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Crest Trail #270C - Jct Sdl to Sentinel Peak - 8 members in 19 triplogs have rated this an average 3.9 ( 1 to 5 best )
19 triplogs
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May 03 2025
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 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Morse Canyon Trail #43Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar May 03 2025
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking15.39 Miles 4,105 AEG
Hiking15.39 Miles1 Day   2 Hrs   31 Mns   
4,105 ft AEG23 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
I led an Arizona Backpackers Club hike for an overnight adventure in the Chiricahua Wilderness. After an overnight at the Sycamore Campground along Turkey Creek Road (nice outhouses), we headed out on the Morse Canyon Trail. There is limited parking at the trailhead. Be sure not to block the turnaround, as people come up here with trailers. The dirt road coming in was a little rough, but easily driven with a small SUV.

The climb up to the ridge went surprisingly fast. Morse Canyon trail is in great shape, as it must have been maintained recently. Turtle Mountain Trail had a few deadfalls, but not bad. I wasn't sure about my conditioning, and most of the crew was much more athletic--and younger--than me. At Monte Vista Peak, the view was somewhat obscured by the haze from the Stronghold Fire about 50 miles to the west; I couldn't smell it but some in our party could. There is an outhouse at the summit. I thought it seemed fine, but some of our party were not impressed.

There is a lot of dormant stinknet weed (Globe Chamomile) along the ridge. This invasive plant will probably lead to yet more fires up here. Crest Trail 270B was in pretty good shape but Crest Trail 270D was the worst with lots of deadfall, and the the last half mile to Aspen Saddle was very sketchy and hard to find.

We camped at Aspen Saddle; from there it is about 0.6 miles to Eagle Spring which had plenty of water in the concrete springbox. It wasn't difficult to filter out the green stuff. There was a 25 MPH wind blowing most of the night across the saddle, and in the morning, with temps around 38F, we were anxious to get going.

Crest Trail 270C up to Chiricahua Peak is mostly missing, but the direction to the peak is obvious. We were freezing in the wind, though, and we actually missed the summit by a few yards in our anxiety to get out of the wind. The trail down the north side of the peak is in great shape, however, and from there, we were out of the wind and started to warm up.

We took Crest Trail 270B back to the Mormon Ridge Trail 269, then down the Mormon Canyon Trail 352, which again was in excellent shape.
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Stinknet
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Eagle Spring
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation None
Nothing in bloom yet.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Eagle Spring Dripping Dripping
Spring box was full of water. It was easy to filter the algae out, and we pulled lots of water for our party.
  2 archives
Sep 27 2024
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 Guides 1
 Routes 263
 Photos 876
 Triplogs 267

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Snowshed & Greenhouse LoopTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Sep 27 2024
JackluminousTriplogs 267
Backpack16.70 Miles 4,508 AEG
Backpack16.70 Miles1 Day   2 Hrs   50 Mns   
4,508 ft AEG22 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
I had the opportunity to get away for an overnight, and I've been wanting to try the east side of the Chiricahuas for a long time. The stars aligned and off I went!

I had planned on being at the trailhead by 10 on Friday, but things didn't work out and I got out of town late. For some reason I didn't want to drive to Herb Martyr campground with a battery that was mostly dead (as in, slightly alive). So I stopped to get a new one on the way out of town.

I started hiking from Herb Martyr just before noon. My goal was to reach Aspen Saddle to camp, which is about the halfway point on the Snowshed/Greenhouse loop.

Herb Martyr Trail
This trail was in pretty good shape. The weekend I went was a major heatwave with the valleys reaching 105; it was probably in the low 80s when I started hiking. The middle section of Herb Martyr follows an exposed ridge and man was it toasty. I hiked like a lizard, zipping between shady spots. The latter half of the trail was a super steep climb, but it was treed and therefore more tolerable. It got a little overgrown close to the junction with Snowshed, and erosion has definitely been taking its toll on tread quality up there.

Snowshed Trail
At the trail junction with Snowshed, the sign for Herb Martyr was missing. Well, pieces of it were here and there, but nothing legible. The Snowshed sign, however, was in perfect condition.

Snowshed was in fabulous condition from the junction with Herb Martyr until after just after Pine Park. This amounted to about 1/8 mile of piney greatness. The remainder of the trail to the Crest alternated between exposed scree and a bushwhack through overgrown shrubbery of various persuasions, and not all friendly. Between loose rocks and dense overgrowth the trail was a little treacherous in places. Nonetheless the trail was followable, until the approach to Snowshed Saddle where it pretty much disappeared. Pink flagging tape at the saddle was helpful.

Snowshed needs love, a lot of love. But it's worthy, with pretty incredible views along its length that just get better as you go.

I definitely underestimated how the heat and the challenging trail would slow me down. I didn't make it to the Crest and Juniper Spring until about 6pm, which was sunset. I didn't have time to collect water, hike the 3/4 mile or so to Aspen Saddle, and pitch a tent before dark. I was also pretty tired, and Juniper Saddle was gorgeous. So I collected water at the spring and hiked to a flat spot on the ridge below, carpeted with wildflowers and featuring a stunning view of Rucker Canyon.

While setting up camp I realized that I thought I had packed my tent, poles, and ground sheet, but instead had packed my rain fly, poles, and ground sheet. No tent. Whoops. So I had to cowboy camp on a perfectly temperate, cloudless, moonless night staring at a blanket of stars. I regretted packing the poles and rain fly more than I regretted forgetting the tent!

I woke very well rested to a stunning panorama of Rucker Canyon, totally stoked that I didn't make it to Aspen Saddle.

Juniper Spring
See my water report.

Crest 270C
At first the trail was very, very faint but followable. It was almost gone south of Eagle Spring. Between Eagle Spring and Aspen saddle it was still faint but followable. From Aspen to Junction it was easy to follow but overgrown, with about four downed trees across it.

This stretch of the Crest is probably my favorite because of the views into Rucker Canyon. I look forward to the time when it gets the restoration work it deserves.

Eagle Spring
See my water report.

Crest 270A
It was a freakin’ superhighway! Lots of recent tread work really shines and even the overgrown parts are easy.

The area from Junction Saddle to Cima Park had burned really badly so it was basically a steeply sloped meadow of wildflowers and tree skeletons, some of them rather spooky. I've always thought of this stretch as the Halloween Trail.

Just south of Cima Park is a stand of aspens, which were turning at the time I passed through. It was really pretty.

Anita Park
The spur trail had a shiny new sign! The trail to Anita Park was overgrown but followable without trouble. I just went to check out Anita Park, which was tall grass and standing dead trees. I sat down on a log in the midst of an aspen stand, ate a snack, and cleared the stickers and seeds out of my shoes. This was a process I repeated many times on this trip.

I decided not to bother hunting for Anita Spring since there was so much overgrowth everywhere. Mental note: when hiking the Chiricahuas in late summer, wear gaiters and bring a machete.

Greenhouse Trail
I stopped at the cabin for lunch and to take advantage of the outhouse. The outhouse was being converted into an unsanctioned rodent hotel; there was a broom inside which I used for demolition purposes.

Greenhouse was in great shape in the forested section till you get to the creek, then things get dicey. Through the creek the trail was hard to follow at times, with lots of overgrowth and obstacles around creek crossings. Lots of water to collect though! And fall colors to enjoy!

Conditions improved as the trail left the creek only in the "easy to follow" department, but not in the "wildly overgrown" one. The tread was loose rock in the burn scars. Some of the overgrowth was pretty gnarly. It was consistently overgrown all the way to the road, but down in Greenhouse Canyon it was mostly grass. There was some deadfall, but only one large tree down near Greenhouse creek gave any trouble.

Winn Falls was not flowing much, it was more Winn Trickle. The views were pretty great nonetheless.

The last 1.5 was a road walk. At least it wasn’t overgrown.

This was what I would call a "real" Chiricahua experience. Neither Snowshed nor Greenhouse trails had seen much or any maintenance in recent years, and both have been pretty majorly affected by fire. I expected this to be a tough hike. While the hike was pretty challenging it was definitely worth doing. I hope these trails get some attention, as they are great trails to access the Crest from the Portal side.
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Light
The aspens are starting to turn. There are some nice splashes of red and yellow throughout the area, but especially on the Crest near Cima Saddle and along the creek in Cima Canyon. Fairly sporadic along Snowshed trail as well.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
Yard-high daisies everywhere, even down the middle of most of the trails! Bring a machete.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Eagle Spring Dripping Dripping
Nice sign but trail down to it is faint and hard to discern if you don’t know where to go. Just hike down the slippery rocks toward the pine tree off to the right (facing the sign) and down the hill a bit. The spring is northwest of the tree.

Overflow is full but slimy with algae. Cover for the spring box is about 1/3 buried with rock and gravel. The spring is useable if you don’t mind clearing out slimy gook.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Juniper Spring Dripping Dripping
Overflow trough and tank not useful. A concrete dam is holding water a bit uphill. Water is seeping out around it, making the ground a little muddy. Water in reservoir is shallow but still deep enough to submerge a small water bottle. Filters great if you're careful to keep the cruddies out; useable spring.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Winn Falls Pools to trickle Pools to trickle
Even if the flow is great, how this is a water source is beyond me. It is impossible to get to from the trail. Jetpack? There was a trickle of water dribbling down the cliff, so I'm not sure you could really call it a waterfall at this time.
 
