9/29, Friday, 7:30pm.
Playwright Lauren Yee
Featuring Songs by Dengue Fever
Directed by Chay Yew
A story of a Khmer Rouge survivor (a former rock band member) returning to Cambodia for the first time in thirty years, as his daughter prepares to prosecute one of Cambodia’s most infamous war criminals (a former middle-school maths teature).
Too much singing, so the play is rather long. They really enjoyed singing. Me, not so much.
The story didn't have enough time to develope, so rather thin. Over all, it's okay.
Friday, September 29, 2023
2023.9.29. Downtown Reimagined by PSRC
9/29, Friday. 9am. Puget Sound Regional Council (PSRC) organized this all day event from their office.
Talks in the morning (in-person + Zoom hybrid):
During the lunch, Rep. Julia Reed (36th District) talked briefly. She's in her mid-30s, sounded very down-to-earth. I like her.
In afternoon, there were 2 tours. One on civic buildings, one on commercial (re)development. We gathered at the ground-floor lobby. I was on the latter tour, at least a dozen people, plus the organizers. The first one has very few takers.
Our first stop is 2+U. The building manager led the tour. The renovation was finished just before the Pandemic. The commercial space is only 30% rented. Ground floor shops are all leased. A large-ish outdoor space with a roof, where an October-Fest took place yesterday, when it was raining. The 40th floor lounge and deck is available to all the tenants. Great view, spacious, kitchen, a separate conference room. Here, a representative from Downtown Seattle Association distributed a nicely printed and designed book on the vision of 3rd ave.
2nd stop: Benaroya Hall. It was decorated for the season opening this weekend. According to the building manager, all staff were kept on payroll during the COVID shutdown. That's nice to hear. The gallery area is scheduled to open for lunch soon, to revitalized this part of the 3rd ave. It has been closed since COVID except 2 hours before events. An interesting bit about cleaning the two giant Chihuly glass installation. The building will shut down for a whole week. Chihuly's company will send a team to take all the pieces down, clean them, and then put them back together!!!
3rd stop is Cedar Hall at US Bank building. Not yet open for business. This property is owned now by Blackstone.
The 4th stop is the new Rainier Square: the office/residential tower. Amazon leased all the office space, of which 50% is subleased.
We visited the lounge floor: available for all tenants. Spacious, great view. There, switched to a different elevator to the residential floors. Rainier Sq is on the land owned by UW. So, lease only. This 2bd-2ba demo unit we visited costs $15200/month at 57th floor. A nice bath with a view. Shower is at the other end of the same bathroom. Suprising to me, more than 100 apartments (out of 189) are already rented.
At the end of the tour, some of us went back to 2+U, at the bar for a happy hour. Gee, a beer on tap is over $9 before tip. Things are a lot more expensive now.
Talks in the morning (in-person + Zoom hybrid):
-
Karen Chapple, Ph.D., University of Toronto, on the recovery of various downtowns by cellphone data (Barcelona is 100%, Portland is the worst, about 60%)
Tracy Hadden Loh, Ph.D., Fellow, Brookings Metro, on the future of downtown
Cynthia Chen, Ph.D., University of Washington, on car trips before/after the pandemic (similar number of trips, but shorter trips).
-
Lyle Bicknell, Urban Designer, City of Seattle
Mason Thompson, Mayor of Bothell
Michelle Allison, General Manager, Metro Transit
Brendan Nelson, Empowering People in Communities
During the lunch, Rep. Julia Reed (36th District) talked briefly. She's in her mid-30s, sounded very down-to-earth. I like her.
In afternoon, there were 2 tours. One on civic buildings, one on commercial (re)development. We gathered at the ground-floor lobby. I was on the latter tour, at least a dozen people, plus the organizers. The first one has very few takers.
Our first stop is 2+U. The building manager led the tour. The renovation was finished just before the Pandemic. The commercial space is only 30% rented. Ground floor shops are all leased. A large-ish outdoor space with a roof, where an October-Fest took place yesterday, when it was raining. The 40th floor lounge and deck is available to all the tenants. Great view, spacious, kitchen, a separate conference room. Here, a representative from Downtown Seattle Association distributed a nicely printed and designed book on the vision of 3rd ave.
2nd stop: Benaroya Hall. It was decorated for the season opening this weekend. According to the building manager, all staff were kept on payroll during the COVID shutdown. That's nice to hear. The gallery area is scheduled to open for lunch soon, to revitalized this part of the 3rd ave. It has been closed since COVID except 2 hours before events. An interesting bit about cleaning the two giant Chihuly glass installation. The building will shut down for a whole week. Chihuly's company will send a team to take all the pieces down, clean them, and then put them back together!!!
3rd stop is Cedar Hall at US Bank building. Not yet open for business. This property is owned now by Blackstone.
The 4th stop is the new Rainier Square: the office/residential tower. Amazon leased all the office space, of which 50% is subleased.
We visited the lounge floor: available for all tenants. Spacious, great view. There, switched to a different elevator to the residential floors. Rainier Sq is on the land owned by UW. So, lease only. This 2bd-2ba demo unit we visited costs $15200/month at 57th floor. A nice bath with a view. Shower is at the other end of the same bathroom. Suprising to me, more than 100 apartments (out of 189) are already rented.
At the end of the tour, some of us went back to 2+U, at the bar for a happy hour. Gee, a beer on tap is over $9 before tip. Things are a lot more expensive now.
Thursday, September 28, 2023
2023.9.28. Petite Morte at PNB
9/28, Thursday, 7:30. I arrived at the ticket office at 7:30pm, and was able to buy a ticket, use the restroom and get seated before the curtain. Does anything start on time any more?
A very funny selection of choreographs. Petite Mort is the first of the 3 numbers tonight. The last one mocks art critiques.
A very funny selection of choreographs. Petite Mort is the first of the 3 numbers tonight. The last one mocks art critiques.
