In the morning there is just a little ice from the trickles above Trail Camp, mostly limited to the few switchbacks below the spring at 12,400'. Where the trickle crosses the trail, or where it runs along the trail here and there. Once the sun has warmed things up a bit, it melts. No problem to walk on dry rocks to the side, or in the water on the trail.
I have never mentioned it in any of my posts, because it is just not a big deal. It will be a bigger deal later in September or October, when an ice bulge forms near the end of the cables, not to melt during the day. Even then, though, it will be easy to walk around it on rocks.
The picture below was taken a few weeks ago, at 7 AM. I was with some flatlanders from Atlanta, and nobody even mentioned it. I'm sure that little bit of ice had melted an hour later.
<img src=http://www.ridgenet.net/~rockwell/ice%20on%20trail.jpg width=900>