Mt. Whitney in a day
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John Wilson
I had been up Mt. Whitney before, backpacking up and down over three
days with my wife, Mary, in 1990, taking time to get acclimated to
the altitude, and slogging it out up from the 8,300-foot trailhead to
the 14,497-foot summit. But my three companions had never been up,
and since Whitney is the highest point in the contiguous 48 states,
and just a few hours up the 395 Highway from Costa Mesa, we decided
to tackle it in a macho one-day assault.
Dennis McNutt, 66, is a former (way former) point guard and
fullback from Southern California College (now Vanguard University).
He still plays noon hoops, tennis and golf and keeps himself in good
shape. After teaching political science from 1966 to 2002 at SCC, he
retired; only to have his college bride, Charlotte, die unexpectedly
and devastate his retirement plans. A physical challenge seemed like
a good idea, though he is more accustomed to backpacking away from
crowds and trails in the Sierras.
I’m 59 and a former club soccer player and coach, still into noon
hoops, tennis and church league softball. With degrees from UC Santa
Barbara and Northwestern University, I’ve been teaching history at
Vanguard since 1989, with a special interest in baseball history. My
wife, Mary, was diagnosed with breast cancer in February and had been
going through chemotherapy after a lumpectomy. Something physical
sounded good to me, too.
Nate Molstad, 36, who is married to our older daughter, Amy,
graduated from Augsburg College in Minnesota. Like me, he is more an
athletic wannabe, pretty much limited to church league softball by
knee problems. An audio-visual techie at Hoag Hospital, he’s the
compassionate one of the group, involved for years in the Big Brother
program and Royal Family Kids Camp for abused kids. He was also
probably the least in shape for an assault on Whitney and most
reluctant to tackle the mountain. He doesn’t need the sense of
accomplishment.
Greg Olson, who is married to Christie, our younger daughter,
turned 33 on our drive up to the trailhead. A Southern California
College soccer All-American, he is completing his doctorate in
history at Claremont, teaching junior high in Scotts Valley, and
adjunct teaching at Bethany College there. Plus he coaches the
women’s soccer team. He plays soccer, tennis, or whatever is
available. Like Dennis, he’s a real college athlete, only half the
age.
We drove to Lone Pine on the afternoon of July 29, picked up our
trail passes from the ranger station, and had set up camp at Whitney
Portal (reservations advised) by 4:30 p.m. We walked up to the
trailhead store, breathing the thin air, and bought the local burgers
for a chilly supper out under the trees in a sudden storm. Ominous,
that! But it passed, and we returned to camp, turning in between 9
and 10 p.m. in preparation for our early getaway the next day.
My 3 a.m. alarm malfunctioned, so we didn’t wake till our backup
at 3:15 a.m., but we struck camp and hit the trail with flashlights
at 4 a.m. sharp, leaving anything tempting to bears in the bear
lockers at the trailhead. By 6 a.m., we had reached Outpost Camp, 3.5
miles up the trail, where we had a bit of breakfast in the early
light.
Then it was on to Trail Camp, where Mary and I had camped on our
1990 expedition. We arrived there at 8 a.m. and had six of the 11
miles to the top already behind us. However, at that point, we had
already taken longer than the fastest round trip, an incredible three
hours and 20 minutes. That’s a decent marathon time, and it was over
22 miles of rough, rocky, uneven trail. Good grief!
Then things got rough. The next stretch was 97 switchbacks and a
climb from about 12,000 feet to almost 13,800 feet. Dennis surged
into the lead as my legs screamed for oxygen and Nate and Greg both
got headaches and began showing other signs of altitude sickness. In
spite of all that, by 10:30 a.m., we had reached Trail Crest, and
then actually had to descend a bit to the John Muir trail coming up
from the west side before pushing on toward the summit, a thousand
feet above.
By this time, Greg says, he was seeing triple and had a bad
headache and Nate was seriously exhausted. Everyone was ibuprofened
to the max. We reached the summit at 12:45 p.m., with Greg and Nate
suffering the most. Here was a chance to use modern technology --
Nate’s cell phone allowed us to phone our wives and tell them we had
managed the hard part.
But it was windy, cool and apparently nonthreatening clouds were
moving in, so we headed for the bottom after a bite of lunch and a
picture with our Daily Pilot. We were actually quite fortunate in our
weather -- nothing too extreme in heat or cold bothered us.
However, back at Trail Crest, a hailstorm struck us, and we donned
ponchos (we learned why those cheap $3 plastic ones are so cheap!)
for the switchbacks down. Greg was behaving strangely -- whenever we
stopped for a break, he would lie down and go to sleep, which seemed
a bit alarming. Still, going downhill, we had gravity on our side. We
sailed through Trail Camp at 4 p.m., then on down to Outpost Camp,
where at 10,000 feet, Greg suddenly emerged from his semi-comatose
condition and became himself again. Slogging doggedly along, we hit
the parking lot at 7 p.m. sharp, a round trip of 22 miles in 15 hours
that almost exactly matched the times I had anticipated: nine hours
up, six down.
We staggered into the Whitney Portal Store for souvenirs, cleaned
up a bit, and drove down into Lone Pine for some good Pizza Factory
pizza to celebrate survival before hitting the road home. We all
agreed that it was the most grueling stunt we had ever pulled, but by
midnight, we were back in Costa Mesa and healing.
Part of the macho bit was a doubles tennis match the next day.
Perhaps reflecting his youth, Greg ran the table in our round robin,
but we were alive and, sore legs aside, well. Never again, we said
... for a few days.
Then, as hikers often do, we began to forget all the pain and
strain and think it hadn’t been all that bad.
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