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    Lasting Adventures

    5.0 (27 reviews)
    Open 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

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    Lasting Adventures - Half Dome 8,846 feet - Hiking Near Me
    Lasting Adventures - 4 day backpacking trip Half dome with Guide Isaac V - Hiking Near Me
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    Chris P.

    Will and James did an amazing job with our four day backpacking trip up from glacier point to half dome. They were really attentive to our group and we had an really fun time. Whether it's campfire stories, sing a longs, riddles, swimming in the river or making the best pancakes this side of of the Mississippi, they always made our trip fun and inclusive. Felt really safe and supported, got to see yosemite in a way that few people have. Thanks so much for an amazing time guys! The company is on such a great mission to get kids into the wilderness. Inspiring.

    Elizabeth B.

    My boyfriend and I had a wonderful time! Our guides Matt and Brando were friendly, attentive, knowledgable about Yosemite and the outdoors, and also supportive. The views and mountains are picturesque and the experience is one for the books! Everything was great, except for the food and coffee. Luckily we brought our own snacks. They accommodated my lactose problem ok but the coffee and food were all cheap and low grade stuff that neither of us found filling or good. An adult trip full of early mornings and exertion where you need a higher caloric intake should be paired with filling meals, protein bars and name brand coffee. With the amount you spend we expected this as part of the deal. It would have made the experience even better.

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    Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad - Duck purchased at the kids depot which offered

    Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad

    4.5(301 reviews)
    31.9 km

    We really enjoyed the Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad train ride in Fish Camp, CA…read more Be sure to purchase your tickets in advance. The admission cost is $32 for adults and $19 for children ages (3-12). You'll enjoy a 45 minute scenic journey through the woods along the historic tracks once used by lumberjacks. You'll learn about the areas rich history by conductor Darrell who was great!! Give yourselves enough time to use restrooms or to purchase lunchbox for the ride. We ended up having lunch after the train ride in snack bar and ordered two chili dogs, a pretzel and IPA Lagunitas beer. The food was surprisingly good. We sat in their outdoor picnic tables. Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad, has a gift shop, snack bar and Gold Panning for kids to enjoy. Seating is first come, first serve. Check it out! Happy Yelping :)

    Really cool train ride! It was very peaceful going through the woods in this train, and the…read moreconductor was extremely knowledgeable. It doesn't go super far, as the train moves fairly slowly, but it's a very immersive experience. If there's one thing I would have changed, it's that the conductor was very talkative; while it was great to have the information, it would have been nice to have a better balance of enjoying the calming ambiance and knowledge sharing.

    Photos
    Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad - Photo courtesy of Visit Yosemite Madera County.

    Photo courtesy of Visit Yosemite Madera County.

    Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad - Photo courtesy of Visit Yosemite Madera County.

    Photo courtesy of Visit Yosemite Madera County.

    Yosemite Mountain Sugar Pine Railroad - Sing a long with Sugar Pine!

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    Sing a long with Sugar Pine!

    Yosemite National Park - A fiery red Checkerspot butterfly (I think it's a Variable Checkerspot) along the Swinging Bridge Trail!

    Yosemite National Park

    4.6(1.4k reviews)
    0.7 km

    I first saw Yosemite in Ansel Adams photos. I was awestruck by the beauty of the interplay of…read morelight and shadow. Experiencing Yosemite in person was amazing. Going on a weekday in the spring we found spots without humans. It was magical listening to the sound of the wind blowing through the trees, feeling the cold air on my skin and breathing in the fresh air. It was quiet enough to hear birds singing. We visited in late May and for the first time Tioga Road was open. There was still snow on the mountain tops and we found snow on the ground. I loved grabbing a handful and tossing some snowballs. Maggie made a cute snowman. The melting snow fed lovely waterfalls. I loved seeing and listening to the water crashing into the land, Maggie also found Snow Flowers which she last saw as a child. Yosemite was an amazing experience for all the senses. Look forward to visiting again next year. "You don't make a photograph just with a camera. You bring to the act of photography all the pictures you have seen, the books you have read, the music you have heard, the people you have loved." ― Ansel Adams

