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The summit |
I have not been up to the top of Mount Ellinor in about four
years, since the crowds up there really turn me off. I got an early start, leaving my house by
8. The mountain was not too crowded, but
I did not get to have the summit to myself for long. Everyone on the trail was polite and friendly
. I’ve had bad experiences up there with
other hikers and their dogs and one bad experience on a hike takes away so much
from the relaxation I get from that hike.
I was really hoping for a view of Jefferson Ridge and the
fire damage, but it was not to be. The
summit was fogged in. People near the
summit were hunting for goats. These
were hunters, not relocation experts. I
don’t know what hunters do with goats since goat meat is not very popular. I guess they could sell the skulls for a
pretty penny.
Two hunters were camped near the summit. Two others day hiked it and one of them was
very out of shape. The hiking will be
good for him if it does not kill him.
I got turned around on the way down as usual. I spent a bit of effort looking back as I went
up so I would not get turned around on the way back, but that did not help
much. There is one spot where you have
to clamber over a rock and it looks much less like the trail than all the
little way trails that people and goats have made up there. Maybe if I was a bit taller I would not have
this issue of finding my way down from there every time? This time was especially bad and I was
feeling down on myself for having to struggle so much to figure out the route
down. I tried to not be too hard on
myself though.
This was the only time this year that I have made it up into
the high country. It was nice to see the
trees and mushrooms, but I wish I could have seen a view to make it really
worthwhile. This was Sage’s first trip
up. I do not normally take a dog up this
trail due to the crowds. Sage is very
well behaved though and she always comes back when she is called, unless she
sees a grouse.
A forest service working was looking at trees on the lower
trail. He talked to me like I did not
know much about trees. Little did he know.
He was not in a law enforcement truck and I did not see a
gun on him, but someone from the forest service left a nasty surprise on two
people’s cars at the trail head. Probably big fat parking tickets probably.
I have a free lifetime pass but I still get miffed when I
see tickets on other people’s cars. I
hung my spouse’s disabled parking pass on my mirror and put my own pass on my
dash. I’ve had the forest circus miss
seeing my pass and ticket me in the past.
By hanging my husband’s giant pass I hoped that they would look closer
and see my dash pass too. I’m so glad
that I did not forget to display my pass.
I remember when these passes were not required.
I remember when the forest circus had money
to invest in trail and road maintenance.
All that money is going elsewhere now and a $30 pass is not going to
make up for the loss of funds.
The road up was in
pretty good shape. I'm still shopping for a reliable used pick up truck.
3 miles with 2,400 feet elevation gain
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Hericium that a chipmunk had been working on. I took some and left some. |
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Sage on the trail near below campsite about 1/3 of the way up |
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A very out of shape hunter not wearing orange |
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Camp belonging to a different set of hunters, one of them was wearing orange |
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Snow or fog rainbow |
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View towards Mount Washington |
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Summit Bonsai |
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Recent trail work, the bolts are new |
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Must have been a lot of work to make this staircase |
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Trees on the summit of Mount Ellinor suffered in the drought and smoke this year. Two here had their
tops die this summer. These trees are probably hundreds of years old, but this year was too much
for them to keep their tops alive. |
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Someone's hike ruined |
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Someone else's hike ruined
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