YOSEMITE -
        
        High up in California's Sierra Nevada, the heart of goldrush
        territory, lies Yosemite, a sublime valley carved deep into a
        gargantuan granite crown. Yosemite means "Some of them are
        killers" describing Paiutes from outside, but it might as
        well be the mountains.
        
        They are of breathtaking beauty, the whole place a killer. 
        It was America's first National Park.  I flew over there
        this August after Ansel Adams' luminous photographs of Yosemite
        at the Hayward stirred me. It was promoted and protected by John
        Muir, an intrepid Scot with a love of wilderness and poetry in
        his heart.  He recognised it as a holy place, "the
        grandest of all the special temples of Nature."  It
        is a paradise for walkers, rock climbers and for camping out
        with the bears, chipmunks and coyotes.  If we are to believe
        Ansel Adams or John Muir, the alpine valleys and granite monoliths 
        of Yosemite are the stuff of life.  We should believe.
        Before drowning in a sea of  interminable superlatives,
        let's get practical. There are three ways into Yosemite, the
        camper-crazed 120, the relaxed 140 Mariposa road or the southern
        Fresno road. I flew out to San Francisco and drove four hours
        with my son Mat through the endless orchards of California's
        Central Valley. "Deportees", Woody Guthrie's eulogy
        to the Mexican immigrant fruitpickers, haunted me.  I remembered
        a film about the illnesses they got from insecticide sprays,
        "The Wrath of Grapes". 
        Most of the campgrounds, lodges and hotels - like the amiably
        luxurious Ahwahnee - are in Yosemite Valley, or in Tuolumne's
        alpine meadows.  Down south is the old colonial Wawona Hotel
        nearby some spectacular Giant Sequoias.  These reach their
        gangly full height in an awkward first 800 year spurt. 
        Then like humans they just get fatter for the next two millennia.
        Here is the famous tree with a stagecoach tunnel and the 2,700
        year old Grizzly Giant.
         
        Yosemite Valley is very different from
        the high country above.  Corralled between three thousand
        foot high granite cliffs in a pastoral mile-wide gorge, the Rio
        Merced - Mercy River - snakes past ponderosa pines and incense
        cedar and through lush meadows with black oak and willow. We
        camped under the pines right below Half Dome and Glacier Point. 
        Oriental and Mexican families come in whole neighbourhoods and
        eat round communal campfires. People play in the river, cycle
        round the woods and meadows of the valley under the massive rockfaces
        and waterfalls or go on trails with park Rangers.  
        British accents are surprisingly common. Our first neighbours
        though were a hillbilly family who played Christian rock. 
         
        "God told me to look in the guitar
        case," says T-Bird, " 'n it was empty. My sister'd
        sold it - hurts more when it's family.  Praise the Lord!"
        As they strike camp the teenage son practises his Ninja moves
        with a tentpole. 
        Each campsite has fireplaces, a table and a steel bear-proof
        food box.  If bears smell something or see a cooler they
        can tear open a car.  All food must be locked away to keep
        the bears wild and uncorrupted by humans. One evening I was bathing
        in the Mercy River and saw a bear just upstream. That night we
        heard pans clattering.  While we stared expectantly through
        the night trees and Mat videoed through the gloom, the critter
        snuck round behind our campfire and was checking our bear box
        before I could even rattle my pans. 
        Incidentally, the campsite resolves an eternal uncertainty I've
        felt about saying lavatory or toilet, bathroom or restroom. 
        Now and forever more it shall be the Comfort Station.
        Yosemite Valley is Ahwahnee -"the gaping mouth" - to
        the Ahwahneechee Miwok.The Fresno road reveals the classic view
        of this open mouth. An image envelopes you like a warm memory,
        reassuringly familiar from old Westerns and Ansel Adams' iconic
        photographs.  Out of a softly curved forested glacial valley, 
        tower cliffs that frame the valley beyond, on one side El Capitan's
        sheer granite rockface, on the other the filigree Bridalveil
        Falls.
        
        At the far end the 8,800 foot top of Half Dome glows like alabaster
        in the sun.  This, the greatest of Yosemite's rounded polished
        granite domes was sheared in half by a vast glacier.  Or
        so the white man says.  To the Ahwahneechee it is the tearstained
        face of a woman from a dysfunctional family turned to stone after
        beating her abusive husband with her basket. Basket Dome rears
        up the other side of the canyon beside her husband, now North
        Dome.  Stroll up to Mirror Lake and take a look.  The
        tears are still there. 
         
        One morning a Buffalo Soldier led us through the valley's sunny
        meadows below the soaring cliffs like a pied piper, his fingers
        fluttering across an Indian flute.  The Buffalo Soldiers
        were all-black Cavalry and a detachment came to protect Yosemite
        in 1904. Ranger Shelton Johnson, a black American, has researched
        and recreated the life and thoughts of Elizio Bowman, a Buffalo
        sergeant stationed here.  Dressed as a cavalryman, it was
        a lyrical performance that took us back a hundred years.
        
        "Muir is like a preacher," he says, "Granite is
        his religion." Custer, says Elizio, was a racist, didn't
        like blacks, so took the white 7th Cavalry to Little Big Horn. 
        The Buffalo Soldiers uniquely celebrate Custer Day in grateful
        thanks.
         
