The HIGHLINE TRAIL..from East to West Following the Spine of the HIGH UINTA MOUNTAINS

Click below for previous post:  

Scheduled DREAMS for 2017 (82nd year) Combining with it the ENTIRE HIGHLINE TRAIL…if my  “ANTI-AGING CHALLENGE” formula keeps doing its MIRACLE!

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UPDATE MARCH 19th
OPPS….A GLITCH!….NOW SOLVED,..MAYBE?
The previous post has  my enthusiastic plans for 2017–and  I’ll add them on at the end of the photo/essay on the HIGHLINE TRAIL, but as I have pushed my daily training–especially the jogging to do the International Half Marathon in Coban, Guatemala,  my back surgery from 2012 for a pinched nerve has been failing me and the sciatic nerve down the back of my left leg started giving me too much pain.  Below follow the results of checking it out.
On Monday, January 23, 2017, Dr. Alan Colledge at the Sports Medicine &  Orthopedics Clinic  in Orem, diagnosed the pain down the back of my left leg caused by two of my vertebrae being mostly bone on bone.
On Tuesday I had an MRI done in Provo, Utah.  The Dr  then reported  that the only hope to  be able to jog/run  would be to extend the fusion  of vertebrates 4 & 5, to include #6 which was done on March 13th by Dr. Bacon.  Recovery is estimated at 2 months, so no International Half Marathon in Guatemala until May 2018.   Today, the 6th day, my walking routine has stretched to 1.5 miles every other day.
So  for 2017 I’ll concentrate on the High Uintas Project, and of course keep the Guatemalan Foundation going for 5 more months..to complete our GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY YEAR …hoping some donors will give in 5 months what they normally do in 12!

http://www.guatemalanfoundation.org/

 I’m not about to give up easily on the challenges outlined below, and will end my summer in August by doing the entire HIGHLINE TRAIL–from near Flaming Gorge to the Trailhead on the Mirror Lake Scenic Byway!
Other than my  back, my Anti-Aging Challenge formula is 
working so well  the list of backpacks at the end of this post is the dream for 2017–at 81+ or in my 82nd year:
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DAILY HIKE WIH PACK…NOT A DAY MISSED SINCE December 1….until March 13th

 My last post on daily hike:   Loved my hike again…right on Main St. a  very nice looking young lady stopped,

holding up traffic, to ask me if I needed a ride or some food!  I replied,
 ” I’d appreciate a bag of Dinovite,”   and seeing her confusion confessed 
“I’m not an old homeless guy, rather a rich millionaire out getting my exercise, but thanks for your kindness!”
I have a great time laughing at being sort of different and lying about being a millionaire!   
If you don’t know about Dinovite, learn about its amazing qualities for solving all our nutritional, longevity and mental problems at the end of my ANTI-AGING CHALLENGE article on my website.

THE CROWNING BACKPACK OF THE 
HIGH UINTAS WILDERNESS PROJECT
THE FAMOUS HIGHLINE TRAIL
Many have seen the Trailhead sign along the Mirror Lake Scenic Byway, under Hayden Peak, as the highway is about to descend towards Wyoming.  It is located at 10,378 ft. and from here heads east.

At the WESTERN HIGHLINE TRAILHEAD there is a nice area for horse packers with restrooms, and a parking lot for backpackers with Restrooms and water, where this nice sign and register are found.  

Down the trail, a bit, and here and there along the trail are found signs to guide hikers venturing into the Wilderness Area.

The HIGHLINE TRAIL is easily the most famous trail in the Uintas, most of it from its well-known Trailhead pictured here at Haydens Pass on the Mirror Lake Scenic Byway and from here it heads east following the spine of the High Uinta Mountains over 8 above timberline passes.   It is usually thought that it ends about 80 miles to the east on the slopes of Leidy Peak, where there is a trailhead above Hacking Lake. 

But, that’s not where it ends or starts.  It rather has its beginning around 26 miles more to the east along U.S. Highway 191 that starts at Vernal and heads north to Flaming Gorge Dam and continues north into Wyoming. Below I’ll insert a labeled Google Earth view of the High Uinta Mountain Range showing the Western & Eastern HIGHLINE TRAILHEADS, plus most of the rivers and creeks that flow from the Uintas where 90% of Utah’s water is produced.
click on image to enlarge
The light colored areas are the above timberline areas & peaks
As we are seeing, the Uintas begin at Kamas, Utah on the west, and end about 150 miles to the east at the Green River.  It is the only major mountain range in the lower 48 states to be oriented east to west.
 That EASTERN HIGHLINE TRAILHEAD 
will be the focus of this photo/essay, but first, let’s understand a little better the subject of “TRAILHEADS” & “SIGNS”  in the  Uinta Mountains.