Petite Mort | Jiří Kylián
Sechs Tänze (Six Dances) | Jiří Kylián
Cacti | Alexander Ekman
Tuesday, September 26, 2023
2023.9.25. The 70th Anniversary of the ROK-US Alliance Special Performance
9/25, Tuesday, 7pm, McCaw Hall. Organized by Korean Consulate. Here's what's written on the poster:
-
Daejeon, South Korea, has been a sister city of Seattle since 1989.
The Daejeon Metropolitan Dance Theater, which has grown up with Daejeon for 36 years, has established itself as a representative dance troupe of Korea after an era of expressing the dynamism hidden in the breath of Koreans and their passion for life.
The performances will bring Korea, the United States, Koreans and Americans together to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the Korea-U.S. alliance through traditional Korean dances.
Sunday, September 24, 2023
2023.9.24, Italian Festival at Seattle Center
9/24, rain. Sunday afternoon, went to the Italian festival in Seattle Center.
It was going on this whole weekend, in fact, up to 9pm on Saturday.
I didn't management to get here until ~2:30pm, right in the middle of this cooking demo. He made pasta, a desert. The pasta was distributed in bite size to the audience. The desert is very simple: just mix ricotta cheese, sugar, raspberry, berry-flavored vodka, garnished with shredded mint leaves. Must delicious, but not enough to dustribute.
The next demo is polenta in 2 ways: mushroom for vegans, sausage in a premade tomato based veggie soup for carnivores, both garnished with parsley. A lot of butter and olive oil. What I learned is using hand-held blender when cooking polenta to make it homogenuous.
The next "door" is the stage of grape stomping. 3 teams, each with 3 members, stomp in the barrel. The team with the most juice output wins (a bottle of wine and a slice of Tutta Bella pizza). It is very fun to watch. The gentleman in hat who's directing this event is very funny. The stomping competition happens between food demos.
In the Armory, there's a bocce tournament on 2 temporary courts. Right beside them, is a long table with all the kids tossing pizza dough. I was on my way to its second floor for a one-hour Italian lesson. One lady lived in Italy for a year, so she was able to converse, and had more real-life questions.
In Fischer Pavilian, there's a stage with music performances all weekend long. Food vendors inside and out. By the time I arrived, only this group was singing. At 6pm, they announced the raffle winners.
All quite entertaining.
I didn't management to get here until ~2:30pm, right in the middle of this cooking demo. He made pasta, a desert. The pasta was distributed in bite size to the audience. The desert is very simple: just mix ricotta cheese, sugar, raspberry, berry-flavored vodka, garnished with shredded mint leaves. Must delicious, but not enough to dustribute.
The next demo is polenta in 2 ways: mushroom for vegans, sausage in a premade tomato based veggie soup for carnivores, both garnished with parsley. A lot of butter and olive oil. What I learned is using hand-held blender when cooking polenta to make it homogenuous.
The next "door" is the stage of grape stomping. 3 teams, each with 3 members, stomp in the barrel. The team with the most juice output wins (a bottle of wine and a slice of Tutta Bella pizza). It is very fun to watch. The gentleman in hat who's directing this event is very funny. The stomping competition happens between food demos.
In the Armory, there's a bocce tournament on 2 temporary courts. Right beside them, is a long table with all the kids tossing pizza dough. I was on my way to its second floor for a one-hour Italian lesson. One lady lived in Italy for a year, so she was able to converse, and had more real-life questions.
In Fischer Pavilian, there's a stage with music performances all weekend long. Food vendors inside and out. By the time I arrived, only this group was singing. At 6pm, they announced the raffle winners.
All quite entertaining.
Saturday, September 23, 2023
2023.9.23. Passengers at Seattle Rep
9/23, Saturday.
7 Fingers stages Passengers at Seattle Repertory Theatre.
They are a Quebec theatre group, on tour now.
Wow, theatre redefined. It's so different from plays I saw here.
A mix of dance and acrobat. No much speaking words, but choregraphed to tell a story (very generic though).
9 performers, each with a specialty. No stage set. Highly enjoyable.
9 performers, each with a specialty. No stage set. Highly enjoyable.
2023.9.23. PNW Historicians Guild's 31st regional history conference
9/23, Saturday. This year, Pacific Northwest Historians Guild hosts its annual conference at Seattle Public Library's downtown branch, before its regular opening hour.
The theme today is "Revisit and Reimagine Pacific Northwest Histories".
Schedule
I left at 2:45pm, to visit the new art space on the 2nd story of King Street station. The left photo is one of the 3 recording studios: raised floor, double walls, tapered openings. The right photo is the shared classroom, or for community use. There'll be 5 art-related groups moving in next month.
The City of Seattle's Arts and Culture is housed on the 3rd floor, with a large exhibition space.
Schedule
- 9 - 10 AM Welcome and Keynote Address by Feliks Banel.
Exploring Pacific Northwest Regional Identity through Vernacular History. Feliks Banel revisits nicknames of local places and reimagines the mythology and pop culture at street level. - 10:15 - 11:50 AM, SESSION 1 in 3 locations
- Unconventional Women: Rosencrantz v. Territory (1884), Phoebe Judson, Ida Lou Anderson
- *Duamish River
- Activism: Class Consciousness in the Construction of the Trans-Alaskan Pipeline System, Black Civil Rights Activism, 1960-1970 newspaper coverage of police violence in Seattle
- 12:00 - 1:00 PM, Workshops: *maps, posters, post-cards
- 1:15 - 2:45 PM, 3 session
- *Uncover new histories: Norwegian ski jump, REI, school remodel
- Controversisal histories
- Preserving local history
- 3:00 - 4:30 PM, SESSION 3 - Panel Discussions
I left at 2:45pm, to visit the new art space on the 2nd story of King Street station. The left photo is one of the 3 recording studios: raised floor, double walls, tapered openings. The right photo is the shared classroom, or for community use. There'll be 5 art-related groups moving in next month.
The City of Seattle's Arts and Culture is housed on the 3rd floor, with a large exhibition space.
2023.9.23. Book-it garage sale
It's a pity that Book-it Theatre is closing (or already closed) its doors.
This morning, they hosted a "garage sale" at their office in the KCTS building.
