Key Reasons to Go: This is a very popular trailhead (at 6980') for entering the Desolation Wilderness. It is a nice introduction to mid-elevation flora that ranges from a damp lodgepole forest entry (at about 7000') to expansive sun-drenched granite slabs. You get to have lunch at your choice of alpine lakes (at 8000' and above) surrounded by dramatic geology and a long list of flowers to photograph and identify.
Best Time to Go: This area may not open up until June, so the “best” time is really any time you can get there. Of course there is a changing flower display through the season and I can't imagine you would go home disappointed. In fact some really nice flowers like heathers and eupatorium (new name: ageratina) won't bloom until late in the season, and they will be up on the slopes behind Twin Lakes.
To put a finer point on this, a real "best time" would be a week day. This area is so popular on weekends that you might drive all the way in to the parking lot only to find it full! I have had a couple of trips become turn-arounds and gone elsewhere, and I mean a totally different place, not just another nearby parking lot.
Directions: Drive up Hwy 50 about 15 miles past Pollock Pines and watch for the small highway sign indicating a left turn lane for Wrights Lake. The road twists and climbs up rather directly, then levels out to follow on for several miles past Lyons Creek and eventually to Wrights Lake.
This is an area that is still surrounded with vacation cabins built in another era, so mind the rules and watch for oncoming vehicles rounding the curves in the forest road. You finally get to a big paved parking lot and fancy forest bathrooms. The trailhead is somewhat obvious if you understand that you need to follow the paved stub down to the lake. There is a map display and a box of tickets to self-serve your wilderness permit.
Google map to Wrights Lake from Hwy 50
There are several options ahead of you as you sign in for your wilderness permit and start past the lake. In short order you will cross a small bridge (not the bridge by the permit station), looking left to the lake and looking right to see a meadow that, at the right time, will be full of the pretty blue Camas (Camassia quamashi) that everyone finds so deserving of a picture or two. At the end of the bridge, look for nodding arnica (Arnica parryi) which is at the other end of the prettiness scale! While not ugly, it is less noticed because it simply never looks like it‘s quite open. (It may do better in other areas but I don't see it in other areas, save for Pole Creek at Lake Tahoe.)
For the first mile you will be walking through a lodgepole forest with plenty of grassy areas which in the early season will be loaded with little white flowers of Calochortus minimus; this little Calochortus is easy to confuse with Calochortus nudus, but C. nudus has "pink-to lavender-tinged petals with rounded tips".
The next half-mile is a level walk through stands of lodgepole with and understory of corn lily, monks hood, meadow rue, erigerons and a multitude of other colorful flowers.
When you come to the end of this shaded portion, you find yourself at the foot of a granite stairway to start climbing up to the Desolation boundary. Along this stretch you start to appreciate the glaciated landscape as you ponder the huge erratic boulders dotting the rock expanse to your left. Once you get familiar with this area you might like to venture off to the left to cross-country over the open rock to find your way to a "hidden" swimming pool fed by a sort of waterfall, a rather grand term for a small runoff stream that simply comes off the granite shield above and plunges 20 feet into the pool. Still, the place is referred to as Enchanted Falls but it isn't on a map. Careful review of the topo will sort of prove to you where to go looking.
Back to the trail: As you make your way up the staircase that is this section, watch for the lone snaggy pine at the top of the rise. Everyone likes to pause to sniff the bark of this ponderosa because it smells like butterscotch if the day is warm.
Past the pine, enter a section of shaded woods and the actual entry into the wilderness area (see photo at top right). This is easy walking with a gentle grade as you make your way up to the next open area where you cross the stream again and this time choose to head left for Twin Lakes or veer right for a steeper climb to Grouse, Hemlock, and Smith Lakes. Most people seem to head for Twin Lakes, Boomerang, and Island Lakes.
If you head for Island Lake, the scenery is really terrific. Views of the surrounding rocky peaks is multicolored geology. Mt. Price looks tantalizingly do-able (but I don't think it is!), and a scramble up and over the ridge to the north will let you visit Tyler Lake and find your way back toward Wrights as a semi cross-country, find-your-way route. Oddly, you may end up coming across the pools that are part of the already mentioned Enchanted Falls complex.
There are no unusual flowers to find in this area (save for the potential for finding Lewisia longipetala! It could happen.) but the displays are terrific from first access on through September. Searching the slopes above Island Lake on the Mt Price side will reveal hidden pools surrounded by alpine vegetation: Brewer's heather, white heather, and kalmia, hiker's gentian, and eupatorium are late-season treats.
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