Aug 12 2023
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 Guides 1
 Routes 263
 Photos 876
 Triplogs 267

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Chiricahua traverse loopy thing, AZ 
Chiricahua traverse loopy thing, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Aug 12 2023
JackluminousTriplogs 267
Backpack24.96 Miles 5,755 AEG
Backpack24.96 Miles   52 Hrs   40 Mns   0.65 mph
5,755 ft AEG28 LBS Pack
 
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
For months I'd wanted to do this loop around the Chiricahuas. Well, years really. About 25 years ago I had my first backpacking trip ever, and it was up Saulsbury Trail during Spring Break with a couple college friends. We had ridiculously heavy packs by today's standards, were woefully unprepared and out of shape, started late, didn't get a weather report, got caught in a snowstorm on a windy saddle for the first night, and generally had a blast. On that trip we barely made it to Round Park on a quest to a fabled place called Booger Spring, and I don't even remember if we made it there. But that trip is what kindled my love of the Chiricahuas and of backpacking in general, and I finally had the opportunity to do a nostalgic trip up Saulsbury.

The Drive
The drive to the trailhead is mostly pretty good; Turkey Creek Road is unpaved but well-graded. It does get rocky in places with a couple creek crossings that will have water in wet times of year, but nothing a brave driver in a Honda Fit can't handle. The spur road to Saulsbury Trailhead, however, is definitely high-clearance mandatory. No trouble in my trusty old '98 CR-V (I have a 1" lift and all-terrain tires, but I think a stock Subaru and skilled driver would make it fine). I did pass an ATVer who looked very surprised to see me, which is always fun. It was very bumpy, and if it wasn't so short I'd have aired my tires down.

Saulsbury Trail
I had my friend Lisa as a partner, and we started at Saulsbury around 9am. It was pretty cloudy, and stayed cloudy all day, which was nice to keep temperatures down and mitigate the risk of a thunderstorm.

Saulsbury is a really beautiful trail and largely clear and easy to follow, with only short sections through old burn scars. The drainage in Saulsbury Canyon had a few pools and trickles here and there for the length of the canyon, though we had brought plenty of water to get us to the Crest. There were lots of ripe raspberries, too! So many, something just had to be done about them...

We did have two issues on this trail. The first was at a broad creek crossing about halfway to Saulsbury Saddle, where the trail was a bit faint and we took a wrong turn up the drainage. It took us a while to realize we were off-trail and some bushwhacking to get back on. This was more hiker error than an issue with the trail, but I did go back down to where we messed up and put up a cairn.

The second issue was higher up, above the saddle in a burn scar. The trail abruptly ended at a huge fallen tree that had slid down the mountain and taken the trail with it. There was a faint workaround that ended in a gully that had flooded and also taken the trail with it. Across the gully you could faintly see what might have been the original trail, but it was completely choked with Locust trees (which are thorny buggers). The trail conditions were so bad that we at first thought the trail may have been rerouted and we somehow missed it, but after some scouting around we realized the trail did indeed go through the thicket of Locust trees. Fortunately it wasn't a great distance before we were back in pristine old-growth pines, but we actually had to crawl on our hands and knees in places to get through. I really should bring some clippers every time I hike in the Chiricahuas, but they are so darn heavy!

Shortly after that obstacle we came to the place where I'm 90% sure I and my college friends had camped 25 years ago and got snowed on. Saulsbury is a relentless uphill slog in a heavy pack, and we had started late and pooped out before getting to the Crest that day.

The trail had changed a fair amount from my memories. When I first went it was just after the Rattlesnake Fire, and I remember seeing a lot of devastation in stretches above Saulsbury Saddle. I thought of it as "The Desolation of Smaug". Now those burned areas have largely recovered and the pine forest is returning. The trail doesn't seem to have been as badly affected by the Horseshoe II fire as other parts of the Chiricahuas.

The rest of the hike to the Crest was remarkable for its scenery and fantastic views, but not for poor trail conditions.

Round Park
The Saulsbury Trail takes you to the Crest through pine forest just north of Round Park, which is an open grassy meadow with wildflowers. It is recovering from the Horseshoe II fire, so there are some dense thickets of aspens and lots of young pines on the periphery. It looks like a beautiful camping area now, with great views to the west and proximity to Booger Spring, though I wouldn't camp here if there was a lot of wind or storms. This section of Crest is also pretty heavily used (by Chiricahua standards).

We came to Round Park about 3 in the afternoon. We considered a side trip to Booger Spring to tank up, but we were planning to camp at Cima Cabin not far away and expecting water there. So we pressed on, snacking on raspberries the whole way.

Cima Saddle
The next big junction on the Crest south of Round Park is Cima Park, which had been heavily wooded by old growth trees before the big fire. Now it is a carpet of downed trees, a few snags, and a lot of young pines and aspens. There is a lovely camping spot just south of the junction with the Greenhouse Trail. For the most part it is a lovely area despite the evidence of the fire, and is recovering beautifully.

We turned down Greenhouse to head to Cima Cabin, a Forest Service cabin built in the 30s and still used today by fire and trail crews.

Cima Cabin
The cabin is about a quarter mile (ish) from the saddle. I'm not sure how often it gets used, but I've never seen anyone there before and we didn't on this trip, either. When we arrived, we noticed some roof damage. A huge tree on the west side of it had come down, landed on the roof, and rolled off the side of the building. There was quite a bit of damage including branches sticking out of the roof; it looked like a big repair job. The Forest Service is undoubtedly aware as the massive trunk had been limbed and there was a large slash pile nearby. We hope the building will be repaired as it is historically significant.

There is a very well-kept outhouse at the cabin, and Cima Creek is a reliable water source. There's also plenty of room for tents. There are also mice, so mind your food and other smelly items.

We enjoyed the evening at camp and were off to bed at sunset. It rained lightly shortly after we retired, and we were roused by more light rain in the morning. It was completely overcast and cool.

Friday we rose, had breakfast, and put together our day packs for some exploring. We decided to check out Anita Park, summit Chiricahua Peak, check out Aspen Saddle, and visit Eagle Spring. At some point in the day we expected to rendezvous with our friend Keith somewhere around the cabin.

We headed south on Crest. This section of trail had seen very recent tread work, and it was like hiking on a superhighway. We deeply appreciated the hard work that trail crews have done to make the Chiricahuas more accessible!

Anita Park
Heading south on Crest from Cima is Anita Park, which back in the day was an idyllic backpacking destination. It was a beautiful meadow amongst old-growth pine, with easy access to water at Anita Spring, and close to Chiricahua Peak. Alas the Horseshoe II fire obliterated it, and the pines are almost all gone, either snags or burnt logs on the ground. The sign marking where the Anita Spring trail leaves the Crest trail is lying on the ground in pieces, and the Anita Spring trail itself is faint and easy to miss. It is followable and we took it to see what we could see.

Anita Park itself is actually recovering, with a beautiful meadow ringed with aspens and young pines. A few snags still stand as reminders of horrors past. The trail passes the meadow and enters the old forest, which is still a sea of devastation. Many standing dead trees and almost none alive. The trail is cairned but there is still a bit of deadfall to traverse, with much more to come in time. I had hopes the spring would be serviceable, as there were good reports as recently as May of this year, but what we found was disappointing. The drainage has water in it, but it seems new deadfall has covered the catchment, or it has silted in completely, or it simply was concealed by rampant overgrowth. Regardless, we couldn't find it. The pools were so shallow that Lisa couldn't use her pump filter, and it wasn't practical to use a water bottle or scoop. Overall the water source was kind of depressing.

As we hiked out, the cloud decks lowered and shrouded the landscape in mist, making the fields of standing dead trees look ghostly.

Junction Saddle
Not far past Anita Park is Junction Saddle at the base of Chiricahua Peak. From here the Crest trail splits; Crest #270B heads west to Chiricahua Saddle, Crest #270C heads south to Aspen Saddle. There is also the Chiricahua Peak trail that heads to the summit, which we took. This trail was also clear and easy to follow, with no deadfall and great tread. It does traverse a significant burn scar but it is thick with aspens and quite lovely.

Chiricahua Peak
You can't see much at the peak on a clear day as it is densely forested, and today it was shrouded in cloud as well. We sat down at the peak, signed the log, and ate some snacks.

Maps show the Chiricahua Peak trail descending to Aspen Saddle as well as Junction Saddle. However, the segment to Aspen Saddle appears to be completely abandoned and there is barely any evidence of it left. So we just walked down the mountain to the saddle as best we could, and it was a pretty easy bushwhack.

Aspen Saddle
This is a favorite camping area with a few token old-growth trees still standing in a small grove with young pines on either side. We've camped here several times. The nearest good water source is Ojo Agua Fria, though the last time I was there it wasn't much better than Anita Spring. It's in a badly burned area and prone to silting in and getting choked with deadfall. It's also a steep climb down and back out. We've found at times Eagle Spring is easier to access. It's further away but with no appreciable elevation change.

Eagle Spring
We decided to check out Eagle Spring, which is a ways south of Aspen Saddle. The Crest from Aspen south hasn't been maintained in a while so the tread is faint, but there's no deadfall or major obstacles. The views along this segment of the Crest are spectacular, some of the best in the range. As we progressed the clouds broke and revealed Rucker Canyon, with clouds spilling over Chiricahua Peak. It was glorious.

