Howdy All
My morning didn't start well -- my Camelbak leaked Gatorade into my pack, my sofa table and floor. I found the leak and in trying to drain one Camelbak into another, forgot to close the stop cock and dumped more Gatorade onto my kitchen floor
Fortunately, I arrived in time tor renew my annual pass before Sally and I took the first tram up. The Craigmeister was our conductor and looked very chipper after doing Skyline with me on Tuesday

I still felt wiped out.
We donned microspikes at the ranger station -- the trail alternated between icy snow and dirt to the Sid Davis junction. Headed up the Sid Davis drainage to Tamarack and followed the boot/snowshoe track up towards the area where the summer trail makes a big bend. Put on snowshoes at about 9.7 K and headed towards the gully that pops out on the ridge to the right of Jean.
I love switchbacking uphill in new snow using my televators on my MSR Lightning Ascent. The snow had consolidated nicely -- not too icy or soft. Once we reached the ridge, we stayed on the north side to traverse around several bumps before reaching the little plateau before the final climb up San Jacinto. We came up the south of the peak -- there was enough snow to negotiate the rocks and brush. Once on the summit, we were blasted with an artic wind. Mark (a member of the San Jacinto hiking club with long snowshoes) greeted us at the sign before heading down.
Although nippy, it was so beautiful that we took time to savor the great views. We had the added benefit of having enough snow to walk out on the north facing ridge for better views of San Gorgonio. I haven't been able to do this since the winter of 2011. Headed down to the hut, which had icicles hanging off the roof, and enjoyed a late lunch. Climbed back up to the ridge and followed the tracks down towards Miller. There wasn't enough snow to go cross country down the Miller Saddle, so we took the trail back to the big bend area.
We broke new trail back down to Tamarack -- I believe this is called the Ranger Overland route. The snow from Tamarack to the drainage was thin and icy. We removed our snowshoes and donned microspies before dropping back into Sid Davis. It was after 4 PM when we reached Long Valley and walked up the dreaded cement switchbacks -- at least there wasn't a throng of tourons coming down or kids sledding down the ramp trying to take out hikers
Celebrated our first San Jacinto summit of 2013 at the tram bar before enjoying wonderful food at Las Casuelas. A great end to a "sticky" start of the day
Miles of smiles,
Ellen