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Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino Canyon - 13 members in 24 triplogs have rated this an average 4.1 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Dec 26 2022
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50 female
 Joined Sep 18 2009
 Tucson, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 26 2022
GrottoGirlTriplogs 1,634
Hiking8.18 Miles 888 AEG
Hiking8.18 Miles   5 Hrs   7 Mns   2.29 mph
888 ft AEG   1 Hour   33 Mns Break
 
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1st trip
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Jan 29 2022
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 Guides 1
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 Triplogs 266

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 29 2022
JackluminousTriplogs 266
Hiking15.48 Miles 2,568 AEG
Hiking15.48 Miles   5 Hrs   28 Mns   2.83 mph
2,568 ft AEG
 
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1st trip
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Glorious trip to Hutch’s Pool via East Fork. Met a couple buddies at the pool who came up from Sabino. It was dreadfully windy for them but pleasant for me, sheltered by the front range.

This is by far my favorite route to the Pool. Didn’t see a soul past Sycamore Reservoir on the way in.
 
Jan 24 2022
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 Guides 93
 Routes 397
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 Triplogs 4,124

49 male
 Joined Jun 20 2003
 Tucson, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 24 2022
fricknaleyTriplogs 4,124
Hiking14.55 Miles 2,589 AEG
Hiking14.55 Miles   4 Hrs   59 Mns   2.92 mph
2,589 ft AEG10 LBS Pack
 no routes
Partners none no partners
first time out to Hutch's Pool in a long time and it was indeed a beautiful site to see. Sycamore Reservoir was flowing nicely. Lot of water everywhere on a perfect, crisp, blue bird winter day.
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May 01 2021
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 Guides 10
 Routes 673
 Photos 7,281
 Triplogs 4,660

67 female
 Joined Nov 17 2008
 phoenix, az
Azt #11 & #12, AZ 
Azt #11 & #12, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 01 2021
trekkin_geckoTriplogs 4,660
Backpack34.00 Miles 7,521 AEG
Backpack34.00 Miles2 Days         
7,521 ft AEG16 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
these two passages have been on the list, partly because john would now be finished with 1-19
i love the sky island terrain, and most of the trails would be new to me
drove to gordon hirabayashi and got going around 0700 saturday morning
a nice downhill to begin, with the realization that we had a lot of elevation gain ahead of us
stopped at hutch's pool to filter and snack, then headed up west fork
john flushed out a nice sized coatimundi somewhere along here
there was a little bit of poison ivy on this section
a moderate grade on good trail until romero pass
good views, but a lot of burned area and very windy there
mount lemmon trail is steep - a challenge all the way to wilderness of rocks
we had planned to camp right at 15 miles, but someone was in the best spot so we went on
found a good campsite near lemmon creek around 1500 and set up
i read, john napped, we filtered water, cooked dinner and were in our tents before dark :lol:
a lot of aeg saturday
up early sunday, coffee and breakfast while breaking camp
usually our second day is shorter - not this time
set out around 0700 again with an uphill to marshall gulch
nice downhill, then the walk through summerhaven (where nothing was open) to the start of oracle ridge
it was extremely windy sunday, with gusts pushing us sideways and blowing up dust and soot
this section was badly burned, and the trail was rocky
that, and a lot of up and down along the ridgeline made for slower going
passed by rice peak, and didn't go up due to time constraints
no water along here either, and we carried extra from camp
the tank was pretty green, but we filtered a liter anyway
the last three miles of this stretch is on the very smooth cody trail, gradually downhill
finished up just before 1500, about an 18 mile day
john's wife janie was waiting for us, and shuttled us back to my car
a big shout out and thank you to janie for making this combo possible
the shuttle is very time consuming, driving all the way around mt. lemmon
another two sections, making 15 for me in just the past year :)
i have a few gaps to fill in on the southern passages
i've enjoyed tagging along with john on these
random thoughts:
hard to describe how much of the santa catalinas burned in the bighorn fire last year
probably 30 of our 34 miles were burned to some degree
always good to practice backpacking
i would have traded my book for a chair
cinched up my quilt correctly and was toasty warm all night
it's nice to have a light pack but there are trade offs
we want to start doing some longer trips
great trip with john again - thank you
good times!
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Arizona Cypress
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hazhole
  1 archive
May 01 2021
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 Guides 1
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68 male
 Joined Mar 16 2008
 chandler,az
Azt #11 & #12, AZ 
Azt #11 & #12, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 01 2021
johnlpTriplogs 5,208
Backpack34.20 Miles 7,521 AEG
Backpack34.20 Miles2 Days         
7,521 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Big two day backpack. Started Saturday morning at the Gordon Hirabayashi trailhead on AZT segment #11 and finished at the American Flag trailhead at the end of AZT segment #12 Sunday afternoon.
A lot of beautiful scenery and a lot of burn. I prefer to focus on the good. Even in the worst burn areas there were wildflowers and signs of regrowth especially oaks.
We camped by Lemmon Creek in the Wilderness of Rocks the first night. There were enough pine needles covering the charcoal from the fire to make our campsite pleasant. Most of this area survived the fire pretty well. The top half of Romero canyon burned pretty hot. Not much left.
Sunday morning we left camp bound for Summerhaven and segment 12. Lots of nice scenery through here. Once on Oracle Ridge #12 the burn returned. The top half of this segment got hit hard by the fire, but again regrowth is already starting.
All through both segments there was a nice scattering of wildflowers. More than expected. We didn't see a lot of wildlife though I almost stepped on a coati sleeping on the side of the trail a ways above Hutch's Pool.
The bottom half of Oracle Ridge is in good shape and the last few miles were on smooth tread.
Tough but rewarding two days. We pushed pretty hard for a couple of boomers. Good times. Thanks Kelly. :)
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“Good people drink good beer.” Hunter S Thompson
 