I spent $50 for a file cabinet, a microwave, a chair, a shopping cart, a fan, 2 lamps.
Took me 2 trips. The shopping cart was useful for transferring these home.
3 employees there. I only saw one other buyer.
Wednesday, September 20, 2023
2023.9.20. Last Plant Camp (of this summer)
9/20, Wednesday.
The last plant camp this summer.
No registration required, so a long line at lunch time.
We were given a plant, a pot, a square leather patch with 4 holes, a ring, a hook, soil and ropes on the tables.
By the time I got my plant, no more ropes.
Those who sat at these tables to repot their plants, and cut the ropes, didn't keep the space clean.
Soil all over the table and chairs. Volunteers were sweeping the tables. It's a shame that users don't take care of their surroundings.
There's a singer, whom everyone seems to ignore. Poor lady.
Day 1 space is occupied this week for many booth to make donation packages, part of the volunteer effort by Amazon. So this plant camp is moved across the street.
There's a singer, whom everyone seems to ignore. Poor lady.
Day 1 space is occupied this week for many booth to make donation packages, part of the volunteer effort by Amazon. So this plant camp is moved across the street.
Sunday, September 17, 2023
2023.9.17. Vesper Peak
9/17, 7 of us hiked to Vesper Peak,
one of my favorite day hikes in the Seattle area: not too far, not too long, rugged trail, easy scramble, great 360° view.
However, seems it's getting too popular now.
2 cars (one from Seattle, one from Bellevue) met up at Woods Coffee in Everett (a bit out of the way). Our car is late because D showed up 15 min late. He's chatty, fun to talk to, claims that he's done 10k' and 11k' in a day. It turned out he was the slowest person of the group. A lot of cars parked along the road near the Sunrise Mine TH.
The trail is well established. Only 2 miles to Headlee Pass, but will take longer than you think. The zigzag up to the pass is quite eroded. I scrambled up the rocky top on the right of the pass to take this photo. Waited for the group there.
After crossing the outlet of Vesper Lake (Lake Elan on Caltopo), a clear trail leads up the heather and halfly wooded slope. Great views already. Half way up, I scrambled down to a pond checking out the route to Wolf Peak. Once there, I think it's easy to go to Wolf Peak. But I figured it'll take me an extra 40 minutes. I didn't want to worry anyone or make my group wait, so I just returned to Vesper proper. Scrambling to Sperry will be more involved. Need to bring at least a helmet.
The summit view never disappoints here, even when it's cloudy like today. By the time D arrived, 1 hour after I reached the summit, it was clear. Seems he was having some issue with his stomach. It's quite relaxing. Such a view, no one was eager to descend anyway. However, noticeable smoke in high elevation. We can also see the smokey clouds to the northwest.
Coming back is straightforward. Saw 2 pikas chasing each other among the rocks. Cute. D and I filtered some water at the lake outlet. I actually forgot to put my water bottle in my pack! Back at the car at 5pm, way past the estimated return. The event host today also lives in downtown, so he dropped me off near his building. It's less than 10 min walk.
2 cars (one from Seattle, one from Bellevue) met up at Woods Coffee in Everett (a bit out of the way). Our car is late because D showed up 15 min late. He's chatty, fun to talk to, claims that he's done 10k' and 11k' in a day. It turned out he was the slowest person of the group. A lot of cars parked along the road near the Sunrise Mine TH.
The trail is well established. Only 2 miles to Headlee Pass, but will take longer than you think. The zigzag up to the pass is quite eroded. I scrambled up the rocky top on the right of the pass to take this photo. Waited for the group there.
After crossing the outlet of Vesper Lake (Lake Elan on Caltopo), a clear trail leads up the heather and halfly wooded slope. Great views already. Half way up, I scrambled down to a pond checking out the route to Wolf Peak. Once there, I think it's easy to go to Wolf Peak. But I figured it'll take me an extra 40 minutes. I didn't want to worry anyone or make my group wait, so I just returned to Vesper proper. Scrambling to Sperry will be more involved. Need to bring at least a helmet.
The summit view never disappoints here, even when it's cloudy like today. By the time D arrived, 1 hour after I reached the summit, it was clear. Seems he was having some issue with his stomach. It's quite relaxing. Such a view, no one was eager to descend anyway. However, noticeable smoke in high elevation. We can also see the smokey clouds to the northwest.
Coming back is straightforward. Saw 2 pikas chasing each other among the rocks. Cute. D and I filtered some water at the lake outlet. I actually forgot to put my water bottle in my pack! Back at the car at 5pm, way past the estimated return. The event host today also lives in downtown, so he dropped me off near his building. It's less than 10 min walk.
Saturday, September 16, 2023
2023.9.16. Fiestas Patrias at Seattle Center
Seattle Center hosts a Latin America festival this Saturday afternoon (1-9pm) and Sunday.
Around 1:30, saw this line of "sports" cars with Mexican flag and loud music running around downtown.
In the Armory, Sea Mar health center had many tables prividing simple blood tests and a few info booths. 2nd floor hosts a small art exhibit. In the afternoon, there was a zumba class.
Most action is in Fischer Pavillion. A performance stage with dances and songs (and many audience members singing and dancing at the same time). A solemn speech session of each country and national anthem. Booths selling colorful decorations and clothing. 2 tables giving out cleaning products and printed instructions. One organization handing out 400 soccer balls. Food trucks outside.
When I left at 8pm, it was still going on merrily. A good way to be immersed in Spanish.
In the Armory, Sea Mar health center had many tables prividing simple blood tests and a few info booths. 2nd floor hosts a small art exhibit. In the afternoon, there was a zumba class.
Most action is in Fischer Pavillion. A performance stage with dances and songs (and many audience members singing and dancing at the same time). A solemn speech session of each country and national anthem. Booths selling colorful decorations and clothing. 2 tables giving out cleaning products and printed instructions. One organization handing out 400 soccer balls. Food trucks outside.
When I left at 8pm, it was still going on merrily. A good way to be immersed in Spanish.
