Midway, Cathedral and Chapel Lakes

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In the afternoon, we hiked up to Chapel, Midway, and Cathedral Lakes underneath the watchful gaze of Finger Peak.  This little lake with the gnarled tree is Chapel Lake.

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A better view of Chapel Lake with Finger Peak in the background.  The little dark notch is where we would have come over had we been able to get over the first pass on Finger Peak.
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Looking down toward Midway lake.  I suspect it might have been named for Midway Island.  Many of the features in this part of the Sierras were named for people, places, and things from WWII by returning GIs.


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Up at Cathedral Lake.


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A long-dead tree retains its beauty.  I have a photo somewhere of my mom and me sitting below this tree from around 2004, the last time I visited this place.


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Looking up toward the notch.  It would have been a difficult proposition to come down that icy, snowy slope with backpacks but no crampons or ice axes.  Probably it was for the best that we couldn’t get around Finger Peak.


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Down by Chapel Lake, we saw a mother marmot and her babies.  She stayed up on the rock until we were within ten feet of her to give her babies time to make it into the rocks.

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The rock cairn that marks the cross-country route down to Pearl Lake.  Once horses came up this way.  You would need to have an extremely sure-footed horse to make it up here these days.

Morning at Pearl Lake

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Dawn breaks over Pearl Lake first on the high peaks that ring Blackcap Basin.

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The morning was crisp and still at our campsite on the moraine at Pearl Lake.
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There are many worse places in the world to wake up than at Pearl Lake.  I can see why people used to spend whole summers camped at this lake.

First Night at Pearl Lake

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After climbing up the hill from Portal Lake, we stopped at Pearl Lake for the night.  The glacial erratic rock on the moraine of Pearl Lake near the outlet makes a great place to camp.  People have been camping here for thousands of years.  In the past, we found evidence of miners and sheepherders camping here plus abundant evidence of Native American occupation.

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Pearl Lake in all her glory.  There are several good places to camp around this lake.  In the heyday of backpacking in the 70s, there would have been at least a half dozen parties around the lake.  We were probably the first people to see this lake this year.

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On the downslope side of the boulder we camped next to there is a little flat spot big enough for one person to get out of the weather.  It is well-used.

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Our campsite setup for the night.  It would be easy for someone to walk by and not even notice us.

STA_3465 - STJ_3474Alpenglow on the peaks of Blackcap Basin.  The mountain to the left of center was once named Little John by a coworker of my father when he was at Michigan State.  It was a joke but the name stuck for several years when my dad was a wilderness ranger in this area.  I don’t know if people still call it Little John but at one point in time, that is what it was called.

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The sun sinking over the shoulder of Blackcap Mountain.


IMG_3478Night settling in on our little camp on the moraine at Pearl Lake.