We left Swall Meadows the cool and quiet mountainside with
the purples and blues and white topped distances. It's all happening now
because it's Yosemite day, Yosemite that I've wanted to go to since forever
that mountain place, that valley place that glaciers made that is protected
from man but man can visit and not just that but stay and be in it. My maps
said roughly a 3 hour drive and it's a pleasure to get in red orange car
knowing everything that lies between will be good and at the end of the drive there will be Yosemite.
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| June Lake |
After that sweet breakfast I described we go and stop in June
Lake to do a loop around it on the way and now everything is dark green with
expansiveness sweeping out in front with lakes dotted everywhere on the way to
Mammoth Lakes, and rounding the corner there is a crystal blue lake sprawled
out and it's so quiet and then stepping out the car the warmth hits you and the
insects buzzing in the bushes and that smell as you look out over the lake.
Obviously we need to get to the lake and touch the clear blue and we drive
through a little holiday town with people getting their boats and syrup
pancakes for the day. We drive down a wrong road a tiny dirt track right along
the river it says private then down the end of the tiny one way track there
is a sign saying PRIVATE but this time with a picture of gun on it so I do some
skillful and swift reversing back to the road so getting to the lake, and
there's a little car park it's so big here and always somewhere and space to
park. It's empty now and early in the morning and the lake is turquoise blue
and inviting. There are 2 Chinese tourists taking selfies but that's it. We
take our snacks out the car because there are bear signs again and watch the
water and sit on the white rocky sand and take our own photos and the tourists
leave the beach but leave their jacket and camera case and when we call to them
they looked confused and slightly panicked and pick up speed maybe they thought
that we were shouting that a bear was going to pounce on them.


The water so clear, so clear you can see to the bottom and
icy fresh all I want to do is get a book and lie there all day but this is just
the start of the day to Yosemite and feels good to be back on HWY 395 so
we stop in a garage that has that good food that a guy way back in Lone Pine
tells us to go try but we buy flip flops and petrol only. The petrol station
was on the turn onto HWY 120 which was closed until only a week ago due to snow
and would have caused 6 more hours of driving if it had been closed so were a
bit lucky and now turned onto it with the other SUVs and motor-homes and drive
up winding up and up through stony green hillsides and the scenery is getting
big and stony behind and in front. The first stop came upon us suddenly and meant a bit of
gravel skidding and it was next to a lake that was half frozen and had the same
turquoise look of June Lake but dramatic covered in ice with some mountains
running into it, we're high up now and it's otherworldly because I'm just not
used to blue sunshine and lakes and ice all at once.

Someone in Bishop tells us to stop at Olmsted Point and I feel so
grateful for these passer-by’s who tell you something almost in passing because
they know, they get it and can see you will too, these defining points in a
road journey that you might otherwise have driven by not knowing what lay right
there to your left, so grateful and may we always pass these nuggets along the
road and keep realising how much they mean and define our adventures. So
Olmsted Point now start to imagine what it felt like to stop and look over it.
As if there was a great cauldron of molten rock but not hot, cool and grey and
soothing and it’s been poured over a deep valley like warmed marshmallow and
then add pine trees dotted around you can see them clearly but they are tiny,
they are far away and also close at every level. Then you notice a stream or
the sound of a stream and the smell of pine comes up to the hot place where you
park and you see little ants which are human ants scattering around and
exploring the marshmallow hardened grey fresh pine rock. And the views you can
see they stretch all the way to Half Dome in the distance, that famous rock the
Apple Screensaver. And not only can you look at all this but you can hop down a
path and walk, walk all over it through the dwarf pines made so by being
restricted by rock, growing small like oversized bonsai's and be one of the ants
all over the cool grey rock going down until you hit a terrace of more trees
and water trickling from the melting snow this is Olmsted Point. Don’t forget
to tell people to stop there or the people who tell you to stop there. After
scampering around this weighty paradise on the return we get lost coming back
over smooth grey rocks and through the wet pine forest because the snow is melting
everywhere and I think bears and how we left the snacks in the car this time
but then we come out almost back where we left the car.
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| Half Dome in the distance to the right |
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| That's me |
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| Dwarf tree |