Oct 11 2019
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 Guides 11
 Routes 123
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62 male
 Joined Jul 14 2011
 Tucson, AZ
AZT In A Day 2019, AZ 
AZT In A Day 2019, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Oct 11 2019
Mountain_RatTriplogs 257
Backpack39.82 Miles 9,646 AEG
Backpack39.82 Miles2 Days   9 Hrs   7 Mns   
9,646 ft AEG47 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Nice 3 day getaway to knock off a section for AZT In A Day. The section I picked began at Cathedral Jct, below and east of Romero Pass, and ended at the Oracle Ridge TH (about 11.5 mi & 4,000 ft), so I set off a day early in order to camp at my launch point. Since this trip would become multi-day, I decided that a third day would top it off nicely.

Day 1:
Started around 10:30, with 5 liters and a heavy pack. I expected to see much more water, after some heavy rains last month, but I crossed stream only once through the entire canyon. This made day 1 tough, as I hit camp with under 2 liters to get me through the night and half way into tomorrow. Okay, so no food tonight and get out early in the a.m.

Day 2:
Got up, got packed, and got going. By now I had under a liter, 5 miles to go & 2,400ish ft to climb. I guess I was mentally prepared, as it all went just fine water-wise and just seemed like any other hike through the Catalinas. I finished up mid-afternoon, arriving to find a post hike BBQ happening. Kim, one of the trail stewards for the area was cooking burgers & dogs, she also had chips, cookies and lots of water (my favorite menu item at that time). I took her up on a burger which I adorned with a slice of spam and an envelope of tuna, and instantly vacuumed down. Now back to feeling sub-human, I continued to graze for the next hour or two. I hung out with the trail peeps until sunset, setup a functional, cold camp and zoinked-out.

Day 3:
04:43, Woke to a squawking turkey, immediately followed by a screeching owl. Not sure what was going on there, but my heart was pumping, so I got up. The turkey must have won (or at least survived) the earlier argument, as he started back up at around 05:00 and continued until the time I left.

