The not-so-easy way is by foot/hiking. The trail is called the Four Mile Trail, although the actual distance is closer to five miles (4.8 to be exact). The distance itself is not the problem, but the elevation gain makes the hike quite strenuous.
Here's the poster for the hike. 3,200 feet of elevation gain!!! |
So we decided to take the shuttle up and hike down instead. A one-way trip of the tour is $25 per person. Let me tell you, it was definitely a good decision.
During the drive from the valley floor up to Glacier Point, we learned the history of Yosemite from our guide on the bus. It simply was fascinating! I haven't been on a tour in so long--and the last time that I had been I was too young to reap all the value a good guide could offer--that I had forgotten the wealth of knowledge you could learn from the experience. Did you know Yosemite was named after a revered Native American tribe that had originally lived in the area? It's not even really pronounced the way it's pronounced today. Then there was the myth behind Bridalveil Falls, and so on.
I feel that whenever we travel to a certain place, we usually get distracted by the sights and sounds, forgetting about the intimate relationship between its history and its present. When we go about taking photographs, buying souvenirs, and doing the usual tourist bit everyone does, we enjoy ourselves. But we miss a chance to indulge in the deeper connection without seeing past the facade of normalcy painted for the nomad visitors. (And that will be all for my philosophical musing of the day, hahaha!)
Did I mention the view was just gorgeous?
I can't believe I was there! |
Here is a placard to identify what you're looking at. Compare with the picture of the view below. |
Pretty cool how the view fits with the placard. |
Half Dome in the background. It was also such a nice day. |
The start of the trail. |
It took us an hour and a half to get all the way down, and we were going pretty fast considering it's all downhill. If they really made it up in two hours, they would have been moving up a steep trail pretty darn fast. The thing is they didn't even look tired when they passed us.
So I came to the conclusion that they must live on a mountain where they are used to higher altitudes and trail run everyday, or something of that nature.
That could possibly be where we parked our car way down below. |
Part of the trail and this beautiful mountain/rock formation. |
Just look at that. What a view! |
A sign at the valley floor not too far from the shuttle stop. |
The pool was pretty crowded, and the water was pretty gross. Despite that, it was a nice little dip. |
There was a reconstructed Indian Village by the theater that we walked through. |
This was a display by the Yosemite Museum. |
What a great way to end the day. |
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