Now we need to go slowly and pass all the happy healthy walkers
with fresh cheeks on the mountain roads through the many many pines, winding
and coming out to view after view and screeching into small lay-by's to crane
necks around mountain sides to get a view of those famous rock faces with Half
Dome as the daddy as we get nearer through the valleys. Getting closer to Yosemite
village there are more cars and people and we see a shuttle bus but everyone is
absorbed and disappears into the big pines and there is a crazy one way system
that I think if we miss the turn off it will take us and hour to come round
again and I make Danny sweat with the responsibility of finding the turn-off
but we find it and get there and we see the white canvas tents through the
distance it's the tented Curry Village (now Half Dome Village) which has been
there since the 1800's. We shuffle into the reception office and they give us a
map and we're a bit spaced out after the longer than expected drive and all the
views and blue and white grey rock that is now towering above us, we find our
canvas tent which is just tent, beds and a big metal box to keep the bears out
your food and it's squished amongst hundreds of others but still feels spacious
like everything here. We're deep in the trees now, tall tall pines but through
the trees you can see the steepest of steep grey rock towering above like a
city of skyscraper rocks but one long skyscraper that has a wall that wraps you
into a valley like tiny ants and it's majestic and just electric, in how
different it is to anything you've ever seen. It's hot now and there is a pool
right nearby and swimming there looking up at the grey rocks with people on
their outdoorsy holidays is just novel to the maximum. We are also near the
food place a large wooden deck that makes pizzas and burgers and there is beer
too so that's what we do, it's busy but so exciting.
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| Every time you look up there is a waterfall |

What's also exciting is
that Matt our friend the bassist in Danny's band and his girlfriend who also
live in London just happened to be in Yosemite Half Dome Village that
very night purely by chance I mean how crazy is that all the way from
London on a different trip going opposite directions and here they were. They
tell us of some star gazing activity that night and it's too late to buy
tickets but we tag along anyways navigating the looped bus system at dusk and
ending up somewhere with a group of people and a very enthusiastic astronomy
student taking us in the dark to a field to look at and learn about stars, he
was like those camp leaders you see in movies really exaggerating his
excitement and knowing the right PG jokes that cracked everyone up each night
and I was loving it lapping it up because it was impossible to be cynical at
anything at this point. We don't yet understand the weather here and leave the
house in nothing warm and in the mountain it gets very cold at night so we
shiver on the plastic sheet on the ground in the darkening field and look up at
the starry night sky while he tells us facts. The sky gets darker and
darker and he points up with a laser although not when an aeroplane comes over
because you can later pilots eyeballs and he tells us that 1m earths fit into
the sun and if the sun was a pea size then the next nearest sun was a beach
ball size, and that there was a star as big as a circle with 40 people sitting
inside it. Just think on that for a little bit, I know how you feel we felt the
same. The sky got darker still and the stars got brighter and he drew the outlines of
constellations with his laser stick and it was magical. I was tired and
sticking my nose into Danny's chest with cold but still managed to have a
little shivery snooze and then it was over and we had to navigate back in the
darkest dark Yosemite Park to our huts.
The canvas hut was cold but there was a huge wooden food cabin that could fit
about 500 people that had hot oats in the morning and obviously Danny went
straight for pancakes and syrup, there was just so much to do and see and I
couldn't contain myself so we opened up a map of the nice walks and decided to
start easy. It began with a gentle walk to Yosemite Falls getting on the
shuttle bus and crossing wooden bridges and hearing roaring water and walking
up pathways with many others with the huge imposing comforting slate walls all
around us, the falls were big and heavy and spraying water and everyone wanted
a picture and it was so refreshing to be near it and smelling the pines and the
mulchy wood forest floor. We wandered aimlessly through the trees just soaking
it all up the smells that you just can't believe and the presence of the rock
and the trees! It's so hard to describe these old reddish giants sucking me in
so that I want to touch every one the temperature rising now but so cool in the
trees. We walk and walk and try find another little lake and its getting hotter
still, and the well-worn paths take us past big boulders that have likely lain
there for millions of years that have cool moss with fresh cool air blowing out
from under the rocks so you feel as if you're walking next to a fridge, and I
want to climb and run all over and under them to get cool and just to step on
these million year old things. There is a rattle snake in the path in front and
the family walking ahead screech but then carry on walking when it's gone and
we do too. At the end of one walk we see a refreshing dipping spot and take off
the boiling hot shoes and step in but the water is so icy it makes your feet
numb so we just splash instead.

