the john muir exhibit - writings - yosemite in winter
Yosemite in Winter
by John Muir
(1872)
Originally published as
"In the Yo-semite: Holidays Among the Rocks,"
New York Tribune, January 1, 1872 (later published as "Yosemite
in Winter").
Yosemite in Winter
Wild Weather -- A Picturesque Christmas Dinner
-- Idyllic Amusements -- Poetic Storms -- A Paradise of Clouds.
YOSEMITE VALLEY, January 1st, 1872. Winter has taken
Yosemite, and we are snowbound. The latest leaves are shaken from
the oaks and alders; the snow-laden pines, with drooping boughs,
look like barbed arrows aimed at the sky, and the fern-tangles
and meadows are spread with a smooth cloth of snow. Our latest
visitor fled two weeks ago. He came via Mariposa, and was safely
conducted over the mountain snows by Galen Clark, the well-known
pioneer and guardian of the Valley. The total number of visitors
to the valley in 1870 was near 1,700, which was about 600 more
than on any previous year. This season, about 2,150 entered the
valley. As soon as bipeds left Yosemite, bears came in; not to
grunt flattery to the falls, but to dine upon ridden-to-death
horses. One burly old chief was killed at Nevada Falls by a party
of Mono Indians. He was a brown or cinnamon bear, the prevailing
species of the region.
Another of the same kind was seen down the valley
on the meadow of the Bridal Veil, and another on the Mariposa
trail, near the hermitage, and the smooth sand which rims Mirror
Lake is grandly printed with their matchless paws. These bears
are our grandest game, noblest expressions of mountain power.
They deserve a Yosemite home, and the Sierras require them to
companion their rocks and domes, and to blend in with their brown
sequoias and cedars, and tangles of chaparral. Our winter population--not
including the bears--totals twenty-six, employed as follows. Making
lumber, ten; making a trail, two; feeding poultry, two; building
fences, one; rebuilding a house, one; women, two; children, six,
and a pair of Digger Indians with no visible means of support.
All of our landlords except one, have disappeared, and doubtless
are engaged in concert with stage and railroad companies, with
next year's problems of travel, sorting their labyrinth of tolls
and trails--their webs for the flies of '72. The 20th of November
first brought us signs of winter. Broad, fibrous arcs of white
cloud, spanned the valley from wall to wall; grand, island-like
masses, bred among the upper domes and brows, wavered doubtfully
up and down, some of them suddenly devoured by a swoop of thirsty
wind; others, waxing to grand proportions; drifted loosely and
heavily about like bergs in a calm sea, or jammed and wedged themselves
among spiry crests, or, drawing themselves out like woolen rolls,
muffled the highest brows sometimes leaving bare summits cut off
from the walls with pine tops atop, that seemed to float loose
as the clouds. Tissiack was compassed by a soft, furry cloud,
upon which her dome seemed to repose clear and warm in yellow
light. At the end of these transition days, the whole company
of valley clouds were marshaled for storm; they fused close, and
blended, until every seam and bay of blue sky was shut, and our
temple, throughout all of its cells and halls, was smoothly full.
Rain and snow fell steadily for three days, beginning November
24th, giving about four feet of snow to the valley rim. The snow
line descended to the bottom of the valley on the night of November
25th, but after-rains prevented any considerable accumulation.
Then the rocks began to fall. During our equable
rainless summers, atmospheric disintegration goes on with the
greatest gentleness, and scare a rock is cast down, but the first
rains find many a huge mass ripe for change, and after-slopes
made slippery, seams washed out, and water-wedges driven. Constant
thunder proclaims the magnitude of accomplished work. We ran repeatedly
from the house to hear the larger masses journeying down with
a tread that shook the valley.
This three days' chapter of rain was underscored
by a seam of sunshine half a day in width, beneath which darkness
began to gather for a chapter of snow; heavy cloud-masses rolled
down the black-washed walls, circling cathedral rocks and domes,
and hiding off all the upper brows and peaks. Thin strips of sunshine
slid through momentary seams that were quickly blinded out. The
darkness deepened for hours, until every separating shade and
line were dimmed to equal black, and all the bright air of our
gulf was sponged up, and fastened windless and pulseless in universal
cloud. "It's bound to snow," said a mountaineer to me,
as he gazed into the heavy gloom, "bound to snow when it
gathers cloud material gradual as this. We'll have a regular old-fashioned
storm afore long." Scarce had he delivered himself of this
meteorological prophecy, ere the beginning flakes appeared, journeying
tranquilly down with waving, slow-circling gestures, easy and
confident as if long familiar with the paths of sky. Before dark
they accomplished a most glorious work of gentle, noiseless beauty.
