Weezerbot wrote:Hey everyone, some of you may have seen my post on the group page on Facebook but I thought I'd try here as well.
What's Facebook? Why in the sam hill would you do a durn fool thing like posting there first?
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Weezerbot wrote:A lot of the info I'm finding seems to be from pre-2010. About the only times that work for everyone this year would be a Friday-Sunday in mid-March, or a Friday-Sunday in mid-May. We'd drive up from the valley late Thursday night, hike down Friday, rest and explore Saturday, and hike back out Sunday. Is this enough time to explore around the area, play in the water and relax before turning around and climbing out Sunday?
Yes. 3 days & 2 nights is adequate. If you wanted to actually hike past Beaver Falls to the Colorado River and back you might want an extra day and night.
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Weezerbot wrote:Also, we have a couple experienced backpackers, a couple intermediate and a few noobies. Looks like its about 3-4 hours down and 4-5 hours out? Does this sound correct from you experienced folks?
Yes. You could lose some time in the Village with check in at the Tourist Office and a snack at the Cafe. Could be a little longer with photographs. Could be a little longer if the weather is hot. I might add an extra hour both ways for a "margin of error" cushion. In all due respect, from the description of your group you will definitely not be quicker than this.
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Weezerbot wrote:Weather is also a concern, we originally planned this for March but some are worried about it being too cold. A few of us are concerned about it being too hot in May. It would be great if we could spend a lazy Sunday morning around camp, maybe with more swimming before making the trek out without needing to get up at 7am. Anyone with weather experience during these two times?
The water seems to be about the same temperature. The difference will be the air temperature. The weather can change in a week or even mid-trip. I might consider early May, I would be nervous about late May. I remember a Grand Canyon Corridor trip in mid-May where it was 110degrees at Phantom Ranch then a cold front blew through and it was 34degrees at the Rim the next day. And I remember a March 26 when it hit 100degrees in Phoenix. There are no guarantees. Choose the best date for everybody. Hope for the best and prepare for the worst. If it's hot you hike in the real early morning (0darkhundred could mean hitting the trail at 0400 on Sunday if it's real hot)
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Weezerbot wrote:Finally, I'm concerned about camping and the crowds. I've read a report that there is some great camping if you are willing to make the additional trek to Beaver Falls, but then I've also read here that they assign you where you are camping and you don't get to choose? Can anyone confirm or deny? And does anyone have any advice on good camping spots away from people? I'm assuming March will be less crowded than May?
My understanding (and I could be wrong) is that if you are camping on the Reservation you have to camp in the huge campground between Havasu Falls and Mooney Falls. They don't actually "assign" you a campsite in the campground. It looks like there are a hundred or so campsites in an area of about 1 mile long and a quarter mile wide. It's a first come, first served arrangement. Some campsites in the campground are a lot better than others. If you go down past Beaver Falls and get off the Reservation and into the National Park, there might be a National Park Service Use Area. But I would doubt it. You would need to coordinate that with the Backcountry Office - not the Tribe.
5 I highly recommend Exploring Havasupai
http://www.amazon.com/Exploring-Havasup ... ikearizona Written by Greg Witt with awesome photos by HAZ member Dabreeze.
6 You know I'm being real serious when I don't use smilies
One summer I started off to visit for the first time the city of Los Angeles. I was riding with some friends from the University of New Mexico. On the way we stopped off briefly to roll an old tire into the Grand Canyon. While watching the tire bounce over tall pine trees, tear hell out of a mule train and disappear with a final grand leap into the inner gorge, I overheard the park ranger standing nearby say a few words about a place called Havasu, or Havasupai. A branch, it seemed, of the Grand Canyon.
What I heard made me think that I should see Havasu immediately, before something went wrong somewhere. My friends said they would wait. So I went down into Havasu—fourteen miles by trail—and looked things over. When I returned five weeks later I discovered that the others had gone on to Los Angeles without me.
That was fifteen years ago. And still I have not seen the fabulous city on the Pacific shore. Perhaps I never will. …
But Havasu. Once down in there it’s hard to get out. … I bought a slab of bacon and six cans of beans at the village post office, rented a large comfortable horse and proceeded farther down the canyon… to the ruins of an old mining camp five miles below the village. There I lived, mostly alone except for the ghosts, for the next thirty-five days.
There was nothing wrong with the Indians. The Supai are a charming cheerful completely relaxed and easygoing bunch, all one hundred or so of them. But I had no desire to live among them unless clearly invited to do so, and I wasn’t. Even if invited I might not have accepted. I’m not sure that I care for the idea of strangers examining my daily habits and folkways, studying my language, inspecting my costume, questioning me about my religion, classifying my artifacts, investigating my sexual rites and evaluating my chances for cultural survival.
So I lived alone.
Edward Abbey Desert Solitaire [196-7]
Anybody can make a hike harder. The real skill comes in making the hike easier.
life is like a roll of toilet paper. The closer it gets to the end, the faster it goes. Andy Rooney