2023.9.16. Pop-up Pickle Ball
9/16, Saturday. I was woken up by the commotion outside of my window.
Loud speakers were deployed before 8am! How inconsiderate.
I wasn't aware of this Pickleball for all event this weekend. Um.. what else was I missing around me?
Did see people blocking the streets and laying the count boundaries Friday evening. Went to register (sign the waiver) and got a green wrist band. There are 2 drop-in courts I was allowed to play. This early in the morning, they are widely available. My first time ever, played with a very patient older gentleman. The foam floor they laid is not good for the plastic ball to bounce. Otherwise, it's easy to adapt.
Did see people blocking the streets and laying the count boundaries Friday evening. Went to register (sign the waiver) and got a green wrist band. There are 2 drop-in courts I was allowed to play. This early in the morning, they are widely available. My first time ever, played with a very patient older gentleman. The foam floor they laid is not good for the plastic ball to bounce. Otherwise, it's easy to adapt.
Friday, September 15, 2023
2023.9.15. The Collective Open House
9/15, Friday. The Collective - Seattle hosts an open house today, to entice the tenants of a neighboring apartment building to the membership.
I've been to this venue numerous times, but only now realized that it's a club with membership.
They are offering $125/month, with a $100 sign up fee (all 50% discount).
However, no tour of the facilities.
Good and great amount of food: the seafood platter has fresh oysters and crab claws, smoked salmon and mackeral, scallop ceviche. Appetizer: dumplings, spring rolls, coconut shrimp. Drink is not free. The small band is not bad. Soon after the karaoke started, I left with a full belly. Some of the "amateur singers" are so bad. Still half of the food left. Desert all gone.
Looks like there'll be 2 more open houses like this with some different apartment buildings this fall.
Good and great amount of food: the seafood platter has fresh oysters and crab claws, smoked salmon and mackeral, scallop ceviche. Appetizer: dumplings, spring rolls, coconut shrimp. Drink is not free. The small band is not bad. Soon after the karaoke started, I left with a full belly. Some of the "amateur singers" are so bad. Still half of the food left. Desert all gone.
Looks like there'll be 2 more open houses like this with some different apartment buildings this fall.
Tuesday, September 12, 2023
2023.9.4-11 My 3rd backpacking trip in the Sierras
9/4 Labor Day, 5:30am flight SEA-LAX. I took bus 124, and arrived at SEA ~3:15am. M.Y. arrived about half an hour later.
We put both our backpacks into his new duffel bag, added more food to hit 50Lb limit. We had to consume some of his coconut water cans then, and gave one car to a passenger nearby.
All is smooth. LAX's rental car agencies are in separate lots, so need to take the particular shuttle. A short line, but slow going. When I got to the counter, the agent couldn't find my reservation. It turned out that I paid for a car in a different airport (Burbank). The agent canceled mine and booked us a different car, and charged $15/day extra for the "up-sell". By the time we drove out, it was already ~9:30am.
Made a stop at Lancaster Walmart on the way. Refreshed in its restroom, bought a can of isobutane gas. I bought some instant refried beans, M.Y. bought a big sandwich.
Drove through Red Rock State Park ~12:30pm, looks quite colorful.
Onion Valley road is officially closed. Google map doesn't route me there. After talking to a ranger on Sunday, I knew we could drive to the TH, it's a "soft closure". On the way, saw some orange cones on the side from time to time, one small washout. No signs of closure.
9/4-7, Kearsarge Pass - Sixty Lakes Basin - Rae Lakes
9/7 Thursday, upon dropping off the LA couple at Independence. I drank a can of calm chowder, while searching for a room for the night. Meanwhile M.Y. bought a large salad from a Mexican food truck. He was a bit sick due to the heat. It was about 90°F here. Settled in Bishop at El Rancho motel (cheapest option $99+tax). On the drive north, with AC in full blast, M.Y. revived.
Had to check in at a different location. The lady their is cheerful. Funny signs on the walll like "bury me at Walmart, so my wife will visit me", "It's better to be lost while fishing than to be found at work". It looks like a dump, But the room is clean. AC. Fridge, microwave, coffee machine, ice bucket. Most importantly 2 beds. I washed my hiking close including my sunt hat and sun gloves. Repacking took some time. Finished my clam chowder and ate another can of sardines. Brew some decafe and ate a pack of oat meal.
I researched what to change for my next loop with the higher than expected snow level, and lower than expected temperature. By the time I went to sleep, it was almost 1am. Didn't sleep well. It was too warm with blanket on, but too cold without it.
9/8, Friday. Up before 6am. All my washing was dry. Chilly outside (upper 40°Fs(. I asked M.Y. to fill ~5 gallon of gas, and insisted that trim his food packages. I drew the new route onto his phone's GPS app. We headed out ~7am towards Mammoth Lakes.
1 hour to Mammoth Lakes. On the drive to Reds Meadow, next to the town, saw a coyote crossing the road. Stopped at the Minaret Viewpoint, looking at the peaks that we'll be walking in. Chilly.
Right at the turn off to Minaret Viewpoint is the gate to the Reds Meadow. The young lady said we had to take the shuttle, even if we have camping permits. I asked when the shuttle stops, 11th 7pm. We are scheduled to leave on the 11th, but in case we were late, we'd be stuck. She waved us in. The credit card reader was broken, so no charge either. This road will be open on weekends only starting 0n 9/16, and probably closed in October.
The road descends at least 1000', to my dismay. Reds Meadow is at the bottom of the valley. We'd have to climb out of the valley onto the other side :( There are 2 THs here that allow you to connect to JMT. I only have the permit to the southbound, even though I was heading up north.
As we drove to the Rainbow Falls TH, saw a shuttle coming this way too. A large parking lot. Picnic table, outhouse, only one bear box. Two piles of food cache, with labels of exit-dates on 8/19 and 8/20. What happened to their owners?
9/8-11, Devils Postpile - Minaret Lake - Thousand Islands Lake
9/11, Monday. Smooth driving down. M.Y. drove on I-395 for awhile, so I could check in my return flight. I also called Priceline about my screw-up of the rental car. Priceline said it'll refund me. (I receive the car portion of the refund the very day, the insurance payment was refund 10 days later.)
