turtle wrote:Simonov, do you consider the water from Columbine safe to drink without filtering?
Since it comes right out of the mountain, I would say yes, unequivocally.
But then I never treated my water until very recently when I started hiking with a Katadyn, which I use as much for the convenience of pumping out water without all the crap floating in it as for concern about microorganisms.
Spring is not flowing. As to whether or not you can fix it, that remains to be seen. I think you'd probably need a pick and a shovel to dig it out. The spring box probably needs to cleared out or replaced.
We hiked to Kellys Camp Saturday 6/11. Someone has repaired the spring box and installed a new pipe. Water is flowing better than ever. Thanks to whoever did this work. This is the second spring. A large, dead tree came down during the winter directly on top of the first spring, but it never had much of a flow anyway.
We hiked Ontario Peak yesterday 7/2. The water flow is still excellent. A camper told us that the rangers rebuilt the spring box. Also, the spring about 1/2 mile below the saddle still has great flow.
muddeer wrote: ↑Will Kellys Camp spring flow for the rest of the summer?
The old spring tended to dry up by the end of summer. With the spring box being rebuilt and this being a wet year, it may last longer. It would be useful if those who spend time at Kellys would report on the flow.
The spring 1/2 mile below the saddle has always been dry by August, but the flow this year is stronger than usual.
RichardK wrote: ↑The old spring tended to dry up by the end of summer. With the spring box being rebuilt and this being a wet year, it may last longer. It would be useful if those who spend time at Kellys would report on the flow.
HJ - No, Columbine is more like a full mile below the saddle and always flows. There is a small spring about 1/2 mile below the saddle that has early season water. Last Saturday 7/23, it had slowed down quite a bit. It will be dry soon. From the trail, it looks like a small, short creek. I have never explored upstream to find the source.
RichardK wrote: ↑HJ - No, Columbine is more like a full mile below the saddle and always flows. There is a small spring about 1/2 mile below the saddle that has early season water. Last Saturday 7/23, it had slowed down quite a bit. It will be dry soon. From the trail, it looks like a small, short creek. I have never explored upstream to find the source.
I've wondered about that one--always figured it was a creek coming from snowmelt above.
FYI for anyone interested: As of Saturday, Kelly Spring was producing ~1 liter/minute.
RichardK wrote: ↑HJ - No, Columbine is more like a full mile below the saddle and always flows. There is a small spring about 1/2 mile below the saddle that has early season water. Last Saturday 7/23, it had slowed down quite a bit. It will be dry soon. From the trail, it looks like a small, short creek. I have never explored upstream to find the source.
OK, I think I know where you're talking about.
I didn't think you meant Columbine. I've never seen Columbine dry.
Today I hiked up Ice House Canyon to Kelly Camp and back. The weather was almost perfect. At Kelly Camp I stopped by both springs to check their flow. The main spring (the one with the PVC pipe) was flowing 350 ML per minute, down from 2 months ago when I checked it. The other one had a somewhat better flow IMO. However, I could not measure it since it flows into a small pool.
The temps were pretty chilly at the camp, 44f in the shade at around 8:30 a.m. It was a little warmer at the Ice House Canyon Saddle, 51f in the shade.
If you haven't done so it's now time to head up the canyon to view the fall foliage. A lot of the trees and bushes are at or near their peak.
It looks like the wind storm hit Icehouse Canyon. Did you see many downed trees overall? The Whitney Portal Store board reports a lot of trees came down there, but the buildings and trailhead structure were spared. Mammoth Lakes basin reportedly has 300 fallen trees.
Have plans to hike cucamonga peak from icehouse canyon, then descend and camp for the night at Kelly Camp.
My question is, what is the water situation at Kelly Camp? I know there is suppose to be a pipe installed that provides water, but various reports I've found from past years indicate it doesnt always have water.
I passed through Kelly Camp last week. I'm not sure about the pipe but there was a large group of college aged campers there and they said they were getting water from a stream just north of the campsite. I didn't check it out to confirm, but I do recall there is a small seasonal stream north of there.