Eagle Spring is signed and just off the trail, with a steep trail down to it. It consists of a concrete box with lid, and an overflow basin. The lid was mostly buried despite a check dam constructed above it, and the overflow was mostly silted in and slimy, so the spring is in need of a little TLC. I tried to clear the dirt to get the lid open but was not successful at getting the lid unstuck. I did discover that a corner of the lid had broken off in the past, exposing a hole large enough for Lisa to drop her pump into the spring box. She easily filled up and the water was great.

We returned to Cima Cabin more or less the way we came, the only exception was taking Crest from Aspen to Junction Saddle. That stretch of trail is densely wooded with aspens punctuated by standing old-growth pines, and a joy to walk.

Keith arrived at Cima Saddle just after we did, and we all went down Greenhouse to the cabin together. Keith set up his hammock and we had a pleasant rest in the afternoon as the clouds dissipated and brought some sunshine into the day.

Saturday was departure day. Keith and Lisa were to hike out to Rustler Park together, while I would return to my car solo along Crest #270B to Pole Bridge. It was a clear, sunny day. Keith had gotten a weather report on his Garmin which suggested afternoon thunderstorms were likely.

Crest #270B
Keith and Lisa accompanied me to Junction Saddle, where we parted ways. I saw three turkeys take flight in front of me as I rounded Chiricahua Peak. As I approached Chiricahua Saddle I spotted an empty tin can recently dropped by another hiker, so I collected it.

As I approached Paint Rock I passed a couple enthusiastic young hikers who were enjoying their first time in the Chiricahuas. They warned me there was a rattlesnake ahead, but I never saw it.

At Paint Rock I observed some rather dark cumulous clouds forming over Rucker Canyon. I had a few miles ahead of me so it motivated me to keep moving.

Between Paint Rock and Raspberry Peak I came across a crime scene that made me livid. Someone had built a campfire in the middle of the trail, and it was full of trash: empty cans of beans, half-burnt styrofoam and plastic meat packaging, a full container of burnt stovetop popcorn, and even a pizza pan. :o :x The offenders had pathetically covered the mess with large pieces of tree bark, which wildlife had scattered while investigating all the food residue. I will never understand what sort of inconsiderate stupidity that some people are capable of. I considered trying to clean up the mess but had no realistic way to pack it all out. I felt guilty the whole way down the mountain.

Update: I reported the crime scene to the Forest Service, who forwarded the report to law enforcement. They suggested it was a migrant resupply.

I was marginally cheered by impressively-sized ripe raspberries along the trail as it approached aptly-named Raspberry Peak.

Monte Vista Lookout
I took the spur trail to the Monte Vista fire lookout when I came to it. There is a cabin and outhouse there along with the metal lookout tower. It was still clear, but the puffy clouds over Rucker Canyon were getting bigger. I observed the elaborate lightning rod and ground wires on the cabin, and imagined what it might be like to be staying at the cabin during monsoon season. Sign me up... not!

There was an old-timey scale hanging on the porch for weighing packs, so I weighed mine. It was 24 pounds, which meant I ate about 6 pounds of food over the last couple days.

Morse Saddle
This saddle appeared to have a lot of blown down trees blocking the trail for anyone continuing west to Pole Bridge trail. A large live tree had blown over recently; at first glance it looked like over a dozen trees were over the trail, but after traversing the big one it was evident the others had already been cut.

The trails past Morse Saddle are less maintained and a bit in need of a haircut and a little tread work, but they are quite followable.

Pole Bridge Trail
This is now one of my favorite trails in the Chiricahuas, if only because of its variety. It can roughly be divided into an upper and lower part, separated by the junction with John Long trail at Pole Bridge Saddle. I'd done a loop in the past, going up Pole Bridge from Turkey Creek and returning via Morse Canyon trail. At that time it was very wet and there was a lot of water in Pole Bridge Canyon, making for a marvelous riparian hike in the lower section. This time I was descending Pole Bridge, which is quite steep, and the canyon was bone dry except for two or three very shallow stagnant pools. That was unfortunate as I'd hoped there was water. I had very little left at this point.

Heading Home
I reached the road and started to make my way back to the car. There's no established connector to Saulsbury Trailhead from any of the other trails originating in Turkey Creek, other than walking the road, so I bushwhacked. As I approached my car I heard the first peals of thunder for the afternoon storms, which were by now substantial but moving east off the Crest and no threat to me.

On the trip home I had to drive through two major thunderstorms, one outside of Pearce and the other just past Benson on the I-10. On that stretch the rain was coming down so hard that traffic slowed to about 40mph and some cars even pulled off completely. When I put my wipers on high, the linkage broke and then I had no wipers. :scared: Fortunately the water was beading up on the windshield and flying off enough that I could still see. I made it home by 4, which also happened to be beer-o'clock. :y:

Another fantastic trip in the Chiricahuas, my happy place in the world. I'm already thinking about the next one!
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
Flowers pretty much everywhere there is a little sun.

dry Pole Bridge Canyon Dry Dry
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout Well there were two or three stagnant pools but not useful, which is too bad because I was quite thirsty.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Saulsbury Canyon Pools to trickle Pools to trickle
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout Pools all along the trail, easy to collect and filter.
  1 archive
Sep 02 2022
avatar

 Photos 115
 Triplogs 31

male
 Joined Sep 15 2020
 Phoenix, AZ
Greenhouse Trail #248Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 02 2022
xsproutxTriplogs 31
Hiking14.00 Miles 4,790 AEG
Hiking14.00 Miles
4,790 ft AEG15 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Day 1 - Climbs, thorns, snakes, bears, oh my

My first day actually started on Mt Lemmon, about 5 miles away from the Marshall Gulch trailhead. I woke up early, hiked out, and made the drive over to the Chiricahuas. As I turned on to Noland Road from the interstate and approached the Chiricahuas, I knew that this was going to be a special place. It was a beautiful day and the road was in great condition. As I got close to Portal, Cave Creek crosses the road and was flowing nicely which gave me comfort that the various creeks would be running. My original plan was to start at Herb Martyr Campground and hike up Greenhouse Road to Greenhouse Trail and, ultimately, end the night at the cabin near Cima Park. I had gotten a later start than anticipated, though, so wanted to see if I could drive up Greenhouse Road a bit to knock off a mile or more and at least 500 feet of the elevation gain on the first day, as it was a big climb. For the most part, Greenhouse Rd is in good condition and could be made by any SUV. It's tight in some sections and there's a chance you might get some pin stripes, but it's in good condition until about a mile in. I also saw a small bear in one of the clearings, but he didn't try to get in my way. Smart bear. At that point, the road crosses Greenhouse Creek and it gets a bit bouldery. I didn't have much an issue with my lifted outback but I did have to reposition some rocks in a couple of spots and had some tire spinning. Fearing it would get worse, when I saw an area that looked ok to park for a few days right at the creek crossing, I figured that was good enough and I'd start the hike from there. Turns out the rest of the road after crossing the creek to the actual TH is like the first part and just fine for any SUV probably, so the only part of that road I would say really needs clearance or AWD/4WD is that section that is about 1000 feet long.

It was about a half mile to the trailhead and while it was just a half mile of forest road, it was interesting: two groups of deer spotted, old bear scat mixed with still steaming bear scat, one snake (signs of what's to come). Once to the actual trail, I could see that this was going to be an interesting climb. As I started what would ultimately be 2700 feet of gain, I could sort of kind of see the trail but I mostly saw vegetation. It was thick, but mostly soft grass so not the worst thing in the world. Then I saw another rattler. Well, to be fair, I never actually saw this one, I could just hear it right off trail. After backing off and giving it a few minutes to see if it would move... it didn't. So, I climbed up the hill to the right a bit in waist high grass hoping I wouldn't find a friend of his and let him have the trail. As I made it to the wilderness boundary and the approximate 15 million switchbacks, the vegetation only got thicker and there was little sign of trail in most spots. If anyone wants to frame me for murder, I left about 5 gallons of blood there so I'm sure you can figure out something. I would not recommend this trail in shorts and this is coming from a guy who only hikes in shorts, overgrown trails and all: this felt like nearly an off trail excursion in a lot of areas.

Eventually, I made it to the Winn Falls viewpoint which was flowing quite nicely and I could hear loudly even from that distance. Loud enough that I almost stepped on yet another black rattlesnake because I couldn't hear it's rattle. Noped out of there real quick and got back on "trail", anxious to get the last bit of climbing out of the way. Eventually the trail meets up with Cima creek and what bit of trail you have disappears almost entirely to brush and deadfall. This next mile to the cabin took almost an hour as I figured out the best path but was an enjoyable hour if nothing else. Cima Creek was flowing beautifully and there are tons of little slick rock waterfalls and fun little chutes that it flows through to keep things interesting. I made it to the cabin around 7:30 or so, set up my tent, and started a small fire to relax by for a little bit before bed. The forest service has carved a couple of big logs as benches which left a ton of good firewood making it easy on me.


