Gold Country Hike

We formed carpools and left around 8:30 on Wednesday morning, July 11. Some of us did some sightseeing along the way before meeting up with everyone for a sack lunch and a leisurely walk through the woods at Indian Grinding Rock State Park. We had to laugh when we saw this enormous grinding rock with more mortar holes than we could count (1185 to be exact) and compared it to our lonely grinding rock up in our Villages hills.

After leaving this historic Miwok Indian village, some of us took a tour through the Black Chasm Cavern where we cooled down a bit. This cave is a National Natural Landmark and so noted because of it’s unique displays of helictite crystals. Following the cave tour, we walked through the Zen Garden and came out a bit more enlightened?????
We had one big bedroom at the Pioneer Hotel and, due to the heat, decided to have our cocktail gathering inside rather than outside. It worked well. So well in fact that some of us were so full that we didn’t go to dinner with the others. Some went to a Chinese restaurant while others decided on Mexican food.
On Thursday morning, most of us headed up past the Kirkwood ski area to Carson Pass for our big hike of the trip. The long hikers hiked up to 9600 feet through glorious fields of wildflowers, beautiful mountain lakes and wonderful views of the mountains with patches of snow and small waterfalls. The ramblers surprised us by making it all the way up to the second lake! They did remarkably well considering the altitude and the rocky paths. It was the wildflower photo opportunities that kept them marching upward.
After cleaning up, we again met for wine and snacks before heading into Volcano for dinner. It was Akiko’s birthday and, hopefully, a memorable one at that.
On Friday morning, we all went different ways. Hiking up in the mountains again, walking around a lake, exploring the little historic towns of Jackson and Sutter Creek, checking out the huge new casino, doing some wine tasting, driving up to Plymouth to walk through the 12 acres of gardens with 800 varieties of daylilies plus over 200 unusual perennials at the Amador Flower Farm and Nursery right smack in the middle of the wine country and stopping at fruit stands to buy local fruits and veggies on our way home.
All in all, it was a most enjoyable trip. Lots of walking, lots of eating, lots of fun times with each other.
Posted on Categories 2012, News