My family history in the  Eastern Sierra and  Yosemite
 dates  back almost eighty years. In 1938, while on a hiatus from living
 in prewar Los  Angeles, my fraternal grandmother, Dorothy met her 
second husband John A.  McCollum there. At that time, he was helping 
construct U.S. Highway 395 near  Bridgeport, California. They fell in love, were married and for the next fifty  years returned to fish for trout in  Gardisky Lake and Saddlebag Lake near the  Tioga Road. In 1944, my mother, Phyllis married my father,  Loron N. McGillis.  For their honeymoon, in December of that year, they chose Yosemite Valley.
 
 In 1959, I got my first taste of Yosemite National Park and nearby  Mono County.  For several nights, our family of five camped in Yosemite Valley. When we  naively set out one morning to climb the  Yosemite Falls Trail,
 we took no water  or food. By the time we reached the base of the main 
falls, we were hot, tired  and dehydrated. When my father wisely made 
the decision to turn back, at  infamous  Columbia Rock, I refused  to move. The lure of the giant waterfall was too strong for me to admit defeat  and return to our campsite.
In 1959, I got my first taste of Yosemite National Park and nearby  Mono County.  For several nights, our family of five camped in Yosemite Valley. When we  naively set out one morning to climb the  Yosemite Falls Trail,
 we took no water  or food. By the time we reached the base of the main 
falls, we were hot, tired  and dehydrated. When my father wisely made 
the decision to turn back, at  infamous  Columbia Rock, I refused  to move. The lure of the giant waterfall was too strong for me to admit defeat  and return to our campsite.
 
At night, bears would roam the campgrounds, silently looking for food. 
On our  final morning in Yosemite Valley, a neighboring camper showed me
 where a bear  had licked the side window of his old truck. There had 
been a melon sitting on  the front seat, but bears and people were more 
naïve in those days. Instead of  smashing the window and taking the 
melon, the California Black Bear walked around our sleeping  bags and 
headed back to his or her domain.
 
 When we left Yosemite Valley, we drove up Highway 120, heading for  Tioga Pass
  and the town of Lee Vining, California on the far side. Although it 
was late June, there was still  snow in the high country. Two years 
later,  in 1961,
 construction crews completed  the modern version of the Tioga Road, all
 the way to the eastern entrance of  Yosemite Park, at the top of Tioga 
Pass.
When we left Yosemite Valley, we drove up Highway 120, heading for  Tioga Pass
  and the town of Lee Vining, California on the far side. Although it 
was late June, there was still  snow in the high country. Two years 
later,  in 1961,
 construction crews completed  the modern version of the Tioga Road, all
 the way to the eastern entrance of  Yosemite Park, at the top of Tioga 
Pass.
 
Because the construction season was so short and there was no alternate 
route, traffic stopped for up to one hour at a time. Traffic would 
alternate at the  construction sites and then everything would close 
down for an hour or more  blasting and grading around Tanaya Lake. As a 
ten year old, the experience seemed to last forever. Even after the 
arduous trip over the  Tioga Road of old, we motored on. In late 
afternoon, we arrived in the City of Bishop,  California. There, we spent the night at a motel with a swimming pool. To me, it  seemed the height of luxury.
 
 From Bishop to our home in  Burbank, California was about a three hundred mile  trip, featuring desert heat and  Sierra Nevada views
  much of the way. In the late 1950s, most of U.S. Highway 395 was a 
two-lane road, with only occasional passing lanes or other safe places 
to pass slower vehicles. To this day, one treacherous stretch of road 
between Olancha and Cartago remains as it was back  in the day. With 
completion of a four-lane bypass scheduled for 2022, I guarantee  every 
day, some fool will pull out to pass, even though there  are twenty 
vehicles ahead of him.
From Bishop to our home in  Burbank, California was about a three hundred mile  trip, featuring desert heat and  Sierra Nevada views
  much of the way. In the late 1950s, most of U.S. Highway 395 was a 
two-lane road, with only occasional passing lanes or other safe places 
to pass slower vehicles. To this day, one treacherous stretch of road 
between Olancha and Cartago remains as it was back  in the day. With 
completion of a four-lane bypass scheduled for 2022, I guarantee  every 
day, some fool will pull out to pass, even though there  are twenty 
vehicles ahead of him.
 