Day 2 - Fog, snakes, snakes, snakes, aspens

I woke up early to the pitter patter of rain and looked outside to see the entire area covered in fog and some fierce winds. What I thought was rain was actually moisture collecting on the trees above me and then being blown off by the wind. This made for some great horror movie vibes but did get me thinking about my plan a bit. Originally, I had planned on hiking north on the crest trail this day and making a 10 mile loop, ending back in the same spot or maybe another mile or two south. After checking the weather report again, it looked like things were only going to get worse in this area that day and night so I made the decision to hike on down Snowshed to drop some elevation and just play it by ear. I made this decision in the great forest service outhouse by the cabin. Truly fantastic.
The first few miles were brutal with the wind whipping the trees into my face but also beautiful. I dipped down to Anita spring real quick to check it out and then I climbed up Chiricahua peak to be met with... well, nothing. I couldn't see anything more than a few feet in front of me due to the fog. Don't worry though, because there was another black rattlesnake in the trail. Joy. This one gave me fair warning, though, which was nice of him. The wind and fog continued until hitting Aspen saddle where the trail starts to turn East. Of note, there is some good camping at Aspen Saddle that is tucked away in the trees; I took a break behind the treeline to get out of the wind and they did a great job of blocking it. I went south on crest to check out eagle and juniper springs and right at the trail split, it seemed like a light switch was thrown and the fog dissipated and the wind died down to a much more manageable level. The views from here to Herb Martyr are just absolutely insane and I found myself stopping often to take pictures/record/stare. Eagle spring is somewhat sketchy to get to; it seems there's been a lot of erosion and it's a fairly steep path with lots of small rocks. I scooted it on my butt. Juniper was a lot easier to get to and it just off the trail. There are three catchments, all have seen better days, but all had water of one variety of algae or another. I refilled here and while it still had a slight brown color to it, it tasted fine.
Guess what else I saw here? I guess black snakes gotta drink, too, because it was just handing out on the rock where a seep is coming through. We were pretty far from each other, though. I asked how it's family was, it didn't answer which I thought was rude, but whatever.
The next few miles are more just descending, beautiful views, and stopping when you hear a rattlesnake next to you to see where it is and realizing it's 6 inches from your foot on the side of this mountain making you an olympic track star. Sounds monotonous, but this one wasn't black like the rest, so it added a little spice.
Eventually I made it to Herb Martyr trail which was a nice change of pace. Well, the pace was still DOWN but now we're in green trees instead of rocky mountainsides. I was able to move much faster on this section and was making the plan to just pick a spot at the campground potentially for the night. I knew when I was getting close: the scent of hot dogs and burgers could be smelled from a mile out. I eventually made it there around 6. I found a spot right outside of the campground by the creek that had obviously been used for tents before and just pitched mine, which became more interesting than it should have. Halfway through, I feel someone smacking my back. I turned around ready for anything to see... a 12 year old boy. Who was immediately mortified and let out a small, "I thought you were my dad", before running away. No, small child, I don't believe I am. That was the first person i saw since setting out the day before, though. Then I checked out the vault toilet in the campground. Review: 5 star. Think they had cleaned it for labor day as it was spotless, the toilet paper was fresh, and it smelled like lysol.

Day 3: Just a quick 1.5 mile hike out along forest road. Nothing special but still a pleasant area. Found a family car camping right near mine which surprised me but it's a beautiful spot, so I get it. Drove out to the National Monument for some more hiking.

Final Thoughts: This is an absolutely beautiful, phenomenal, amazing, and remote area. It's also extremely rugged, tough, and affected by fire. These factors result in a trail that at times is trying to throw you off the mountain due to erosion and, other times, trying to separate your legs from your body with the vegetation. I also saw more wildlife in this one trip than I have seen on many trips combined including two bears, a scorpion, snake after snake after snake, a couple coatis, 6+ herds of deer, and all sorts of birds I haven't seen before. I would recommend the area and these specific trails to anyone wearing pants in decent physical condition and I will be going back soon.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Winn Falls
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light
 
Jun 27 2021
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 Guides 187
 Routes 990
 Photos 12,079
 Triplogs 865

72 male
 Joined Jun 27 2015
 Tucson, Arizona
Green House Crest Trail Loop, AZ 
Green House Crest Trail Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jun 27 2021
markthurman53Triplogs 865
Hiking15.49 Miles 2,957 AEG
Hiking15.49 Miles   8 Hrs   28 Mns   2.09 mph
2,957 ft AEG   1 Hour   4 Mns Break
 
1st trip
After a three week dry spell of no hiking I took 3 days to go hiking in the Chiricahua Mountains. My first day was on top of the mountain walking along the Crest Trail with some side trips along trails I haven't done yet. I arrived at the end of FR42D around sunrise. This time I drove all the way to the end of the road, requires at least high clearance vehicle. Hiking on the crest requires getting there at sunrise, not just because you may have a full day of hiking but mainly because it is so damn beautiful.

I passed along the west slopes of Flys Peak with great views of the early morning west views. The first side trip was along the Green House Trail. Ginny and I did this last April starting at Herb Martyr Campground and Hiked up to Winn Falls. We turned around at the falls. This was a really steep trail and figured I would have to do the upper part from the top. From the top it is 2.2 miles down to the falls. I had just passed Green House Cabin when I heard a noise that sounded like wood cracking, I wasn't sure what it was but a few minutes later I heard it again but this time I could see one tree leaning against another and debris was coming down. I looked closer and it was a bear clawing at the tree. I was about 50 feet from the bear and it was about 40 feet up the tree at about my eye level. This is the best opportunity I will probably ever get to photograph a bear before it runs off, you could say I had a captive audience. The bear did not know I was there it was intent on digging into that tree so I sat down and started taking pictures. As it dug a lot of insects were flying out and swarming all around. I was close enough that I remember thinking, I hope those aren't bees. I already had an incident in May where Ginny's bees attacked me while I was mowing and got stung about 30 times. I got the impression they were moths but I don't know, anyway they didn't bother me. After about 5 minutes of watching this bear I decided to head on down the trail, this is when the bear saw me, didn't knowing what to do since he was stuck up in the tree. "I HUNG EM UP"(as Jimmy Buffet said in the song "that's when I meet the bear"). It turned out the trail I was on did a switchback and I headed back toward the tree passing underneath it on the uphill side. I continued going and the trail did another switchback toward the tree on the downhill side. Before heading back toward the tree again I noticed the bear was heading down the tree slightly slower than free fall. I decided to wait until the bear got on the ground and hopefully it would just scurry off. I wasn't concerned that it would cause any problems for me, they usually just run off. Well it did and I went on my way. I wish Ginny was here because she is my Video person; my videos are not very stable. I made it down to Winn Falls and immediately headed back the way I came back up to the Crest Trail. There were a few pools of water in a few places along the Cima Creek. This little 2.2 mile jaunt with 1800 feet of elevation gain really kicked my rear, not sure why but it could be that I had not acclimated to the 10000 foot elevation. Maybe I'm just getting old and turning into a wimp and have been hiking too many flat Texas trails. I choose to think the former.

Continued on my hike toward Chiricahua Peak and did another short hike down to Ojo Agua Fria Spring, another 500 feet of elevation gain. I made it down to within a tenth a mile from the spring and it did not look that impressive so I spared myself climbing down any deeper into this canyon to see a place where supposedly there is a spring. I was pretty beet by now and the climb back up was taking a toll on my already sore heals. Not sure why my heals were rubbing, I haven't had that problem in quite a while.

I returned by walking around Chiricahua Peak in a clockwise direction. Took the Crest Trail 270D along the south side of the peak and then took the Crest Trail 270B back to Junction Saddle. I headed back to where I started and completed the 16 mile 3200 feet accumulated elevation gain by 3:30. I was staying in Portal Arizona at the lodge and they close at 6:00 so if I wanted to eat and sleep I best get down the 14 mile dirt road. Great day of hiking, felt good to be back out on the trail.

Bear video [ youtube video ]
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Jun 17 2020
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 Guides 99
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 Photos 16,072
 Triplogs 1,375

male
 Joined Jan 07 2017
 Fountain Hills,
Chiricahuas - South Flys and Snowshed, AZ 
Chiricahuas - South Flys and Snowshed, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jun 17 2020
DixieFlyerTriplogs 1,375
Hiking15.90 Miles 3,563 AEG
Hiking15.90 Miles   8 Hrs      2.35 mph
3,563 ft AEG   1 Hour   14 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Snowshed Peak has been on my radar screen for a while -- it is one of the Arizona 20-20 challenge peaks, which is an arbitrary list of the 20 highest "hikeable" peaks in AZ. Snowshed is the 19th out of the 20 that I have done -- still outstanding is Blue Peak, which is south of Alpine.

Since I was hiking to Snowshed, I figured that I would also hike up to South Flys Peak, which was along the way.

I started and ended the hike from Rustler Park, on FR 42D. After going about 2.5 miles, I stopped to take a quick break and step off the trail in order to do my part to keep Arizona green. I restarted the hike and looked down the trail and about 50 feet away was a bear in the trail. I stopped and slowly took a step back while staring at the bear. The bear saw me, and it took a u-turn and scampered back down the trail away from me, which is what bears should instinctively do. I was of course happy with the bear's reaction. I waited a couple of minutes for the bear to get out of Dodge, and then I continued hiking.

I continued on the Crest Trail until I go to Round Park, at which point I went off-trail up to South Flys Peak. There was a fair amount of vegetation to go through, mostly small aspen trees that were growing close together. In addition, there was a bit of deadfall to negotiate, and the closer to the summit that I got, the more the deadfall. I wanted to head toward Snowshed Peak, so instead of going back the way that I came I descended from the summit to the south and once again hit the Crest Trail going toward Chiricahua Peak.

