Cataract of Diamonds – below Nevada Fall and above the
Emerald Pool
Cave of Spirit Voice – This is the cave at the base of Upper
Yosemite Fall. From the valley
floor it looks like a dark gap, but it is large enough to stand up inside. Muir spent a night here. I spent half an hour one October and
collected Yosemite Falls in my cup.
It had been a dry year.
From the cave, the Lost Arrow is off to your left.
Contemplation Rock – one of two overhanging rocks at Glacier
Point. It is more commonly known
as Photographer’s Rock. You will
see people dancing on it occasionally, although not legally.
Devil’s Elbow – a loop in the Merced River opposite El
Capitan. Its course was rearranged
by the massive flood in 1997.
Diamond Flume – one name for the narrow canyon above the
Nevada Fall bridge that is particularly glittery at dawn.
Enchantment Point – one of the early names for Valley
View. I like Enchantment better.
Fern Ledge – This is a ledge 450 feet up from the base of
Upper Yosemite Fall. The falling
water arches away from the rock at this point, and Muir once tried to walk
across it and got into trouble when the wind shifted the water back into the
wall.
Ledge Trail – This was an early trail that went from Curry
Village to Glacier Point. It was
only a mile long but really steep.
Much of it was wiped out by a rockslide in 1984. After the rockslide, I tried to hike up from
Curry on remnants of the trail until the trail disappeared and I began slipping on piles of loose gravel. So I stepped off the trail and enjoyed a controlled slide back down to camp.
Horseshoe Grotto – At the top of Illilouette Falls. If you hike the Panorama Trail between
Nevada Fall and Glacier Point, spend time here rather than hiking through. It’s a lovely, open setting, and some
people have been known to camp here overnight.
Overhanging Rock – the other hanging rock at Glacier Point,
east of Contemplation/Photographer’s Rock.
Sunnyside Bench – east of the top of Lower Yosemite
Fall. Every time I hear it called
a bench I think of giants sitting on it with their legs hanging over. Muir liked to hike up here for its
unique view over the valley. He
got to it by hiking up Indian Canyon.
When I went up Indian Canyon to get on the Bench, I discovered that a
gap existed that I could not get across.
I’m thinking that rockslides over the years took out the connection
because I went up and down and did not see any way over.
Table Rock – on the flat area between Vernal Fall and Nevada
Fall where Snow’s La Casa Nevada Hotel stood in the late 1800s.
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