I had to gamble on the best route down, due mainly to water issues, and ultimately decided on the Box Camp Trail. For those who have never done it, The Box Camp is 30% Disneyland (the upper) and 70% Hell, so a decision to take it is not made lightly. I won't go too much into it rather than to say that it's far worse now than my previous trip, and that I've probably made my last pass there.

By the time I hit the West Fork, it was in the 80 deg range, under full sunlight. I took a minute at the junction there to assess my egress. My god was it steep, and upon consulting my Guthook app, found that I had over 6 miles & 2,400 ft to go. $#$#*&^!!!, I said, then put my head down and made the final push. Miles don't much bother me, I can do them 16 hours a day, but there's something about climbing out to finish a hike that just isn't natural (to me anyway). Anywho, I made it out around 17:00, and as tough as the last few miles were, I was bummed out to be going home.
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Feb 24 2018
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 Triplogs 3

female
 Joined Apr 08 2016
 Phoenix
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Feb 24 2018
hanmartTriplogs 3
Backpack13.60 Miles 3,300 AEG
Backpack13.60 Miles2 Days         
3,300 ft AEG
 
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1st trip
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This was a short gear test trip since my friends and I hadn't been backpacking since November. We wanted to hike the Superstitions but the unreliable water out there after such a long time without rain led us to this awesome backpacking trip. I was nursing a recently sprained ankle :--: so I was happy to keep it short and sweet. We paid and parked in the Sabino Canyon visitor's center lot then took the tram to the end to start out hike. We hiked up Sabino Canyon Trail #23 up then hooked onto the East Fork Trail towards Hutch's Pool. We ended up finding a great creekside campground enroute and set up camp. The icy creek was perfect for aching feet and chilling beers. After getting settled, and realizing how cold it felt sitting in the shade of the canyon, we grabbed our daypacks and continued on to Hutch's Pool. There were a few interesting campsites along the way but ours seemed the best. Lots of water in the creek from the visitor's center, all along our trail and tons at the pool. :y: The night got really cold — we woke up to frost on our tents and chunks of ice in our nalgenes, and a strong determination to gear up before our next cold weather trip. The hike out was perfect weatherwise. We enjoyed the short hike and tram ride back to the car. We stopped at Tanias33 in Tucson for (vegan!) burritos and then headed back home. Great trip.


water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 East Fork Sabino Canyon Heavy flow Heavy flow

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Hutch's Pool 51-75% full 51-75% full
I'm not sure how full "full" normally is but it was pretty deep.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 West Fork Sabino Canyon Heavy flow Heavy flow
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Sep 09 2017
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 Photos 326
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71 female
 Joined Jan 04 2014
 Phoenix, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Sep 09 2017
AZBeaverTriplogs 124
Backpack16.00 Miles 3,300 AEG
Backpack16.00 Miles2 Days         
3,300 ft AEG32 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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I finally got back into backpacking after taking a long summer/monsoon break. I joined 10 members of the Arizona Backpackers Club on a hike to Hutch’s Pool in the Santa Catalina Mountains near Tucson. This was a nearly 16-mile round trip through a lot of vegetation and a lot of ups and downs. We parked our cars at the Gordon Hirabiyashi Campground and set out for a great day. For a good description of the hike, read Fricknaley’s Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino Canyon, AZ description. I thought going downhill for most of the day to the pool would be easy. Not so. It took us 5 hours with lots of breaks to reach our destination for the night. It was hot which made this trek more difficult. Once reaching the pool, many of us just took our packs off and waded right in. The water felt great as it cooled us down from all our exertion. We set up our tents on the beach and along the creek area settling in for a relaxing evening.
Another group of young people hiked through our camp disappointed that we got there before they did, so they camped further down the creek at the end of the pool where the waterfall was. They jumped from edge of the waterfall into the pool all evening long and gathered firewood for the evening although it was a warm night. It was obvious they were in for a party.
I went to bed around 8:30 as I was one tired puppy. It was a warm night and I knew I wasn’t going to sleep too well. When I finally got into a deep REM sleep, I heard what I thought was gun fire. Bang….Bang. I woke up and thought I was dreaming. I looked at my watch and it was 11:30 p.m. Then another …Bang…..Bang. The intoxicated party up the creek shot off a gun of some kind. It made me so upset. Those bullets could have ricocheted off the canyon walls and hit one of us; or worst, they could be walking through the camp shooting at each tent. (I watch too many crazy TV shows, I guess.) You never know what is going on in the minds of drugged out people. It ruined my night. I’ll take the presence of bears any day from the presence of idiot humans!
The next morning, we all got up early to get ahead of the heat as we knew it was going to be a long climb back to the GH trailhead. We were all thankful we survived the gunfire from the night before.
One of our hikers decided he could not make it back up the mountain and decided to take an easier way out by going a shorter trail to Sabino Canyon and taking the Tram. A couple of the Tucson gals took his car keys and drive his car from the GH parking lot and dropped off his car at the Sabino Canyon parking lot. All worked out for him.
I decided to suck it up and go the long way up with the help of the “the sweep” encouraging me all the way. As long as I took a lot of breaks, I was going to make it. Again the trail was a bit overgrown making using your hiking sticks nearly impossible. There were these certain kind of evil weeds that were stronger than Velcro wrapping around your pant legs and socks. They turn to mush if you tried to pull them off. I looked like the “Swamp Lady” covered with sticky weeds when I was done.
This trip just proved to me that you cannot take the summer off from hiking and backpacking. Just because it’s hot, you got to keep your body moving and keep it strong!
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Feb 15 2015
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 Triplogs 11