I continued on Crest Trail 270B and then Crest Trail 270C until I got to a junction with Snowshed Trail #246. I took Trail #246 to Snowshed Saddle, which is about 1/2 mile below Snowshed Peak. From there the plan was to take Snowshed Peak Trail #364 up to the summit. However, there was one problem: Trail #364 does not really exist anymore. So instead of hiking on a trail, it was a bushwhack up the summit through some thick vegetation (mostly very thick small aspen trees), lots of deadfall, and some rock/boulder fields. It wasn't the easiest off-trail that I have done, but it wasn't the hardest either; however, I managed to make it up to the summit. As is typical of many peaks in the Chiricahuas, the views at the summit weren't the greatest. In the Chiricahuas, it is often more about the journey than the destination.

I went back the same way that I came until I got to Fly Saddle, below Flys Peak. Instead of continuing on the Crest Trail back to the TH, I took Long Peak Trail #42D for about 0.7 miles to FR 42D, and then took FR 42D for about 2 miles back to where I parked.

If I had it to do over again, I would have started the hike from the Long Peak TH, which would have saved about 4 miles of hiking. However, you'd want a high clearance 4WD vehicle to get from Rustler Park to the Long Peak TH.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Flys Peak  Snowshed Peak
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Fire Burn Area & Recovery
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Civilization is a nice place to visit but I wouldn't want to live there
 
May 25 2020
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 Guides 99
 Routes 1,485
 Photos 16,072
 Triplogs 1,375

male
 Joined Jan 07 2017
 Fountain Hills,
Sentinel Peak - Chiricahuas, AZ 
Sentinel Peak - Chiricahuas, AZ
 
Hiking avatar May 25 2020
DixieFlyerTriplogs 1,375
Hiking18.20 Miles 4,157 AEG
Hiking18.20 Miles   10 Hrs   24 Mns   1.99 mph
4,157 ft AEG   1 Hour   15 Mns Break
 
1st trip
This was day #3 of 3 days of hiking in the Huachucas/Chiricahuas, and we saved the worst for last. Actually the destination was fine, but the journey there was a brutal one.

We started and ended the hike at the South Fork Trail #243 TH. Note that the trailhead location is now different from what the guide on this site has for the TH. The reason is that in September of 2014, there was a major flood event in the eastern Chiricahuas caused by the remnants of Hurricane Odile. Large portions of the South Fork Trail were washed out and/or covered in rock rubble. As a result, heavily damaged sections of the trail were rerouted above the canyon bottom, and the trailhead was moved back about 0.4 miles to its current location (31.87345, -109.18478).

The trail was nice and easy to follow for a while. There are quite a few creek crossings -- some are dry and some had some water, but it was easy to keep your feet dry. The trail is generally easy to follow for about 3.5 miles until you come to an apple tree on the left side of the trail (there are several apple trees in the area). Past that point, the trail is sketchy in places, and we wound up having to rock and boulder hop through a dry creekbed in many sections. After about 5 miles you come to Pinnacle Rock, and the trail is pretty much non-existent past that point. We mostly were in the creek bed for a while, and then we were basically bushwhacking.

I had hoped to be able to follow the South Fork Trail to the junction with Burnt Stump Trail #366, but the South Fork Trail had disappeared well before that point. It became obvious that we were not going to be able to follow the South Fork Trail up to the Crest Trail, so we bushwhacked over to the Burnt Stump Trail and took it up to the Horseshoe Ridge Trail. The Burnt Stump Trail was overgrown, but we were able to follow it for the most part. We lost it at one point, and wound up being on a steep, slippery hillside, but we managed to get back on the trail.

We continued on the Burnt Stump Trail until it ended with a junction with Horseshoe Ridge Trail #282. We took the Horseshoe Ridge Trail for about 0.6 miles to the Baker Canyon Saddle, where we took Baker Canyon Trail #225 for about 0.8 miles until it intersects with Crest Trail #270C a very short distance below Sentinel Peak. We then took Crest Trail #270C up to the Sentinel summit.

The sections of the Horseshoe Ridge Trail and the Baker Canyon Trail that we were on were actually fairly decent, at least compared on what we had been through to get to them.

There were more trees at the summit than I thought there would be, so there weren't any 360 degree views. We could see the foundation of what used to be a fire tower, and there was some old rusty stuff scattered around.

To retraced our steps to get back to the TH. On the way back, we were able to stay on the Burnt Stump Trail, although it was largely overgrown with ceonothus, locust, oak, sticker bushes, and other assorted pleasantries. We got to a point where we decided to leave the trail and bushwhack our way down to the creek below. We stayed in the creek bed for a good while until we finally got to where we could occasionally pick up a trail.

I hiked with Tom and Sean, who are a couple of young guys in the Air Force -- both are bad-pumpkin hikers who are much stronger hikers than I am. On the way back, about 2.5 miles from the TH Tom was ahead of us and he looked up and saw a bear on the trail ahead of him, about 20 yards away. Tom and the bear stared at each other, and the bear ambled off the trail, crossed the creek, and started going uphill. When Sean and I got there, we could see the bear moving through the vegetation on the hillside. The bear was looking down at us as we were looking up at the bear. Unfortunately, I was unable to get a pic.

This was a tough hike -- I imagine that we were rock/boulder hopping through the creekbed for probably 4 miles of the hike. For me, that was tougher than bushwhacking that we did.

I originally thought this hike would be 14-15 miles, and I would not have hiked Sentinel from here had I known that the hike would be 18+ miles. Starting from Rustler Park would probably have been 19-20 miles, but it would have a much easier and enjoyable hike. I imagine that you could also start from the Mormon Canyon TH and hike an even shorter distance, and perhaps also from the Morse Canyon TH.

I WOULD NOT recommend that anyone do this hike just to bag Sentinel Peak -- there are better ways to get there. We were originally also going to bag Finnicum Peak, but we did not have enough time.

The South Fork Trail seems to be very popular with birders, and I imagine that is the reason that most people go here. There is also a nice swimming hole about a mile from the TH, which might be of interest to some people.

Over our 3 days of hiking in SE Arizona we wound up hiking 45.7 miles with 11,588 feet of elevation gain. This hike was easily the most difficult of the 3 hikes.
 Geology
 Geology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Rhyolite
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Sentinel Peak
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation None
there were next to none as far as wildflowers go

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max South Fork Cave Creek Medium flow Medium flow
There was a good bit of water in the creek in a number of places.
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Civilization is a nice place to visit but I wouldn't want to live there
  2 archives
May 07 2020
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 Routes 1
 Photos 356
 Triplogs 31

43 male
 Joined Nov 23 2007
 Tempe, AZ
Chiricahua Peak from Rustler Park THTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar May 07 2020
bballardTriplogs 31
Backpack12.00 Miles 1,282 AEG
Backpack12.00 Miles4 Days         
1,282 ft AEG45 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Wonderful 4-day backpacking escape exploring the crest trail for the first time! We bagged peaks and springs, saw plenty of white-tail deer, sweated and froze our butts off between daytime highs and nighttime lows. An AZ classic!
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Summit Register Log

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Anita Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Beautiful small but deep holding pond with clear cool water. Noticeable flow beyond.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Bear Wallow Spring Dripping Dripping
The tank was full but kind of cloudy. Not enough water to filter down course.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Booger Spring Dripping Dripping
The concrete tub was full but kind of cloudy. Barely enough water flowing down stream to filter.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Eagle Spring Dripping Dripping
Very small flow but really nice large clear pool of tasty water contained in the concrete trough. There's an easy to miss short trail to the right of the sign!

dry Headquarters Spring - Chiricahua Dry Dry
Damp area and dark murky water in trough. Not appealing to drink.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Hillside Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
small amount of flow and minimal but clear supply in the tank.

dry Juniper Spring Dry Dry
Not much going on here, but really pretty location.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Ojo Agua Fria Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute
Wonderful abundant flow from PVC piping direct from spring.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Tub Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
The trough was disconnected, but a good enough flow was found in the adjacent watercourse.
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Apr 23 2016
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 Guides 6
 Routes 183
 Photos 5,612
 Triplogs 1,647

male
 Joined Mar 12 2004
 Scottsdale, AZ
Chiricahua Peak via Turkey Creek, AZ 
Chiricahua Peak via Turkey Creek, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Apr 23 2016
John9LTriplogs 1,647
Hiking10.76 Miles 3,773 AEG
Hiking10.76 Miles   6 Hrs   38 Mns   2.16 mph
3,773 ft AEG   1 Hour   39 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Chiricahua Peak has been on my to do list for at least a year. Claire & I had plans to hike it back in September but the road to Rustler Park was unexpectedly closed so we stayed near the National Monument. After the trip I did some research and saw trip reports starting from the west side in Turkey Creek. This looked like a great option and we worked out all the details and hit the road on Friday afternoon. Our plan is to day hike on Saturday & Sunday and hit a variety of trails in the area.

Chumley, Claire, Kyle and myself left Phoenix around 1pm and made the drive to the Chiricahuas. We made good time and found ourselves at Sycamore Camp around 4:30pm. The established campground was about half full with four parties so we continued up the road and spotted a sweet site right next to the creek. The turn off was blocked with some medium size rocks and we weren’t sure if it was a legal site. Chumley and I both had the motorized use plan PDF on our phones and saw this truly was legal camping so we moved the rocks and drove down. The site is magnificent with a fire ring and lots of room for camping. We set up camp and then drove back down the dirt road to get cell signal so we could text FOTG our camp location and other important items. Did someone forget hiking shoes?!?!