Since my first visit to Yosemite National Park, it has held a place in 
my heart,  as it did for my parents and grandparents before me. Over the
 decades, I would  often visit Yosemite, driving north on U.S. Highway 
99 to Fresno and then  northeast on Highway 41. Once inside the national
 park, the highway becomes the  Wawona Road.
 From Los Angeles to Yosemite Valley was a three hundred mile trip,  
with lots of San Joaquin Valley heat to endure. From Yosemite Valley to 
Tuolumne Meadows was only sixty miles, but that took another two hours 
via the Tioga  Road. In recent years, I realized it was eight  miles
 shorter to drive from Los  Angeles to Tuolumne Meadows via Highway 395 
and then over Tioga Pass. In  addition, once you leave Bishop, heading 
north, you ascend almost immediately  into the high country, with its 
cooler temperatures and scenic views.
miles
 shorter to drive from Los  Angeles to Tuolumne Meadows via Highway 395 
and then over Tioga Pass. In  addition, once you leave Bishop, heading 
north, you ascend almost immediately  into the high country, with its 
cooler temperatures and scenic views.
 
After a decade of drought in California, the winter of 2016-2017 brought
  record-setting snowfall in the Sierra Nevada. With a cool springtime 
and a late  start to summer heat, many Sierra trails and secondary roads
 remained blocked  well into July. After seeing a complete lack of snow 
atop Mammoth Mountain in  August 2016, I wanted to see the Sierra 
snowpack that remained this summer. In  order to avoid July 4th weekend 
crowds, I planned my trip to end on July 1,  2017.
 
When
 I left Los Angeles on June 28, my initial destination was the Mammoth  
Mountain RV Park. I planned to road test my New Titan XD truck, towing 
our  travel trailer to that location. From there I could venture to Lee 
Vining and  then over the Tioga Road to Tuolumne Meadows. Over the 
winter, the meadows had  received up to thirty feet of snowpack. In 
Mammoth Lakes, at an elevation of  7,500 feet, there was no trace of 
snow. At an elevation of 8966 feet, nearby  Lake Mary was still frozen. 
As is often the case in July, the days were warm and  the nights were 
cool.
 
After arriving at Mammoth Lakes,
 I remembered that it takes almost a week to  acclimate to the altitude.
 On Thursday morning, I slept late and did not venture  away from my 
campsite until late afternoon. Wanting to test my four-wheel drive  system, I drove my new truck to  Obsidian Dome,
 just fifteen miles away. One of  five volcanic craters in the Mono-Inyo
 Craters group, I knew that the Obsidian  Dome forest trail was 
challenging but not too daunting for such a big truck.
 
Looking more like a huge pile of volcanic rocks than a crater, I decided
 not to  hike to the top of the dome. Instead, I drove to a turnout in 
the woods and enjoyed the solitude of the place. Soon, two other 
vehicles pulled up to my secluded spot and idled for several minutes 
before moving on. One might think my  spot was the only place to stop in
 the Eastern Sierra. After the interlopers  departed, I noticed that 
there was still snow a few hundred feet above my  location.
 
 Upon
 returning to the RV Park, I confirmed that the Tioga Road had indeed 
opened  to traffic on that very day. The next morning, I started out for
 the historic  town of Lee Vining
 and then up the Tioga Road to Yosemite National Park. While talking on 
my  mobile telephone, I became distracted and missed the Tioga Road 
turnoff. That  was a lucky break, because a trip through Lee Vining on 
Highway 395 is always a treat. Just north of the town, there are 
spectacular views of ancient  Mono Lake, so I stopped to take pictures.
Upon
 returning to the RV Park, I confirmed that the Tioga Road had indeed 
opened  to traffic on that very day. The next morning, I started out for
 the historic  town of Lee Vining
 and then up the Tioga Road to Yosemite National Park. While talking on 
my  mobile telephone, I became distracted and missed the Tioga Road 
turnoff. That  was a lucky break, because a trip through Lee Vining on 
Highway 395 is always a treat. Just north of the town, there are 
spectacular views of ancient  Mono Lake, so I stopped to take pictures.
 
