We did this as a one-night backpacking trip on Oct 20-21. We started off at
Rogers Trough Trailhead. Joe and the others are correct in half the fun is the
drive in. It is necessary to at least have a high clearance vehicle and I would
not go without a 4WD.
A couple of friends and I did this in a two car shuttle. We parked my jeep at
the Woodbury Trailhead and my friends truck at the Rogers Trough Trailhead
where we started. The trailheads are 3 miles apart, and trust me when I say
this, after coming out the JF Trail at Woodbury Trailhead, you aint a gonna
wanna walk 3 more miles up some very steep hills to the Rogers Trough parking
area! If you do this in a loop, use a two car shuttle. I also must recommend
starting at Rogers Canyon and ending on JF Trail. Its easier.
So, there are two descriptions on this site regarding these two trails. One for
getting to the cliff dwellings via Rogers Canyon Trail, and the other coming in
via the Woodbury Trailhead on the JF Trail. Both are great write-ups, so Ill
just tell of my experience of doing this in a loop.
We started out about 10:45 am on the Rogers Canyon Trail. It being
mid-October, I think we were among the first hikers out in the Supers this
season. They must have had a really good summer, because the trail was very
overgrown. The water situation is apparently run-off based and not
spring-based; as it was dry as a pop tart back there. I hiked Rogers Canyon in
April one year and there was plenty of water in the drainage. Never
underestimate your need for water, and Ill touch on this point a little later
on. Also, I would like to recommend long pants and perhaps even a long-sleeved
shirt. There were many a cat claw acacia gauntlets to run through on the trail,
which left me sort of, well, pretty bloody.
There is a really nice place to take a break about half to maybe 3/4 of the way
to Angel Basin. Its a clearing with a campfire ring made of stones and some
logs to have a sit down on.
After this, youll climb over a little pass and down in to the drainage area.
There is a spot where you might lose the trail if you start going up the wash
rather than crossing it. If you find yourself looking for the trail, look over
to the other side of the wash and you will see it climbing up the bank. The
trail makes a gradual turn west. Look up to the right and youll see some
caves. In there are the ruins. If youre camping, go a bit past this and youll
find some great places to camp. There is a little area under some oak just a
little past the ruins, then there are some more campsites along the trail a
little further (which is where we camped) and then there is Angel Basin. You
cant miss this, as it is a large meadow. Beautiful area. Breathtaking rock
formations, excellent stargazing at night. I think its a magical place.
We pitched camp and went to explore the ruins. My friends climbed all the way
to the upper ruin, but I was not confident enough for that. The last time I was
here, there were bits and pieces of broken pottery scattered around. I didnt
see any this time. Please, folks, just leave it be. Dont take anything. Its
fun to have artifacts in your collections, I know, but it spoils it for the rest
of us who would like to enjoy seeing traces of pre-historic human creativity
right there at the site. The ruins are cool, but its neat to see other stuff
there as well. If you want Indian pottery, go buy it. You can get some really
nice, unbroken objects in the art galleries around the state. You will help the
artist by making a purchase, so its a win-win situation.
Back at camp, I discovered a small tarantula making its way toward my backpack.
I made one of my companions adios it because I am arachnophobic. I had the
willies the rest of the evening.
The next morning, we got going about 7:55am. We hiked up the JF Trail on a
gradual climb to Tortilla Pass. This was a challenge because of the overgrowth,
but it may get better with use throughout the season. Once you start switch
backing up to the pass, it clears out and you have some terrific views of
everything around you. You can even see the top of Four Peaks if you look
toward the northwest.
Once you go over Tortilla Pass (it was not marked when we were there) you begin
to descend. You will descend for a long, long time. The trail is pretty much
scree, so hiking poles are a great help. The trail levels out for a little
while at one point and there are some shady spots to rest. It was here I ran out
of water, and I lost a pin on my backpack (Kelty Tioga for Women). Great. We
managed to fix it with a small substitute part, so I didnt have to ditch the
pack
You bottom out at Randolph Canyon Wash. At one point, I must warn the reader,
it looks as if the trail goes into the wash and keeps going from there. It does
not. Look for the trail going on straight ahead. Like I said before, it was
overgrown and sometimes hard to see the trail.
The trail will lead to a Windmill, this is the Woodbury Windmill. We had a copy
of Hikers Guide to the Superstition Wilderness by Jack Carlson and Elizabeth
Stewart. This is a very good and valuable book, and it saved our lives. If we
hadnt had it, we would still be out there looking for the Woodbury Trailhead.
Un fortunately, though, there isnt a description of the JF Tail coming to the
Woodbury Trailhead, only going from it. So we had to read backwards. The map
didnt include the Woodbury Windmill; it only referenced it in the narrative.
One of my companions read the map as it was and it looked like we were about 2-3
miles off course. The windmill on the map is the windmill at JF Ranch. We
didnt know where we were! We had no water. It was hot out. That is a very bad
thing. It was the very first time I have ever run out of water on a trail. Here
is where I will remind you that you should never underestimate your need for
water. No food + no water + lost = deep in the hurt locker.
We walked to the Windmill and I was hoping there was water there, as what are
windmills for? There are no trail indicators at the windmill and the trails are
not obvious at all. We walked on a trail past the windmill, as there were
Cairns. After a while, we thought it felt wrong and so we went back to the
Windmill. There we found a tank with a trough and a water pipe with water
coming out. We descended upon it with wild abandon. Like those movies you see
where someone is lost is the Sahara and comes across an oasis? I saw a trail
heading south and I thought that it was what we wanted as the map indicated that
we walk south from the windmill. I was right; we found the crossroads of the
Coffee Flat Trail and the JF Trail. We were about a half a mile to the
trailhead.
The thing to remember is, at the windmill, keep going south. From the trail
sign, it looks like you can only go east or west, but the trail to the west
curves due south. The trail leads up an old road and once at the top, you will
see the parking lot. Shangri-la.
I apologize that I dont have any photos of the windmill area and the direction
to go, but I had run out of battery juice in the camera. Its a Canon digital
Elph.
Also, I dont care how heavy it is, bring lots of water. Better to have too
much.
I bought a Magellan GPS this afternoon.
- Oct 22 2001 Desertboots