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| Yosemite Falls |
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| If you ever need to cool down |




We head home and out again and try use the car
but then get stuck in the one way system so back on the shuttle bus and then
got off the wrong stop for our next destination and as we're wondering what
we're doing a hippy guy with no shirt and bright flowing trousers ask us
directions and we laugh because we don't know and he tells us cool places to go
in San Fran Cisco and Danny likes him. We are supposed to meet Matt and Jane at
3pm but it's about a mile walk away and legs are aching and everything is hot
and there's another rattle snake in the path but as soon as you forget that the
walk is awesome again so we get to them on time sitting at a bus stop where I
pick up a nice stick for walking and also start to feel like maybe we shouldn't
have walked so much before meeting them to go on another big walk. They tell us
of another great waterfall that of course we want to see and I take my big
stick with tired legs now we walk up the steep incline of smooth grey rock. I
will say over again how hard it is to describe the majestic huge swathes of
grey granite rock face that surrounds us and when you look up there is a shelf
of trees way up and you just can't get over the scale so much so that I feel
hard vertigo and a bit dizzy looking up so look ahead until we come to another
huge white spraying waterfall that gallops and crashes under the wooden bridge
that we stand on and it's so cool and refreshing with the water, and you look
up through the valley and see more waterfalls higher up in the rocks and they
look small now but they're actually huge and I look down now instead of up,
down where the water is rushing and I feel just overwhelmed and emotional by
the power of the water that is melting off the snow somewhere and coming down
in vast gallons of galloping elephants. It just looks so powerful careening in
between the huge boulder and I feel tiny and that this place is somewhere
humans could never dent or master and how it’s how it was millions of years ago
and I am overwhelmed again by time and scale and earth and the taste of the
cool clean air going through my hot body.



I think this is it the end of the waterfall walk but Matt tells me this is just
the middle. I thought when I started I would be too sore and tired but there is
new life in my legs as I fill the water bottle and we see people coming down
the other way totally soaked and realise we're going to walk into a waterfall.
UP and up, rocky stairs and white water rushing in the valley up and up through
the pine trees and now steps and more up and more very wet soaked people, then
we see the next one up in the distance and it looks huge and can hear it now
and the path gets slippery and wet and precarious but up still now there are metal
railings and we're like ferrets clinging to the wet rock and the spray starts
to reach us. It becomes crazy like are we really walking into that there
waterfall and yes we are and then through the trees and rock we see the biggest
waterfall I've ever been close to with crushing white water horses made of
heavy iron and white racing down the mountain side make a huge wall of water
smoke and there is a pine tree sticking up no branches they have come off with
the weight of water drops and 1 big rainbow across our path, then 2 then 4 we
are surrounded by rainbows of all sizes looking at this powerful thing and then
I realise this is one of the defining memories and sensations in my body that
will stay with me for a long time I don't even feel like I'm Talitha in my own
body. I stand with my bare skin on the edge getting sprayed and soaked and just
breathing and not knowing how to absorb it all.

