Tag: "Alpine County"

Carson Pass Wildflower Hike

| October 11, 2010 | Comments (4)
Scarlet Indian Paintbrush and Lupine

The Carson Pass area in Alpine County is the greatest summer wildflower area I know of. There are a number of different trails (see my article on Meiss Lake), each with a different set of features.  The most popular hike starts at the Carson Pass Information Station and takes you through a series of wonderful wildflower gardens until you get to Winnemucca Lake. The highlight of this hike is a “seep” area that covers an entire hillside. The hike is relatively easy (considering the altitude) and well worth it if you can time it right. This year we visited it on the last weekend of July.

Note: Click on any photograph to see a larger image

The Hike

The hike isn’t difficult as long as you remember to pace yourself and bring water. The starting elevation is around 8500 feet. You start off through a forested area with some elevation change, passing by Frog Lake.

From there you continue alongside Elephants Back, where there are a number of different wildflower areas that are more exposed on the granite hillside. Lots of Indian Paintbrush, Lupine, and flowers that take to the drier exposed areas. In the picture to the right you can see Round Top in the background, which is where we are heading.

Continuing on you eventually come to a hillside that is fed by snowmelt, with small streams crisscrossing the open areas and an incredible variety of wildflowers. This is the “seep” area, with a wide assortment of flowers that like the dampness (Monkeyflower, Shooting Stars, Elephant Head) as well as masses of Paintbrush and Lupines. If you hit this at the right time you’ll find acres of flowers in full bloom.

Continuing on, the area dries out a bit and you come to Winnemucca Lake, with an elevation of 8980 feet. This is at the foot of Round Top. It is about three miles in from the highway, and usually we don’t go much further past this lake. The lake area itself is fairly exposed, but there are some reasonably shady areas for a rest. This year we went a bit past the lake, just starting up the side of Round Top mountain, and found another seep area that had a different collection of flowers.

You can continue on up Round Top, but the trail starts to change elevation fairly rapidly. I’ve not gone past here yet so I’m not sure what you’ll find as far as wildflowers.

This is a very popular trail when the flowers are at their peak. You won’t be alone. But it is fun to sit in the flower gardens and listen to people gasp in amazement as they come over the crest and see the seep area for the first time.

Timing is Everything

Crimson Columbine

This trail heads south from the highway and it has a different exposure than the hike to Meiss Lake.  Usually this hike hits its peak about two weeks later than the Meiss Lake trail. Be sure to stop in at the Carson Pass Information Station to get the latest information on which trail to take. This is manned by volunteers from the El Dorado National Forest Interpretive Association (ENFIA), and they are a wonderful source for information on the area. You can call them at (209) 258-8606 to get a reading on when the flowers will be at their peak.

We hiked on this trail in late July 2010. Some years you want to go earlier, but this was a relatively cool summer. The weather was excellent, a clear sunny day with temperatures reaching the low to mid 80′s. It was a bit warm in the exposed areas, but the starting (and ending) section are in the forest and protected. There are a number of trees and shady spots at Winnemucca Lake where you can rest.

Directions

The trailhead is on Highway 88 past the Kirkwood ski resort area in Northern California.

Nettleleaf Horsemint

From Sacramento take Highway 16 east until it meets Highway 49. Head south on 59 to Jackson. From there go east on Highway 88. It is roughly 55 miles to the Kirkwood Inn and Station (just past the Kirkwood ski resort). Continue on 88 past Caples Lake, at about 5.2 miles you will see the Carson Pass Information Center  on the south side of the highway (this is just after the Meiss Meadow trailhead parking lot on the north side).

Parking at the Information Center can be crowded if you go on a weekend. The parking fee is $5.00.  If that lot is full then just past this there is a road on the south side (Red Vista Road) that serves as overflow. People squeeze in on that narrow side road – I found that if you go down several hundred feet there is a broad lookout parking area that is often empty. There were flowers to view even on this side road.

If you are in the South Lake Tahoe area you can take Highway 8outh from near the airport to Highway 88 (about 11 miles) and then turn right (west). The Carson Pass Information Center is about 9 miles to the west.

The Flowers

Please feel free to help me with the identification of any “unidentified” flowers listed here, as well as correcting any errors I may make. Click on any photograph to see a larger image. I’ll start with a few favorites, and then the “gallery”. All pictures were taken with a Nikon D50 with a Tamron 18-270 mm zoom lens. I was trying out this lens as it has image stabilization, and I didn’t use a tripod. The lens was wonderful for the scenery shots, but I didn’t like the results for the flower shots. My apologies for the poor depth of field in some of these shots (I’m not keeping that lens).

Little Elephant Head

This is the first time I’ve come across this. You have to look close – see the two elephant ears and the trunk on each flower?

Dodecatheon alpinum

Alpine Shooting Star

Shooting Stars are always interesting but hard to photograph, they never look “perfect”. There were quite a few just past Winnemucca Lake in a wet area.

Calochortus leichtlinii

Leichtlin's Mariposa Lily

Mariposa Lilies tend to like the drier areas. They stand out, as the flowers are fairly large, and very bright.

Castilleja miniata var. miniata

A hike isn’t complete (for me) until I find a Paintbrush. No problem on this hike, they were plentiful in both the drier and wetter areas. A couple of species.

Click on the gallery pictures below, there is quite a variety of flowers. Help me identify the ones I couldn’t name!