These kinds of signs are common all around the Wilderness area, here on the Uinta River.

Even nicer ones are found in some areas like what many of us call
“THE GATEWAY TO THE GRANDADDIES,”
seeing here the entrance to the parking lot………
…….and nice signs giving adventurers all the information they need for a great outdoor experience.
Just past the register,  as the trail begins, we find appreciated information on how far we have to hike to get to whatever our destination might be in the Basin.
Even years ago up the trail from the Grandview Trailhead, at Hades Pass,  when it was just the 
HIGH UINTAS PRIMITIVE AREA,
 this great sign seen above told us about the wonders we were about to see (1954).
But, it disappeared many years ago and is sorely missed!
In 2003, when I began my HIGH UINTAS WILDERNESS PROJECT, this great sign was still in the Grandaddies, between Grandaddy & Betsy Lakes, but on the ground and I had to prop it up for this picture….but it is of course now gone.

……and this great sign, accompanied by wonderful displays explaining some the wonders of nature,  found at the East Fork of the Bear River Trailhead.…and so it goes all around the Uintas….until you come to the far eastern end of the Uinta Mountains near the Flaming Gorge of the Green River on U.S. Highway 191.

From Vernal, Utah the highway climbs into the eastern end of the High Uinta Mountains, and at 28 miles from Vernal, one reaches the pass, seen below, approximately 2,300 feet lower than Bald Mountain Pass on the Mirror Lake Scenic Byway, near the Western Highline Trailhead.

At this point, we have traveled 186 miles from American Fork, Utah and the Wasatch Front.  Most of the traffic zeros in on The Flaming Gorge Recreation Area, just a few miles further north.


There are some nice displays along the highway with a few glimpses seen below.








But, what we are looking for is the Eastern end of,  or the beginning of,
 THE HIGHLINE TRAIL.  
At a low point 3 miles down from the Pass, and just beyond the Interpretive  Display, we find a simple generic sign indicating that off to the west on a dirt road there is a trail, but, WHAT TRAIL?



Shortly we come to a small sign with little detail. We have found…..
.
….THE EASTERN END OF THE HIGHLINE TRAIL


No really pertinent information.  
No register.  No mileage signs.  No hint of where it goes.   Only a faded, worn out map!

It seems like a humiliating beginning for what is a GREAT TRAIL.
SOMETHING HAS TO BE DONE!
COME ON FOREST SERVICE–LET’S GET SOME NICE SIGNS FOR THIS GREAT TRAIL!
and whIle talking to the FOREST SERVICE, let me insert here a comment just received from a friend, Clay Zimmerman, the “GOAT WHISPERER,” clay@highuintapackgoats.comwho says:  
“The eastern end of the Highline trail has so much dead fall it is impassable according to people I have talked to. “
But, good news came from new High Uinta Friend, John Parker who emailed me, saying:
Cordell, I hope to see you on the Uinta Highline between Aug 15 and Sept 15. Those are the target for my hike of the Highline this year.

Good news for you! The trail between Hwy 191 and Leidy Peak was adopted a couple years back by the Uintah Basin Back Country Horsemen. They have cleared and maintained that first 20+ miles as a service project. My understanding is that it’s not impassable but now nicely maintained. Still need good navigation skills but not a mess.

John Parker
So, FOREST SERVICE, 
if there is need, PLEASE BY AUGUST WHEN I WILL MAKE MY ATTEMPT, HAVE THE TRAIL CLEARED IF AT ALL POSSIBLE.  I WILL APPRECIATE IT AS I HAVE LEARNED–NOW 80+ YEARS OLD, THAT “DEADFALL” IS REALLY HARD FOR ME!  PLEASE!

I hiked down the trail, well worn by the blessed ATV’s, to see if there was a sign, any kind of sign, but there were just the expected Forest Service markers you see here



And a very old blaze on a couple of trees, plus some newer ones.


 There were signs of road/trail work, and a bridge over what I believe is Carter Creek.



Along with efforts to keep the ATVs from ruining everything.