        "History is point-of-view,"
        he explains to children, "Camping under apple trees - bears
        like apples - is either dangerous or exciting.  Depends
        on your point of view." 
        If like myself you are fiercely athletic, you can climb 3,000
        feet along the trail from the serene valley floor to Glacier
        Point.  Or you can take the bus and save yourself for the
        Panorama Trail, eight heavenly miles through the High Sierras. 
        The view from Glacier Point is a majestic granite sculpture park
        stretching all around and far away.  Bleached white domes
        against bright blue sky, massive cliffs, mountain ranges, 
        canyons   The Valley floor looks like a map of itself
        with our campsite so far down below.  On nearby Overhanging
        Rock a century ago crazy Americans did handstands and high kicks
        in long dresses over the drop. 
        
        This August there was a heatwave.  The air was extra hazy
        from smoke from lightning fires so the views didn't have the
        pinpoint clarity of Adams' photographs.  Instead they were
        hot and dreamlike but no less affecting. First, passing through
        shifting perspectives of Half Dome and the High Sierra, while
        two miles away and thousands of feet below Nevada and Vernal
        Falls are roaring in the blazing heat of summer.  Much later
        we join the John Muir Trail, the end of 184 miles across the
        Sierras from Mt Whitney.  It thrusts us headfirst into the
        landscape.  From a walled promenade clinging to a cliff
        we are blinded by Nevada Falls tumbling down a vast burnished
        granite bowl below the rugged sugarloaf of Liberty Cap. 
        All is so massive they are the stuff - the waterfalls, the domes
        - of dreams. It is the visions of wildness on this massive scale
        that astonish and overwhelm.  Mat and I would constantly
        mumble "Vista!" out the corner of our mouths as view
        after view took our breath away. Meanwhile for light relief,
        watch certifiable rock climbers dangling from the 3,600 foot
        sheer granite rockface of El Capitan for up to ten days on their
        way to the top.
        We went one night to lie in a meadow for some tutored stargazing. 
        We watched shooting stars, the fiery Perseids slashing across
        the heavens.  We learnt that Arcturus, a bright star an
        arcing leap across from the Plough, was Coyote's eyeball. 
        Coyote, the  Native American Trickster was juggling with
        his eyeballs, as you do.  He threw one into the sky where
        it got stuck. Coyote howls at night for his lost eyeball. We
        went back again to El Capitan's meadow for more stellar fireworks. 
        A live coyote crossed our path, ran off into the dark and spookily
        howled into the sky. We lay down and watched the fizzing remnants
        of a comet's tail race across the inky skies from El Cap's monstrous
        shadow past Coyote's eyeball. A special and holy place.
        A reconstructed Indian village has a trail through acorn granaries,
        ritual sweatlodges, and cedar bark tipis that are sweet and cool
        in the summer heat.  Inside the nearby museum two Miwok
        women sat weaving baskets and making twine from willow twigs. 
        Julia Parker - "I'm seventy three and a half" - has
        written books on Ahwahneechee life.  My favorite is on acorn
        gathering and preparation.  She showed me a picture of the
        basket she made for "the English Queen" in 1980. 
        The royal couple stayed at the Ahwahnee Hotel in Winston Churchill's
        footsteps. Lee Stetson regularly performs as John Muir in Yosemite
        with a restless and convincing energy.  Sitting by a campfire
        we heard Muir's wilderness stories, of hanging atop a Douglas
        fir in a storm, of surfing an avalanche down a cliff.  The
        right stuff.
        Eight thousand feet up in the high country are the pastoral Tuolumne
        Meadows, more open than the Valley with domes and peaks away
        in all directions.  As you enter the Meadows Pothole Dome
        sits on the left, waiting to give the most indolent a simply
        attained and staggering panoramic view.  Fifteen easy minutes
        takes you to the round top of this dome.  Jeffrey pines
        contort from cracks in the granite affording welcome shade from
        the wild Sierra sun. As President of the Nude Mountaineering
        Society and with the temperature over 95° I took a naked
        scamper up the white granite ball.  The high breezes were
        delicious and the view sublime.  From Lembert Dome over
        in the Meadows to the Cathedral it is, well, how many times can
        you say breathtaking?  Do you search for more superlatives
        or simply say that Muir, Adams, Roosevelt, the Queen of England
        or four million visitors can't all be wrong. Later a family sets
        up their camera and poses on the dome. "Do another honey,"
        says Dad, "Is it Xmas-cardable?"
        One tradition now gone is the Firefall.  At nightfall in
        summer the fiery embers of a huge wood and cedar bark fire was
        pushed off Glacier Point down into the valley.  Our camp
        host Jack Houchens remembers it fondly;  the unearthly red
        firefall pouring down a massive granite rockface made up for
        the dried up waterfalls in the summer.  A booming voice
        would send "Firefall!" echoing through the darkling
        valley and the crowd would inexplicably start singing the Indian
        Love Call from Rose Marie -- "I'll be loving You-oo-oo-oo-oo-oo-oo"
        -- as the fire cascaded down.  Hard to police, it ended
        in 1968. 
        On the way back home we pass a building with two shopfronts.
        "Cake Decorating" sits next door to "Diet Centre".
        Welcome back to the real world.
                              
        ©Hank Wangford August 2002