Twelve inches of snow fell during the night and when morning opened
our temple, there was more of beauty than pen can tell--from meadow
to summit, from wall to wall, every tree and bush, and sculptured
rock was muffled and dazzled in downy, unbroken, undrifted snow.
Transparent film-clouds hung in the open azure or draped the walls,
the gray granite showing dimly through their fairy veil. This
after-storm gauze is formed when vapor is made by sun-rays upon
exposed portions of the wet walls, which is of higher temperature
than the air with which it drifts into contact.
One day usually is sufficient to dry the warmest
portions of the wall and to lave and mix the air until it is about
equal in temperature to the rocks which contain it--then that
reeky storm-tissue disappears. After every heavy snow-fall, numerous
avalanches are born upon all of the slopes and cañons of
suitable steepness. In general appearance they resemble waterfalls
of the highest free-falling kind, being like them, close, opaque,
white in color, and composed of companies of comets shooting downward
with unequal velocity, amid a casing atmosphere of whirling dust.
They are most numerous about the slopes of Glacier Point and Tissiack,
but by far the grandest avalanches of this Yosemite region are
those of Clouds Rest, on the north side, up Tenaya Cañon.
The highest Clouds Rest avalanches have a clear, unbroken course
of not less than 5,000 feet, and they frequently wipe down great
quantities of granite, pushing it a considerable distance up the
opposite slope of the cañon. The avalanches of the Summit
Mountains often-times descend below the thick zone of pines that
grow upon their bases, cutting straight gaps, without leaving
a single tree.
The latter half of December was one vast snow-storm,
stained and washed by torrents of rain. We have had only one mail
in two months, and if our everlasting mountains are to have such
everlasting storms, you may not receive this before June or July.
The average temperature of last month at Black's on the south
side the valley, was at sunrise, 33° Fahrenheit; at noon
39°; maximum morning temperature, 41°; minimum morning
temperature, +13°; maximum noon temperature, 55°; minimum
noon temperature, 34°; 21 inches of rain and 41 inches of
snow fell during the month up to December 25th. The morning temperature
of the sunny, eclipsed side of the valley does not differ much
from the south side, but the noon temperature of the north side
in clear weather is often as much as 20° higher. Also owing
to the difference in height and angle of the various parts of
the valley walls and to the irregular form of the bottom of the
valley, both north and south sides have a number of well-marked
climates. The delta of Indian Cañon is the warmest portion
of the valley, both in winter and summer.
[Illegible . . . ] Yosemite and we slid smoothly
over the astronomical edge of '71; Santa Claus came with very
little ado, gave trinkets to our half-dozen younglings, and dropped
crusted cakes into bachelors' cabins; but upon the whole our holidays
were sorry, unhilarious, whiskified affairs. A grand intercampal
Christmas dinner was devised on a scale and style becoming our
peerless valley; heaps of solemn substantials were to be lightened
and broidered with cookies, and backed by countless cakes, blocky
and big as boulders, and a craggy trough-shaped pie was planned
for the heart and soul of the feast. It was to have formed a rough
model of Yosemite, with domes and brows of "duff" and
falls of buttering gravy.
"South Dome be mine," cried one, "softened
with sauce of Pohono. "
"I'll eat Royal Arches," cried another,
"salted with Bachelor's Tears."
"And I'll choose Riverbank Meadow, plumed with
avalanche boulders. And some purple granite for me, cut smooth
from the cliffs of El Capitan." etc. etc.--all very well
conceived but, alas, like all other ladyless feasts, it was a
failure. In my last [illegible] I gave you a list of our
inhabitants, together with their various employments; now you
may peep at our social life, quarrels, amusements, etc. Of course
you will guess that in our glorious home we gather on the meadow
when our work is done, to feast on the moonlit rocks or dark pines
spiring up in the stars, and to drink song from the falls like
water, and breathe the deep spirit-hush of the winter. But, alas--no!