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| HUGE Vernal Falls spraying us with water and making rainbows |
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| The billion tons of water careening down the valley |
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| The happiest I could probably ever be |
We walk up to an even higher
ledge and all stand with our bodies facing the roaring lions of water and just
stand there. Then up still, more wet steps and hugging the rock and stepping
carefully climbing now, until we get out onto a ledge and are standing ON TOP
OF THE WATERFALL, yes the waterfall that made me feel all that and now we were
on a giant smooth rocked ledge looking out in to the valley and all the sheer
granite cliff faces and looking up and even bigger mountain rocks and the sun
is coming down and still warm drying us off and I just don't think I could feel
more blissful. We stay there warming ourselves like lizards and eating snacks
and I do some yoga moves for a pic and a funny guy who might have been stoned
and loving life came and did some yoga moves for my pics too.
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| Yoga dude |
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| Matt & Jane |
Back at the camp now with achy legs but loving life even more there was a big dinner
buffet from the huge wooden hall of dubious boiled veggies and an eggplant bake
thing which was leathery but I didn’t care because I was happy and we sat on
the wooden deck and played songs on Danny's new mini guitar child and sang with
Jane and Matt and then we learned that Matt could really play guitar he's a
dark guitar playing horse and we drank beer until it was bed time, they were
going to drive all day to the Grand Canyon the next day and I think that was a
day where I've seen some of my all-time favourite things and I still get
shivers thinking of that waterfall.

Now we had our walking legs and the aches and pains from the day before made us
strong to walk again the next day and our last in Yosemite. We were going to do
the Panorama Trail hike 6-8 hours of walking and it was a hot day now, we had
to get a bus up to Glacier Point which was sold out of bus tickets but we
managed to squeeze on anyways and it had a driver and tour guide who had worked
in Yosemite for 35 years and he drove the bus and told us facts, especially
fire facts about how for over a century they had been wrongly putting out small
fires but this disrupted the natural way of the forest so when lighting struck
instead of making small manageable fires it made huge fires that killed all the
giant sequoias so now they were trying to maintain small fires and he also said
how people drive a bit crazy in their motor homes and the bus was freezing with
air con but he said it was better than being boiling hot. Up at Glacier Point
there is a big tourist spot where the bus lets off bus-loads of people because
you could see all the way down into Yosemite Valley and see our canvas hut
village and all the waterfalls and again you were struck down by the scale and
insanity of the idea that a glacier with some boulders came itching down this
mountain millions upon millions of years ago to make it.
We got a good amount
of snacks now from the shop which included a tuna sandwich some nuts and dried
fruit and some chocolate for Danny's big sweet tooth and also a coffee drink
because we had around 6 hours of hiking at least on the Panorama Trail (you will see why it's called this) and it was almost 12pm and
boiling hot. We walked down an easy path hugging the sides of the whole valley and
it was utterly beautiful and exciting to see the whole valley in this way with
red giant pines dotted around and waterfalls tiny in the distance the ones we
had seen so close up. The way was hot and people were resting in the shade all
along and we made it to a point which was a sheer cliff with a big rock to sit
on but didn't want to go to the edge and I realised this was the line of trees
I had looked up at from the valley floor the day before, the top of the sheer
cliff that made me feel so dizzy with vertigo and we were sitting ON it.
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| WATERFALL! |
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| Lots of cliff edges |
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| Pic below is where we were sitting |
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| Taken the day before |
What
we were looking at with our eyes was almost too much to take in, in its beauty
and scale, the scale and colours and of things that were huge and roaring now tiny
in the distance was just insane to look at now. The pine forest was beautiful
and cool to walk through with all the smells and we hopped over and through
little streams and walked for hour and hours as the path hugged the valley
sides, coming to another huge ledge of smooth rock with a gazzilion tons of icy
water flowing over and in the form of another majestic waterfall over the edge
careening down the cliff edge creating masses of white cold steam and water
smoke below, and you could go right up to the edge and look right down at the
steep waterfall below you until you felt sick. Here you could see the big
mountain tops that look so incredible from below, big boulder mountain tops and
lizards and people drinking out of filter straws from the calmer parts of the
water and we had run out so we had to ask to borrow a filter straw for more
water and some people who liked Danny's hat didn't mind lending their straws to
us.
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| See the rainbow in the trees? |
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| Eagle Peak |
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| Mountain Man |
The day continues in this blissful way while we walk on the home 3
hour stretch still hugging the valley and we twist round and down and I can’t
stop looking back behind me at the waterfall trying to drink in its dew and I
get another chance as we pass by a ledge that has water pouring out cracks in the
rock and showing us from above and it’s hot and the water icy cold so you kind
of skip and jump through the shower. We get to a crossroad where you look up at
the Three Brothers of Yosemite Eagle Peak Middle and Lower Brothers and the
scale strikes you again because you were just there under one of those and now
it’s rising up in front of you. A couple get to the crossroad and it’s a choice
either a walk through Vernal Falls where we were yesterday having the outer
body experience under the rainbow waterfall or there is a different way the
John Muir trail and they can’t decide which way to go as the light starts to
dip lower and the shadows grow longer and the day cools down so we tell them
definitely go to Vernal Falls and walk under the rainbow but we’re going the
John Muir way because we think we should see something different but we end up
wishing that we’d gone back to Vernal Falls afterwards. After another couple of
hours and now the legs are really starting to feel it we get to the bus that
takes us home to our Canvas tent and rest. I try to look at the stars that
night but there is too much light in our camp so I just end up wandering around
the dark corners and mistaking trees for giants and rocks faces for glittering
towers in the sky.

