Sierra Stories

Sierra Stories

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Activities Activities: Mountaineering

Daniel Arnold’s Early Days in the Range of Light goes back in time to discover, first-hand, the early mountaineers

Dan Arnold

The premise is simple, the execution grand. Take nearly a dozen or so early pioneers of California mountaineering and tread in the echoes of their bootsteps. Follow them up the peaks that defined them, separated only by time itself. Sounds easy, right?

Almost forgot to mention: No Gore-tex, GPS, or nylon ropes allowed. If these early mountaineers went solo, so shall you. If they had to roll their meager possessions up into a blanket and tie it off with an old rope as Clarence King did, then you too will leave your backpack at home. Like John Muir, you will chase away hunger with bread crusts and tea. As for maps … What maps? You will bed atop a layer of dead pine needles. Shiver under the stars and storms without a tent. With the invention of DEET still decades away, mosquitoes will sing you to sleep. And you will come to know the Sierra like you have never known it before.

This is, in part, Daniel Arnold’s Early Days in the Range of Light: Encounters with Legendary Mountaineers (Counterpoint, 432 pages, $28). High above timberline, Arnold deftly nudges the legends of the Sierra into the present, bringing forth their sepia-toned accounts into sharp, colorful focus. Here, in about the only place left in California to have resisted civilization’s broad reach, Arnold goes back in time, reenacting their first ascents in the same style, using the same equipment—or, in most cases, the lack of.

Beginning with William Brewer’s 1864 accent of Mount Brewer in the Southern Sierra, Arnold weaves the narratives of Clarence King, John Muir, Bolton Brown, Joseph LeConte, James Hutchinson, Francis Farquhar, Charles Michael, Ernest Clayton Andrews, and Norman Clyde with his own ascents of peaks that, as he writes, “… climbers would lose sleep over in the nights before an attempt and look back afterward with pride.”

Arnold, 29, says the idea was sparked when he was 18, climbing the walls of Yosemite and the backcountry peaks of the Sierra. Soon after graduating from Stanford with a degree in philosophy, Arnold headed for the hills, living up to expectations of his major in a talus cave in Yosemite.

“The general impulse for the project had been rattling around in my head for years,” he says. “I remember picking up little snippets of stories about Charles Michael and Bolton Brown when I first started climbing. Right away I wanted to know more. Who were these guys? How come no one talked about them? I couldn’t believe that a whole generation of bold soloists—or maybe proto-soloists? —had been all but forgotten.”

While the Sierra was snowbound, Arnold hunkered down in various Bay Area libraries reading letters, journals, and books from the mountaineering greats. “When I was in research-mode,” Arnold says, “I’d show up at the door of the Bancroft (Library at UC Berkeley) right when they opened and only leave when they threw me out at the end of the day.”

Working on his MFA in creative writing at San Jose State University, Arnold began the book in earnest. As the snow melted he headed back into the high country. Arnold wandered as close to the narrative shadows of his lowland research as he could while stepping boldly into the Sierra light with his own story, told with tremendous heart. It was a balancing act that took nearly fours years and in the process, one in which he was thoroughly humbled.

But a mountain tends to humble an individual on a regular basis. Good climbers know they must pass over it with as much style and grace as they can muster. So too with Arnold, which partly explains why he doesn’t so much bookend the early mountaineers with his own story, but strolls causally into his own book, deferring time and again to the pure audacity and immense talent of the early climbers.

“It’s worth pointing out that uncertainty plays a huge role in a climber’s impression of the difficulty of a climb,” Arnold tells me. “I’m sure that if I went back to (Francis) Farquhar’s route on Middle Palisade it would be easier the second time. But for the original climbers everything was uncertain. They had no idea what was above them in the mountains, and they really didn’t even have a good measure of their own capacities. On each new climb they made it up as they went along. It was the anti-SuperTopo era.”

Happily, Arnold has much to add to the early narratives. Through nimbly channeling these early mountaineering experiences with his own modern-day sensibilities, he retains an awareness of the 19th century sublime that seeps effortlessly into his own writing. This is not to say Arnold writes in a bushy prose style a la John Muir. Rather, the time spent digesting the legends in the lowlands and the years spent in the high country under their reverberating care has clearly forged its way into his consciousness.

Taking off through the woods to follow John Muir’s path up Mount Ritter, Arnold takes only a tin cup, a warm hat, and three small pieces of bread in a canvas shopping bag slung over his shoulder. Twelve miles in he encounters a couple of incredulous backpackers, huffing under 50-pound packs and demanding to know where he is going. Arnold doesn’t have the heart to tell them. He presses on.

Nightfall finds Arnold spooning a whitebark pine in the vicinity of “chateau-Muir,” wilderness abodes that John ‘o the Mountains exuberantly described as “snug as squirrel-nests, well-ventilated, full of spicy odors, and with plenty of wind-played needles to sing one to sleep.” Cold, alone, and wondering how Muir survived, let alone romanticized his adventures, Arnold settles in for the long night.

Muir, he muses in Early Days in the Range of Light, seemed incapable of finding fault, no matter how slight, with any aspect of the Sierra. “In theory I agree with him—it is the human being who inhabits the imperfect form and who should try to live up to the mountains—but in practice, on a breezy evening at eleven thousand feet with a cold night ahead, I could use less philosophy and more insulation.”

