Well, Jim, I am planning on going over there over July 13,14,15 driving back on the 16th. Will be in the high country if there is access. This will be a solo but you are welcome to join me. Not sure which trail system yet. Have to look at my map and plan a loop trip.
Hmm, doubt I can make that. According to the fire's BAER page on the inciweb, it will probably be fully open by then. I prefer the mid to low elevation stuff, generally below 8000'. I would like to make it back there, but monsoon season is not the time of year I would like to go. I prefer reaching the ponderosa pine when I did in 2010, late spring early summer dry season, or in the late summer early fall. Generally, I want warm but dry conditions. The summer flowers would be nice, but I expect they aren't really blooming until August.
Might go in at Rain Creek, need to see what connector trails I can use to make some sort of loop. I've been out of the Sandy Point, Bursum TH several times and really don't have any interest unless to survey the burn damage. Monsoons can be pretty nasty over there, but mostly just make driving some of the roads a mess. I would prefer not to bake, and I like the lush look if it's been raining. It'll be too early for flowers and I haven't seen much over there unless at higher elevations as part of the understory in the forest.
Lifeis not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty & well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, totally worn out & proclaiming,"Wow What a Ride!"
@RWStormI know...I guess it started out as a very small fire and just blew up on them overnight. Now they're having to scramble to save structures in town.... Oh well, if they treat this one like the Whitewater Fire, I guess we'll have some pretty commanding views from the AZ/NM Border all the way to Central NM.... plz:
Lifeis not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty & well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, totally worn out & proclaiming,"Wow What a Ride!"
Great Photography. Alot of those photos were very good. The one before that is a nice photo of what a Backburn looks like...
Lifeis not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty & well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, totally worn out & proclaiming,"Wow What a Ride!"
I shared that one on my facebook page. It's incredible!
----------------------------------- Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.- Barack Obama
I shared that one on my facebook page. It's incredible!
Wendy, do you know how much of the area we hiked last fall has been affected by this fire? Just curious. I can't read the maps that people keep posting. The print is too small.
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
azbackpackr wrote:Wendy, do you know how much of the area we hiked last fall has been affected by this fire? Just curious. I can't read the maps that people keep posting. The print is too small.
It looked to me like the entire area we hiked in past the top of the catwalk is in the fire zone. Of course, we don't know how intense the fire was in those sections yet. This link should get you to a map you can read: http://www.inciweb.org/incident/map/2870/1/
----------------------------------- Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.- Barack Obama
Lifeis not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty & well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, totally worn out & proclaiming,"Wow What a Ride!"
azbackpackr wrote:Wendy, do you know how much of the area we hiked last fall has been affected by this fire? Just curious. I can't read the maps that people keep posting. The print is too small.
It looked to me like the entire area we hiked in past the top of the catwalk is in the fire zone. Of course, we don't know how intense the fire was in those sections yet. This link should get you to a map you can read: http://www.inciweb.org/incident/map/2870/1/
I can't see a thing on that map, especially not creek names.
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
Hmmm... Try looking at the rough permiter on the google map on the main incident page: http://www.inciweb.org/incident/2870/ If you find the Catwalk Road, you'll see where we were hiking.
----------------------------------- Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.- Barack Obama
Usually I will save the pertinent map then blow it up using Windows or a photo program. Only problem is sometimes the clarity is poor from the resolution posted so ya can't fix that by enlarging it.
The BAER mapping is better for the bad zones, which looks to be at the heads of Whitewater Creek, etc. Lipsey fried, so I wonder if the Apache Fire cabin survived.
Again, glad I've seen a lot of it before it burned.
So glad that I was able to finally backpack the whole Crest trail last year. We made it to Hummingbird Saddle a bunch of times (great place) but hail, thunder and lightning turned us back early on previous trips. I can't imagine (or want to see) those huge old growth pines looking like burnt match sticks. I never thought that could happen to such tall and stately trees but 60mph winds and fire did them in. Its sad that 100's of years of tree growth was killed in a matter of hours (maybe minutes) which would be the equivalent of a split second of those trees lives. I know its nature but this one really hurts. Any unburnt Crest trails left in the Southwest now?