Stopped twice for gas. M.Y. bought a burger near the last gas station. Some traffic in LA. Not too bad (yet). Returned the car ~3:30pm. At the terminal, put our 2 backpacks into the duffel. It still took sometime. Dropped the luggage ~4pm. Our flight is at 7:26pm.
Now the trouble started with United Airline. We boarded the flight, before it taxes to the runway, we were told that the bathrooms have some fault, and we deplaned, waiting for a new air craft. 2 hours later, we boarded another plane. Taxied to the runway, then 2nd announcement informed us that the pilot would be running out his allowed flight time. The plane drove back to the terminal. We deplaned, and waited for a new pilot. 2 hours later, we boarded the same plane. Everyone was relieved too early as we taxied to the runway. Yet another announcement informed us that the captain was running out of his alloted time. The plane drove back to the terminal. It's already past midnight. They were talking to a pilot who's landing here from DC. We were instructed to wait in the plane, just in case. Then I noticed that I was given a $15 meal voucher. Unable to use it. Each time, some passengers left. More empty seats. Finally, ~1:30am, Marc from DC took us towards Seattle.
9/12, Tuesday. Picked up our duffel ~4am. What a night!
Received an apologetic email from united.com titled Customer Apperciation with a link to united.com/unitedcares. There, I was able to input my flight detail and receive a voucher of $75, which expires in 12 months.
Summary and take-aways
All is smooth. LAX's rental car agencies are in separate lots, so need to take the particular shuttle. A short line, but slow going. When I got to the counter, the agent couldn't find my reservation. It turned out that I paid for a car in a different airport (Burbank). The agent canceled mine and booked us a different car, and charged $15/day extra for the "up-sell". By the time we drove out, it was already ~9:30am.
Made a stop at Lancaster Walmart on the way. Refreshed in its restroom, bought a can of isobutane gas. I bought some instant refried beans, M.Y. bought a big sandwich.
Drove through Red Rock State Park ~12:30pm, looks quite colorful.
Onion Valley road is officially closed. Google map doesn't route me there. After talking to a ranger on Sunday, I knew we could drive to the TH, it's a "soft closure". On the way, saw some orange cones on the side from time to time, one small washout. No signs of closure.
9/4-7, Kearsarge Pass - Sixty Lakes Basin - Rae Lakes
9/7 Thursday, upon dropping off the LA couple at Independence. I drank a can of calm chowder, while searching for a room for the night. Meanwhile M.Y. bought a large salad from a Mexican food truck. He was a bit sick due to the heat. It was about 90°F here. Settled in Bishop at El Rancho motel (cheapest option $99+tax). On the drive north, with AC in full blast, M.Y. revived.
Had to check in at a different location. The lady their is cheerful. Funny signs on the walll like "bury me at Walmart, so my wife will visit me", "It's better to be lost while fishing than to be found at work". It looks like a dump, But the room is clean. AC. Fridge, microwave, coffee machine, ice bucket. Most importantly 2 beds. I washed my hiking close including my sunt hat and sun gloves. Repacking took some time. Finished my clam chowder and ate another can of sardines. Brew some decafe and ate a pack of oat meal.
I researched what to change for my next loop with the higher than expected snow level, and lower than expected temperature. By the time I went to sleep, it was almost 1am. Didn't sleep well. It was too warm with blanket on, but too cold without it.
9/8, Friday. Up before 6am. All my washing was dry. Chilly outside (upper 40°Fs(. I asked M.Y. to fill ~5 gallon of gas, and insisted that trim his food packages. I drew the new route onto his phone's GPS app. We headed out ~7am towards Mammoth Lakes.
1 hour to Mammoth Lakes. On the drive to Reds Meadow, next to the town, saw a coyote crossing the road. Stopped at the Minaret Viewpoint, looking at the peaks that we'll be walking in. Chilly.
Right at the turn off to Minaret Viewpoint is the gate to the Reds Meadow. The young lady said we had to take the shuttle, even if we have camping permits. I asked when the shuttle stops, 11th 7pm. We are scheduled to leave on the 11th, but in case we were late, we'd be stuck. She waved us in. The credit card reader was broken, so no charge either. This road will be open on weekends only starting 0n 9/16, and probably closed in October.
The road descends at least 1000', to my dismay. Reds Meadow is at the bottom of the valley. We'd have to climb out of the valley onto the other side :( There are 2 THs here that allow you to connect to JMT. I only have the permit to the southbound, even though I was heading up north.
As we drove to the Rainbow Falls TH, saw a shuttle coming this way too. A large parking lot. Picnic table, outhouse, only one bear box. Two piles of food cache, with labels of exit-dates on 8/19 and 8/20. What happened to their owners?
9/8-11, Devils Postpile - Minaret Lake - Thousand Islands Lake
9/11, Monday. Smooth driving down. M.Y. drove on I-395 for awhile, so I could check in my return flight. I also called Priceline about my screw-up of the rental car. Priceline said it'll refund me. (I receive the car portion of the refund the very day, the insurance payment was refund 10 days later.)
Stopped twice for gas. M.Y. bought a burger near the last gas station. Some traffic in LA. Not too bad (yet). Returned the car ~3:30pm. At the terminal, put our 2 backpacks into the duffel. It still took sometime. Dropped the luggage ~4pm. Our flight is at 7:26pm.
Now the trouble started with United Airline. We boarded the flight, before it taxes to the runway, we were told that the bathrooms have some fault, and we deplaned, waiting for a new air craft. 2 hours later, we boarded another plane. Taxied to the runway, then 2nd announcement informed us that the pilot would be running out his allowed flight time. The plane drove back to the terminal. We deplaned, and waited for a new pilot. 2 hours later, we boarded the same plane. Everyone was relieved too early as we taxied to the runway. Yet another announcement informed us that the captain was running out of his alloted time. The plane drove back to the terminal. It's already past midnight. They were talking to a pilot who's landing here from DC. We were instructed to wait in the plane, just in case. Then I noticed that I was given a $15 meal voucher. Unable to use it. Each time, some passengers left. More empty seats. Finally, ~1:30am, Marc from DC took us towards Seattle.