We only quarrel and gossip, and [illegible] whisky! And,
to show you how much our rocks and quarrels correspond in magnitude,
I will give you our last in detail, which is, perhaps, one of
average size.
At the close of this last visiting season each hotel-keeper
found among his remaining provisions a living mutton, and it was
desirable that these three sheep should be kept over winter in
the valley to be in readiness for the first pilgrim customers
of '72. Now, in winters of ordinary severity, sheep can care
far themselves with but little attention from the shepherd, and
at first our sheep seemed to have promise of a mild winter. They
had rich, sunny days with noontimes dreamily warm. They nibbled
the willow bushes on the meadows and silver lupines beneath the
pines, and gathered bunch grass and later eriogonums up on the
rugged debris, but a month ago, when heavy snow fell, they had
to be cared for, and trouble began. The three shepherds were equally
concerned in the three sheep, and bickerings arose about turns
in hunting them up; also about the depth of snow which rendered
hunting them up necessary, Black's shepherd holding, with characteristic
obstinacy, that in light storms the sheep were better let alone
to nibble a living from chaparral in the lee of big rocks. Also,
it was proposed that when they were driven up, instead of outraging
their gregarious instincts by compelling each to eat his bog sedges
in solitude, they should be kept together and "boarded round"
from barn to barn. But this union could not be effected, because
the three sheep were not equal in size, and moreover, Mr. Black's
hay was cut on the Bridal Veil Meadow, while Mr. L's was cut on
the Bachelor's Tears, and it was argued that one tun of Bachelor's
Tears hay was worth two tuns of Bridal Veil, because the Bachelor's
Tears was sweet, while the Bridal Veil article was boggy and sour.
Black's shepherd denied all this, affirming that Bridal Veil carex
was as good as Bachelor's Tears carex, or Virgin's Tears carex,
or any other in the valley, salt or sour. The geographical position
of H's meadow midway between the Veil and Tears, determined the
quality of its carex as medium. These bickerings increased in
acrimony, and as Black's shepherd was Scotch, L's Dutch, and H's
Yankee, there was grave danger of a war of the races. But by brain-racking
diplomacy, and a profusion of bloodless blixen, our pastoral sky
was cleared, and now all goes heartily well, and each sheep eats
its own sedge in its own barn, tended by its own shepherd. All
this beneath Tutocahnula and the domes. Ruskin who deals in the
relationships of men and mountains, may find some difficult problems
here. In striking contrast with these diminutive wranglings are
the broad, loving harmonies of our whisky soirees of which about
seven are held weekly.
Each of the two bars now open has its own particular
friends and patrons, but neither between dealers nor patrons does
there exist the faintest trace of opposition or jealousy. This
dealer A gathers up his patrons and repairs to the whisky of B
which, together with cards, and bear stories, and shooting scrapes
of early days, are freely discussed. Next evening B gathers his
patrons and repairs to the whisky of A. The two whiskies are about
a mile apart, and between them a nocturnal see-saw of admirable
fidelity is maintained, although the two whiskies are not of the
same species, one being "bushhead" and the other "golden"
pronounced with a long lazy emphasis on the 'o'.
More shingle houses are being built, one of which
is to be a saloon. At the present rate of progress, flimsy buildings
will soon bedraggle the valley from end to end, making it appear
like the raw pine towns of a new railroad. Also the meadows are
being fenced up, with trees living and dead chopped down and the
divine banks and thickets of the briar-rose and azalea are being
trampled and cleared away under the name of d----d chaparral,
and all destroyable natural beauty in general is fast fading before
the armed presence of vulgar mercenary "improvement".
But happily, by far the great portion of Yosemite is unimprovable.
Her trees and flowers will melt like snow, but her domes and falls
are everlasting. I have said that one-half of last month was filled
with storm, but the first gift of December weather was a ripe
cluster of golden days filling up all the other half. Days and
nights glowed past in equal splendor, and not until the afternoon
of the 16th was there any sign of coming storm. On the night of
the 17th we had a light rain, which changed to snow, and in the
morning about ten inches remained unmelted on the meadows. On
the night of the 18th rain fell in torrents, but with a temperature
of 34°, and the snowline remained high above the meadows.