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| The Three Peaks |
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| Cross Roads - Yosemite Valley, Vernal Falls, John Muir Trail |
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| Can't get enough of this magical delicious powerful mountain water |
The next day it’s time to leave already but not before checking
out El Capitan Dawn Wall where those amazing crazy climbers attempt to scale up like
lizards and you really just can’t imagine the size of this rock face but know
that it takes an experienced climber 5 days to finish it and they sleep in
little tents hooked into the rock how’s
that for your vertigo. There is small Indian man gazing at the rock face in the
middle of the wooded path and he says he is waiting for his wife who walks
really slowly because she’s lazy and he is still there around 20 mins later and
we can see his small wife shuffling up the path looking none too pleased that he made her walk.
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| I can't even get across how big this is - El Capitan |
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| People are actually climbing this! El Capitan |
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| Those are climbers!!! |
I can’t stop breathing in the forest and looking at flowers and
pine needles and then looking back behind me as we drive out of this place to
Lake Tahoe but not before stopping to look at the Giant Sequoias in Tuolumne
Grove on the way out. There were around 6 of them set apart and also some ones
that had fallen and been burnt by forest fires the good and bad kind and it was my
first look at these Ents, orange and fuzzy they are the Viking uncles of the
forest and can live up to 3 thousand years old that’s right you heard me they
were around when the pyramids were being built but like everything they are
suffering the effects of the human Lech. One you could walk under (Danny was
very taken with this one) and one you could go inside even and see the roots of
the fallen that were like a thousand octopuses suddenly fossilised while having
a fight and also the cross section of the trunk of one which had fallen that
had hundreds even thousands of rings and surrounded by scattered giant cones
almost as if to prove it’s age to family members as they scurry by, proudly
like a centenarian would proudly display their original teeth in a case to
anyone that would take any time to listen.



 |
| Nerd |
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| I wish you could see the patterns on this burnt tree |
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| Octopus fight / Sequoia roots |
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| Inside an ancient burnt out Sequoia |
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| Tree Man |
Imagine getting to live or work here in Yosemite I mean I don’t
think that anywhere can quite live up to its extreme nobility and scale, it’s icy cold
waterfall mist or electric air or giants of rock or its power to make you feel
how earth once was and our small size and the mighty adrenaline injection of
pure love for life and the living. YOSEMITE.
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| The road out of Yosemite, those are the Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance |
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| Road out of Yosemite, another beautiful dwarf tree waves us goodbye |