39 male
 Joined Oct 01 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Feb 15 2015
TheRationalOptimisTriplogs 11
Hiking13.60 Miles 3,300 AEG
Hiking13.60 Miles   6 Hrs   45 Mns   2.01 mph
3,300 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
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Headed up to Tucson this weekend for some outdoor fun and the gem show. After doing some research via HikeAZ I found this trail description which sounded amazing. We gave it a whirl and it didn't disappoint! Some great views (aided by some good hiking weather) made it a real fun trip. It's been a while since I've been in this area so it was fun figuring out what the various canyons were. In fact, it was hard for me not to start planning my next excursion in the Catalina's while I was out on this one. A wide varitety of butterflies and birds added to the enjoyment of the trail as well.
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Nov 06 2012
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41 male
 Joined Dec 01 2010
 Tucson, AZ/Long
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 06 2012
nicoleleeTriplogs 37
Hiking10.00 Miles 3,300 AEG
Hiking10.00 Miles
3,300 ft AEG
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Started out a little too late up at Gordon Hirabayashi and by the time we got to Hutches Pool it was HOT. I totally wussed out and headed down the Sabino Canyon trail and caught the TRAM :out: . I wont live that one down anytime soon. Beautiful day though at Hutches :) Boyfriend headed back up the East Fork, got the car and picked my sorry butt up at Sabino Canyon.
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I'd rather sit alone on a pumpkin and have it all to myself than be crowded on a velvet cushion. Henry David Thoreau.
 
Sep 30 2012
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 Routes 596
 Photos 9,604
 Triplogs 2,400

58 male
 Joined Jan 30 2011
 Chandler, AZ
Santa Catalina Mountains - AZT #11Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 30 2012
JuanJaimeiiiTriplogs 2,400
Hiking23.62 Miles 5,459 AEG
Hiking23.62 Miles   7 Hrs   12 Mns   3.28 mph
5,459 ft AEG
 