    So many thoughts... My relation to Yosemite Valley began…read moreabout 64 years ago. In the Cub Scouts, I think. Ralph John loaded a squad of loud, wiggling, excited boys into his blue Plymouth station wagon for the 250 mile drive from Sylmar to Yosemite. No Interstate 5. Valencia was a carrot field, Magic Mountain an oak studded pasture for the Newhall Family cattle operation. Thank you Ralph, thank you Lord Baden-Powell. My most memorable trip, my intro to modern tourism, was when Ted Germond and I took two days of November Coast Guard Liberty from the USCGC Blackhaw, drove from San Francisco one afternoon, arrived at night, pitched camp in the center of Yosemite Valley, covered our sleeping bags with a tarp, woke at dawn under that frost-crusted tarp. We threw that crunching canvas off, shook off the frost, and threw our gear into Ted's Land Cruiser. He took one photo of the valley. We drove back to San Francisco, a handful of photos proving the journey. Aside from my tourism, I have known members of the Southern Sierra Miwok Tribe, keepers of Yosemite Valley and the surrounding area for millennia until gold miners, livestock grazers and the U.S. Government arrived. Priscilla and her husband built a very successful real estate enterprise in Oakhurst, deciding their children needed a better education in a bigger city. I got to know Priscilla through her daughters, was accepted by the family, caring for the sons and meeting The Matriarch, another very sucessful real estate entrepreneur in Southern California. Never a word, never a peep, never a hint the female side of the family were Native American Indigenous people until I was much older. Too much shame. So much taken from the Guardians of Yosemite Valley. May 22, 2026. The Friday of Memorial Day weekend. A perfect set of days to stay away from 21st century Yosemite. We knew this. I chose to cross Yosemite returning home to Phoenix. As our trip home from Coastal Washington began jelling, I checked several times to see if California 120 over Tioga Pass was clear of snow. At first, Tioga was closed, then announced open for the start of The Season, 2026. We breakfasted light at the Angel's Camp Best Western, started early, entered the park with very short lines and rolled for Tioga Pass. We did not enter the valley. Tourist aspects are so slick, capitalized and bussed, we did not choose to deviate from Cal 120. There are many burned areas from recent fires. Fear not! Intrepid sightseer. With Miwok vegetation management ending in the 19th century, the Gifford Pinchot ethos of 1912; the Environmetal Movement, no fire, no tree cutting; plus drought, higher temps and lower humidity. Expect immense burned areas across the Sierra Nevada. Prescribed fire was brought back to The Valley by Harold Biswell in the 1960's, carried strongly in the 1990's and 2000's. Many notable and positive changes are visible in forest ecosystems where fire has been laid down in moderate temperatures and humidities. I note one thing as I close. The turnouts dor the first paved roads to this region were chosen for their breath taking vistas. The forests have grown as forests do. We the tourists in our climate-controlled, musically diverse, internet-connected pods see only tree trunks these days. Lots of tree trunks. Bring Back the ancient and 20th Century Vistas! Yes Park Service, a few trees must go. But, my wife and I stopped near a deck of Incense Cedar logs at one turnout and got a view worth more than Xanterra's cash flow. We need those vistas - to honor the Miwok and their cathedral; the vision of Frederick Law Olmstead and the National Park Service's first Landscape Architects. Most of all, we members of Our Family Human, traveling here from across our planet need those humbling, magnificent, Creator-realizing views to be properly set in our places. To understand our puny, self important sparks in time and space mean nothing at all to geology, nature, and the endless seasons. We can only take care of our beautiful world generation by heneration. Said the Southern Sierra Miwok.

    Photos
    Yosemite National Park - ***AMAZING PLACE***

    ***AMAZING PLACE***

    Yosemite National Park - Sweat lodge

    Sweat lodge

    Yosemite National Park - Our Half Dome hike started at 4:45 AM

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    Our Half Dome hike started at 4:45 AM

    Cook's Meadow Loop - Yosemite Creek runs along part of the trail - the water was so clear!