Saturday morning started slow for everyone. FOTG and Jackie arrived around midnight and all of us took our time with breakfast and gearing up. Our group of six people and four dogs left camp around 9am and walked down the road to Mormon Canyon Trail. We hit the trail and started making our way up canyon. This is a really nice trail that parallels the creek most of the way. It’s a steady gain that had all of us huffing and puffing as we made our way up. We took short breaks when needed and continued the climb up. The trail eventually leaves the creek and makes a few more switchbacks before leveling off at a saddle that is the junction with the Mormon Ridge Trail.

We took a short break and discussed our options. The known route heads to the southeast before turning for Chiricahua Peak. I noticed an old trail on some of the forest service maps that heads to the north. I didn’t have any info on the trail and made a hand drawn route for us to follow. We decided to go for it and this turned out to be a mistake. The route was very overgrown with lots of deadfall. I felt bad for the dogs but we kept pushing through. We could see the trail cut but had a very hard time staying on it. About a third of a mile across the route was completely consumed by new growth so we decided to bushwhack straight up the mountain. The going was very slow and difficult as each step slid down about six inches in loose dirt. We eventually topped out near Anita Park and were glad to be on the Crest Trail.

Once on the Crest Trail we made the final push for Chiricahua Peak. This last stretch was fairly easy besides some deadfall to navigate. Once up top we took an extended break and enjoyed the summit. The views are limited from all the trees but I didn’t mind. The temps were perfect with a nice breeze and I enjoy the cool mountain air at elevation. After our break we looked for an alternative route down the east side of the peak but couldn’t find an established route. We didn’t want to experience another route finding fiasco so all of us, except Chumley, went down the way we came up. From there we connected to Chiricahua Saddle. This trail was in good shape for the most part other than more deadfall. Once at the saddle we met back up with Chumley and continued down.

Our group decided to split at the top of Mormon Ridge & Mormon Canyon. FOTG, Jackie & Kyle decided to stay in the canyon so they could water the dogs. Claire, Chumley and myself headed down the Mormon Ridge Trail which was in good condition for the most part. There was some deadfall but no major issues. We made relatively good time as we headed down. The sun was beating down and I wouldn’t want to climb this trail on a hot and sunny day. We eventually hit the road which we followed back to camp returning around mid-afternoon.

This was a nice day on the trails. I really enjoyed the Mormon Canyon and Mormon Ridge Trails. I also enjoyed Chiricahua Peak. It doesn’t have the expansive views like Mount Wrightson but is still a quality peak. My biggest takeaway is the vast trail system in this range. Trails are all over the place and I would love to explore more of them. A return trip is definitely in the plans for some point in the future. Thanks to Chumley and FOTG for both driving.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Intrepid Back Shot
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  1 archive
Apr 23 2016
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 Guides 94
 Routes 840
 Photos 22,055
 Triplogs 1,993

52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Crest Trail #270A - Chiricahua PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 23 2016
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Hiking12.46 Miles 4,205 AEG
Hiking12.46 Miles   6 Hrs   52 Mns   1.81 mph
4,205 ft AEG
 
Great day hike to the top of the Chiricahuas! Nice intro to the range for me too since I had not previously been anywhere near this part of the state before.

First impression: The Chiricahuas are unlike other sky islands in that they really are a mountain range, rather than just a single primary peak. Lots of peaks, ridges, and valleys and a very well developed trail system. I was afraid that the Horseshoe fires had destroyed this entire island, but was pleased to find quite a bit of beautiful forest, some old growth pines, and areas of healthy regrowth. The fire scarred areas can be jarring to see, but there's also some beauty to be found from them too. The variety makes it interesting.

Things I learned: Turkeys can fly! We saw rafter after rafter of these enormous birds. Thanks to a little canine encouragement, I was impressed to see how easy a 40-lb chunk of thanksgiving feast can get off the ground. I wouldn't use the word "graceful" but nonetheless, they would easily qualify as air force pilots in a third world country. :)

Mormon Canyon #352
We headed up this canyon trail and it is a real gem. The climb is relentless, steep, and features no breaks, but the terrain is shaded, cool, and serene. Water flowing in the creek for the first half made for pleasant conditions for the pups. Only the very top section had burned, but the trail was well maintained, and the burn opened up some great views.

The north cut toward Crest near Cima Park
At the top of Mormon Canyon and the junction with Mormon Ridge 269 we opted to head for the Crest trail via a trail on the north side of Chiricahua Peak. This is a terrible idea. This trail has been abandoned. Fire damage, erosion, deadfall, and new growth has taken over, and this trail should not be attempted. I've seen varying sources name this trail as the continuation of either Mormon Canyon or Mormon Ridge. Either way, don't bother with this one.

Crest Trail #270
I eventually hit the Crest Trail well south of Cima Park after making a direct ascent for the ridge. The ridge has been badly burned, but the Crest trail has been well maintained and is a relative highway.

Anita Spring Trail
I wanted to check out Anita Park and Anita Spring, and didn't see any sign of a route to get there anymore. I eventually circled the rocky outcropping at Anita Park off trail and headed toward the spring I had marked on my GPS. Despite the burn, the spring looked and tasted fantastic. Good flow and a great source of water. From the spring, it was easy to follow the tread of the old trail back up to the Crest. The sign is missing but there's a post which I somehow missed on the way by earlier.

Chiricahua Peak Trail
The Crest trail traverses the east side of Chiricahua Peak and didn't look particularly well-traveled. I headed up the peak trail to meet up with the others who had gotten ahead of me while I had been exploring Anita. The peak trail is in fine shape and easy to follow despite the burn.

Chiricahua Peak Southeast Descent
Maps showed a trail descending the southeast slope of Chiricahua Peak, but after a quick search, the group came up empty, and didn't want to repeat the experience above Mormon Canyon, so they all headed back the way they came, while I decided to look for the trail. After not too long, I found an old cut to follow, and this side of the peak didn't burn so travel is easy even if there had not been a trail. I followed the easy track until I joined the obvious junction with the Crest Trail that traverses the east side of the peak. It looked much better traveled on this end.

Route Scout was telling me I was close to Headquarters Spring. I opted not to make the trip since it dropped farther down the hill than I was willing to go. Shortly thereafter I arrived at a sign for Ojo Agua Fria #361, which I also skipped. Now in wide open, sandy burn area, I looked for the trail that cut back to the west, and didn't see an obvious cut. But just a few steps later I reached the well-marked junction with Crest Trail 270D to Chiricahua Saddle ... where I was headed.

Crest Trail #270D
This stretch of the crest trail that traverses the southern side of Chiricahua Peak was some of the nicest high-elevation trail of the trip. The eastern end traverses a gravelly burned slope before entering unburned forest and traversing some great rocky landscape and unbelievable trail construction through a boulder slope. It drops easily to Chiricahua Saddle, where I headed north a hundred yards to meet up with the others who had just arrived from the other side of the peak to get here. It's a short stretch through some burn with a couple of deadfall obstacles descending to the north and the junction of Mormon Canyon and Ridge trails where we had been earlier in the morning.

Mormon Ridge Trail #269
Claire, 9L and I decided to take the ridge trail, while the others took the canyon back down. The trail is impressively built, and generally easy to travel. I would not want to ascend this way, and in fact, having now done it once, I would probably stick with the canyon trail on the way down as well. It descends just below a south facing ridge, so the flora is small and desert-like, despite the elevation. It is exposed to sun and warmed up nicely despite the strong winds we had endured all day. The area from just above the wilderness boundary to the bottom had received recent maintenance. There were a couple of sections that were so well maintained, I wondered if they had brought the "trail machine" out there!

Turkey Creek back to camp
The Ridge trail reaches Turkey Creek road about half a mile below where the Canyon trail begins, so to complete the loop you have to do a short road walk. I hopped along the creek instead, finding a couple of cascades, a neat section of narrows with a dam, as well as a natural waterfall. I then found the old road cut on the opposite side of the creek as the current alignment and followed that in a pleasant forest setting adjacent to the creek. There were signs of an old homestead too. I continued upstream to the waterfall just below our camp where I got to brush up on my Spanish before settling into a chair with an ice cold beer and newfound socks!

This was an extremely enjoyable day hike and—except for that short stretch of trail that doesn't exist anymore and can be easily avoided—is an ideal trip for anybody staying in the Turkey Creek area. Thanks to 9L for planning this one! :)
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Benchmark  Snowman

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Anita Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
full and flowing. fresh, clear, and cold.
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I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
 
Apr 23 2016
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 Guides 37
 Routes 556
 Photos 10,872
 Triplogs 1,052

43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Crest Trail #270A - Chiricahua PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 23 2016
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Hiking9.09 Miles 3,537 AEG
Hiking9.09 Miles
3,537 ft AEG   1 Hour   21 Mns Break
 
1st trip
I got an invite from John for a car camping weekend in the Chiricahuas and I was quick to accept. I have always been intrigued by the Chiricahuas, but I have been too preoccupied with other areas of the state to make the long drive and commit to something in that area. This weekend's hikes offered a nice intro into the area, a county high point, great hikings and some quality camping in the pines.