In all my years of visiting  Mono County, I had not seen the lake level so high. This summer, there was more water available to the  City of Los Angeles
 than it  could divert. As a result, Lee Vining Creek and other streams 
in the Mono Lake  watershed appeared to disgorge directly into the lake.
 
After
 researching historic water levels at Mono Lake, I determined that the 
July  7, 2017 elevation of 6380.4 ft. was up 2.1 ft. from the same date 
the previous  year. Even at that, the lake level was forty-seven feet 
lower than it was in  1919. Today, the City of Los Angeles and the  Mono
 Lake Committee have an agreement regarding diversion and partial 
refilling of Mono Lake.  With its gently sloping shores and shallow 
depth, even a small rise in water  level covers a vast expanse of the 
original lake-bed.
 
After gazing at Mono Lake, I realized that I had driven right past the 
Tioga  Road Junction. Soon, I turned around and headed back toward 
Highway 120, also  known as the Tioga Road. When I stopped at the 
service station just off Highway  395, I could see that it was busy. 
Inside the store and deli, several hundred  people milled around and 
blocked every aisle. Luckily, I had brought my own  snacks and did not 
need to wait in line for food.
 
Back
 on the Tioga Road, I used the torque of the Titan XD’s turbo-diesel 
engine  to glide up the steep grade. I was passing slower vehicles and 
appeared  hell-bent to get to the high country. Then, I saw the first of
 two large lakes  visible from the highway. It was full to the brim and 
the spillway was open. I  stopped to see a cascade of water plunging 
down the rocky slope into Lee Vining  Creek. At each subsequent stop, I 
positioned the truck off-road, so I could and  take pictures through the
 open side window. On the return trip, I would  photograph points of 
interest on the other side of the road. One place I  stopped, the  Tioga Pass Resort,
 founded in 1914 was flooded and partially destroyed. That  was my first
 taste of infrastructure destruction in the area. Later, I learned that 
the resort  would not open for the season in 2017.
 
By
 the time I reached Tuolumne Meadows, I realized that I had missed the 
sign  for the  Tuolumne Meadows Lodge, which is located in the woods, to
 the east of the actual meadows. Strange… I thought. Did they cover or 
remove the signage?  Before long, I arrived at the  Tuolumne Meadows Store.
 I should say… what was left of the store. In the late fall, the store 
is stripped of its canvas roof.  As winter snows fall, they drift and 
accumulate inside the skeleton of the  wooden structure.
 
This year, over thirty feet of snow accumulated on the concrete floor of
 the store. We perceive that snow melts vertically, disappearing into 
the earth  without a trace. The reality is that deep, wet Sierra Nevada 
snow-pack behaves like a slow-motion glacier. As the snow-pack 
accumulated in the store, it could  not melt through the concrete floor,
 so it pushed sideways, contorted by both  wind
 and gravity. The result was about ten-years of weathering in only one 
season. The ends of rafters snapped under the load. Anything left 
standing looked decrepit and derelict.
 
Compared to the summer drought of 2016, this year Tuolumne Meadows 
looked green and lush. There was no remaining snow in the upper meadow, 
but high water flowed down the  Tuolumne River. When I headed west 
another mile along the Tioga Road, I came to  the lower meadow
 that gives the place its plural name. There, the river had  backed up 
at the entrance of a small canyon, creating a seasonal lake. A later 
check of Google Maps showed no lake in that location, only a  wide spot  in the river.
 
