This post is part of my series on the National Park System.
One of my goals while the kids are still at home is to visit as many of the
National Parks and Monuments in the Western United States
as we can.
In 2017, 4.3 million people visited Yosemite
National Park. Less than one-sixth that number visited Kings Canyon
National Park - and the overwhelming
majority of those visited only the Grant Grove area - or merely entered at that
gate and drove south to Sequoia
National Park. (The two are administered as a single unit.) The number of
visitors to the canyon itself is barely one-third of the visitors to Grant
Grove - and that is only during the peak summer and fall months when the road
is open.
This is an interesting state of affairs, because Kings Canyon
is actually quite a bit like Yosemite. A
glacial valley with towering granite cliffs, green meadows, a refreshing river,
a scenic drive in...why is it less popular? One reason likely is that Yosemite has bigger waterfalls. Another is that Yosemite
is famous, while Kings
Canyon is known mostly to
true wilderness aficionados. On the one hand, this is a shame, because Kings Canyon
is a marvelous park. On the other, well, the lack of crowds is a significant
part of the charm.
One interesting fact about Kings Canyon
is that the overwhelming majority of the park is wilderness, completely
inaccessible by road. For most of the park, you have to hike to get there - and
not easy, short hikes either. From any number of trailheads, it is possible to
hike 50 to 100 miles before you cross a road. And these go up and down passes at
up to 14,000 feet, traverse mile-high cliffs, and generally conspire to defeat
all except the most committed of backpackers. The Kings Canyon
backcountry is world-renowned for its beauty and isolation. It is kind of odd
to think that all this is less than 100 miles from some pretty large cities in
the most populous state in the Union.
I first visited Kings
Canyon before I had kids
- and I visited the backcountry only. We backpacked in from the east side of
the Sierra Nevada, over Kearsarge
Pass (nearly 12,000 feet)
- which is the park boundary. We camped a couple nights on Bubbs Creek, which
is one of the upper branches of the canyon. It wasn’t until I had three kids
that I took them into the valley itself for a day of hiking and exploration.
Later, I would backpack starting on that end, and bring the kids back to camp.
Kings Canyon is one of the deepest canyons in the United States.
If you count the highest peaks (at 14,000 feet) and the lowest depth, it is
nearly two miles deep. This isn’t a canyon like the Grand
Canyon, with obvious rims, but it is quite deep, and the lower portion
is pretty sheer.
The portion you can visit by car is the South Fork of the Kings River canyon. There is a lodge and several
campgrounds at Cedar Grove, and a number of trailheads throughout the canyon.
There are a few good day hikes, depending on your stamina, and many more
backpack adventures.
I recommend camping in the canyon, as it is beautiful,
fairly quiet, and lets you see the many moods of the canyon. At minimum, walk
Zumwalt Meadows, visit Roaring
River Falls,
and hang out somewhere with a view. I also like the overlook trail up Hotel
Creek. Strong hikers will enjoy the 9 mile round trip to Mist
Falls and back - which is also the
start of the Paradise
Valley backpack - one of
my favorites. There are so many options, and I have only explored a few despite
the many times I have visited.
For campers, only one of the campgrounds is reservable.
There are two more (plus a tents-only group camp you can also reserve), and
those rarely fill up completely except on holiday weekends. If you get there
Friday morning, easy to get a site. Better selection is available on Thursday.
Or just come during the week.
***
Our first visit in May, 2008. Ted (age 2), Cordelia (age 3), and Ella (age 5).
Near East Lake, off Bubbs Creek, John Muir Wilderness, 2010
Bubbs Creek canyon, John Muir Wilderness, 2010
Looking south toward the Sphinx, South Fork Canyon (Paradise Valley), 2011
Monarch Wilderness, 2012
Kings Canyon from the Hotel Creek Overlook, 2012. (Picture by Ella, then age 9.)
Roaring River Falls, 2012.
Ella (age 9), Cordelia (age 7), Ted (age 6), Fritz (age 4)
The Sphinx, from below Mist Falls. Kings River Canyon, 2018
Ted (age 12), Cordelia (age 13), Ella (age 15), Fritz (age 10), cousin, me, Lillian (age 7)
Western Tanager, 2018.
Zumwalt Meadow, 2018.
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