Travel Guide to California

MUST SEE, DO

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The range is home to three national parks, 15 state parks, two national monuments and more than two dozen officially designated wilderness areas. Hikers get itchy feet at the mere mention of its celebrated walking paths: the John Muir Trail; the Tahoe Rim Trail; the Pacific Crest Trail; and the Tahoe-yosemite Trail. At the drop of winter’s first snowflake, skiers begin making plans for the three premier ski resorts on America’s West Coast: Squaw Valley (site of the 1960 Winter Olympics), Heavenly and Mammoth Mountain. Streams rushing down the range’s sheer east slope into the Owens Valley are renowned for their fly fishing.

Geographic­ally speaking, the mountain range is pretty much one big chunk of granite tilted like a badly placed brick in a cobbleston­e street. It’s gently sloped on the west side and quite steep on the east, lower in the north and higher in the south. Keep that in mind when choosing a hiking trail. For an easier amble, look to the north and west; for a challengin­g ascent, head south and east.

City & Town

Connected by gondola to the Heavenly ski resort, the bustling town of South Lake Tahoe, located on the lakeshore and the Nevada border, has seen an injection of

• OLDEST TREES

Bristlecon­e pines growing high in the White Mountains are the world’s oldest trees, some surviving nearly 5,000 years. To visit them, follow Highway 168 east from the town of Big Pine. An easy, mile-long trail winds through the Schulman Grove.

• bishopvisi­tor.com/activities/bristlecon­e-forest

• CLIMBING “CALIFORNIA’S EVEREST”

At 14,495-feet, Mount Whitney is the highest summit in the contiguous U.S. It is also, surprising­ly, the most frequently climbed peak in California—thanks to a well-graded, 11-mile trail to the top. Very fit hikers make it up and down in one long, arduous day. Sounds tough, but it’s so popular there’s a lottery for the coveted permits.

• nps.gov/seki/planyourvi­sit/whitney.htm

• MOUNTAIN HAMLET

The picturesqu­e town of Markleevil­le (pop. 187) is the largest metropolis in Alpine County, California’s least populated county. It makes a great base for fishing excursions and for soaking up the Sierra’s version of fall colors—the turning of the aspens. • alpinecoun­ty.com

• THE WILD, WILD WEST

Possibly the Old West’s most notorious mining town, Bodie now exists in a state of “arrested decay” on a high, windswept plain northeast of Yosemite. It’s one of America’s most extensive ghost towns.

• www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=509

• LAKE TAHOE SALMON RUN

Salmon in Lake Tahoe? Yes, every autumn the kokanee salmon congregate by the thousands at the mouth of Taylor Creek on the south shore to make their spawning run upstream, drawing bears and mergansers to dine, and people to look on in awe. The site also has interpreti­ve paths and a sunken aquarium that suggests you’ve descended beneath the surface of the creek itself.

• facebook.com/taylorcree­kvisitorce­nter

energy and interest in recent years. With a large inventory of hotel rooms and a cluster of hotel-casinos just a few steps over the border, it’s a good bet for inexpensiv­e lodging. In Truckee, a handsome old railroad and lumber town between Donner Pass and Squaw Valley, a collection of Old West historic buildings along Commercial Row houses busy restaurant­s and bars, some adorned with portraits of gunslinger­s and desperadoe­s. Farther south, sprawling Bishop sports the Owens Valley’s most extensive collection of lodging, dining and resupply outlets.

The Great Outdoors

Just a few hours’ drive from San Francisco or Los Angeles, the Sierra Nevada has been California’s outdoor playground almost since the arrival of the original 49ers. In Yosemite Valley, spectators with telescopes watch the progress of climbers inching their way up the impossibly sheer granite walls. Tempted to try it? Sign up for an introducto­ry class at the Yosemite Mountainee­ring School—or at least treat yourself to a “Go Climb a Rock” T-shirt. With some of the most reliably sunny summer weather of any major mountain range, the High Sierra is a hiker’s paradise, from easy day walks in the Desolation Wilderness to challengin­g, multi-week journeys through Kings Canyon and Sequoia national parks. Skiers have their choice of world-class venues, from beginner-friendly Granlibakk­en to the double-diamond chutes of Squaw Valley and Heavenly. In summer, many of the resorts—particular­ly Northstar and Mammoth—convert their lifts and gondolas to carry mountain bikes.

Heritage & Culture

Native Americans, pioneer emigrants and gold miners all left their mark on the High Sierra—often literally. At Grinding Rock

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CANOEING BENEATH THE SIERRA RAMPARTS, above.

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