    Cook's Meadow Loop

    4.5(10 reviews)
    0.4 km

    We took the Sentinel Meadow/Cook's Meadow Loop on our second day since it was an easier hike (~2…read moremiles). We drove around the Yosemite Valley area too: stopping by the Tunnel View of El Capitan & bottom view, Happy Isles Bridge near the Half Dome, Bridalveil Falls, and view of the Yosemite Valley. This Sentinel Meadow/Cook's Meadow Loop isn't "marked," but there is a path for you to walk. During winter/off-season, some areas on the path have black ice, so be careful. This loop gives you different vantage point of Yosemite Falls (Upper & Lower), takes you through the old Yosemite Village (last standing building is the Chapel), and decent views of all the granite rock mountains. We also took the Lower Yosemite Falls trail to get a closer look at the waterfall. It's an easy trail that isn't too long. Restrooms are available near the Yosemite Lodge/Lower Yosemite Falls trail.

    We arrived into the park on a Thursday at about 7:30am and parked at the lot in front of Swinging…read moreBridge to do this loop (with Lower Yosemite Falls added one easily). Since park access is restricted because of COVID-19, there were plenty of parking spaces for us. This is a very easy hike - I'd label it more of a causal walk. A lot of this trail is shaded, only the portion between Sentinel Bridge on Southside Drive back to to Swinging Bridge parking lot was very exposed and sunny/hot. This walk is great because you get to see a lot of things - Swinging Bridge, Cook's Meadow, Yosemite Falls, Sentinel Bridge, the chapel, Merced River, and views of all the granite giants like Half Dome. We took our time, and Including the Lower Yosemite Falls Trail, it took us about 1 hour and 45 minutes. Along the wood boardwalk (which we had to ourselves), my husband spied a bear casually walking along the meadow. My son found some baby ducklings in a pond just off the Merced River too.

    Photos
    Cook's Meadow Loop - Yosemite Creek runs along part of the trail - the water was so clear!

    Yosemite Creek runs along part of the trail - the water was so clear!

    Cook's Meadow Loop - Yosemite Creek runs along part of the trail - the water was so clear!

    Yosemite Creek runs along part of the trail - the water was so clear!

    Cook's Meadow Loop

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    Sierra Cider - Gummy Worm Cider

    Sierra Cider

    4.9(37 reviews)
    34.2 km

    We stopped by Sierra Cider right at opening (12pm) as part of our day trip before heading into…read moreYosemite for my birthday, and it was such a fun and refreshing visit! The owner and staff were super welcoming and walked us through all their offerings, which made the experience even better. We kicked things off with a cider flight--our favorites were Early Harvest and Graveyard. Early Harvest was simple, crisp, and just sweet enough, while Graveyard reminded me of a Scottish smoky cider aged in whiskey barrels. I do wish there were a few more sweet options overall and possibly a current up to date list of what's on tap somewhere online, but everything was well-crafted and flavorful! To cool off, we grabbed a cider slushy (highly recommend!) and wandered the property. We visited the goats, strolled through the apple trees, and made friends with their big fluffy Pyrenees who was living his best life napping in the shade. I picked up a bottle of Early Harvest and a t-shirt to bring back to DFW. It was the perfect stop--relaxed, local, and a great way to start the afternoon before heading into Yosemite. After our tasting, we walked through some of the apple trees, visited the cutest goats, and made friends with their big, lazy Pyrenees dog who was living his best life soaking up attention. I picked up a bottle of Early Harvest and a t-shirt to bring back to DFW--both worth it! Such a charming little spot--relaxed, scenic, and just the right detour before Yosemite!

    Great cider, great vibes, great place for the family…read more The cider they have is very good. The tasting flight I got was primarily focused on the drier varieties and they did a great job of making well balanced, delicious ciders that let the quality of the apples shine through. The grounds are very cute. They have a petting zoo and "ghost town" area that are perfect for small children or photo ops. All of the animals were very well behaved and friendly. You can also pick apples or flowers for a very reasonable fee. They have an area of food trucks and today Yosemite Pizza was there. The pizza was great and went well with the cider. The staff was kind and helpful. If you are in the area and want a cold cider, or a place to let the little one explore a bit this is an excellent choice.

    Photos
    Sierra Cider - Motherlode Imperial Hard Cider

    Motherlode Imperial Hard Cider

    Sierra Cider - Our tasting room built from an old shipping container!

    Our tasting room built from an old shipping container!

    Sierra Cider - Dope merch!

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    Dope merch!

    Lasting Adventures - hiking - Updated June 2026

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