September, 2009
By John Evanoff
September is my favorite month to begin looking
for signs of autumn in the Sierras. The first burnt-orange and amber-yellow
leaves of fall can be found in the higher northwest facing canyons
so I dash out to take a few pictures and get a hike in at my fifth
top ten trek. Take Highway 395 south to the Mount Rose Highway (NSR431)
and head up the mountain to the summit. Just past the summit at
8,933 feet of elevation, you will see a road to the left going to
Mount Rose Campground. The campground is open June 15th to September
15th. There are several spots for day use and a few for overnight
camping. If the campground is closed for the season, you can park
at the Tahoe Rim Trailhead just a short distance down the hill towards
Incline Village. If you take the entire day to visit, you will be
splendidly rewarded once you hike to the top of Slide Mountain,
with fantastic views of Lake Tahoe, Mount Rose and the valleys below
on the east side including the entire Truckee Meadows to the north,
Washoe Valley and Pleasant Valley directly below and south into
the Eagle Valley. Looking east down the canyons, you may see a few
cottonwood beginning their change of color near Galena, Steamboat
and Bowers Mansion. Ponderosa pine, white fir, lodgepole, juniper
and quaking aspen dominate the entire area around Slide Mountain.
You can occasionally find the three needled pines Jeffery, Washoe
and Gray and the five needle pines Sugar and White Bark as well.
A dirt road to the top of Slide Mountain from the campground just
northeast of the restroom facilities allows you to get to the top
without too much exertion. The road is traveled almost every day
by technicians working on equipment located at the two different
radio/television tower locations and a weather station atop Slide
Mountain, so be sure to give them plenty of room as they maneuver
the narrow-hair-pin-turns up or down. You can also view the top
two ski lift towers and huts when you get to the top and look around.
Once you have visited the top at 9,698 feet of elevation, you can
move south and west on many different routes normally cleaned and
cleared for skiers during the winter. As you traverse the many fairly
wide ski-trails, you will begin to see several spots below on the
northwest side of the canyons where the first autumn colors have
begun to show. The aspen are always the first to change color, but
on some occasions depending on weather, you will see the willows
along the spring change as well. If you move down from the spring
all the way to Ophir Creek, you will see more color changes in amongst
the Manzanita. Although the change is very light, you will see some
variations in amongst the sagebrush, bitterbrush and rabbitbrush.
The trail down Ophir Creek to Upper Price Lake at about 7600 feet
of elevation extends the trek and the visual color spectrum and
is worth the extra effort. The Ophir Creek Trail eventually meets
up with the Davis Creek Trail near Bowers Mansion. A spot just about
a half mile above Price Lake goes through an entire stand of Quaking
Aspen that have dates and initials cut into their bark from the
early 1900’s. By the way, a trail near the Ophir Creek Trail
was used by the Washoe Indians every summer for hundreds of years
to get to Tahoe where the clan rested in cooler surroundings and
fished and hunted amongst the shores of the lake. There is a large
mound of small flat round rocks along the trail if you look hard
enough, which indicates a spot where the tribe would rest for a
night before moving the rest of the way over the hill. The shaman
or chief of the clan would add one rock every year to the pile with
a prayer to the spirits for good luck. The Washoe families of the
Carson Valley and one other clan further south also had similar
routes to the shores at Glenbrook and South Tahoe near Tahoe Keyes
where the Truckee runs into the lake. These three spots have these
rock piles at positions where the families camped overnight to rest.
There are thousands of rocks on these piles so you do the math.
Most probably, it took the families from the Washoe Lake area approximately
three days to get from the valley floor to the shoreline at Lake
Tahoe near Incline Village. I make the entire trek a full day affair
from the Mount Rose campground to the top of Slide Mountain down
the side of the mountain near the spring and then to the creek or
along the ridge along the slide of Slide Mountain, down Ophir Creek
and to the shoreline of Upper Price Lake and back again to the campground.
By the time you get back to the campground, you could have a thousand
pictures and memories. Most of the wildlife in the area is small
but fascinating to view. The jays, Clark’s nutcrackers, woodpeckers,
Goshawks and occasional golden eagle or mountain blue bird all make
homes in the area and the chipmunk, squirrel, rabbit, deer, skunk
and porcupine also spend the daytime moving around the trails. There
are some bear and a few bobcat in these hills, but very few people
have ever seen them up close. You may hear bear moving around at
night though and if you do stay over, be sure to keep your food
stored safely away from the sleeping area.
Although September is my favorite month for this
hike, you can sometimes make the hike in October and early November
when the colors can be even more dazzling. Be careful to watch the
weather though. The Sierras along this part of the range sometimes
influence low fronts tracking from the west and through a process
called orographic lifting where air mass is forced from lower elevations
and it cools to raise humidity, sometimes thunderclouds and dry
lightning is created. The resulting thunderstorms can cause tremendous
downpours and even massive flash floods. Some of these flash floods
have dug out huge canyons on the west side of Mount Rose, but they
have also contributed to the many rock slides on Slide Mountain.
If you camp at Upper Price Lake, you’ll be very close to the
dramatic slide. Price Lake was larger once but a portion of the
mountain came down into the lake in the early 1980’s and pushed
most of the water down Ophir Creek causing damage to roadways and
a few houses. The other possibility of these thunderstorms is winds
in excess of 70 mph. I’ve been on the trail in this area on
several different occasions in the fall and been forced to hightail
it to the car to get out of the weather. One year, in October on
my birthday, I hiked to the top of Mount Rose and saw the weather
created just like explained in less than an hour. Before I could
get a thousand feet down the mountain in winds whipping up to 60mph
and gusts of 80mph on the Mount Rose Trail, I was engulfed in clouds
and lightning. I even hit the ground a half dozen times when I felt
the hair on my neck stand up. Before I reached the trailhead road
going back to the Mount Rose Highway, two inches of wet snow and
hail covered the trail and lightning was all around me. I began
running down the road from the trailhead fork and got to the car
completely soaked. That was an interesting experience to say the
least, but it exemplifies the reasoning behind carefully watching
the weather. When conditions begin deteriorating, turn back to your
camp or car before it gets ugly.
Preparing for your trek, take plenty of snacks
(preferably fruit and nuts) and water. Do not drink any of the creek
or spring waters unless thoroughly filtered through a good micro
filter. Usually, I bring along about a half-gallon of water, but
I also have a Katadyn mini-ceramic water filter which is only about
half a pound and stores easily in the bottom of my backpack with
my first aid kit, a pair of dry socks, emergency rain poncho, blister
block, sunblock, deet, binoculars, compass, topo map, cell phone
charger and an emergency tent. I always bring two cameras and I
have my trusty walking stick which is one I made myself from a ski
pole. Wildland fires in this area are a constant fear for the US
Forest Service and Nevada Division of Forestry. A fire permit is
mandatory and is part of the fee for overnight stays at the Mount
Rose Campground.
If you just want to see fall colors and don’t
want to take this hike or an extended drive, wait a month and take
a late October afternoon or early evening stride through Idlewild
Park. There, you’ll see all the rich bright colors of autumn
all around the park and along the Truckee River and Riverside Drive.
The maples, elms, alder, willow, ash, cottonwood, crabapple, mulberries,
red oak, beech, hawthorn and hackberry all compete for spectacular
changes as the weather cools and the result is a wonderfully brilliant
visual spectrum. So, where do you guess where my fourth favorite
trek is?
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