Chiricahua Peak was tabbed for Saturday. I was very elated to know that I was going to stumble across another county high point in this hike and initially thought that might be the highlight of this hike. As it turned out, the peak was pleasant, but the views were limited and the real highlights of the hike were probably some stretches along the ridgelines and the lower portions of Mormon Canyon. The first couple of miles up Mormon Canyon Trail were very pleasant with running water a couple of robust springs and some nice stands of pine. The hike then becomes a bit of a relentless climb, but nothing too overwhelming and along generally well-kept trails.

We tried an alternate approach to the summit and took a trail with little beta on it and only a hand drawn route. After a somewhat promising start, it turned out to not workout at all for us. After losing any semblance of the tread and some time spent navigating the eroded slope, most of us made the decision to shoot straight up the seemingly less-overgrown over hillside to our ridgeline trail that led to the summit. The climb was tough, but for us it seemed like a better alternative than continuing our off-trail contour along the steep slope.

It was nice to see several surviving pines on the summit, but they do hinder the great views one might expect from a county high point. We enjoyed our time on the peak nevertheless and after an extended stay finally made our way down. We opted for the out and back return minus the alternate route because it offered more shade and guaranteed water for the pups. The hike down was a bit of a knee-jarring ride at times, but it went by quick even with a few stops to let the dogs have their fun in the water.

In the end Mormon Canyon Trail made the hike for me, but I was happy to knock out a high point and the views while limited were still certainly redeeming enough to warrant the climb. The burnt out sections were a bit of a bummer. However, I thought there were enough nice stretches of great forest and areas seemingly untouched by previous fires to keep the scenic factor pretty top notch. There are also some pretty promising signs of rebirth in some of the burnt out areas to keep one positive about the future of this area.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Mormon Spring

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Mormon Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
A very nice flow coming out of a larger pipe attached to an old concrete storage container, water from spring going into creek, which was flowing as well.
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  3 archives
Apr 23 2016
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 Routes 67
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89 male
 Joined Mar 28 2008
 Phoenix, AZ
Crest Trail #270A - Chiricahua PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 23 2016
Tough_BootsTriplogs 755
Hiking9.10 Miles 3,530 AEG
Hiking9.10 Miles
3,530 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
This was day 2 of a car camping trip in the Chiricahuas. It was my first trip to the area and I really enjoyed it. We had quite the hiking group on this trip-- 6 humans and 4 dogs. We took the Mormon Canyon trail up to the junction with the Mormon Ridge Trail and the Saddle Trail and took the ridge trail a ways. It was destroyed and took quite a bit of effort to get through. It was especially challenging for the dogs. We decided to bushwack straight up and made the steep ascent. It was tiring but we made it. We hit the top of the ridge right near the junction with the Crest Trail and the summit trail. We headed up and had lunch. Unfortunately because of the tree coverage, the views are not exactly spectacular but its still a worthy peak. We headed back down and took the Crest Trail around to the Saddle Trail. Us with the dogs decided to take Mormon Canyon back down where we knew there would be shade and water and the others descended via Mormon Ridge. Great hike!
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  4 archives
Sep 19 2015
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45 female
 Joined May 14 2008
 Tucson, AZ
Chiricahua Figure 8 Loop, AZ 
Chiricahua Figure 8 Loop, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Sep 19 2015
SaraeTriplogs 94
Backpack13.31 Miles 4,000 AEG
Backpack13.31 Miles2 Days         
4,000 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Tyler and I decided to spend the last weekend of summer exploring some trails in the Chiricahua Mts that we haven't been on before and checking out the condition of an old favorite destination, Anita Park.

We drove down to Sycamore Campground on Friday evening and were treated to a very colorful sunset. Sycamore was pretty busy, the only site left was right next to the bathroom, but beggars can't be choosers, so we set up camp and ended up having a surprisingly peaceful night of sleep. The sound of the creek running next to the campsite probably helped out with that.

Saturday morning, we got ourselves organized and then headed up to the Mormon Canyon TH. We parked the Jeep and started up the trail. The morning was very muggy and we were soon laboring up the steep trail and feeling grateful that there were at least clouds to shade us. The trail was overgrown with grasses in many places, but not that difficult to follow. We made it about halfway up the canyon before those clouds started lowering and a mist joined us on the trail. We were still in good spirits, so up and up we continued. We only found a few downed trees across the trail, not too bad at all. By the time we got to the top, it was late morning, and a soft, constant rain was falling. We decided to continue up towards the junction with one of the legs of the Crest Trail (#270B). We stopped for lunch, putting up our tarp to shelter from the rain and the wind that was picking up. At this point I suppose we could have decided to head back down, because there were no indications that the rain would let up, but since there was no thunder or lightning, we decided to continue and hope for a break in the weather in the afternoon. It's a short hike from our lunch junction to Junction Saddle, where a few trails intersect. We headed off to check out Anita Park, fill up our water, and see if there were any safe places to hang after the fire. The sign for Anita Park is basically just a post right now, and the start of the trail is covered by knee high grasses. As we came over the small rise and viewed Anita Park, it didn't look good for hangers. We continued down to the spring, passing one promising group of trees, and filled up our water supply. The Anita Spring looked pretty nice with a stone reinforced pool and good flow. We hiked back up the steep trail to check out the one spot it looked like we could hang. As we were surveying the rain got a bit heavier, and so we decided to commit, even though it was a pretty windy spot. We quickly set up the tarp and snacked and dried off a bit waiting for the rain to let up so we could finish setting up our hammocks. We had no such luck, so we got our rain gear back on and hastily set up our hammocks in between shivering. Thank goodness we have a giant tarp and that hammocks are so comfy, because it ended up raining for the rest of the evening. We called it a night at around 7pm and woke up the first time at midnight to a totally clear sky and fantastic star gazing. The wind had also completely died down, so the rest of our night's sleep was very quiet and comfortable.

Sunday morning, in the beautiful sunny weather, we had a decision to make. I had originally wanted to do a loop past Monte Vista peak and down Morse Canyon, but because we were a bit worn out from the day before, we decided to shorten things up a bit and complete a figure 8 loop by going around Chiricahua Peak and ending with heading down Mormon Ridge Trail. We packed up and headed out pretty quickly and started our hike out. We decided to wait to fill up our water so we would have an excuse to check out Headquarters Spring. The hike from Anita Park to Ojo Agua Fria trail was really, really pleasant. There are flowers ALL OVER along the crest. Most are a yellow flower that look like they are in the daisy family, but other colors are scatter around, too. They all appear to be loving the extra light that is available because the trees are gone. We made our side trip to Headquarters Spring, which had a few cairns to show the way. The spring box is a metal tub and the water looks pretty good with a small bit of flow. After getting back to the junction it was a short walk to Aspen Saddle, where we picked up another leg of the Crest Trail (#270D). The beginning of this trail contours through an area cleared of trees and some of the tread was pretty loose. As soon as we got back into un-burnt trees, the trail was solid and enjoyable. We switch-backed down to Chiricahua Saddle and then back over to the junction with Mormon Ridge Trail. We ate our lunch looking out over Mormon Canyon and then made our way easily to the Mormon Canyon/Mormon Ridge junction. The Mormon Ridge trail is obscured by fallen trees here, but we bypassed the mess and found it without too much trouble. The trail condition was pretty good after about 1/4 mile. There are quite a few shrubs and grasses that you have to push through, but the footing was pretty steady and the switchbacks made it a relaxing hike to the trailhead. The Mormon Ridge TH on Turkey Creek Rd is about .75 miles from the Mormon Canyon TH so we had to hike up the road to finally get back to the Jeep.

It was great to get back to the Chiricahuas. The damage from Horseshoe 2 fire was clearly devastating, but the area is still very beautiful and we didn't find it too difficult to navigate with our gps and good trail descriptions in hand.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Substantial
Tons of yellow, daisy-like flowers.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Anita Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
The pool below the spring is clean and looks good.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Headquarters Spring - Chiricahua Quart per minute Quart per minute
Metal tub is full and pretty clean.
_____________________
In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks. ~John Muir
  1 archive
Sep 19 2010
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 Guides 2
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 Photos 44
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81 male
 Joined Mar 26 2004
 Houston, TX
Crest Trail #270C - Jct Sdl to Sentinel PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Sep 19 2010
sumnergeoTriplogs 24
Backpack6.30 Miles 1,100 AEG
Backpack6.30 Miles4 Days         
1,100 ft AEG
 no routes
Big News - Crest Trail (270 and 270C) now cleared of downfall from Barfoot Lookout to Sentinel Peak.
Seven of us backpacked from Rustler Park to Aspen Saddle. This was a volunteer trail crew with six volunteers and Zac, the Trails Ranger for the southern Coronado National Forest.
We spent our first day (Sunday) clearing the Crest Trail 270C from Junction to Aspen Saddles. This was less than a mile of trail but with some massive trees and difficult clearing. We set up our basecamp on Sunday night at Aspen Saddle and walked the trail to Ojo Agua Fria for water and found even more large trees blocking the way.
On Monday, we continued clearing 270C from Aspen to Junction Saddle but the trees were deadfall and relatively easy to clear. From Junction Saddle out to Sentinel Peak, a Forest Survey crew had cleared the trail the week before but the tread made walking difficult from the Price Canyon trail junction out to the South Fork trail junction (about 1.5 miles). We arrived at the South Fork junction at 11:20 and the rain hit us. With cloud-to-cloud lightning - we hoped - we waited out the rain in a copse of trees downslope on the south side of the ridge. With the shower out of the way, we worked our way down the trace of the South Fork trail. We chopped out raspberries and also ate some. We moved and shoved off smaller logs and cut out bigger ones to the switchback, about 150 yards to the northeast and started clearing the next leg to the northwest before calling it a day and heading back to Aspen Saddle. We flagged and located the trail to the northwest into a drainage and then along the southeast-facing hillside to just below a rock outcrop so are encouraged that we may someday be able to get the trail open once again.
With concern about more storms, we decided to clear the trails around Chiricahua Peak on Tuesday. We started on 270D, from Aspen to Chiricahua Saddle and had that cleared by 10 o'clock. Working back up 270B toward Junction Saddle, we cleared some nasty tangles and also a huge Douglas Fir so even though there are a number of "step-overs" left, the trail is easily passable for hikers heading out to Monte Vista. Rains hit again around noon but only lasted about an hour. We got water at Anita Spring and found enough dry wood at Aspen Saddle to enjoy a campfire.
It rained overnight so our hike out on Wednesday was in cloud and drizzle. Even with packs and tools, we made the walk back to the Long Park trailhead in 90 minutes.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Trail Maintenance
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Isolated
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Extreme

