Follow Me, I Won't Get You Lost!
This form does not yet contain any fields.
    Take A Look Around...
    Adventure Stories Angel Share Ansel Adams Anza Borrego Desert Anza Borrego State Park Anza-Borrego Desert Arroyo Tapiado Arroyo Tapiado Mud Caves Backcountry Skiing San Jacinto Backpacking Banshee Canyon Beardpocalypse 2010 Beards Beards Make One Hot Big Sur Black Mountain Black Mountain Community Ranch Park Blimps Blue Sun Cave Borrego Springs Borrego Springs Dinosaurs Borrego Springs Metal Creatures Borrego Springs Pre-Historic Creatures Bump-And-Grind Trail Bump-N-Grind Trail CA Desert App Cabazon Cabazon Dinosaurs California Highway 1 Camping Food Canyon Loop Trail Cardiac Hill Cardiff State Beach Carlsbad Carlsbad 5000 Cedar Fire Changing tires Charcoal Kilns Charcoal Kilns Death Valley Cloud's Rest Coachella Valley Corte Madera Mountain Cowles Mountain Crane Flat Crest Canyon Crest Canyon Del Mar Cross Country Skiing Cross Country Skiing Yosemite Cross Country Skiing Yosemite Valley Curtis Howe Springer Cuyamaca Lake Cuyamaca Rancho State Park Cuyamaca State Park Death Valley Death Valley Charcoal Kilns Death Valley National Park Deer Del Mar Airport Del Mar Blimps Desert Dinny the Dinosaur Dominator Shipwreck Dos Cabezas Dos Cabezas Siding East Side Trail Eastern Approach Woodson Mountain Eastern Sierra Interagency Vistor Center Emerald Pool Encinitas Father Junipero Serra Museum Folly Peak Foster's Point Four Mile Trail foursquare Garnet Peak Geminid Meteor Shower Geminid Meteor Shower 2011 Geminids George Van Tassel Giant Sequoia Giant Sloths Gin Flat Loop Goodan Ranch Gowalla Green Valley Grizzly Giant Half Beards Half Dome Happy Isles Harper's Creek Hi Fi Killers Highway 120 Highway 41 Highway 67 Highway 67 Sycamore Canyon Staging Area Hole-in-the-Wall Hole-in-the-Wall Petroglyphs Indian Hill Inspiration Point iPhone iPhone Apps Iron Mountain Jeffrey Pine John Muir Trail Julia Pfieffer Burns State Park June Climbing Mt. Whitney Kelso Kelso Dunes La Jolla La Orilla Trail Ladders Laguna National Forest Lake Las Vegas Xterra Trail Run Landers Leonard Knight Little Yosemite Valley Living With the iPhone Long Valley Los Penasquitos Lagoon Lunar Eclipse Lunar Eclipse 2011 Lunar Eclipse December 2011 Lusardi Loop Trail Mahogany Flat Malibu Creek State Park Man's Best Media Mariposa Grove Merced River Meteor Showers 2012 Mission Hills Mission Trails Regional Park Mist Trail Mog Mogfest Mogfest 2010 Mojave Desert Mojave Desert Tortoise Mojave Desert Tortoise App Mojave National Preserve Monaco Mr. Rex Mt. Badly Skiing Mt. Hoffman Mt. Laguna Mt. Lawson Mt. San Jacinto Mt. San Jacinto State Park Mt. Whitney Mt. Whitney Trail Crest Mt. Woodson Mud Caves Nevada Fall Niland North Ponto Beach Nothing is the same Obselida Oceanside Painters Path Trail Palm Desert Palm Springs Tram Panamint Mountains Partington Cove Trail Paso Picacho Campground PCT Penny Pines Perris Jurassic Park Petroglyphs Plushgun Pocketwatch Games Presidio Park Quadrantid Quadrantid Meteor Shower Ranchita Ranchita Yeti Ranchos Palos Verdes Red Tide Ridge Trail Ring Loop Trail Rings Climb Rogers Peak Round Valley Saber-Tooth Tigers Salvation Mountain San Diego County Hiking San Diego Hiking Clubs San Diego Red Tide San Diego Urban Legends San Dieguito Lagoon San Eliijo Lagoon San Elijo Ecological Reserve San Gorgonio San Gorgonio Wilderness San Jacinto San Jacinto Hiking San Jacinto Summit San Jacinto Trail Sentinel Dome Sentinel Dome Parking Area Sentinel Dome Yosemite National Park Slab City Snow Conditions San Jacinto Snowshoeing Solana Beach South Ponto Beach SS Dominator Steampunk Stonewall Peak Stowe Summer Solstice Sweetwater River Sycamore Canyon Preserve Tarantulas Tatooine Telescope Peak Tenaya Canyon That's What She Said The Beanery The DC The Integratron Tioga Road TNF Trailhead Torrey Pines State Beach Torrey Pines State Park Torrey Pines State Reserve Torrey Pines State Reserve Extension Total Lunar Eclipse Trail Running Trona Tunnel View Yosemite Unimog Valley Loop Trail Venusians Vernal Falls Vivian Creek Vivian Creek Trail Vivian Creek Trail Mileage Wawona Tunnel Wawona Tunnel Emergency Access Wheel of Kama Wheel of War White Deer of Mission Hills Whitewater Preserve Whitney Portal Store Whitney Portal Trail Wildrose Peak Woodson Mountain Woolly Mammoths Wreck of the Dominator Xterra Black Mountain Trail Run Xterra Malibu Trail Run Xterra Mission Gorge Trail Run Yeti Yosemite Yosemite National Park Yosemite Valley YYosemite National Park Zzyzx