I stopped at the Gordon Hirabayshi TH to pick up Nicks car and headed on up to the Marshall Gulch trailhead in Summerhaven. He had already started his hike up. It was amazing how many people were out today on Mt. Lemmon. Once at Marshall I stashed his key and was off myself. I didn't bring a map since I had hiked this recently the other direction. Woops, mistake. All was going well until I reached the intersection for the Wilderness of Rocks and the Mt. Lemmon Trail. I had two choices. Mount Lemmon Trail to the right or Mount Lemmon Trail to the Left. 50/50 chances since there is no Arizona Trail sign. I went to the right. Up, up, up and more up. I was thinking as I went up that hill "I don't remember this". Then I reached the intersection up top with the Sutherland Trail. There was a big sign with a map. Hmmm, I wasn't here with Joe. I took a good look at the map and saw that I was on the Arizona Trail. Oh good! Wait a minute. That isn't the current Arizona Trail. It doesn't go up over Mt. Lemmon Summit anymore. I had just hiked 2 miles uphill the wrong way. Rats! Back down I ran when I hurdled a downed tree and cleared it no problem. Well I did but my shoe lace didn't. Straight down I went. Bam! Then the F word came out of my mouth on full volume.

Okay no reason to get upset here. So I got up dusted myself off and continued on my journey. This time I went the right way. Soon enough Romero Pass came and once again an intersection with no AZT signs. Actually come to think of it this is the transition between passage 11 and passage 12. Not as much as a little Arizona Trail sticker or sign anywhere in sight. Fortunately this time I made the right choice. Pretty soon I ran into Nick. He was a welcome sight because I was afraid I may have missed him with my wrong turn. Anyway we chatted for a minute and then went on our respective ways. The late afternoon sun was taking its toll and it was getting toasty. Overall, with the exception of the wrong turn and the fall I really enjoyed this hike. Thanks for the help with this one Frick.

On a side note. Personally if you ask me the Arizona Trail should really transition passages at Marshall Gulch. After all there is parking there and even an Arizona Trail sign. Romero Pass doesn't have either. Just my 2 cents though.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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Sep 30 2012
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 Guides 93
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49 male
 Joined Jun 20 2003
 Tucson, AZ
Santa Catalina Mountains - AZT #11Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 30 2012
fricknaleyTriplogs 4,124
Hiking18.66 Miles 6,147 AEG
Hiking18.66 Miles   8 Hrs      2.87 mph
6,147 ft AEG   1 Hour   30 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
no photosets
1st trip
awesome climb up from prison camp. i've been on all these trails numerous times but not officially as the AZT so here it is..

beautiful day, though a bit warm. the east fork and west form remain among my favorite local trails though right now they are literally pure torture from all the grass and fox glove.

as always the climb up mt. lemmon trail from romero pass in the hot sun is a total killer. the wilderness of rocks remains a show stopping rock star trail. saw a western diamondback and a black tailed rattler

thanks for the help getting this one done, john. :y:

this caps off 30 days in a row for me and also gives me a new personal record for mileage recorded in one month :zzz:

697.98 miles and 38 segments done. 5 to go
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hi
 
Feb 13 2012
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 Photos 98
 Triplogs 37

41 male
 Joined Dec 01 2010
 Tucson, AZ/Long
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Feb 13 2012
nicoleleeTriplogs 37
Hiking13.60 Miles 3,300 AEG
Hiking13.60 Miles   7 Hrs      1.94 mph
3,300 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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Headed out around 10am from the Gordon H trail head. Kinda chilly to start but warmed up real quick. Wish we started earlier so we could of spent more time at Hutches Pool. What a beautiful place!
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I'd rather sit alone on a pumpkin and have it all to myself than be crowded on a velvet cushion. Henry David Thoreau.
 
Sep 24 2011
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 Guides 16
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51 male
 Joined Apr 30 2008
 Tucson, AZ
Santa Catalina Mountains - AZT #11Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 24 2011
azdesertfatherTriplogs 1,144
Hiking18.60 Miles 7,539 AEG
Hiking18.60 Miles   9 Hrs   30 Mns   2.19 mph
7,539 ft AEG   1 Hour    Break
 no routes
1st trip
Very nice hike. Was surprising to start the segment heading up the Catalinas to discover we actually had to head down in elevation 1000 ft. The climbing after that was a bit challenging, but doable. The fact that I took the Cathedral Rock trail by mistake and climbed a few hundred feet of switchbacks before recognizing the mistake didn't help things much. Fortunately I was ahead of the pack, so not everyone went quite as far as I did.

