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View Full Version : Trip Report Wind Rivers 2010 - Cook Lakes



homerj
08-22-2010, 09:20 PM
WindriversCookLake2010

TRIP REPORT:
Sunday: Day 1 - Elkhart Park to Pole Creek Lake
We left the trail head around 9:30 and started hiking. After about 3 miles of hiking I was getting blisters on the back of my heals from my new boots. I was debating turning around because we were going in 15 miles and I didn't want to have horrible foot problems where I couldn't do anything once we were back in. My friend suggested that I try hiking in my sandals, which I had brought for camp shoes. So I changed shoes, but kept the two layers of socks on, and we continued on. I figured I could make the decision to turn around or not at Photographers Point (2 miles ahead). The sandals worked great despite my pack weighing 55 lbs, although I was a bit slower on the loose rocks than with boots on. I ended up hiking almost 30 miles in those sandals with my pack on with no trouble! I wouldn't recommend it to anyone though! ha. Just before reaching the lake we had to cross Pole Creek. The creek is more a small river and entails taking off your boots and socks, putting on your sandals, crossing, drying your feet, and putting your socks and boots back on. Even though I had sandals on I still had to take them off take off my socks and then put them back on. It slows you down quite a bit. After getting to camp we were all exhausted and layed around for a bit and then setup camp, gathered firewood, and did a little fishing.

Monday: Day 2 - Pole Creek Lake
Monday morning we headed out to fish the stream from Pole Creek Lake down to 1000 Island Lake. The stream is really pretty with nice little water falls along it with one bigger one near the top of 1000 Island Lake. The stream was full of lots of small brookies and was fun fishing! We tried fishing 1000 Island Lake for a few hours, but no one caught anything. We saw a storm brewing and decided to head back to camp. On the way back up the stream to camp I turned and looked down stream toward the storm and could see smoke rising (lots more than a campfire) in front of the dark clouds and figured there was a forest fire near Junction Lake (below 1000 Island Lake). The fire never got close to us though. After getting back to camp (late afternoon) the rain storm came in and we all jumped in our tents and took a much needed nap for an hour or so while the storm passed. After dinner that night we went down and fished the Pole Creek Lake. I caught about 7-8 brookies in 30 minutes.

Tuesday: Day 3 - Pole Creek Lake to Cook Lakes
We packed up in the morning and head out to the Cook Lakes (4 miles). We had to cross Pole Creek three times to get to the lake. The forest service needs to build some foot bridges across these creeks! The climb to the Cook Lakes isn't bad except for one short steep part. After getting camp setup, water pumped/filtered and firewood gathered we headed off to fish the lake. The fishing was great on the lake and we all caught a bunch. They were all brooks and average from 6-10 inches. We kept 8 of the larger ones and took them back for dinner. While we were fishing we heard someone from the campsite near ours shouting. We couldn't make it out as we were about 1/2 mile away and then it ended so we didn't think much of it. Around 8:30 that evening we heard a helicopter coming up the canyon. It flew right over us, out across the lake, making a circle around the lake and coming back towards the campers to the side of us that were about 200 yards away from our camp. We all instantly thought it was life-flight and it was. The helicopter landed in a really small clearing near there camp (we were all impressed with the pilot). About 15-20 minutes later it took off and flew to the North and was gone. After seeing the life-flight helicopter come in we figured that the shouting we had barely heard was for help. The funny thing is, is that we had talked to the people at the camp when we went past them heading back to out camp after fishing and they hadn't said anything or acted liked anything was wrong. What had happened is that some of them were out rock climbing and one of them fell and got hurt. It took them about 2.5 hours to get back to camp, where they shouted to the rest of their party for help. Someone then climbed a ridge and got a cell signal and called for help. The rest of the party was gone before morning and we never knew what had happened until we got out of the wilderness two days later and read about it in the Pinedale newspaper. I posted about the injured hiker in the Hiking Forum here. (http://www.bogley.com/forum/showthread.php?40404-TTSAR-extracts-injured-hiker-just-in-time-Wind-Rivers-Cook-Lakes)

Wednesday: Day 4 - Hike to Wall Lake
We hiked up to Wall Lake on Wednesday. It was really pretty up there, unfortunately the fishing was lousy. We fished and fished and caught nothing. We tried all different lures, trying each and different depths and different locations, nothing... So we decided to try the stream above the lake. The stream above Wall Lake is very pretty with lots of little water falls. We hiked about 2 miles above the lake before heading back and didn't see any fish in the stream. The scenery up there was beautiful, but the fishing was a big let down.

Thursday: Day 5 - 15 mile hike out
One of the guys we went with wanted to head out a day early, so Thursday morning we packed up was going to head out half way and stay at Mary's Lake. Just as we got to Mary's Lake he said that he was going all the way out. Rob and I were going to stay and the other two were going to head out; but we got looking at the sky and it looked like rain was coming. Since we both love packing up wet tents and everything else; and with the trail being muddy if it rained, I'd have to put on my boots and go much much slower we decided to head out too. So we ended up hiking out 15 miles. We made it in 7 hours, which was pretty good for having to cross Pole Creek twice and stopping to rest, eat, and pump water. We stayed the night in Pinedale and headed home the next morning.

Over all it was a good trip. I wished my boots wouldn't have given me so much trouble. I only used them on the day hikes and when it was too cold outside for socks and sandals.

