On Thanksgiving weekend Stefan and I stayed in South Lake Tahoe for the first night, and then went on to Mammoth early in the morning. It was a lengthy drive, but the snow in Mammoth was worth it. Coming down the Kingsbury Grade into Carson Valley was especially scenic this time - houses were hiding under a blanket of fog.
Mammoth Mountain is a big resort, and it has interesting terrain. The snow earlier in the week mostly skipped Tahoe and went here, so they had a variety of terrain open, including a few double diamonds. This picture however is from a trail that wasn't open. There wasn't a "closed" sign either (I swear), but the lift (lift 14) sure was not running. Now that I had sailed into this, I did my best to enjoy it; but which path to take - left or right? Thinking that the only visible track in the snow must have been a local who knew what he/she was doing I went right. The first few turns were great (fresh snow!!!), but then I had to unstrap: not enough coverage - oops! - my run ended in a field of boulders...
The wind blew hard at the top of Mammoth Mountain, but the views made up for this. The picture below shows the sunny backside - which is not for skiing but just for looking. The upper, steeper section of the mountain is on the opposite side, mostly in shade, and as we dropped over the edge we were greeted by a lengthy sheet of ice. After this it was decent snow though, and the "Face Lift" which doesn't go all the way to the top made enough of this terrain accessible without the inconvenience of wind and ice.
The next day we went to Emerald Bay at Lake Tahoe, so I had to take a shot of the island.
We hiked up the Eagle Lake trail and returned via the Bayview Trail. We did not find much snow on the trail - it was certainly easy to hike in regular hiking boots.
The sun set and we came by Granite Lake, which I really liked.
A bit later, Emerald Bay put on its post-sunset glow as well.
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