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24 Lukens Lake (from White Wolf)

       25 May Lake

       26 Mount Hoffmann

       27 Olmsted Point

       28 Tenaya Lake

       Tuolumne Meadows

       29 Pothole Dome

       30 Tuolumne River

       31 Lower Cathedral Lake

       32 Cathedral Peak Shoulder

       33 Elizabeth Lake

       34 Soda Springs and Tuolumne Meadows

       35 Dog Lake

       36 Lembert Dome

       37 Lyell Canyon

       Tioga Pass

       38 Mono Pass

       39 Gaylor Lakes and Great Sierra Mine

       40 Mount Dana

       41 Dana Plateau

       42 Bennettville

       43 Gardisky Lake

       44 Slate Creek Fork of Lee Vining Creek

       45 Twenty Lakes Basin

       46 Conness Lakes

       Mono Lake and Vicinity

       47 Lee Vining Visitor Center to Mono Lake

       48 Lee Vining Creek

       49 South Tufa

       50 Panum Crater

       Hikes at a Glance

       About the Author

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      Acknowledgments

      The offer to write this book arrived from Wilderness Press at a perfect time: I had 6-month-old and 21⁄2-year-old daughters and was increasingly having fun exploring and reexploring the shorter trails in the Sierra. My husband, Douglas, and daughters, Eleanor and Sophia, supported me throughout the research for the hikes, obligingly following me down the trails or patiently waiting for me by a river play spot or pullout. Eleanor, just 5 now, has walked more than half the trails described here, and Sophia has accompanied me on nearly all of them, albeit in a backpack. Thanks as well to my sisters, Rebecca and Evelyn Wenk, and friends Louise Berben, Alisa Ellsworth, Cadie Hall, Charlotte Helvie, Candace and Eric Renger, Steven Thaw, John Williams, and others who also accompanied me on Yosemite walks over the last few years.

      I acknowledge the many park service interpretive rangers and park scientists with whom I have spoken while writing this book. Each conversation has expanded my knowledge about Yosemite and the preservation of its natural resources. I also acknowledge the many people who have written books about Yosemite natural history and human history, for the more I learn, the more I appreciate Yosemite and see its secrets as I walk down the trail. The most important author to acknowledge is the grandfather of Yosemite, John Muir; I reread several of his books as I began writing, for in them is buried an incredible richness of natural history and a conservation ethic that was far ahead of its time.

      The staff at Wilderness Press have been helpful and supportive throughout. As always I appreciate their flexibility in how I write the manuscript.

      The Very Best Short Hikes

      VERY BEST FOR LOCATION

3. Wapama Falls Spring wildflowers and waterfalls encircling Hetch Hetchy Reservoir
11. Mist Trail and Clark Point Waterfalls, cliffs, domes, tumbling water, and narrow amphitheaters
16. Four Mile Trail Never-ending, but evolving, views of Yosemite Falls and Yosemite Valley
45. Twenty Lakes Basin Seven named lakes, abundant flowers, and the steep northern faces of Mount Conness and North Peak

      VERY BEST FOR DESTINATION

13. Taft Point El Capitan views from an overhanging perch, staring down deep clefts
26. Mount Hoffmann Views in every direction, including

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