Hutch's Pool was the highlight of this segment, followed by incredible views from Romero Pass to the top. The climb up to and just beyond Romero Pass in the heat without a stop for lunch until 1:30pm almost did all of us in but Joe, who just seems to be an elevation machine (I guess all those trips up and down Piestewa Peak are paying off!).

The three wild turkeys on the trip were a surprise, as well as the large number of trees struck by lightning up there above 7,000 feet.

After lunch I followed Denny while Joe stuck with Bruce. We made it up top a bit earlier than the rest but certainly didn't mind the wait up top!

Thanks guys for the great company, and another great trip on the AZT. Only 10 segments to go!

Note: 1 hr 50 minutes break total, but I needed 50 minutes of it to recoup at lunch so I'm only counting an hour.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
_____________________
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
 
Sep 24 2011
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 Guides 264
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 Triplogs 5,894

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 1996
 
Santa Catalina Mountains - AZT #11Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 24 2011
joebartelsTriplogs 5,894
Hiking18.80 Miles 6,700 AEG
Hiking18.80 Miles   10 Hrs   5 Mns   2.50 mph
6,700 ft AEG   2 Hrs   34 Mns Break16 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
I love all the big Catalina hikes. While I've done all these trails I was excited to get back for the AZT!

We took a wrong turn onto the Cathedral Trail and ascended 315 feet. Denny mentioned something at the junction. Dave and I ignored him and kept on trekking...lol Luckily Dave noticed the error quickly and we didn't lose to much energy.

The highest temp Bruce noticed for the day was 80 degrees. With lack of shade 80 is pretty toasty at times. Exposure and grade were not to Dave or Bruce's liking from the Cathedral junction to Wilderness of Rocks. Hopefully they get to experience the phenomenal spring snow melt in the lower half some year!

The foxtails were pretty annoying. Foxtails are bad when your socks look like fur. It's really bad when they penetrate the shoe. When I got home I witnessed a new level... embedded in the skin. Perhaps someday I will remember to prepare for all aspects... unlikely. Today I brought 5 quarts of water which was not nearly enough. I started rationing before the big climb. Otherwise this was another great hike. We got some nice distant views from the top. Denny is starting to tell mean jokes that are funny, he must be getting that from Bruce. "if you don't like your burger then I'm sorry we didn't stop at one of the other 104 restaurants you had us pass up" :sl:

AZT
We only have 10 segments left to finish the Arizona Trail. 5 between the Kelvin Bridge and the Rincons with the remaining 5 north of the Grand Canyon. We should be able to knock out the lower 5 before summer 2012 easily.

Wildflowers
Large swaths in areas yet not super photogenic as they are tiny. Most of the interesting varieties are along #39

AEG
I added up all the ascents and came up with 6,500 ft. I threw in 200 for tiny uncalculated blips. Recorded, TOPO! and DEM SYNC figures seem too high.

Personal Stats
September appears to be shaping up to be my third largest mileage month, currently at 183mi
AEG currently at 64k is a far cry from my best at 92k last Dec
Temps seem to be warmer than normal yet still a huge relief from the hottest August ever last month

Video short
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UE4auzA72sM
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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- joe
 
Sep 24 2011
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 Guides 41
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69 male
 Joined Jan 20 2009
 Far NE Phoenix,
Santa Catalina Mountains - AZT #11Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 24 2011
The_EagleTriplogs 2,760
Hiking18.80 Miles 6,700 AEG
Hiking18.80 Miles   10 Hrs   5 Mns   2.50 mph
6,700 ft AEG   2 Hrs   34 Mns Break18 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Left the House at 3am, picked up the Phoenix portion of the AZT Team, and met Dave on the top of Mt Lemmon at about 6:45. We dropped off a car up top and drove the beginning of our journey today at the old Prison Camp / Prisoner of war camp, the Gordon Hirabayashi (aka hibachi) Trailhead.

