Nothing to Fear

January 17, 2014
Upper Yosemite Falls Trail, Yosemite National Park
Total distance walked: 4 miles

Ever since I started hiking in Yosemite National Park, I avoided the Upper Yosemite Falls trail. I was intimidated by it, imagining it to be an extremely difficult, crowded, and unbearably hot trek. It’s incredible how our minds can exaggerate things. In reality, there was nothing to fear.

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Mary Elizabeth at the trailhead.

Late in the morning, Mary Elizabeth and I set off on the trail that ascends 2,700 feet to the top of Yosemite Falls.

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The sky above was a brilliant, cheerful blue, making me think of it as a “happy sky” as I looked up. The air was calm, and the weather was perfect for hiking: starting in the low 30s and warming up to the low 60s by the afternoon. Quite unusual for January.

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View from the trail: Half Dome, embraced by a heart-shaped arrangement of trees.

We took our time ascending the rocky steps, savoring the journey. We passed under the fragrant California laurel trees and navigated steep switchbacks that provided breathtaking views of the valley below.

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Leidig Meadow

We paused at Columbia Point, which is at an elevation of 5,036 feet.

Along the way, we encountered a variety of people: a group of six men and women from New Zealand in shorts and tank tops; a man from China touring the United States who cautioned us about a slippery section of the trail ahead; and a couple with loaded backpacks, tackling a 24-mile loop over the holiday weekend.

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A flat stretch of trail where one can feel the mist from the waterfall when the water flow is abundant.

From a flat section of the trail, we caught our first glimpse of the upper fall. It seemed almost dry, with only a trickle of water flowing down.

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First view of the waterfall from the trail. At its base, which is not shown, there lies a pile of snow.

We kept walking until noon, when we found a flat boulder and decided to sit for lunch. From our vantage point above the snow cone, we could see the water spilling over the edge of the fall. John Muir once described the snow cone as follows: “In winter the thin outer folds and whirling spray of the great Yosemite Fall are frozen while passing through the air freely exposed and are deposited around the base of the fall in the form of a hollow, truncated cone, which sometimes attains a height of 400 feet.”

It seemed like we could easily reach the fall from our lunch spot, but we still had over a mile and another thousand feet to climb to the top. Content with what we had achieved for the day, we headed back to the car.

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Heading back.

Looking back, there was nothing to fear about hiking the Upper Yosemite Falls Trail. The mild winter made the trail comfortable and much easier to climb than I had anticipated. However, we didn’t make it to the top.