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Hiking adventure proves it’s a dog’s life


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Aj spends her 12th birthday exploring the Mount Rose Wilderness. Photos/Kathryn Reed

Aj spends her 12th birthday exploring the Mount Rose Wilderness. Photos/Kathryn Reed

By Kathryn Reed

RENO – AJ’s birthday hike was no piece of cake.

This 12-year-old – that’s 84 in human years – is much sprier than her much younger mommies. As if we needed a reminder. What was a 9.2-mile loop for us had to have been at least 1½ times that amount for the dog. She can be like the Energizer Bunny – she just keeps going and going and going.

This is what she lives for – being in the outdoors, romping in new terrain, sniffing all those delicious scents that never cross my olfactory senses and quenching her thirst from pristine water flowing from higher elevations.

When we first planned this for Feb. 14, snow had not fallen in a while and the U.S. Forest Service said the trail was free of any white stuff. Naturally, it snowed the week we were going. But because it is much lower in elevation we figured we would be OK in just hiking boots. And we were, despite going down on the slick snow a few times. Poles would have been a tremendous help, but they were in the garage.

The Jones-Whites-Thomas creeks trail system could keep us entertained for days.

It doesn't take long for pretty views to unfold.

It doesn’t take long for pretty views to unfold.

This loop has a little bit of everything. We went in a counter clockwise rotation based on the advice of visitor center staff. From the parking lot it is 0.6 miles to the start of the loop.

From there the terrain is similar to being in the Lake Tahoe Basin, but more barren. Plenty of pines loom overhead, but it’s not dense. It doesn’t take long before we are climbing. This provides spectacular views of far off mountains as well as parts of Reno. Behind us the slopes of Mount Rose are all covered in white.

A segment of this trail is open to mountain bikers. All were courteous to let us know they were approaching.

Farther along we come across some downed trees that require scrambling to get over. AJ, showing off her part Greyhound agility skills, leaps across the debris as though it’s a fun obstacle course.

Plenty of water is running in the creeks so AJ didn’t need any bottled water. She even trotted across logs to get to the other side. Her people were a little less confident in their ability to balance.

While we made it across the water without getting wet, there are four stream crossings that in a more typical winter or heavy spring runoff might prove to be a bit more challenging.

As we start a long trek west we know at some point we need to head south to get back to our starting point. But we’re in a canyon and the terrain to our left looks steep. We didn’t really descend that much, did we? Won’t there be some sort of cutoff to get us back without going up?

Mount Rose Ski Area, in the distance, is visible at different points.

Mount Rose Ski Area, in the distance, is visible at different points.

Up we go. And that’s when the snow goes from spotty to consistent. Luckily, others had gone before us. While there had been good trail markers, in the snow we would have had no clue where to go without others first “paving” the way.

At times we punch through to thigh-high snow. It becomes slow going. But it is still so incredibly beautiful that our whining is short-lived.

We make it to the top – again. More views, more picture taking. It’s an easy descent, but by this time we are getting chilled and fatigued. (At one point I was in shirtsleeves.) AJ on the other hand looks like she could keep going, right until she curls up on the blanket in the back of the Jeep.

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Getting there: The scenic route from South Lake Tahoe – go east on Highway 50. Turn left on Highway 28 at the top of Spooner Summit. Turn right onto the Mount Rose Highway in Incline Village. There is a sign for the Jones Creek trail system on the left. This is well beyond Mount Rose Ski Resort. The visitor center is on the right; drive a little farther to the trailhead.

The less scenic route from South Lake Tahoe would be to drive to Carson City and then come up Mount Rose Highway from the other side.

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Comments

Comments (11)
  1. Steven says - Posted: March 8, 2015

    Why weren’t the dogs on a leash ?
    I can see there are signs at the trailhead that says “dogs on leash only ”
    The visitor center staff probably told you of the dog leash rule also.

  2. Steven says - Posted: March 8, 2015

    Why weren’t the dogs on leashes ? Did you not see the “Dogs on leash only” sign at the trailhead ?
    Did the visitor center staff tell you to keep your dogs on leash ?

  3. Cranky Gerald says - Posted: March 8, 2015

    Steven

    Saying it once should have been sufficient, don’t you think?

  4. Mr mustache says - Posted: March 8, 2015

    @steven because in tahoe k9s have the right of way. :)

  5. nature bats last says - Posted: March 9, 2015

    Yesterday at the baseball fields in SLT for baseball tryouts there were three different people there with dogs. To get onto the fields every access has a no dogs allowed sign. How is it that these humans think they are the exception to the posted rules? It is baffeling to me. It was torture to the dogs that were pulling at their leashes to go play with the balls being thrown everywhere. Not one of the dogs was a service dog so there was no excuse to have them there. It sure would be nice if dog owners followed the posted rules or if the officials asked these people to leave the premises. I felt sorry for the dogs. Talk about animal abuse….

  6. Al Terego says - Posted: March 9, 2015

    I’ve been hoping to see a response to Steven’s question about the author’s supercilious decision to allow her dogs to be off leash in an area clearly designated to be an area where dogs are required to be on leashes. The rules are in place for many reasons and the author’s arrogance in that regard should be questioned.

  7. AROD says - Posted: March 9, 2015

    Leashes? We don’t need no stinking leashes!

  8. lou pierini says - Posted: March 9, 2015

    Maybe it was a ADA dog.

  9. maisiedog says - Posted: March 9, 2015

    Leashes are typically only required at trailheads and in sensitive ecological areas or your fed, state, county parks. Dogs are permitted off leash in all CA wilderness areas as long as they are under voice control. There are of course those few that ruin it for the rest of the responsible dog owners. Just like some people shouldn’t breed other people, some people shouldn’t own dogs. Personally I’d rather encounter dogs on the trail over a bunch of idiots cutting switch backs, carving their names in Aspens, smoking and worse yet building camp fires out in the backcountry.

  10. Butters says - Posted: March 10, 2015

    The sign in the 3rd picture clearly reads “Dogs on Lea” and I’m guessing the 2 letters cut off are “sh”

  11. Al Terego says - Posted: March 10, 2015

    My apologies to the author. I’ve just read that dogs are required to be on leashes within one mile of the trail heads in wilderness areas and under voice control farther away from the trail head. Your adventures that day had you farther away from the trail head.
    Wilderness. net was the source I checked for that information.