yes, I was impressed at the beauty and
grandeur of the architecture…especially when the "morning" fog
finally rolled away around three in the afternoon.
Dick and I met up with his roommate, Rick, and they took me to a
fancy Chinese dinner near Fisherman's Wharf. Afterwards, as we were
walking along, I experienced an unexpected psychic event. I was
following close behind Rick as Dick and I were chatting, and were
just about to cross a busy intersection. The light changed and Rick
stepped off the curb. Without my conscious volition, my hand jabbed
forward, grabbed Rick by the belt, and jerked him back onto the
sidewalk, just as a Volkswagen came careening against the light. It
hurtled by exactly where Rick had stood a split-second
before. If I hadn't have pulled him back, he would have been hit for
certain. Rick thanked me for saving him, but I didn't feel I could
take credit—I hadn't seen the car, and had been paying zero
attention to what was going on around me. Whoever or whatever was
responsible for saving Rick, it hadn't been my conscious self.
I spent the night on Dick and Rick's sofa, but not for long: We
were up—more or less—at 2:00 am to begin our camping trip. I hope
I helped load the car but I don't really remember much. I am not
really myself at that hour. And I slept pretty soundly in the car as
Rick drove eastward toward the park, so I missed all of that
scenery.
We were in the foothills by the time the sun rose, and climbed
steadily upward as I roused, took a photo, dozed off, and roused
again.
I learned later that we had entered the park from the Northwest
Entrance, State Highway 120, and continued on the northern road
through the park, This bypasses the Yosemite Canyon floor and its
most famous landmarks, such as El Capitan (of which, at the time,
I'd never heard). So, for me, it was just pretty. Incredible, in
fact.
I knew we were gaining altitude as we drove, of course. But I had no
idea how much. I was unaware, for example, that when we reached
Tuolumne Meadows, from which we planned to hike, that we were more
than two-and-a-half miles higher than we'd been when we started out
at 2 AM from San Francisco.
I had fallen asleep again when we arrived at a small general store
near our planned trailhead. Dick woke me, and I immediately realized
I had to go to the bathroom something fierce. I opened the door,
jumped out of the car, and started running for the general
store—and found myself on my knees, gasping for breath. We were at
nearly 9,000 feet in altitude, and I had spent no time acclimating.
But I was young and able to get back up. We picked up a few
last-minute supplies from the store, and began our hike.
Our packs were pretty heavy, as Dick used to be an Eagle Scout (Dick
will always be an Eagle Scout) and intended to cook full
meals from scratch on this trip. So we had a frying pan, a sauce
pan, a camp stove, ingredients, and so on. Add that to the altitude
and the fact we weren't used to it, and it will surprise no one that
we started out literally having to stop and rest every six or
seven steps. A half hour after leaving, we could still see
Rick's car. I wondered if we would ever get anywhere.
But eventually we got into a rhythm and made some progress,
continuing to climb even higher.
We began hiking about 10 or 10:30. When we pulled our packs from the
car, that included the last-minute transfer of lunch sandwiches from
a cooler into our packs. Dick set an alarm on his watch. He had
researched exactly how long the sandwiches could remain
unrefrigerated without causing health problems.
As I said, Dick will always be an Eagle Scout!
Similarly, Dick had brought some kind of tablets to treat any
water before we drank it. There's lots of water in Yosemite's high
country, but (as I now know) all water west of the
Continental Divide is potentially contaminated with Giardia,
a genus of anaerobic flagellated protozoan parasites that colonize
and reproduce in the small intestines of several vertebrates,
including humans. Dick knew that but didn't explain why he
was so careful with the water he drank.
I couldn't argue with the wisdom of drinking treated water.
Nevertheless, some of the springs and creeks we came upon looked so
inviting, and just darn tasty, that I simply cupped my hands,
filled them with water, and drank. I didn't even wash my hands
first.
Dick, of course, was horrified. And I can't say he was wrong…but
the fact is, I never got sick, and subsequent tests just to be sure
have shown I do not have a Giardia infection.
Sometimes it's best to go with your gut.
We came within sight of an exquisite alpine lake around
lunchtime, that we agreed would be an awesome place to enjoy lunch.