The temps at out 7:30 start were perfect. Blue skys, rolling hills, gentle breezes, and a dew still on the grasses. The first six miles of this passage of the AZ Trail takes you past the Riparian area by Sycamore Reservoir, down the East Fork of Sabino Canyon and to the lowest elevation you will be at for the day.

At the 7 mile mark, after loosing 1000' in elevation, was the first highlight for the day, Hutch's Pool. We spent a good amount of time cooling off in the water. Denny did a Cannonball and Joe did a Chair, off the ledge into the water.

Back on trail, A couple miles up, was the second highlight. 3 Turkeys..what the heck are Wild Turkeys doing up here. Hopefully somebody in the group got some decent shots, because none of mine turned out. All three of the birds had yellow or orange tags an inch of so wide by 18 inches long on them. So more than likely some sort of reintroduction program... or maybe they've been tagged for Thanksgiving :D .

The rest of this trip was a brutal climb for me. By the time I got to Romero pass I was sucking wind big time. Luckily there was only 6 miles and 3000' in elevation to go. Lack of sleep over the week took it's toll. Denny and Dave pushed forward, while Joe stayed back with me. He must be getting old, he did it last week w/ Denny on the North Rim, and this week with me. I may have to re think my opinion of him. Thanks Joe!

Temps to start the day - low 60's,
Lunch just up from Romero Pass - 80
End of day on top of Mt Lemon - 60

10 passages and under 200 miles to go!

Thanks guys for another memorable trip :y:
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Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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There is a very fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness."
Dave Barry 🦅
 
Sep 24 2011
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 Guides 1
 Routes 148
 Photos 9,924
 Triplogs 3,652

63 male
 Joined Apr 02 2005
 Mesa, AZ
Santa Catalina Mountains - AZT #11Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 24 2011
Tortoise_HikerTriplogs 3,652
Hiking18.80 Miles 6,700 AEG
Hiking18.80 Miles   10 Hrs   5 Mns   1.86 mph
6,700 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Another adventure on the AZT.I did this hike a week ago so I'm a little fuzzy on the times.Dave met Bruce,Joe and I up top to set up the shuttle and I think we were hiking by 7:30 or so.Some nice vegetation in this area included lots of little flowers and LOTS of FOXTAILS!We saw a couple garter snakes in the first mile or two.Some great mountain veiws too.The southern trails continue to surprise me.Very nice.For a break,Joe introduced us to Hutch's Pool.Very cool and refreshing!A little while after that Joe showed us 3 Turkey's which surprised us all.From there it was on to Romero Pass for a lunch break.That stretch seemed to take forever and we wre spent by then.The views were great(Thanks Joe) and the break felt so good.From there the rest of the hike was slow and steady(Tortoise speed) but it felt better than the part before Romero Pass.The boulders in the upper section among the Pines always look cool.We had some nice clouds by then and the temps were great in the end.Another great outing with the AZT boys! THANKS to Dave,Bruce,and Joe! You guys rock!!! :D
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Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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Tortoise Hiking. Stop and smell the Petrichor.
 
Mar 15 2011
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 Photos 23
 Triplogs 7

65 female
 Joined Apr 13 2012
 Tucson, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 15 2011
evelecTriplogs 7
Hiking8.40 Miles 3,300 AEG
Hiking8.40 Miles
3,300 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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We took the tram to the end of the road in Sabino Canyon.
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Mar 13 2010
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 Guides 264
 Routes 2,797
 Photos 14,494
 Triplogs 5,894

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 1996
 
Hirabayashi to Catalina State Park, AZ 
Hirabayashi to Catalina State Park, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Mar 13 2010
joebartelsTriplogs 5,894
Hiking19.20 Miles 3,750 AEG
Hiking19.20 Miles   10 Hrs   10 Mns   1.89 mph
3,750 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Game Plan Hirabayashi - Sycamore Reservoir - East Fork - West Fork - Hutch's Pool - Romero Pass - Catalina State Park

6:34am Nick's Confidence 5% chance(documented on video below) we'd make it due to reported chest high creek crossing

