Hike to Gaylor Lakes
From Tioga Pass to Gaylor Lakes is 4 miles round trip with 900-foot elevation gain.
On the hike to Gaylor Lakes you’re guaranteed to feel the high in the High Sierra. The climb begins in the shadow of Yosemite National Park’s Tioga Pass Entrance Station at nearly 10,000 feet in elevation. It’s the highest trailhead in the park.
The path climbs through the rarefied air, delivering views of snow-capped peaks, to Gaylor Lakes, two cobalt gems rimmed by dramatic crags. Wildflower connoisseurs will marvel at hillsides known to bloom with lupine, columbine and corn lily. Daisy, Sierra wallflower, penstemon and spreading phlox add to the trailside bouquet.
And if lovely lakes, wildflowers and wonderful views aren’t sufficiently enticing, this hike offers something else: a walk into history. Near trail’s end is the site of the Great Sierra Mine, raison d’etre for the predecessor of Tioga Road, and an ambitious undertaking even by the standards of gold-fever crazed nineteenth century prospectors.
In 1881 the Great Sierra Mining Company hauled tons of machinery to Gaylor Lakes Basin and beyond and proceeded to drill and blast a 1,784-foot long main tunnel into the mountains back of upper Gaylor Lake.
For a few years the boomtown of Dana, complete with its own post office, thrived. Just north of Dana stood an even more remote town—Bennettville—headquarters of the mining company. After four futile years of digging, the miners abandoned efforts to uncover the rich vein of silver believed to lie buried deep below this rugged country.
A bit beyond upper Gaylor Lake, hikers will discover an old stone cabin, a rather well built structure with two-foot thick rock walls that dates from the 1880s. Other mine ruins are located near the cabin.
With so much scenery packed into a short hike, this trail is fairly popular (at least for a park pathway so far removed from Yosemite Valley). Get an early start to avoid the crowds.
Directions to trailhead: Head for Yosemite National Park’s eastside entry station on Tioga Pass Road. Park in the lot west of the station. You’ll share trailhead parking with hikers bound for Mt. Dana.
The hike: Begin with a very steep westward ascent switchbacking over slopes seasonally sprinkled with wildflowers. As you catch your breath, enjoy the in-your-face views of Mt. Dana to the east.
The path climbs past scattered, stunted whitebark pine and lodgepole pine. After 0.75-mile ascent that seems much longer, you’ll crest a rocky ridge and behold Gaylor Lakes and commanding Gaylor Peak to the east and a collection of Cathedral Peaks to the west.
Soon the path descends rapidly, losing some of that hard-won elevation, to the first (Middle) Gaylor Lake, located one mile from the trailhead. From the lake, the path follows the inlet creek on a mellow eastern ascent. A mile of walking through meadows brings you to Upper Gaylor Lake, situated at about 10,500 feet in elevation.
Admire the lake’s stirring backdrop—cone-shaped Gaylor Peak. Follow the trail around the left (north) side of the lake. A steep 0.1-mile ascent takes you to the old stone cabin and the site of the Great Sierra Mine. A bit farther up the trail lie several mine shafts. (Keep away).
Yosemite Hiking Trails >>
Hetch Hetchy | Mariposa Grove | Wawona Meadow | Glacier Point 4 Mile Trail
Glacier Point to Yosemite Valley | Half Dome Trail | Yosemite Falls | Vernal & Nevada Falls
May Lake | Cathedral Lakes | Clouds Rest | Gaylor Lakes| Lembert Dome | Lukens Lake
Merced Grove | Mirror Lake | Mono Pass | Mount Dana | North Dome | Taft Point
Ten Lakes | Tenaya Lake | Tuolumne Falls | Tuolumne Grove | Tuolumne Meadow |