But Dick's watch alarm went off while we were still about ten
minutes away from it, indicating his unrefrigerated sandwich must be
eaten now or it wouldn't be safe. He sat on the spot and ate
it, while Rick and I continued to the lake, unrefrigerated
sandwiches be damned. Dick joined us after his potentially deadly
pepperoni sandwich had been consumed.
Did I mention, Dick was the only one of us who ate the pepperoni?
In any case, we continued on our way, which was to some spot Dick
had found on his topographic map. This being long before GPS, we had
to go by landmarks which in this area change with the seasons; and
one granite dome looks pretty much like the other five. So it wasn't
easy to be sure we were where he thought we were.
And we kept climbing, reaching an 11,000 foot ridge just
around sunset. At this point, I didn't care where the hell we
were. I wanted to stop, set up camp, and sleep. Even eating was
optional at this point. But, as cranky as I was, even I was
enthralled by the fantastic sight of the chalk-white hill across
from us, reflecting the light of the setting sun.
Pouring over his topo map, Dick was still not certain where we were.
It was clearly a volcanic caldera, but there were at least three in
what was probably our immediate area and five within a wider circle.
But we didn't really care. While Rick and I pitched our tents, Dick
started cooking dinner, carefully frozen hamburger patties with
aluminum-wrapped potatoes and corn-on-the-cob baked in the fire.
The sky was still light enough to see after dinner, so I
suggested we go for a swim. Dick was hesitant—it was still accepted
folk wisdom in 1981 that one should never go into water less than an
hour after eating. But Rick and I both laughed and bullied him out
of his clothes and into the water with the rest of us.
As it turns out, it was a good thing we shallow-dove into the
lake instead of wading slowly, as it turned out the lake was
infested with leeches. But we didn't learn that until morning,
because we never actually touched the lake bottom for more than a
moment.
There was a lone eagle flying in the crater, around and around
and around. It appeared he (or she) couldn't leave. I guessed the
air was too thin for him to quite cross the 11,000 foot ridge we'd
climbed. A wind may have blown him into the caldera, where he was
now trapped, able to hunt and eat and drink, but unable to leave or
enjoy the company of other eagles. It made me sad, but I couldn't
think of anything I could do to help.
By the time it was full-on dark, with the sky splattered with a
magnificent array of brilliant and unwinking stars, I was too tired
to enjoy it. I crawled into my sleeping bag and was out like a
light.
So I was unaware that Dick got sick. He insists it was altitude
sickness, as the symptoms matched and we were, after all, a lot
higher than any of us was used to. Still, I teased him for years
after that, that it was either his water purification pills, or the
pepperoni sandwiches that only he ate, that were what really
made him sick.
In any case, he was sick enough all night that he kept Rick
awake. And by the bear sign we found in the morning all around but
at a respectful distance from our camp, his moans and puking may
also have scared off the bears.
I awoke late. Sick as he was, Dick had managed to make pancakes
from scratch, along with fried bacon. Now, oddly, I was not
only not sick…I felt better than I ever had before in my
life! So when I saw how miserable Dick was, I suggested Rick and I
split the contents of his pack, each adding half to our own. And
then…with this heavy load…I ran!
I do not run. I have never run. I never liked running. I didn't
like it in gym. I don't even run for the parking meter.
But this day, this one day, wearing a 60-pound pack at almost
11,000 feet above sea level…I felt as if I were floating; and I
trail ran for at least a mile before stopping to wait for Rick
and Dick to catch up. Which is probably why I was quiet long enough
for the deer, or elk, or whatever it was, to come relatively close
to me.
This kind of special moment, when we enter the world of nature and
are accepted by it, is what makes people who've experienced it want
to come back for more.
Since the return trip was more-or-less downhill, and we'd had a
night to get used to the thin air, it passed more quickly. That we
didn't know our exact location wasn't a problem; we had a compass
and as long as we kept heading north we had to reach the
road. But in fact, we soon recognized the lake at which we'd had
lunch, and then, before long, we were back at the general store and
Rick's car.
Dick was already much improved; by the time we got back to the
Bay Area he was almost better, though he later said it took a couple
of days before he was completely back to normal.
As for me, I was hooked: On the West, on high mountains, on
Yosemite, on camping in these places. And I knew I would be
back…though I would never have guessed at the time that it would
be 14 years before my next visit.