7:28am Sycamore Crossing Two respectable men yelping(documented in video) crossing 18 inch deep creek

Knowing we'd be crossing countless creeks I wore Teva's with Seal Skinz. The reviews from REI are about 10% absolutely love 'em and 90% call them useless. Starting in the upper 30 degree temps walking through a 1/4mi very shallow creek and followed by full submersion at a swift creek crossing I was very impressed. I think people that buy these are expecting to go swimming in them and stay dry. If you go above the sock line but jump right back out, I had good results. Later on through 2-3 foot deep and much longer submersion in wide creeks I found they leak in from the top. Almost wished I bought a size smaller, perhaps better results?

Yet I was still impressed as my feet were still very warm. I should have dried off but foolishly went another 5 or so miles until tending. Later on I developed some rather painful 3 inch blister pads on each foot.

Back to the hike... All the creek crossings turned out to be within reason. While I thought they weren't that cold, Nick and Bob felt they were painfully cold. The crossing of Box Canyon Creek, which I call the subway since all the creeks collect in the area, was flowing hearty. Nick and Bob found an easy dry jump across. I beelined it straight through the creek.

At the crossing before Hutch's Pool I beelined it right across too. This was the crossing Nick heard was chest level days prior. I met three runners at the crossing. One crossed half way with me while talking with me. He said this crossing was no big deal but there was much worse ahead. I asked him to please not tell my friends :D

I think that man heard the same report Nick heard without seeing it for himself as all the other crossing heading up got much easier. Nick took us for a quick look at Hutch's Pool then on to what he called a "5 minute hike" up to the Cathedral junction. What a stud, that five minute section kicked my butt. Reminded me of Kurt's "it's a half mile more" in the Grand Canyon last year... ugh, 2 miles later...

Up to Romero Pass aside from all the reports there was barely any snow. Nick figured about 5 feet judging by views from his house, luckily it had melted! It looked like a twenty foot swath then home free. So I decided to forge through with bare feet in sandals. That twenty feet turned into the most tortured half mile of my life without a doubt. About an hour later when the feelings were restored to my lower limbs I noticed my feet were in terrible pain. The extended push in wet socks earlier turned into huge elephant sized blisters on my feet. I almost wanted to go jump back in the snow to numb them up again.

Romero was kickin' throughout with one extraordinary waterfall among countless cascades that appeared more on the scale of dam releases than what you'd expect near Tucson. Hiking above Montrose the wildflowers were looking pretty sweet. Large patches of Mexican Gold Poppies dominated over Dichelostemma capitatum. There were several occurrences of Desert Anemone throughout Romero Canyon too. My "Moderate" wildflower observation is for the stretch above Montrose. It was isolated otherwise.

Great day, glad it's over too :D

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vtb5_zzM0qA
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Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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- joe
 
Mar 13 2010
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 Guides 2
 Routes 251
 Photos 4,593
 Triplogs 3,212

63 male
 Joined Feb 26 2008
 Scottsdale, AZ
Hirabayashi to Catalina State Park, AZ 
Hirabayashi to Catalina State Park, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Mar 13 2010
BobPTriplogs 3,212
Hiking19.20 Miles 3,750 AEG
Hiking19.20 Miles   10 Hrs   10 Mns   1.89 mph
3,750 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
I actually felt bad for Joe after he came thru the snow. He leaned against a rock and I thought for sure he was gonna start banging his head against it. From that point on, everything he said was incoherent until we were about a mile or two from the vehicle and the old Joe started giving Nick a hard time. Then when we hit the railroad ties it was game on for Joe. He ordered some Macaroons from a girl scout hiking up. The hike was fun except for the 9 hours of not eating anything and the freezing water. Anyone need a new coffee cup? Thanks for Subway Joe...the food place not the crossing place. Tucson is a cool place but I hate driving there. ;)
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Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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https://www.seeitourway.org
Always pronounce Egeszsegedre properly......
If you like this triplog you must be a friend of BrunoP
 
average hiking speed 2.31 mph
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