9/12, Tuesday. Picked up our duffel ~4am. What a night!
Received an apologetic email from united.com titled Customer Apperciation with a link to united.com/unitedcares. There, I was able to input my flight detail and receive a voucher of $75, which expires in 12 months.
Summary and take-aways
- We brought too much food. M.Y. brought a lot snacks from his office, and shared with me. So I ended up bringing back part of my own provisions.
- Bananas and string cheese survived 4 days in the bear box at TH (no shade), a surprise.
- Didn't prepare for the mosquitoes (big mistake). The high snow fall this spring postponed the mosquito season.
- Colder than I expected, still snow on trail, ice on tent. Sun disappeared at 5pm, unable to wash my clothes and hope they'd dry.
- Umbrella is good to have. Instead of protecting from the sun, used it for the rain this time.
- Regreted not to bring my book on the second loop.
- No one checked our permits.
- M.Y.'s favorite is Mid Rae Lake, mine is the traverse from Minaret to Ediza Lake.
- For updated trip reports and discussions in the area, see High Sierra Topix.
- It's possible to remedy a bad user experience by offering some small compensation in an apologetic and systematic way. Easy to implement.
Monday, September 11, 2023
2023.9.8-11 Devils Postpile - Minaret Lake - Thousand Islands Lake
Day 1, 9/8, Friday. Rainbow Falls TH ‐ Minaret Lake
Checked out the Rainbow Falls first. Nice. Viewing platform. Too bad, that the sun is not shining on the water, so no rainbows. Maybe afternoon is better. On the way back, saw some family with small children going there. Dry and hot, no shade.
Devils Postpile is underwhelming. A national monument. No water at all. It's in Ansel Adams Wilderness. 2 signs at the border for 2 different government agencies.
Left the monument onto Kings River trail going uphill. Found a creek, was filling water. One guy walked by and told us in 15 minutes we'd have to ford a river. So we dumped the water for later. A couple came down told us it's possible to hop over rocks upstream. It took us 30 minutes to reach the river, and we crossed over the rocks. Filled water here, too buggy to stay put. Sprayed ourselves with repellent.
Not far is Johnston Meadow, swampy, buggy. Up and up, dryer, less mosquitoes. We sat down to filter the water we took at the river. Saw many mariposa lily and buckwheat along the way. Dry and dusty.
At this water slide of Minaret Creek, we took a lunch break. Views improved afterwards. More alpine, creeks, boulders, mosquitoes are back.
Another hour or 2 later, we finally reached Minaret Lake. Beautiful and large with a few ponds close by. Many small peninsulas. Quite windy, so not too buggy. Found 2 tents at its south end. We continued to the camp sign on the map. Found many sites. Too windy, so I opted to tent in the trees without much of a view. We are of equal distance to Minaret Lake and this lovely pond.
Again the sun disappeared from the lake very early (by 5pm). Scrambled up a little hill by the camp for some last minute photos. No good sunset. Cooked and ate dinner by the lake. I passed out before 8pm.
Total today ~10 miles (including the detour to Rainbow Falls). Up 2800', down 600'.
Day 2, 9/9, Saturday. Minaret Lake ‐ crossover to Ediza Lake ‐ JMT
Thunder and rain woke me up at 2am. Rained off and on all day. Ended up cooking and eating breakfast in the tent. My umbrella enabled me to fetch water and give boiled water to M.Y.
My tent has a huge flaw using footprint. Or maybe all tents have the same problem. The rain poured down to the fly, draped on to the front bathtub of the tent, and onto the groundsheet, instead of draining into the soil. I dug a hole at the front below the tent, guy out the front, to minimize water pooling onto the groundsheet.
Met a runner while I was moving food into my vestibule. She ran up here today. Couldn't figure out the way to Cecile Lake. I showed her where the route is. She decided to run back. She was shivering. She carried no backpack at all.
Sun came out around noon with occasional drizzle. Met a guy looking for a camp site here. He said he checked weather an hour ago and it was supposed to clear up by now. He scrambled up to Cecile before in dry weather, and even then he said it wasn't easy. He will go back tomorrow.
As we were eating lunch airing out my wet gear, the guy came by and told us that the weather should be dry until tomorrow noon, then it's 30% precipitation. How nice!
Rain stayed at bay. I decided to continue my loop, but cut out Catherine Lake. We packed up and headed up at 3:20pm. Going to Cecilia is quite easy. There, we need to traverse its eastern shore which has a stretch of snow. I put on spikes and crossed the snow. M.Y. opted going around on rocks. He met the same guy who was telling us about the weather a few hours ago. Now, he was resting on a large rock. Later, saw him hopping rocks with ease and disappeared out of sight fairly quickly.
At the pass north of Cecile (right end of the above photo). I saw a steep snow going down without seeing an end. See the left photo of the view looking down from this pass. We took to some track heading right and up. Crossed the ridge then looked for a way to go down to Iceberg Lake. Aptly named, plenty of snow on the lake surface. The right photo is later looking up from Iceburg, the red dot is roughly where I popped out of Cecile, the red track is roughly how we ended up going down.
It's very steep. We picked our way gingerly down. Then it rained, or rather hailed. Put on rainjacket. Now some slabs were a bit slippery. It's all quite sketchy. Twice we had to lower our packs later. Then we hit snow. I glissaded. My phone fell out of my pocket, and my hiking pole couldn't stop my slide, only slowed it. Finally I was stopped by a rock. Hopped up rocks to fetch my phone. Meanwhile M.Y. slid his backpack down. It tumbled down, and his tent fell out of the bottom strap, tumbled a bit more. I wasn't able to catch either. They didn't tumble far, I went to fetch both. M.Y. put on spikes and inched towards the closest rock. Then scrambling down rocks. His face was ashen by the time he reached me. Afterwards, it was some easy rock hopping down to the shore of Iceberg. Out on spikes to traverse the snow by the lake shore. It's not steep here. Easy. But still care is needed. Don't want to fall into the water with icebergs floating in it. Finally we were on trail at the north end of the lake. It took 1.5 hours from the pass down to Iceberg! Maybe 1/4 miles?
