We didn’t get out into the backcountry last year because we had such a busy summer and I vowed that will never happen again. Here is the first of several trip reports of photography expeditions from this year’s adventures and I’m sure there are more to come. I’ll break this down into two sections, a quick summary of our trip, then some technical details on the photography. For past adventures you can see our route through the Sawthooths, or our cross-country loop from thousand island lake to Minaret Lake, or some environmental photojournalism in the White Mountains or a ski trip up Mt. Shasta. High resolution images of all trips can be licensed for use or purchased by simply searching through my online archive of stock photography via keywords.
First, on all our trips we usually do about 40% on trail and 60% cross-country, navigating with USGS 7.5 maps or equivalent. I can say that after nearly 10 years of doing this, those who stay strictly on trail are excluding themselves from the best the High Sierra has to offer. This trip was about 50-50, with our small group making a meandering loop up Piute Pass and into Humphreys Basin to Desolation Lake, before cutting cross country to wind our way back to Piute Pass. Piute Lake seemes to always be windy. I don’t know why, probably the shape of the valley and the oppressive heat of Bishop sucking the air down from 12,000 feet. The lake has some nice campsites just below the snow survey shed on the east end, this spot comes complete with a secluded pond deep enough for swimming and secluded enough for skinny dipping and lying out on the warm granite slabs afterwards. There is another great set of campsites, suitable for a larger group about midway up the lake. Keep your eyes out for when the trail starts to veer away from the lake at about the middle. Look toward the water and there are two peninsulas that jut into the lake and have several large, flat sites well away from the trail. Most of the rest of the sights are near the trail and a waste of time in my opinion.
From the lake, the climb to Piute pass is easy, and once over it, I was amazed by just how flat Humphreys Basin is. There are tons of lakes to choose from. The main trail, if followed, will eventually connect with the John Muir trail and offer the possibility for longer loops. We chose to head north, to Desolation lake, one of the largest lakes in the basin. I was unimpressed by this lake, it’s shallowness and the lack of decent campsites. For such a popular destination, its pretty bleak. Some of the best sites are at the north-east end, near the drainage that leads up to Forsaken Lake. I think you would do better just to head to Forsaken Lake.
From there, we cut cross-country to a series of tiny no-name lakes at the base of Mt. Humphreys in the 12,000 foot range. While Humphreys lakes had some decent sites and beautiful blue water, we liked the higher, more secluded lakes. We kept working our way past these small, beautiful lakes, too numerous to count, until we popped out the next day at Piute Pass, from which it was a simple 2500 ft decent to the trail head at North Lake. A small trip, but totally worth it and you can make your own infinite variations on it by avoiding the larger, named lakes and following your map to the hidden beauties.
I have been toying with the idea of getting a digital rangefinder camera such as the Sony Nex7 or Nikon v3 (not quite out yet) and a set of fast prime lenses to go with them for my trips. The quality is getting to be exceptional with these cameras, easily good enough for publication and at less than half the weight of my DSLR. But there is something about my Nikon d800E, the massive files are so sharp and clear that when I get a good image, it really pops out, and I can make wall size prints without any loss in quality. So far, I still prefer to travel with a quality camera and save weight elsewhere. However, in a concession to my age and not-quite-recovered knee, I only took one lens. The uber sharp Nikon 24 f1.4. I knew it was going to be a new moon while we were out and I wanted to experiment with some astral photography while I was out there. I found 20 seconds at f2 and iso 2500 to give me sharp stars, great exposure and a super clean image. The massive 106Mb file size of the D800E allows a lot of room for cropping, so I can recover some of my range through cropping, but in general the wider the better for landscapes. During the day I had a B+W polarizing filter on. I gave up on my split grade neutral density filters as that is more easily accomplished and at a higher quality by bracketing exposures and compositing the images in Photoshop.
Sick with envy and regret!!! Such stunning and amazing images…and all of your beautiful faces. Wish I could have rally’d for this one!
Just holy WOW!
xoxo
K
Great report and pictures. i have a question. For a trip like that 3-4 days, do you need a permit?
Also what was the entry point?
Hi Andrei,
Yes, permits are required in this section, as in most of the wilderness areas. This basin is generally limited to 39 people. Half of the permits can be reserved in advance, the other half you need to show up for by 8am the day of your hike if you feel lucky, otherwise by 8am the day before to get in the que for the first in line, first served issuing of following day permits at 11am sharp. We actually did the latter, because we didn’t plan to well. Granted it was a holiday, but got to the Forest Service office in Bishop at 7am the day before our hike and at 8, we were first in line to put our name on a list to get our permits at 11am. At 11am sharp, (you can’t be late or they skip you) they call out, in order, all the folks that got on the list that morning. We were first and scored a permit for 3 people. The couple right behind us asked for the same route and were denied. All the forest service office computers apparently are linked together now, so even if nobody in front of you is planning on taking your exact route, that doesn’t mean someone isn’t in line at Mammoth, or Mono or some other office for the same area. This usually only applies to weekends and holidays, but we went in on July 4, about the busiest time of the year, so we got lucky. But that said, permits are always required.
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FANTASTIC PHOTOS.
Was in this very area about 8? years back; interestingly, we did a similar off-trail adventure in the same pockets, I think, where you and your friends traveled; you are so correct about Desolation Lake. Big, yes. But not a very attractive pocket — hence the name, I guess.
Did you use a tripod or some steady rock platform to get the night stars? Those are lovely shots.
Was curious if you ever looked at that seemingly easy-to-navigate skree to the northwest of Desolation. My buddy and me looked it a few times and thought that we might be able to go “cross country” style to the direction of Star Lake (but we decided against it because we were a bit worried it might be more difficult than we were willing to tackle for a Day 2 location.
Years later we ended up in that area (not Star Lake — but L Lake; that is a pretty part of the world too).
Enjoyed your post and photos! Happy hiking!
Sincerely,
John
Thanks for the great post. I have backpacked the higher altitude Pioneer Basin when rejected for the “day of” trail pass to Piute. They did a lottery and even though we were there early it didn’t matter. Piute is very popular.
I’m curious. What are your thoughts doing this trip mid-June? Obviously, it’s hard to predict weather systems but any experience that early in the year?
Thanks!
Charlie
Hi Charles, we did the lottery and we were second in line and the first person took 3 spots and we got the rest, so yes, pretty popular. This year was a decent snow year, I would expect you might have a lot of snow, especially up over the pass, to deal with. Plus wildflowers probably won’t be out that early that high unless it turns really warm. If you are experienced with winter navigation it shouldn’t be much of a problem.
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