I have never hiked the main trail before in autumn, so I decided to hike solo up to Trail Camp for the day. I picked up a permit at the Visitors Center just after 8 am and was on the trail at 9 am.
When I was getting ready, I noticed Doug working outside the WPS so I went over to say, "Hello." It turned out that he was in the process of boarding up the windows of the store. (They were all boarded up when I came down at 6 PM). As noted in
Rubber Tips on Hiking Poles, a ranger came by and looked at the tips of my extended poles.
It was a beautiful day. I only wore a long sleeve polypropylene top most of the way. It was warm in the sun and cool in the shade. There were a lot of fall colors on the lower part of the trail, particularly at Bighorn Park/Outpost Camp. Yet there were still ice patches on the lower trail. Part of the cascades below Lone Pine Lake looked frozen and the left waterfall next to Outpost Camp looked like frozen icicles. Above Mirror Lake there were several patches of hard packed snow on parts of the trail that were in the shade. One section near Consultation Lake had only the perimeter rocks exposed.
It was nice to be able to take the time to hike the lower trail in daylight and see the fall colors. It also was great to see the reflection off of Lone Pine Lake at around 4:30 pm. I ran into somebody in the pass between the switchbacks above LPL and BP who only had a camera. He asked me about taking a picture of the summit, and I told him that he was not going to find it at Bighorn Park. He was about ready to turn back anyway (so I did not ask him if he knew that he was in the Whitney Zone).