    Entries in Emerald Pool (1)

    Thursday
    Dec152011

    Mist Trail to Nevada Fall

    Nevada Fall

    One and one half miles of uphill ascent not enough of a workout for you? Looking to see more than one waterfall flowing from the power of the Merced River? Well, you’re in luck. There’s another waterfall directly above Vernal Falls, and it’s just as beautiful – if not more so than the first. How do you get there? Glad you asked.

    Directions: Follow the Directions here: (http://lastadventurer.com/last-adventurers-fieldnotes/2011/12/12/the-mist-trail-to-vernal-falls-winter.html) to the first bridge crossing before Vernal Fall. After this point, you have two choices on how exactly, you want to get to Nevada Fall.

    The first way is up the Mist Trail, as described in the above link and the previous series of postings. Once you reach the top of Vernal Falls, the trail follows the Merced River back into the trees (roughly East) for half a mile (.50). At this point, the Emerald Pool will be directly to your North (left, if you are coming up from Vernal Falls). The Emerald Pool is a slow area of the Merced River flowing down to Vernal Falls (sometimes not, depending on how fast the current is moving and how high the River is – just the conditions accordingly should you decide to enter).

    To your right (South) there will be trail junction that will take you up to the John Muir Trail (JMT) in .40 miles past Clark Point. Continue straight across the Merced, and you will find yourself heading uphill through a series of forested switchbacks at the base of Nevada Fall. After approximately .50 miles, you will be on a series of graded switchbacks on the North side of Nevada Fall and directly under Liberty Cap. For my money, this is a great view of Nevada Fall, and is equally – if not more stunning than the Mist Trail. At the top of the switchbacks, you can either proceed left (North) into Little Yosemite Valley, or to the Right (South) toward the area around the fall (approximately .10 miles). This last portion of the ascent is steep, and I guarantee you will be working up a sweat if you are carrying a multi-day bag. From the Emerald Pools, it is 1.05 miles to the top, and 1.15 miles to the actual fall, leaving you with 1.65 miles of distance one way from Vernal Falls to the top of Nevada Fall.

    Nevada Fall

    The area around the fall is solid granite, only interrupted by the Merced River, which has eroded a deep furrow in the rock over thousands of years. To cross the Merced, you have to utilize the NPS bridge, but you can walk down the granite slopes to overlook the fall cascading down into the valley you just ascended. Once you are done, you can return the way you came, or you can return back down the JMT as described in the following paragraph in a loop. From the top of the switchbacks, it is .40 miles to the JMT/Pohono Trail Junction, which will lead you back down toward the Valley.

    The second way you can reach Nevada Fall is to turn off on the JMT after crossing the first bridge. The junction is approximately .10 miles to the right (South) as you are approaching the Mist Trail. The JMT runs from Yosemite to Mt. Whitney, and it takes backpackers approximately one month or longer to travel the distance as it heads South through the Sierra Nevada Mountain range. The first section of this challenging trail winds up a moderately graded series of forested switchbacks for .32 miles. If you are backpacking out of Yosemite Valley, you may want to consider this route as it is usually cooler and shadier than the busy Mist Trail. Once you have traversed the switchbacks, you will be up above the treeline, and on the edge of a stunning cliff that looks down upon the Merced, and waterfalls below. (In late spring or early winter, this section should be traversed with caution, as ice can build up along the area, and it would not be a good place to slip!) From this point, it is a gradual uphill climb for a mile (1.0) to the JMT/Pohono junction, and Nevada Fall described above. 

    Both routes have great views; and it is hard to go wrong by heading either way. Personally, I’d recommend doing the whole route – Mist Trail to Vernal Fall, past the Emerald Pool, up to Nevada Fall, and returning to the valley by the JMT as a loop, but it will take you some time, as you will be gaining 2,900 feet of elevation from the valley floor to the top of Nevada Falls. Also, bear in mind that you will be hiking seven miles roundtrip should you head all the way up to Nevada Falls, plus any additional distance that you may tack on should you not ride the Yosemite Valley bus.

     Top of Nevada Falls, Merced River flowing into Yosemite Valley

    Despite the distance, this is a great loop hike from the Valley, and a great way to see a lot of the scenery of the area. Once you pass Vernal Falls, the crowds dissipate somewhat in the summer, although both locations remain very popular.

     

    See you on the trail!

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    More Information Here:

    http://www.nps.gov/yose/planyourvisit/valleyhikes.htm, http://www.yosemitehikes.com/yosemite-valley/mist-trail/mist-trail.htm, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nevada_Fall