Visited 7/29/2017 - Jeff and I loaded up our two chocolate Labradors, Summer and Skye and set out in our Jeep Wrangler for a full day of capturing the beauty of several California Lakes. When we came up on these two Lakes we said, "Wow! How beautiful - what a hidden gem." A few people were fishing on the left side of the road into the lake and so peaceful. Mosquito Lakes is located near Ebbett's Pass along Highway 4 at elevation 8,040 feet above sea level. These two shallow, reflective alpine lakes are especially popular with photographers and anglers who enjoy fishing for trout from the rocky shoreline. When conditions are just right and the winds are calm, the lakes turn into a glassy mirror-like surface, reflecting the blue sky, tall trees, granite boulders and picturesque summer cabins on the south shore of the lake. The two lakes drain into different watersheds—the western one into the North Fork Stanislaus River, the eastern into Pacific Creek and then into the North Fork Mokelumne River. There are two small U.S. Forest Service campgrounds at Mosquito Lakes, and some sites are on the actual historic Emigrant Trail. In the 1920s the Angels Camp Booster Club was looking for a site in the mountains for their “high jinks,” so Angels Camp druggist Harry Barden, dentist Charles Smith and wife Amelia, Dick Raggio, and others settled on Mosquito Lakes. Named “Camp Kilkare,” at that time the lakes were just shallow snowmelt lakes filled with mosquitoes. When the highway department realigned the old turnpike closer to the lake, Harry Barden and his cronies constructed a concrete dam between the lakes, raising them for swimming and fishing. A segment of the original Emigrant Road can be seen north of the present route. Immediately east of Mosquito Lakes is Pacific Summit, known as the “Second Summit” on the Big Tree-Carson Valley Turnpike. The 5,000-foot level was called the “First Summit” and Ebbetts Pass, the “Third Summit.” A spectacular view of the U-shaped Pacific Valley is visible below the summit, as are Raymond and Reynolds Peaks to the northeast. Another pull-out on the way to Pacific Valley offers a view north toward the Carson Pass area and Jeff Davis Peak and a geologic featured called the Nipple.
A bucket list of mine is to travel, document & photograph nearly 750 of the largest lakes in the State of California with a minimum of 50 surface acres. My husband, Jeff, our two water loving Chocolate Labradors, Summer & Skye joined me on several of these trips. This blog includes pictures I have taken & information I have gathered: size, elevation and any other unique facts. Enjoy and feel free to leave a comment along the journey & watch my blog for new lakes I have visited.
Monday, July 31, 2017
Mosquito Lakes - Alpine County, California
Visited 7/29/2017 - Jeff and I loaded up our two chocolate Labradors, Summer and Skye and set out in our Jeep Wrangler for a full day of capturing the beauty of several California Lakes. When we came up on these two Lakes we said, "Wow! How beautiful - what a hidden gem." A few people were fishing on the left side of the road into the lake and so peaceful. Mosquito Lakes is located near Ebbett's Pass along Highway 4 at elevation 8,040 feet above sea level. These two shallow, reflective alpine lakes are especially popular with photographers and anglers who enjoy fishing for trout from the rocky shoreline. When conditions are just right and the winds are calm, the lakes turn into a glassy mirror-like surface, reflecting the blue sky, tall trees, granite boulders and picturesque summer cabins on the south shore of the lake. The two lakes drain into different watersheds—the western one into the North Fork Stanislaus River, the eastern into Pacific Creek and then into the North Fork Mokelumne River. There are two small U.S. Forest Service campgrounds at Mosquito Lakes, and some sites are on the actual historic Emigrant Trail. In the 1920s the Angels Camp Booster Club was looking for a site in the mountains for their “high jinks,” so Angels Camp druggist Harry Barden, dentist Charles Smith and wife Amelia, Dick Raggio, and others settled on Mosquito Lakes. Named “Camp Kilkare,” at that time the lakes were just shallow snowmelt lakes filled with mosquitoes. When the highway department realigned the old turnpike closer to the lake, Harry Barden and his cronies constructed a concrete dam between the lakes, raising them for swimming and fishing. A segment of the original Emigrant Road can be seen north of the present route. Immediately east of Mosquito Lakes is Pacific Summit, known as the “Second Summit” on the Big Tree-Carson Valley Turnpike. The 5,000-foot level was called the “First Summit” and Ebbetts Pass, the “Third Summit.” A spectacular view of the U-shaped Pacific Valley is visible below the summit, as are Raymond and Reynolds Peaks to the northeast. Another pull-out on the way to Pacific Valley offers a view north toward the Carson Pass area and Jeff Davis Peak and a geologic featured called the Nipple.
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