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Backpacking the North/South Lake Loop: Piute Pass to Hutchinson Meadow

November 8, 2017 By Greg Glass 3 Comments

East down Piute Creek Canyon

DAY ONE on the North Lake/South Lake Loop

img
Bishop Loop Day 1 Details
Distance: 12.1 miles
Time: 6-9 hours
Difficulty: Strenuous
Elevation gain: 2,056 ft
Dogs: No
When to go: Late July-Early October
The Piute Pass Trail is a gentle 2,000 ascent up a gorgeous canyon over five miles.  We woke at sunrise at the North Lake Campground, had breakfast and coffee, and broke camp.  We hit the trailhead at approximately 7:30 a.m.  The weather was sunny and perfect. Our goal? Head over Piute Pass, through Humphreys Basin and down to Hutchinson Meadow.

There are several early stream crossings using large logs, but nothing that required getting our feet wet.

About half way up to Piute Pass you reach Loch Leven, a beautiful lake at 10,743 feet.

Our campsite at North Lake Campground
All geared up for the trek
Loch Leven on our way to Piute Pass
Loch Leven

After a series of gorgeous waterfalls and water features, you climb up to Piute Lake at 10,958 feet.

Author at Piute Lake
Beautiful Piute Lake

Finally, it’s a short ascent to Piute Pass at 11,423 feet.

There was one remaining snow field across the trail approaching Piute Pass, with some parts of the snow breaking away – so we used caution and took the safest route across the snow.

Snow bridges approaching Piute Pass
Snow field on the way up Piute Pass

From Piute Pass, the views are spectacular to both the East and the West.  To the east, it’s back down Piute Pass trail from where you came.  To the west, it’s the vastness of Humphreys Basin.  We sat, ate lunch and enjoyed the gorgeous views.  There is also a side trail here that heads southwest towards Muriel Lake.

Panorama of Humphreys Basin from Piute Pass

We then continued to head west down and through Humphreys Basin.  The expanse of the basin is truly beautiful.  After passing Summit Lake, there were a few wet crossings and some use trails heading south towards Upper and Lower Golden Trout Lakes.

Humphreys Basin had several water crossings

Once below 10,800 feet the tree line starts again and you head through the forest towards Hutchinson Meadow.  On the west edge of Hutchinson Meadow are a series of wet stream crossings – about six to be exact – that come one after the other…so we left our water shoes on and banged them all out in order.

After the last one, there is a beautiful meadow on the south side of the trail, with gorgeous flat granite rock features – the perfect place to camp for night one.  We pitched our tent directly on the granite and the water source was super close and clean.

Piute Creek Canyon
Hutchinson Meadow Campsite
Deer in the creek
Fishing in Piute Creek at Hutchinson Meadow

We got some beta on this campsite from a pair of backpackers coming the other way on the trail a few hours earlier – and their beta was spot on!  We pitched camp, and then I tried my hand at some fishing in Piute Creek.  No bites, but a beautiful place to cast a line and I had a family of deer as my audience. The bugs were probably the worst here of any night on the trail – so we used the head nets for a bit in the evening before climbing into the tent.

The elevation at Hutchinson Meadow is 9,500 feet – so campfires are allowed.  There was one camp site in the trees with a fire pit, but we chose to camp in the open meadow on the granite and forego a fire for this first night.

Piute Pass Trailhead to Hutchinson Meadow Trail Map & Elevation Profile

© OpenStreetMap contributors
Download file: NL-SL-Loop-Day-1.gpx

Originally hiked on Sunday, August 20, 2017.

 

Continue to Day Two: Hutchinson Meadow to the Goddard Canyon Bridge Junction

 

Filed Under: Backpacking, Trail Guides Tagged With: 11+ miles, Backpacking, Inyo National Forest, Kings Canyon National Park, Sierra National Forest, Sierra Nevada, strenuous, wilderness

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About Greg Glass

Native SoCal-er, raised in Claremont, CA at the base of Mt. Baldy - my "backyard". Lived in a cabin on Mt. Baldy for 10 years.

Comments

  1. Ed Tolman says

    September 4, 2018 at 9:16 am

    I hiked this 50 years ago as a twelve year old Scout. My first experience that gave me the bug for backpacking in the Sierras and thus influenced the next two generations as my children and grandchildren now love the High Sierras! I hope to hike this loop again someday soon…what great memories!

    Reply
  2. David Dimond says

    August 31, 2020 at 7:21 am

    Hi. Great post! Wondering what time of the year you hiked this trip? Conditions looked good.

    Thanks.

    Reply
    • Jeff Hester says

      September 1, 2020 at 2:15 pm

      Hi David! If you look carefully down near the very bottom of the post it says “Originally hiked on Sunday, August 20, 2017” I’ve also hiked this in September and it was beautiful, too.

      Reply

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Planning Your Backpack Trip

  • Overview of the North Lake/South Lake Loop
  • The 10 Essentials
  • 7 Leave No Trace Principles
  • Campfire/Stove Permit
  • North Lake/South Lake Loop Map (Amazon)

Day-by-Day on the North/South Lake Loop Trail

  • DAY 1 – Piute Pass TH to Hutchinson Meadow
  • DAY 2 – Hutchinson Mdw to Goddard Canyon
  • DAY 3 – Goddard Canyon to Sapphire Lake
  • DAY 4 – Sapphire Lake to Little Pete Meadow
  • DAY 5 – Little Pete Mdw to Upper Dusy Basin
  • DAY 6 – Over Bishop Pass to South Lake

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