Traveling
 back to the east, toward Tioga Pass, I turned right on to the Tuolumne 
Meadows Lodge Road.  At a fork in that road, temporary barriers blocked 
blocked vehicle access.  Parking in the adjacent parking lot, I  began a
 short hike up the closed road. My goal was the Tuolumne Meadows Lodge, 
 with its famed tent-cabins, dining hall and general store. With no one 
 else in sight, my hike alternated between hot sun and gentle shade from
 the pine and  fir trees. When I arrived at the  lodge parking lot, I saw the first signs of  destruction.
 
During the spring melt, the Dana Fork of the Tuolumne River had breached
 its  natural banks and an errant stream had cut through grounds of the 
lodge. Below, mud, rocks and gravel lay fanned out across the parking 
lot. Closer to the  wood-framed lodge, the new stream had cut a v-shaped
 channel in the  pathway.  Although a dozen of the tent cabins had their canvas tops and sides installed, there was no sign of any additional work or work parties.
pathway.  Although a dozen of the tent cabins had their canvas tops and sides installed, there was no sign of any additional work or work parties.
 
On  August 25, 2016,
 I had visited the Tuolumne Meadows Lodge. By chance, it was the 
centennial of the U.S. National Parks Service. On that date, the lodge 
was  bustling with activity. Some people sat in the shade, reading, 
while others had  lunch in the dining hall. Hikers and visitors crowded 
the little store, buying  backcountry supplies. Unless one had a prior 
reservation, no lodging was available. After ten years of drought and 
insignificant snowfall, the lodge had  opened early in 2016.
 
On the Friday before the July 4th weekend of 2017, the scene was quite  
different. No other humans were in sight. Almost nothing of the old 
wooden lodge  had received attention. The white-painted structure looked
 like the  bleached
  bones of a beached whale. The shed roof in front was broken and 
falling down.  Many of the hand-made trusses that supported the dining 
hall roof were broken.  One dangled over the concrete floor, hanging by a
 length of old electrical conduit. No one had yet taken a broom to the 
floor, let alone repaired any of  the extensive damage. It appeared that
 the many layers of flaking white paint  were all that held the 
structure together.
bleached
  bones of a beached whale. The shed roof in front was broken and 
falling down.  Many of the hand-made trusses that supported the dining 
hall roof were broken.  One dangled over the concrete floor, hanging by a
 length of old electrical conduit. No one had yet taken a broom to the 
floor, let alone repaired any of  the extensive damage. It appeared that
 the many layers of flaking white paint  were all that held the 
structure together.
 
Out back, I had the cascading falls of the  Tuolumne River’s Dana Fork
 all to  myself. I could see where the river had jumped its banks and 
toppled an enormous old tree. Steel lunch tables, where campers had sat 
reading the previous year  lay crumpled and broken by the weight of the 
winter snow-pack.
 
With
 no one working and the road so recently opened, repair of both the 
Tuolumne Meadows Store and Lodge appeared to be an overwhelming task. 
With California experiencing the lowest unemployment figures in a 
decade, I wondered who would endure the hardship of living in a tent 
cabin in order to rebuild derelict buildings that might not be 
repairable. With meager federal government funding for the National Park
 Service, where would the money come from to repair  structures that my 
parents had first visited seventy-five years ago?
 
At the old Tuolumne Meadows Service Station, I noted that there were no 
gas  pumps. Where once had been a concrete pad and a service island was a
 large patch of gravel. Nearby, I photographed an old  roadside sign. 
For motorists heading west to Yosemite Valley, it read, “No  Services 
Next 39 Miles”. The irony
 was that there were no motorist services for  the seventy-five mile 
stretch between Lee Vining and Yosemite Valley. As  I departed Yosemite 
National Park, I realized that high country visitors would  find no 
food, fuel, campsites, wilderness permits or lodging any time soon. As  
with everything else in Yosemite and Mono County this year, unprepared 
travelers  could be in for a rude shock and a very long wait.
            
By James McGillis at 05:32 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link

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