NO MILEAGE SIGNS WERE FOUND!
My topographical maps indicate that the trail heads up this draw, eventually going through thick forest and over that low saddle to the west.

Let’s insert again our Google Earth view to help visualize the wonderful Uinta Mountains we are talking about.
The light colored areas are the above timberline areas & peaks
click to enlarge image 
From the Eastern Trailhead, seen above on the right, the trail gradually–over 26 miles, climbs from 8,000 ft. to  Leidy Peak  where it is above the 11,000 ft. timberline. From there it follows the spine of the Uinta Range for 80 miles traversing rugged alpine terrain as seen below, climbing 8 passes all over 11,00o ft., 3 of which are over 12,000.   12,600 ft. Anderson Pass is the highest near Kings Peak, Utah’s highest at 13,528 ft. 

PUTTING INTO PERSPECTIVE THE PASSES...
…more than half of the 8 passes are higher than the summit of Mt. Timpanogos that is dwarfed by the High Uinta peaks!
 The elevation profile high points are said passes, the profile showing the ups and downs of the 106-mile distance between trailheads, the western one near Mirror Lake at 10,378 ft.  


The trail only dips a few times below timberline.


In 2016 as I was on my way to finally get to Little Andy Lake, Utah’s highest at 12,302 ft.,  I met  John Sowell, from Colorado,  and had a great conversation as he was doing the entire HIGHLINE TRAIL coming from the east.


I told him about my plan years ago to do it too, even having printed a series of 14 topographical maps for the adventure, but then a glitch ambushed me and it looked like I would have to get used to being a cripple.   Then I told him of the miracle that had me without pain for the first time in 30 years, with at that moment being on the verge of what I was thinking would be my last adventure–getting to my lake.

But since meeting him, and being so pumped up for having finally got to Little Andy Lake, I’m now training for the best summer of backpacking of my life–in my 82nd year, the crowning trip being in August  backpacking the entire
HIGHLINE TRAIL FROM EAST TO WEST!
Thanks, John, for inspiring me!

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Scheduled backpacks for Summer 2017
1.  GRANDADDIES:  down past Lost & Powell Lakes, to pick up two missed, RANGE & JEFF  LAKES & if all goes well,  swing up to Pine Island Lake, and back past Fish Hatchery, Betsy & Grandaddy Lakes:   30+ miles, 4 days. NOTE: Date depending on conditions  in June, in other words, the thaw.
2.  MIDDLE FORK BEAVER CREEK:  Will explore Beaver, Coffin & other lakes, & will climb Thompson Pass, leaving 2 passes to go to achieve all 22 in the Wilderness.  30 miles 5 days.
3.  From E. Fk Blacks Fk Trailhead:  To Little East Fork of Blacks Fork and   UPPER ALPINE/ABOVE TIMBERLINE LAKES.  20 miles, 4 days.
4.  TWOROOSE PASS (with which only North Pole Pass remains) from the Lake Fork Trailhead up to the  Brown Duck Basin, Pass, & lakes.  35 miles, 6 days.
5.  HENRY’S FORK, PAINTER BASIN in late July & early August, to visit again Little Andy Lake–taking time to get better pictures, Trail Rider Pass, Beard Lake, George Beard Basin, and in Henry’s fork Cliff, Castle & other Lakes. 50 miles, 8-9  days.

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IMPORTANT
Keep an eye on this website as summer approaches for more details, and  get my  link to  the SPOT Personal Satellite Tracker , which I go nowhere without, and  follow my progress, & make sure and listen every Saturday morning to hear my satellite phone reports on  Tim Hughes’ KSL OUTDOORS RADIOprogram. 
Satellite phone acquired from Russ Smith & SKYCALL SATELLITEwhere you can get yours for your outdoor adventures.
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THEN…….Originally Scheduled for Summer 2018 in my 83rd year–now changed to August 2017

THE FAMOUS HIGHLINE TRAIL

On this approximately 14 day backpack I will take some detours to explore other areas critical to my project, such as unexplored lakes in the Upper Garfield Basin, others in the Oweep Drainage, plus very importantly, Crater Lake you see below and others.
I will attempt one more time to realize a goal of getting the perfect photograph of this incredibly beautiful scene–CRATER LAKE, the deepest in the Uintas at 147 ft. The plan is to get up on the saddle to the north so I can look down on the lake and  with a fish-eye lens photograph it with Explorer Peak in the background. Approximately 126 miles.
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