Missing 411: The Yosemite Cluster

Missing 411: The Yosemite Cluster

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37 Comments

    1. Glad you made it back. I’ve never been there and not too sure I ever want to go. I’m content with just looking at it…from a distance!! 👍😎

    2. We camped wayyy off grid in an area that looked kinda creepy from a fire. We’re up chatting around 11pm and heard a twig snap.. scary cause no way a person could be where we were.

      Turn around and it was a super pretty deer lol. She just came to the river to get a drink of water and see what we were up to. No lie though, I almost 💩 myself.

  1. Great comp. Steve. As a regular to Yosemite (at least once a year), i can attest that there is something alluring and mysterious about Yosemite. Personally, i feel that every time I go, I feel like i’m completely removed from everyday life, it’s problems, and stresses. I can’t properly describe it, almost like a vivid dream everytime I am physically in the park. There is a sense of peace and traquility such as i’ve never felt anywhere else. The logical part of me says it could be the altitude? Maybe. But even my wife and mom have had surreal moments. Several years ago we took my mom for a 2 day stay, since it was her first time there. She was awed by the beauty of it, but she said she felt such a sense of calm and peace with every breath she took. She would stop during walks suddenly and just look up and around without saying a word. During this trip as well, my wife (who had been there well over a dozen times already at this point), would also just stop suddenly and look around during walks. We went up to Glacier Point that night to watch the sunset and stargaze. We sat at the amphitheatre at the Point and i told them both that it was kinda funny that they both had similar reactions at our hikes earlier that day. Their (similar) replies were that it just felt like they were in a dream, that it was surreal. They couldnt explain it. To me, every time i go it’s almost like i feel an unnatural pull and attraction that i feel. Like a magnetic feeling, if that makes sense? And it was after a few trips, i began to wonder if that was what John Muir felt when he said that “the mountains are calling, and I must go”? I can’t really explain it at all. Maybe others who have visited know what I am talking about or have had a similar experience?

  2. Interesting because my dad used to go backpacking in the Sierras near the Yosemite region back in the 70’s. He says the thunder storms he saw would blow in seemingly out of nowhere, and he says they were always freakishly intense. Lightning striking all over the place to where he thought he might die up there. As an outdoorsman he always told me these stories growing up, because he wanted me to be prepared for wilderness storms. I remember him pondering whether all the granite rock had something to do with how intense the lightning was.

    1. In my 26 years there I only ever experienced a handful of truly intense storms. They definitely were not a regular occurrence from my perspective. Any storm can seem brutal when you’re in a tent though

    2. @@Chudchanning I wasn’t there. I’m not saying it’s a regular occurrence, just going off what he claims he experienced in the 2 or 3 storms he saw up there. I grew up in the area between the Cascades and Sierras, and I know how freak storms can happen once in a while, especially in the high country.

    3. @@torilyn432 unless it is winter/early spring season ( a time where access is restricted and it is relatively unpleasant to visit) the entirety of travel season plays out from spring to october with almost zero rainfall in the foothills, with the exception of a rare one off. I’m not personally calling anyone a liar, I’m simply pointing out that I lived in Yosemite from ’94 to 2020 and was there to experience the weather patterns. the anecdote implies that it’s a regular occurrence for thunderstorms to roll in without warning when it’s actually pretty uncommon. They can be strong when they do happen though, I have no problem corroborating that detail. I lost patio furniture a few times over the decades

  3. When storms come up suddenly you are a lightning rod in exposed high elevations. Get down the mountain as fast as possible or at the very least seek shelter in a boulder field or overhanging cliff edge or cave.

  4. Love this place!!! I have been going there ALONE now for over 6 years, And I have seen NOTHING, as well as heard NOTHING! People get lost everywhere no matter where you go! Some people do not want to be found! I hike alone I fish alone, as well as gather my firewood alone. Of course I have protection but I have never had to use it. I sit at my campsite at night drink a few Beers, a couple of shots, staying up late past 0100hrs. I enjoy my peace and serenity!

  5. I went hiking there in 2021. I saw so many things. I even saw the little people. One of the craziest spiritual encounters I have endured. The holy ones who protect the place and put walking sticks for people when hiking up the waterfall trail. If they don’t use and fall they are taken. I’ll never forget the experience and am lucky to be alive. It’s no joke going to that area. It’s very powerful.

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