Despite the hardships he suffers to penetrate the world of the early mountaineers, Arnold is quick to point out that he had some advantages over the pioneers. “My hands,” he writes, “have the benefit of a century’s worth of experimentation passed down the line by one climber to the next.”

Arnold is an accomplished rock climber and can easily solo (climbing without rope or hardware) moderate routes. With rope, climbing hardware, and sticky rubber shoes he can push into vertical territory the early climbers would no doubt have deemed out of the realm of possibility. “It’s hard to know exactly what would happen if you gave Charles Michael or Jules Eichorn a modern rope and some climbing shoes,” he says. “My guess is they’d be leading 5.10, if not 5.11, in no time.”

Still, throughout the book, Arnold finds that the purity and simplicity of the legendary mountaineers suits him just fine. Long before “fast and light” was a buzzword of the backpacking and climbing set, these bold mountaineers were lighting out for days and weeks at a time with little to protect them from the elements, but also little to interfere with their experience. (Well, aside from Norman Clyde with his infamous 90-pound pack. But he lived whole summers in the backcountry.)

Arnold tells me that half the joy of mountaineering is the physical and mental act of climbing; the other half the stories that come from these climbs. Bringing too much technology into wilderness, he says, makes the climbing easier but also ruins the stories.

“I’d much rather hear, for example, Mark Twight climbing some demented obscurity with a single 8.8 mm rope and six packets of chicken soup than I would about a huge expedition winching itself to the top of a Himalayan trophy with the help of porters, bottled oxygen, laptops, and satellite phones,” he says. “In the Himalayas this question of style has been thoroughly hashed and rehashed, but I think the same principle applies to a day climb. The less you take, the more you learn about yourself and the land, and the more likely you’ll have a good story to tell at the end of the day.”

And that, without putting too fine a point on it, is exactly what happens in his Early Days in the Range of Light.

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madeintahoe

madeintahoe - Feb 6, 2010 11:21 am - Voted 10/10

Thank you!

This is beautifully written!
My favorite...

"Muir, he muses in Early Days in the Range of Light, seemed incapable of finding fault, no matter how slight, with any aspect of the Sierra. “In theory I agree with him—it is the human being who inhabits the imperfect form and who should try to live up to the mountains"

SpiderSavage

SpiderSavage - Feb 7, 2010 2:19 pm - Voted 9/10

Great Concept

I look forward to reading this book. Walking in the footsteps of the early climbers is a great concept.

I often consider doing a similar project using only Native American accessories.

Sierra Ledge Rat

Sierra Ledge Rat - Feb 8, 2010 9:23 pm - Voted 10/10

Manly men

"Shiver under the stars and storms without a tent. With the invention of DEET still decades away, mosquitoes will sing you to sleep. And you will come to know the Sierra like you have never known it before."

Been there. Done that. Sounds like a great idea until you're exhausted from lack of sleep from shivering all night and your eyes are swollen shut from mosquito bites. I'm not man enough to ever travel like that again, give me a warm sleeping bag, a pad to insulate me from the ground and DEET. Sorry!

John Duffield

John Duffield - Feb 9, 2010 9:00 pm - Voted 10/10

The Old Guys

It’s hard to know exactly what would happen if you gave Charles Michael or Jules Eichorn a modern rope and some climbing shoes,” he says. “My guess is they’d be leading 5.10, if not 5.11, in no time.”

For years, I've thought about that. I've seen lots of old photos of the old guys doing crazy things. Parties of people going up the Devils Tower. Put up a ladder. Grew up in a more physically demanding era. Deeper understanding of their own capabilities.

Marmaduke

Marmaduke - Feb 10, 2010 10:15 pm - Hasn't voted

GREAT

As I'm brand new to this site and haven't hiked any major peaks yet, I was just talking to my wife about this the other night though. Couldn't imagine what those guys had to indure but you sure put it all in perspective. Excellent writing!!!

Deltakyp

Deltakyp - Feb 22, 2010 1:58 pm - Voted 9/10

Well played Sir!

An intriguing tribute to the spirit of what brings us all here. Having spent many a night burrowed into a cozy tent in the Sierras myself, it is inspiring to walk the founding "bootsteps" of those who went before us... as they did: without modern conveniences. A noble effort and a motivating concept we should all consider.

Thanks for sharing a beautifully written trbute, will be reading the book shortly!

phatty

phatty - Feb 22, 2010 2:55 pm - Hasn't voted

Great Idea... In theory

Not one of these guys lived without some luck. Trying to duplicate the luck of all of them is not a good idea. Im still willing to bet, he didn't do these trips without a fair amount of preparation and planning. Watching the weather forecast, etc. Think Muir would have climbed shasta had he known the snow storm that was coming? But im still intrigued so i will read it... good article

drpw

drpw - Feb 23, 2010 1:27 am - Hasn't voted

Love the pioneers

One trip at the trail head my friend was encouraging me to bring an extra soft-shell or something and as encouragement turned into bullying I showed him the shell I was bringing and told him "Norman Clyde would have put an ice ax through your head to have just this piece of equipment, I'll be fine with this." As it turned out, I was fine.

Viewing: 1-8 of 8