Very glad to hit the trail. From now on, it's smooth sailing. A bit wet on the trail. All the way down to Ediza Lake (~20 min) is very pretty. More and more grass, more mellow. According to some account, Ediza is John Muir's favorite lake. It is indeed very pretty, set against the peaks we just stumbled across, and more.
Met a large group of campers. The blue sky ahead (to the north) is promising for tomorrow.
It was 7pm already, getting dark. But We continued, and reached the camp on JMT at 8pm in headlamp. Already very dark when we setup our tents. M.Y. insisted on cooking dinner. As we were boiling water, it rained again! I was able to sit and finish my dinner under my umbrella. M.Y. took his dinner into his tent.
Rain stopped around 9:30. I could see stars.
Total today ~4.3 miles, up 700', down 1400'.
Day 3, 9/10, Sunday. JMT RT to Thousand Islands Lake ‐ Johnston Meadown.
Rain started again in the middle of the night. Late start today. We hiked out just before 8am with a day pack.
Took JMT north towards Garnet Lake. Up and down. Rain on and off. Garnet Lake is quite pretty with many little "islands".
Continued on JMT, passed Ruby Lake, and then Emerald Lake. Both are pleasant. We are running into more and more people, now that we are on JMT.
Thousand Islands Lake is one of those recommended to me. It looks very much like Garnet Lake. It's larger, and more little "islands". We continued on JMT to the view point marked on my Gaia Map. It's definitely a good view point: a large rock outcrop. We took a long break before heading back.
On the way back, took an alternate route between the 2 lakes. Saw a tent. Didn't meet anyone. I do recommend going both ways. A different little lake, more grass. Trail is not as well defined, but not too hard to follow.
Back at camp around 2pm. Lunch, packing up. Hiked down around 3:30pm. We want to drive out as early as possible tomorrow, for fear of the traffic in LA.
Easy trekking on JMT south. It follows Shadow Creek, passing Shadow Lake, Rosalie Lake, Gladys Lake, all not pretty. Saw a deer at Rosalie, and a tent. I didn't bother to take a photo of Gladys Lake.
Settled for the night at Johnston Meadow. Very buggy ~7pm when we arrived. Already dark. I hid inside the tent without cooking dinner. Today is long. 19 miles, 4000' up, 5000' down.
Day 4, 9/11, Monday Hike out
Up before mosquitoes (~5:30am), so I can cook without being molested. Packed up wet tent, and headed out before 7am. It's only 3.7 miles, easy mile. This time, we crossed Kings River by wading. The water is cold. Higher now after 2 days of rain. All the rain in the last 2 days made a difference. The silver lining is that the trail is nicer, not as dusty, and the temperature cooler.
The morning light over Reds Meadow is lovely.
This time, we walked by Devils Postpile up close.
Reached the car around 8:30am. Fetched food from the bear box. The August food packages were still there. Where are their owners? 2 NFS truck arrived, about 7-8 rangers. I reported the falled bear can and poncho. They said they are not local, but doing a tour from Yosemite. They are not familiar with the location I told them about. M.Y. handed them the leftover isbutane can. One young lady claimed it happily.
We drove out a little before 9am. On the way out at the gate, I reported again to the gate agent about the fallen bear can and poncho. She's more concerned, and promised that she'll convey my message to the right department.
Here's the itinerary and profile, map drawn after the trip, so not the live track. The orange is the difficult part, due to lingering snow on steep hill north of Cecile Lake. The green is what I initially planned to do and cut away due to time. The only regret is not going to North Glacier Pass to look at Lake Catherine.
Checked out the Rainbow Falls first. Nice. Viewing platform. Too bad, that the sun is not shining on the water, so no rainbows. Maybe afternoon is better. On the way back, saw some family with small children going there. Dry and hot, no shade.
Devils Postpile is underwhelming. A national monument. No water at all. It's in Ansel Adams Wilderness. 2 signs at the border for 2 different government agencies.
Left the monument onto Kings River trail going uphill. Found a creek, was filling water. One guy walked by and told us in 15 minutes we'd have to ford a river. So we dumped the water for later. A couple came down told us it's possible to hop over rocks upstream. It took us 30 minutes to reach the river, and we crossed over the rocks. Filled water here, too buggy to stay put. Sprayed ourselves with repellent.
Not far is Johnston Meadow, swampy, buggy. Up and up, dryer, less mosquitoes. We sat down to filter the water we took at the river. Saw many mariposa lily and buckwheat along the way. Dry and dusty.
At this water slide of Minaret Creek, we took a lunch break. Views improved afterwards. More alpine, creeks, boulders, mosquitoes are back.
Another hour or 2 later, we finally reached Minaret Lake. Beautiful and large with a few ponds close by. Many small peninsulas. Quite windy, so not too buggy. Found 2 tents at its south end. We continued to the camp sign on the map. Found many sites. Too windy, so I opted to tent in the trees without much of a view. We are of equal distance to Minaret Lake and this lovely pond.
Again the sun disappeared from the lake very early (by 5pm). Scrambled up a little hill by the camp for some last minute photos. No good sunset. Cooked and ate dinner by the lake. I passed out before 8pm.
Total today ~10 miles (including the detour to Rainbow Falls). Up 2800', down 600'.
Day 2, 9/9, Saturday. Minaret Lake ‐ crossover to Ediza Lake ‐ JMT
Thunder and rain woke me up at 2am. Rained off and on all day. Ended up cooking and eating breakfast in the tent. My umbrella enabled me to fetch water and give boiled water to M.Y.
My tent has a huge flaw using footprint. Or maybe all tents have the same problem. The rain poured down to the fly, draped on to the front bathtub of the tent, and onto the groundsheet, instead of draining into the soil. I dug a hole at the front below the tent, guy out the front, to minimize water pooling onto the groundsheet.