But some time after eleven o'clock the temperature was suddenly
raised by a south wind to 42° carrying the snow line up to
the tops of the valley and far beyond out on the upper basins,
perhaps to the very summit of the range, and morning saw Yosemite
in the grandeur of flood. Torrents of warm rain were washing the
walls, and melting the snow of the surrounding mountains, and
the liberated meltings joined with the rains, sang jubilee in
glorious congregations of cascades and falls. On both sides [of]
the Sentinel foamed a splendid cascade, and over on Three Brothers,
half concealed by the pines, I could see fragments of an uncountable
company of snowy falls and cascades of every form and voice, and
I ran for the open meadows to see the whole circumference of living
rocks at once. The meadow between Blacks and Hutchings was full
of green lakes, edged and islanded with floating snow, but after
fording many a young torrent, I succeeded in groping along the
debris to a wadeable meadow between Hutchings and Laymans, in
the open midst of the most glorious assemblage of waterfalls ever
laid bare to mortal eyes. Between Blacks and Hutchings, there
were ten majestic cascades and falls, around Glacier Point, six;
on the shoulder of South Dome, facing the main valley, three;
on South Dome, facing Mirror Lake, eight, between Mt. Watkins
and Washington Column, ten; between Arch Falls and Three Brothers,
nineteen--fifty-six newborn falls occupying this upper end of
the valley, beside countless host of silvery arteries gleaming
everywhere. In the whole valley there must have been nearly a
hundred. And be it remembered that those falls were not mere momentary
transient gushes, but noble-mannered waters, shooting from an
average height of near three thousand feet--the very smallest
with notes audible at a distance of several miles. From this meadow
standpoint only one fall is normally seen, but on this jubilee
day there were forty, all perfect and distinct.
The Upper Yosemite Fall is queen of all these mountain
waters yet in the first half day of this jubilee her voice was
scarcely heard and her manners betrayed no warmth of sympathy
with the gushing enthusiasm that encompassed her. she sang her
everyday song in everyday dress, but about three o'clock in the
afternoon I suddenly heard an overwhelming crashing and booming
mixed with heavy gaspings and rocky explosions. I ran from the
house thinking that a rock avalanche had started, but quickly
discovered that all this outbreak of overmastering sounds came
from Yosemite Fall. The great flood wave gathered from many a
glacier cañon of the Hoffman mountains had just arrived,
sweeping logs and ice before it and plunging over the tremendous
verge, at once blended in crowning grandeur with the universal
anthem storm.
On November 28th came one of the most picturesque
snow storms I have ever seen. It was a tranquil day in Yosemite.
About midday a close-grained cloud grew in the middle of the valley,
blurring the sun; but rocks and trees continued to caste shadow.
In a few hours the cloud-ceiling deepened and gave birth to a
rank down-growth of silky streamers. These cloud-weeds were most
luxuriant about the Cathedral Rocks, completely hiding all their
surnmits. Then heavier masses, hairy outside with a dark nucleus,
appeared, and foundered almost to the ground. Toward night all
cloud and rock distinctions were blended out, rock after rock
disappeared, El Capitan, the Domes and the Sentinel, and all the
brows about Yosemite Falls were wiped out, and the whole valley
was filled with equal, seamless gloom. There was no wind and every
rock and tree and grass blade had a hushed, expectant air. The
fullness of time arrived, and down came the big flakes in tufted
companies of full grown flowers. Not jostling and rustling like
autumn leaves or blossom showers of an orchard whose castaway
flakes are hushed into any hollow for a grave, but they journeyed
down with gestures of confident life, alighting upon predestined
places on rock and leaf, like flocks of linnets or showers of
summer flies. Steady, exhaustless, innumerable. The trees, and
bushes, and dead brown grass were flowered far beyond summer,
bowed down in blossom and all the rocks were buried. Every peak
and dome, every niche and tablet had their share of snow. And
blessed are the eyes that beheld morning open the glory of that
one dead storm. In vain did I search for some special separate
mass of beauty on which to rest my gaze. No island appeared
throughout the whole gulf of the beauty. The glorious crystal
sediment was everywhere. From wall to wall of our beautiful temple,
from meadow to sky was one finished unit of beauty, one star of
equal ray, one glowing sun, weighed in the celestial balances
and found perfect.
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