Part 6 - Kaiser Pass and those nasty final S-turns
Part 6 - Kaiser Pass and those nasty final S-turns
All corked up in those nasty S-turns
The last day of an adventure is usually the hardest for me. I love the daily demands of life on the trail; where what's important, is what's happening right now. I thrive on that. No checking email or on-line corporate calendars being populated remotely by unseen demands. No checking the stock market to see if you're achieving corporate-escape velocity (retirement) or not, or wether you're on today's random-drug-test-list. All symptoms of a high-demand society attempting to stuff you into it's little, manageable, uncreative, box. I grew up in Berkeley CA, so you might understand why I have authority issues. I don't do well with external structure and prioritization. The free-form life on the trail suits me just fine. That's where I'm confident that I can mostly make good decisions that will keep me within my capabilities, and that I can fix most anything else.
Twenty years ago, I left the Bay Area for Bellingham, Washington to start a job in the bicycle industry that quickly fell through. I ended up, by virtue of the fact that I could fix things, working in an oil refinery. Probably not the best fit for a person of my temperament. In leaving California, I also left Erik my younger brother and partner in adventure. So these days on the trail with our boys, are sweet and precious as we explore the edges of our abilities together. We get show our boys how to expand the horizons of what can be attempted and won, and the feeling you get when you do succeed. They watch us as we test ourselves and meet challenges they know we are not confident we can accomplish, but are willing, or forced, to try. Days on the trail are a perfect instructor for life; it goes something like this:
"oh boy, I hope we can make that!"
Drive up to nasty section. Look section over and express doubt as to wether or not we can make it. “This seems much harder than what we've done so far - this is going to be sketchy, I hope we can do it, I don't want to get stuck here!”. Next, apply experience, creativity, sweat, several different tactics, lots of discussion and a few attempts. Then, success. Feelings of accomplishment and elation. Repeat in 300 feet. It's all such a great metaphor for life - but with much less complication from external demands and priorities.
This was our last day and I was faced with that usual melancholy. This had been a tough week, our trucks were filled with dust and had several new unexplained squeaks, scratches and dents, but it had been an immensely satisfying journey. We were convinced by now that we were going to make it. Most of the tough stuff was behind us I thought, when Erik mentioned over breakfast that there were:
“some pretty tough S-turns near the end of the trail”.
Me -“oh really?” “Tougher than what we've seen?”
Erik - “maybe, I'm not sure”.
“Great!” - me.
A little bit of dread began to seep in over the top of the melancholy.
Breakfast at Lakecamp - Erik hard at work
We got off to a good start, but were worried about having enough gas to finish. We had both filled up in Shaver Lake, the last gas before the Dusy, and had both filled up a 5 gallon can each to top-off once we got to the trail. Long since gone. It's hard to imagine that less than 30 miles had put us near empty, but that's where we were - both hoping the gas light wouldn't come on too soon.
Another well-used tree along the way
From the 4WDC of Fresno website:
“The next four difficult miles to Whitebark Vista will test driving skills, but the panoramic views make it worth the effort.* The route ends at Whitebark Vista.* Many people prefer use this White Bark Vista as a starting point.* Huntington Lake is about 30 minutes away.”
The trail wasn't too bad on the way to Kaiser Pass, just more of the usual slow-going with the occasional “doozie” thrown in to make sure that we were still awake. We stopped at the highest point on the trail, just over 10,100ft, for a group photo. Further on, the trail began to toughen up as the builders needed to loose about a thousand feet in order to meet up with the paved Kaiser Pass road, only a couple of miles ahead. I could tell that we were beginning to approach those S-turns I was beginning to dread.
The Crew @ 10,100'
The entrance to the turns is a narrow, boulder strewn chute, that had us both rocking and rolling and scraping and stacking. Me more than Erik. It was very tough and I am convinced that it would have been harder coming up on 285's than Thompson Hill was. The S-turns were absolutely hideous. Very tight, with some of the largest drop-offs on the trail. Not the place for anything but short wheel-base trucks with high clearance. It took us well over an hour to negotiate the 200 yards that made up this whole section.
Above the S-turns
Erik getting tippy entering the S-turns
The easiest line
Erik three wheelin'
By luck, and ambition to do the trail the “hardest way”, we had not done this section at the beginning of our adventure. I would have been very close to throwing in the towel and headed for camping and day-trails in the beautiful surroundings of the Sierra National Forest. I don't believe that the FJ could have made it going uphill, without winching this section. That's a lousy way to begin a six-day adventure. In the end: through the application of experience, creativity, sweat, several different tactics, lots of discussion and a few attempts, we did make it. And almost immediately the trail was done.
Wow! Just like that - the trail is over. The struggles are done. Our adventure was complete. It was a very tough journey and I don't believe that I will attempt anything quite so difficult in my FJ again - we had been damaged by the Dusy.
That's our story and were sticking to it!
Thanks for reading along and for all of your encouraging comments as I posted up. I know the Expedition Portal, as a site, might not be the best place to write about this kind of trail, but readers seem to enjoy the stories and I've met a lot of friends here, gone on some fun adventures with some of them and hope to again many times in the future - Lord willing. Thank you.