Skip to main content

Kings Canyon and Sequoia National Parks (Spring season)

Since January the weather in California has been somewhat murky.  The winter had largely been high and dry but there was a couple months of snow followed by heavy rain.  I was able to visit Yosemite unabated by chain controls earlier in the year but getting anywhere else over 5,000 since in the Sierras was somewhat dicey.  This weekend was the first true clearing in higher elevation and that being the case I decided to visit Kings Canyon in addition to Sequoia National Parks for the day.






I started the morning on a quick climb from the Central Valley eastward into the Sierras on CA 180.


CA 180 is a fun drive uphill on a steep grade east of CA 63.  I wrote two previous blog posts on CA 180 east to Cedar Grove and the former alignment on Dunlap Road which can be found here.

CA 180 east to Cedar Grove in Kings Canyon National Park

Old CA 180 on Dunlap Road

My goal for the day was 8 miles hiking.  To that end I started out at familiar digs in Grant Grove of Giant Sequoias in Kings Canyon National Park.  There weren't any other people in Grant Grove when I arrived so it was a nice opportunity to try for some panoramic photos of the General Grant Tree.





From Grant Grove I traveled to the eastern segment of CA 180 in Sequoia National Forest. 


CA 180 east of Hume Lake Road was closed for the season in Sequoia National Forest.  I thought it was odd since the closure point is generally at least five miles to the east even in the most wet winters.



Interestingly CA 180 now has Scenic Byway signs within the boundary of Sequoia National Forest.





Hume Lake Road has some fantastic views of Kings Canyon.  There is a pullout that has a sandy ledge which descends down to this overlook.  CA 180 can be seen snaking below into Kings Canyon.  Interestingly there appeared to be several plow vehicles parked off in the distance above the Kings River.





I arrived at Hume Lake which has some sort of active even going on.  Then again I'm generally surprised how many people are actively at the lake even during early morning hours.





I found this odd Generals Highway shield which was definitely Forest Service sourced.





I took about a mile walk on the Hume Lake Trail to the overlook of Hume Lake Dam. 




Hume Lake was originally part of the Hume-Bennett log flume to Sanger.  I spoke of the history of the logging flume last fall on this blog entry.

Kings Canyon and Sequoia National Parks (Fall Season 2017)

It wasn't exactly clear if Hume Lake Road was open through to the Generals Highway so I decided to backtrack through Grant Grove.  Ultimately it turned that Hume Lake Road was actually open all the way through.  It would seem the heavy rains in the past couple weeks have cleared up most of the snow below 10,000 feet in the Sierras.





I did find a nice old button-copy sign for Hume Lake at the closure gate on CA 180.





After reaching the Generals Highway I took it south into Sequoia National Forest to the Buena Vista Trail which I had not been on.  The Buena Vista Trail is located across the Generals Highway from the Kings Canyon Overlook.





The Buena Vista Trail is a 2 mile loop to the approximately 7,600 foot Buena Vista Peak.  The very top of Buena Vista Peak offers wide panoramic views of; Kings Canyon, San Joaquin Valley, Big Baldy, and The Great Western Divide.  The trail had some snow on it but wasn't anything too difficult to traverse on the shallow incline from the Generals Highway.



South of the Buena Vista Trail I was considering either Little Baldy or Moro Rock.  I ultimately settled on Moro Rock due Crescent Meadow Road being closed which would serve to trim the crowds down.  The trail head from the Giant Forest Museum is marked but doesn't show a distance to Moro Rock which is 1.7 miles ahead.





The Moro Rock Trail is substantially shorter in distance than the Crescent Meadow Road and traverses through a grove of redwoods.








Moro Rock was largely devoid of people.  Oddly Crescent Meadow Road didn't have a drop of rain on it which made me curious why the road was still closed.  The view from the top of the Great Western Divide was spectacular with a full winter snow pack atop of it. 





On the way back to the Giant Forest Museum I found an alternate overlook of the Generals Highway overlooking the Generals Highway below snaking to the Giant Forest from the Kaweah River Watershed.





The Generals Highway has a really interesting history.  I wrote account of history of the Generals Highway and Colony Mill Road on a blog entry last year.

Return to the Generals Highway

After leaving the Giant Forest I descended down the Generals Highway to CA 198.  After crossing the Pumpkin Hollow Bridge I headed towards home.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Interstate 40's Tumultuous Ride Through the Pigeon River Gorge

In the nearly 60 years Interstate 40 has been open to traffic through the Pigeon River Gorge in the mountains of Western North Carolina, it has been troubled by frequent rockslides and damaging flooding, which has seen the over 30-mile stretch through North Carolina and Tennessee closed for months at a time. Most recently, excessive rainfall from Hurricane Helene in September 2024 saw sections of Interstate 40 wash away into a raging Pigeon River. While the physical troubles of Interstate 40 are well known, how I-40 came to be through the area is a tale of its own. Interstate 40 West through Haywood County near mile marker 10. I-40's route through the Pigeon River Gorge dates to local political squabbles in the 1940s and a state highway law written in 1921. A small note appeared in the July 28, 1945, Asheville Times. It read that the North Carolina State Highway Commission had authorized a feasibility study of a "...water-level road down [the] Pigeon River to the Tennessee l

Ghost Town Tuesday; Mannfield, FL and the stairway to Hell

Back in 2015 I went searching the Lecanto Sand Hills for the original Citrus County Seat known as Mannfield.  Unlike Centrailia in Hernando County and Fivay in Pasco County I did find something worth seeing. Mannfield is located in the Lecanto Sand Hill section of Withlacoochee State Forest somewhat east of the intersection of Citrus County Route 491 and Mansfield Road. Mannfield was named after Austin Mann and founded in Hernando County in 1884 before Citrus County Split away.  In 1887 Citrus County was split from northern Hernando County while Pasco County was spun off to the south.  Mannfield was selected as the new Citrus County seat due to it being near the county geographic center.  Reportedly Mannfield had as many as 250 people when it was the County Seat.  The town included various businesses one might include at the time, even a sawmill which was common for the area.  In 1891 Citrus County voted to move it's seat to Inverness which set the stage for the decline of M

The National Road - Pennsylvania - Great Crossings Bridge and Somerfield

West of Addison, US 40 crosses the Youghiogheny River at what once was the town of Somerfield.  When crossing the current modern two lane bridge, you many not realize that it is actually the third to cross the Yough at this site.  The first - a stone arch bridge - was known as the Great Crossings Bridge.  Built in 1818, this three arch bridge was part of the original National Road.  The name Great Crossings comes from the men who forded the Youghiogheny here - George Washington and George Braddock. (1)  If you cross the bridge at the right time, this historic bridge and what was once the town of Somerfield will appear out from underneath this massive man-made lake. Historical Postcard showing the 'Big Crossings' bridge and Somerfield.  Image submitted by Vince Ferrari. The Great Crossings Bridge was located in the town of Somerfield.  Somerfield, originally named Smythfield until 1827, would develop as a result of the National Road. (1)  Somerfield would go through va