Met a runner while I was moving food into my vestibule. She ran up here today. Couldn't figure out the way to Cecile Lake. I showed her where the route is. She decided to run back. She was shivering. She carried no backpack at all.
Sun came out around noon with occasional drizzle. Met a guy looking for a camp site here. He said he checked weather an hour ago and it was supposed to clear up by now. He scrambled up to Cecile before in dry weather, and even then he said it wasn't easy. He will go back tomorrow.
As we were eating lunch airing out my wet gear, the guy came by and told us that the weather should be dry until tomorrow noon, then it's 30% precipitation. How nice!
Rain stayed at bay. I decided to continue my loop, but cut out Catherine Lake. We packed up and headed up at 3:20pm. Going to Cecilia is quite easy. There, we need to traverse its eastern shore which has a stretch of snow. I put on spikes and crossed the snow. M.Y. opted going around on rocks. He met the same guy who was telling us about the weather a few hours ago. Now, he was resting on a large rock. Later, saw him hopping rocks with ease and disappeared out of sight fairly quickly.
At the pass north of Cecile (right end of the above photo). I saw a steep snow going down without seeing an end. See the left photo of the view looking down from this pass. We took to some track heading right and up. Crossed the ridge then looked for a way to go down to Iceberg Lake. Aptly named, plenty of snow on the lake surface. The right photo is later looking up from Iceburg, the red dot is roughly where I popped out of Cecile, the red track is roughly how we ended up going down.
It's very steep. We picked our way gingerly down. Then it rained, or rather hailed. Put on rainjacket. Now some slabs were a bit slippery. It's all quite sketchy. Twice we had to lower our packs later. Then we hit snow. I glissaded. My phone fell out of my pocket, and my hiking pole couldn't stop my slide, only slowed it. Finally I was stopped by a rock. Hopped up rocks to fetch my phone. Meanwhile M.Y. slid his backpack down. It tumbled down, and his tent fell out of the bottom strap, tumbled a bit more. I wasn't able to catch either. They didn't tumble far, I went to fetch both. M.Y. put on spikes and inched towards the closest rock. Then scrambling down rocks. His face was ashen by the time he reached me. Afterwards, it was some easy rock hopping down to the shore of Iceberg. Out on spikes to traverse the snow by the lake shore. It's not steep here. Easy. But still care is needed. Don't want to fall into the water with icebergs floating in it. Finally we were on trail at the north end of the lake. It took 1.5 hours from the pass down to Iceberg! Maybe 1/4 miles?
Very glad to hit the trail. From now on, it's smooth sailing. A bit wet on the trail. All the way down to Ediza Lake (~20 min) is very pretty. More and more grass, more mellow. According to some account, Ediza is John Muir's favorite lake. It is indeed very pretty, set against the peaks we just stumbled across, and more.
Met a large group of campers. The blue sky ahead (to the north) is promising for tomorrow.
It was 7pm already, getting dark. But We continued, and reached the camp on JMT at 8pm in headlamp. Already very dark when we setup our tents. M.Y. insisted on cooking dinner. As we were boiling water, it rained again! I was able to sit and finish my dinner under my umbrella. M.Y. took his dinner into his tent.
Rain stopped around 9:30. I could see stars.
Total today ~4.3 miles, up 700', down 1400'.
Day 3, 9/10, Sunday. JMT RT to Thousand Islands Lake ‐ Johnston Meadown.
Rain started again in the middle of the night. Late start today. We hiked out just before 8am with a day pack.
Took JMT north towards Garnet Lake. Up and down. Rain on and off. Garnet Lake is quite pretty with many little "islands".
Continued on JMT, passed Ruby Lake, and then Emerald Lake. Both are pleasant. We are running into more and more people, now that we are on JMT.
Thousand Islands Lake is one of those recommended to me. It looks very much like Garnet Lake. It's larger, and more little "islands". We continued on JMT to the view point marked on my Gaia Map. It's definitely a good view point: a large rock outcrop. We took a long break before heading back.
On the way back, took an alternate route between the 2 lakes. Saw a tent. Didn't meet anyone. I do recommend going both ways. A different little lake, more grass. Trail is not as well defined, but not too hard to follow.
Back at camp around 2pm. Lunch, packing up. Hiked down around 3:30pm. We want to drive out as early as possible tomorrow, for fear of the traffic in LA.
Easy trekking on JMT south. It follows Shadow Creek, passing Shadow Lake, Rosalie Lake, Gladys Lake, all not pretty. Saw a deer at Rosalie, and a tent. I didn't bother to take a photo of Gladys Lake.
Settled for the night at Johnston Meadow. Very buggy ~7pm when we arrived. Already dark. I hid inside the tent without cooking dinner. Today is long. 19 miles, 4000' up, 5000' down.
Day 4, 9/11, Monday Hike out
Up before mosquitoes (~5:30am), so I can cook without being molested. Packed up wet tent, and headed out before 7am. It's only 3.7 miles, easy mile. This time, we crossed Kings River by wading. The water is cold. Higher now after 2 days of rain. All the rain in the last 2 days made a difference. The silver lining is that the trail is nicer, not as dusty, and the temperature cooler.
The morning light over Reds Meadow is lovely.
This time, we walked by Devils Postpile up close.
Reached the car around 8:30am. Fetched food from the bear box. The August food packages were still there. Where are their owners? 2 NFS truck arrived, about 7-8 rangers. I reported the falled bear can and poncho. They said they are not local, but doing a tour from Yosemite. They are not familiar with the location I told them about. M.Y. handed them the leftover isbutane can. One young lady claimed it happily.
We drove out a little before 9am. On the way out at the gate, I reported again to the gate agent about the fallen bear can and poncho. She's more concerned, and promised that she'll convey my message to the right department.
Here's the itinerary and profile, map drawn after the trip, so not the live track. The orange is the difficult part, due to lingering snow on steep hill north of Cecile Lake. The green is what I initially planned to do and cut away due to time. The only regret is not going to North Glacier Pass to look at Lake Catherine.
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