Sombeech
08-22-2010, 10:23 PM
I'd love to get back up there. :cool2:

By the way, your picasa album is maybe set as "unlisted" or private, you'll have to edit it to "public" before it will show for anybody else in this thread.

ibenick
08-23-2010, 09:19 AM
Great trip report! I hope you get that Picasa link issue fixed... would love to see the pictures! I'm blown away that you packed 55 pounds that far in sandals. Hell, I'm blown away that you packed 55 pounds period. That sounds painful!

kniephof
08-23-2010, 04:08 PM
Nice TR. Crazy that someone right near you had to be evacuated like that. Makes you think twice about safety in the backcountry. I'm glad to hear they got him out of there...hope he is fine.

I went to the Cook Lakes area a few years ago. We had a great time and caught tons of brookies (mostly out of the streams in the area). Wall Lake is scenic, but looked devoid of fish...I'm not ever sure we tried it. Glad we didn't. =) Maybe it has finicky Goldens in there.

Thanks again for the TR...hope to see the pics soon.

homerj
08-23-2010, 06:01 PM
I'd love to get back up there. :cool2:

By the way, your picasa album is maybe set as "unlisted" or private, you'll have to edit it to "public" before it will show for anybody else in this thread.

Thanks beech, I think I got it working now. When I posted it the first time it worked for me, but that was probably because I was still logged on picasa albums.

homerj
08-23-2010, 06:04 PM
Nice TR. Crazy that someone right near you had to be evacuated like that. Makes you think twice about safety in the backcountry. I'm glad to hear they got him out of there...hope he is fine.

I went to the Cook Lakes area a few years ago. We had a great time and caught tons of brookies (mostly out of the streams in the area). Wall Lake is scenic, but looked devoid of fish...I'm not ever sure we tried it. Glad we didn't. =) Maybe it has finicky Goldens in there.

Thanks again for the TR...hope to see the pics soon.

Thanks. We were trying for goldens but got skunked. I've heard they are finicky too. We tired everything... all different lures, different depths, different spots, and we didn't see a thing in the stream above the lake. So I don't have a clue if there are there or not. The lake is definitely deep enough for fish to survive the winter.

Sombeech
08-23-2010, 08:21 PM
Thanks beech, I think I got it working now. When I posted it the first time it worked for me, but that was probably because I was still logged on picasa albums.

Yep. :mrgreen:

Great pictures. :2thumbs:

ibenick
08-24-2010, 02:10 PM
Excellent photos! Thank you so much for posting this! :hail2thechief:

Dr. Nebz
08-25-2010, 07:12 PM
After about 3 miles of hiking I was getting blisters on the back of my heals from my new boots

I always wear my new boots for a week or so like casual shoes. Then do a day hike or two in them before I take them out bearing any sort of a load. New backpacking boots can be a pain to break in. For the blisters, I always wear a merino blend sock, and change my socks everyday, and carry some mole skin in my first aid kit just in case I develop any blisters. Been pretty good so far, no real bad blisters running things with my feet this way.

Nice report! The Winds is on our list for next season for sure. Love the landscapes you took. Makes me want some 120 film and a light meter. Black and Whites up there with all that granite would be epic! 55 lbs? I hope 27.5 of that was kind beer. :mrgreen:

bobb169
08-25-2010, 09:29 PM
Great pics. No goldens? We caught a LOT of Goldens last year on our thru hike. Passed these but didn't fish them. 55 lbs......you pick up some rocks........my pack last year was 41 lbs for the 13 day traverse. Couldn't make it back this year....Next year look out!

accadacca
08-27-2010, 09:19 AM
This brings back great memories. I gotta get back up there too. :popcorn:

http://lh3.ggpht.com/_IgUFYErYygw/TG_0AFZbSUI/AAAAAAAAEX8/L3brolqsV7g/s720/IMG_6743.JPG

Shan
08-27-2010, 11:29 AM
Nice report and photos!

I have some hiking boots that give me grief no matter what. And they are like 11 years old! I now hike in trail running shoes.

How were the mosquitoes?

homerj
08-28-2010, 10:57 PM
Thanks for all the compliments everyone!


I always wear my new boots for a week or so like casual shoes. Then do a day hike or two in them before I take them out bearing any sort of a load. New backpacking boots can be a pain to break in. For the blisters, I always wear a merino blend sock, and change my socks everyday, and carry some mole skin in my first aid kit just in case I develop any blisters. Been pretty good so far, no real bad blisters running things with my feet this way.
:mrgreen:
I usually have plenty of time and have my boots broke in, but 3 weeks early I backpacked into Yellowstone and got blisters. My boots were too old and didn't hold their shape/support anymore. So I had bought new boots as soon as I got home in anticipation of my Winds trip, but I had one blister that took forever to heal so I didn't do any hiking in the new boots, but I did wear them to work most of the time before I left and thought I'd be fine.... WRONG. lol.


Great pics. No goldens? We caught a LOT of Goldens last year on our thru hike. Passed these but didn't fish them. 55 lbs......you pick up some rocks........my pack last year was 41 lbs for the 13 day traverse. Couldn't make it back this year....Next year look out!
We were planning on going for a week and we like to eat well! LOL! I really need to get the pack weight down.... I've slowly been working on that.


Nice report and photos!
I have some hiking boots that give me grief no matter what. And they are like 11 years old! I now hike in trail running shoes.

How were the mosquitoes?
Almost no mosquitoes... unlike my trip to Yellowstone in July (almost went insane from them).