First, let me say the waterfalls are spectacular. As usual with our luck, we saw them at premiere peak. In Yosemite, mother nature controls the flow of the falls, so the only time they are all gushing over the cliff tops is late spring and very early summer. It didn't hurt our chances there was a big rain event two days before we arrived adding to the snow melt. Here's Yosemite Falls which dries up by August.
Yosemite Falls with 'ice' on the sides |
I can only imagine what it must have looked like. Now, the valley floor is a web of paved paths, paved short hiking trails to the base of any accessible water fall, hotel rooms, motel rooms, 'improved' camping sites, RV parking sites, and ribbons of roads to reach it all. This park has been 'loved to death' by the public.
On the positive side, the valley would be a great vacation if you have elementary school age children. The bike paths which wind around everywhere are relatively flat, and children would love riding on them. The hikes are doable by short legs. And, to be fair, there's thousands of acres of wilderness to which the hardy (young adults) can backpack. This place is also a rock climbing paradise.
Just be sure to bring your own food. Part of our disgruntled attitude was the lack of a single decent meal the entire time we were there. I really did get food poisoning which ruined an entire day of the trip for both of us. However, even before that, the $40 breakfast was a bad combination of airline food/fast food. I've had a better free breakfast at the lowliest Best Western. The hamburger was on par with one from a minor league ballpark. Drake resorted to eating the ham salad I brought with us from home for breakfast one day.
I did discover each of the five entrances into the park offer different sights and hikes, so if you are planning a visit and it's NOT waterfall season, skip the Yosemite Valley and choose somewhere else inside the park to visit. It will be much less crowded, and this entire area of California is gorgeous.
Of course, I took lots of pictures. I also decided to channel Ansel Adams and took several black and white shots. Click on the link to see both the B/W and the color shots of Yosemite Valley. (Oh, and we did see several vintage cars leaving the valley as we were arriving, so we just missed a rally of early 20th century cars.)
No comments:
Post a Comment