Dimond O: Where to Camp When Yosemite is Full
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Dimond O: Where to Camp When Yosemite is Full
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You get up at 4 AM, stir the kids from slumber with much grumbling and moans of dismay, spend the next half hour pouring coffee down your gullet while yelling at your kids to hurry up and get dressed, pile into the pre-packed, pre-gassed car, hit the highway by 5 AM, drive for four hours and stop in Fresno, endure 100 plus degree temperatures to feed lunch to your family, wait while everyone takes their time peeing at a Shell station, hit the road again and drive another four hours until you finally come upon that glorious sign that reads, “Yosemite National Park: Entrance ½ mile,” and the kids start shrieking with joy.
Then you find yourself in a line of about 500 cars waiting to get in, get your entry fee money ready, keep your kids calm with threats of violence, finally reach the entrance after waiting three more hours in line and find a smaller, less pleasant sign that reads, “All Campgrounds Full.”
It’s about then that the top of your head figuratively blows off and your kids discover your previously hidden capacity for swearing.
Now what do you do?
Well, you can drive south for an additional three or four hours and hope there’s a campground open in Sequoia/Kings Canyon, but as it’s already after 5 PM, you’ll have to set up your camp in the dark… if you find a space. You can see if there are any vacancies at the lodges scattered around the entrance to Yosemite, but trust me, they’ll all be full, too, and even if they aren’t, they’re expensive. You can drive down the mountain and spend the night in Merced or Fresno, but that’s like settling for Detroit when you had your heart set on Disneyland.
So, where to camp?
I’m going to spill the beans here, and I may live to regret this, at least I might if you take my advice and get to the place before I do, filling it up and leaving me wondering where I’ll spend the night. I’ll take that chance.
A lovely meadow takes up about a third of the area, and beyond that is the middle fork of the Tuolumne River, here little more than a small, sparkling, crystal clear creek in summertime.
Unless obligated to for family reunions, I always camp at Dimond O when I go to Yosemite. It’s right outside the park with easy access to both the valley and Tioga Pass Road; at an elevation below 5,000 feet, I don’t get as winded as I do when I camp in Bridal Veil Creek Campground in Yosemite, and the nights don’t get nearly as cold, yet Dimond O is so remote that it rarely fills up, hardly any noisy motor homes stay there and it has a truly wilderness feel about it.
Another plus is the Evergreen Lodge a little over a mile up the road. They have cabins there for those who find camping repugnant (by the way, I don’t want to know you), but best of all, they have a bar, so while camping at Dimond O you can always take a jaunt up the road (it’s even within walking distance) for a nightcap or two if the desire strikes you.
Continuing on this road, you will eventually reach the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, a place that is perfect for day hikes where you can avoid the crowds of Yosemite Valley. Now a dammed reservoir that no longer serves any real purpose, Hetch Hetchy used to rival Yosemite Valley in its beauty before it filled with water, with towering walls of granite and placid, tumbling waterfalls. While the valley is still lovely in its way, you can no longer take a walk across the meadows lining the valley floor without the inconvenience of drowning.
So, now that you know all about Dimond O Campground and its environs, do me a big favor and never go there!