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Meiss Lake Wildflower Hike

| August 29, 2010 | Comments (4)
Showy Penstemon and Paintbrush

 One of my favorite summer wildflower areas is the Carson Pass area in Alpine County. If you can time it right you will find beautiful hillside gardens full of wildflowers. We visited this area in mid July 2010 and hiked on the trail towards Meiss Lake, stopping at a meadow along the way. I knew it was going to be a great day for flowers - I had already taken 30 pictures of flowers before we even left the parking lot area. 

It didn’t take long to find masses of wildflowers just a short distance in. As we were marveling at the abundance of flowers, people coming back down the trail said kept saying “it’s going to get better!”. 

Penstemon speciosus

Showy Penstemon and Paintbrush

It did… 

Note: Click on any photograph to see a larger image 

The Hike

The hike wasn’t difficult (particularly since I was stopping every 10 feet to take pictures). The starting elevation is around 8200 feet. 

As I said before, I was taking pictures even before we got out of the parking lot! 

The trail starts with a moderate climb through an area of boulders and Jeffrey pine. If the day is warm you will enjoy the occaisional shady spot. The trail was lined with quite an array of flowers, with Lupine, Mules Ear, Penstemon and Paintbrush. 

Soon you are surrounded by a wonderful garden of flowers. You would think that someone had spent hours arranging amongst the boulders along the way. It was an incredible display, starting just a quarter of a mile in and increasing in density as you go along. 

After awhile you move out onto the hillside, out of the trees. The trail wanders up through a number of switchbacks as you climb at a fairly steady, but not difficult, rate. This more exposed area presents a different collection of flowers, including Sulphur Flower, Mariposa Lily, Sierra Onion and more. 

After about 1.5 miles (approximately, I didn’t have a GPS) you come to a “saddle” in the mountain where there is a high meadow. Some patches of snow, a small lake, a different mixture of flowers. 

This picture doesn’t do justice. There was an Iris garden, hundreds of blue and white Iris. Shooting Stars, Pretty Face, Penstemon, Larkspur, Prairie Smoke, quite a variety. 

Not a lot of trees. There was a pond, a marshy area, drier areas, so there was an opportunity for many different kinds of flowers. We did find one stand of trees that provided shade for lunch, but we had to clamber over a deep stream bed, up a hillside, and across some patches of snow.

Timing is Everything

Hansen's larkspur

This trail heads north up the hillsides from the highway and it has a different exposure than those you will find on the Winnemucca Lake trail that heads south from the highway. This means that the wildflowers on this trail hit their peak bloom a week or so before the other trail. Be sure to stop at the Carson Pass Information Station just up the road to get the latest information on which trail to take. This is manned by volunteers from the El Dorado National Forest Interpretive Association (ENFIA), and they are a wonderful source for information on the area. You can (as I did several times) call them at (209) 258-8606 to get a reading on when the flowers will be at their peak. 

We hiked on this trail in mid July. The weather was excellent, a clear sunny day with temperatures reaching the low to mid 80′s. It was a bit warm in the exposed areas, but on the hike up there are several large Jeffrey pines right on the trail, and we found a group of trees at the meadow (a bit aways from the trail) where we could rest in the shade and eat our lunch. 

Directions

The trailhead is on Highway 88 past the Kirkwood ski resort area in Northern California. 

Mountain Marsh Larkspur

From Sacramento take Highway 16 east until it meets Highway 49. Head south on 59 to Jackson. From there go east on Highway 88. It is roughly 55 miles to the Kirkwood Inn and Station (just past the Kirkwood ski resort). Continue on 88 past Caples Lake, at about 5 miles you will see the Meiss Lake parking lot on your left (north). If you miss this, just two tenths of a mile later you will see the Carson Pass Information Center that I mentioned above, on your right. 

If the Meiss Lake parking lot is full you can park at the Information Center. If that lot is full then just past this there is a road on the south side (Red Vista Road) that serves as overflow. If the lots are full people squeeze in on that narrow side road – I found that if you go down several hundred feet there is a broad lookout parking area that is often empty (who cares if you have to hike uphill some more, you are going on a long hike anyways). There were flowers to view even on this side road. 

If you are in the South Lake Tahoe area you can take Highway 8outh from near the airport to Highway 88 (about 11 miles) and then turn right (west). The Carson Pass Information Center is about 9 miles to the west. 

Rocky Mountain Iris and Paintbrush

  

The Flowers

Please feel free to help me with the identification of any “unidentified” flowers listed here, as well as correcting any errors I may make. Click on any photograph to see a larger image. I’ll start with a few favorites, and then the “gallery”. All pictures were taken with a Nikon D50 with a Nikkor 18-135mm zoom lens.

Scarlet Gilia

Scarlett Gilia is a very showy flower, it reminds me of the Fuschia that I have in my backyard garden.

Mule Ears

There was an abundance of Mule Ears. Whole hillsides of them. They actually were quite showy in those big masses.

Prairie Smoke

This was a new one for me – Prairie Smoke or Old Man’s Whiskers. Just starting to open up.

Fendler's meadow rue

Another odd one, Fendler’s Meadow Rue. Not a great picture, it was breezy. There are separate male and female plants (this is the male).

Brewer's Indian Paintbrush

A hike isn’t complete (for me) until I find a Paintbrush. There were quite a few color variations on this hike. This is an interesting one because there are red and orange variants on this same hike, all from the same subspecies (see pictures in the gallery).

Click on the gallery pictures below, there is quite a variety of flowers. Help me identify the ones I couldn’t name!

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