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Booger Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Good flow and trail cleared; Anita spring had water but low flow. Ojo Agua Fria good flow but trail obscured in places

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Hillside Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
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it's the only earth we have
 
Jun 05 2010
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81 male
 Joined Mar 26 2004
 Houston, TX
Crest Trail #270B - Jct Sdl to Monte Vista PkTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Jun 05 2010
sumnergeoTriplogs 24
Backpack6.30 Miles 1,100 AEG
Backpack6.30 Miles14 Days         
1,100 ft AEG
 no routes
Trail work - June 5-19, 2010

Brief Summary
Cleared for foot and horse
Long Park to Flys Saddle (42D)
Lower portion of North Flys Peak Trail (337)
Crest Trail (270) from Rustler Park to Aspen Saddle
Bootlegger from Rustler Park to jct with Rock Canyon Trail (275)
Greenhouse from Crest to Cima cabin and barn (248)
Chiricahua Peak (270A)
Bear Wallow (333)
Centella - Tub Springs (334)
Anita Park (but not to spring) (359)
Booger Spring (347)
Cleared for foot
Junction Saddle to Chiricahua Saddle (270B); Chiricahua Saddle to Paint Rock (270B) to Monte Vista lookout

Work Phases
June 5 & 6, Clearing Crest trail outside the Wilderness from Rustler Park and Long Park TH (w/ chainsaw): John, Walter, Jim, Jean, Ron, and Tom - 2.2 miles - dark blue
June 7, Bootlegger tread and brushing (only two trees since John and Greg had removed most last fall); John, Jim, Jean, Ron, Tom, Charley, Mel, Joe and Donna - 0.8 miles - light green
June 8-10, Clearing Crest trail from Flys Saddle to Cima Cabin; Jim, Jean, John, and Ron - 1.9 miles - orange-red
June 13-18 (Sierra Club Trip, one day joined with Portal Hiking Club members); John, Jim, Jean, Joe, Gary, Rachel, Anne, Zoe, Zac, Joe M, Donna, Carol, Barbara, Lorraine, Greg; Cleared Crest from Cima Park to Aspen Saddle; Anita Park; Chiricahua Peak, Booger Springs (north) Bear Wallow, Centella, Tub Springs and half-way up Flys Peak on north side - 5.1 miles - magenta

Of Note
o Biggest tree was a 30 inch (or 29 inch) ponderosa on the Bear Wallow Trail that Zac, Rachel and Zoe polished off with two cuts in less than 40 minutes (20 minutes to get off the trail)
o Toughest stretch was south on the Crest from Junction Saddle with nine of us working to open up about 500 feet of trail
o Two trips out Centella Point to view the Horseshoe fire as it worked its way along the west flank of Portal Peak
o Eb's tireless sawing
o Joe and Gary tossing logs off the trail
o Stars and more stars with the dark of the moon
o Anne's rumpedehumps
o Gary's fires
o Joe's blisters (12 miles in new boots!!)
o Rachel and Zoe's 12 pounds of books
o Butts on the ground with lots of sap to make certain the stains are permanent

Problem Areas
o Crest trail from Rustler Park to Bootlegger Saddle has tread problems below the cliffs (above the Guard Station and about 1/4 mile south of the Bootlegger Trial junction). An hour of pick-mattock should solve it in the short term but might be a candidate for some rock to stabilize the slumping. Crew of four, two hours
o Bootlegger trail from the Saddle down to the junction with Rock Canyon and Rattlesnake trails has downfall but the tread is in good shape. It is outside the Wilderness Area. Crew of four, eight hours
o Flys Peak trail - north and south - has significant deadfall, especially on the south side. Crew of four, 12 hours.
o Monte Vista trail has significant downfall, mostly green: 46 trees between Junction Saddle and Chiricahua Saddle, four will need a crosscut; 18 trees between Chiricahua Saddle and Raspberry Ridge Junction that can be handled with a big Corona or D-handle; 26 trees between the junction and the Lookout, most of these are within 1/4 mile of the junction on the north side of Raspberry Peak. The tread needs work within 3/8 mile of Junction Saddle. Crew of four, two days.
o Crest trail from Aspen to Juniper Saddle probably has significant deadfall based on what we saw elsewhere on the Crest trail. Crew of four, eight hours.
o The trail from Barfoot Lookout down to Barfoot Park has several trees across it. Crew of four, two hours.
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Nov 01 2009
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47 female
 Joined Oct 13 2007
 Loveland, CO
South Fork of Cave Creek #243Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 01 2009
hhwolf14Triplogs 173
Hiking16.00 Miles 3,420 AEG
Hiking16.00 Miles
3,420 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Partners none no partners
The first 3 miles of this one are worth spending the whole day. The colors are not peak yet, but are still very sweet. There was a light brushing of snow on the slopes of the higher elevations. There's a bit of a question for the total distance of this hike all the way to Sentinel Peak- reports to the Crest trail are 13.8, and I easily bushwacked an extra bit- so I think 16 is fair. The trail is well marked until the last segment climbing to the Crest trail. It is very slow going through here, lots of deadfall, loose rocks and raspberry plants grabbing you as you try to make your way up the slope. It also makes for sore feet and ankles as you head down. I would strongly recommend a walking stick or trekking poles for balance on this one, not usually a fan, but it helped a lot on the way back.
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Moderate
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Jun 12 2009
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81 male
 Joined Mar 26 2004
 Houston, TX
Crest Trail #270C - Jct Sdl to Sentinel PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Jun 12 2009
sumnergeoTriplogs 24
Backpack6.30 Miles 1,100 AEG
Backpack6.30 Miles7 Days         
1,100 ft AEG
 no routes
Trail work - June 3-12, 2009, Sierra Club Service Trip

Summary
For trails noted, cleared of all downed logs. Brushing and treadwork accompanied clearing the trails of trees. About 15 miles of trail worked. If last year's estimate of trees per mile holds, we cut out or moved over 200 trees from the trails. Largest tree was 25 inches (green Douglas Fir on Bear Wallow trail).
Work accomplished over seven days with eight to twelve people. Sierra Club Service Trip.

Trails Cleared
Long Park to Fly Saddle
North and South Fly Peak Trails (337)
Crest Trail (270) from northern Wilderness boundary to Junction Saddle
Chiricahua Peak (270A)
Junction Saddle to Chiricahua Saddle (270B); Chiricahua Saddle to Paint Rock (270B); we scouted eleven trees on the trail from Paint Rock to Monte Vista.
Aspen Saddle to Chiricahua Saddle (270D)
Junction to Price Canyon trail junction (270C); many small trees across trail from Price Canyon to South Fork jct.
Anita Spring trail (359)
Booger Springs trail from Round Park (347)
Greenhouse trail (248) to basin overlook from Cima Park and from lower trailhead to Upper Falls Overlook (heard from Portal Hiking Club that there is a tree across the trail above the overlook and the Cima watershed)
Bear Wallow (335). This included extensive clearing and total rework of portions of the trail around the spring south of the spring
Centella Point trail (334) from Fly Saddle out to overlook

Details
June 2 - Arrival of early group of seven in late afternoon at Rustler Park.
June 3 - carried supplies into Cima Cabin from Long Park and cut out one tree from Crest Trail north of Bootlegger Saddle; return via Bear Wallow to check trail conditions on east side of Flys Peak.
June 4 - hike to Cima with supplies and removed logs along Crest from Long Park to Cima Park; cleared blow down northeast of Round Park
June 5 - Anne and Terri to Willcox for groceries. Jody, Jim, Jean, John, Joe, Eb and Fred cleared logs off Flys Peak trails and out to Anita Park on Crest Trail.
June 6 - hike to Cima with produce purchased in Willcox on June 5. Prepare to depart from Rustler Park; rest of members of Service Trip arrive. Say adios to Eb.
June 7 - depart for Cima to set up camp; afternoon doing safety training, cutting log below Cima Cabin, Cleared logs out Crest Trail to Anita Park and Springs (no water in the spring) and out to Aspen Saddle.
June 8 - Continue out the Crest Trail toward Sentinel Peak. Smaller group clears logs off trail to Chiricahua Peak. Cleared trail to Price Canyon junction and beyond. About a mile of uncleared trail remains to South Fork junction.
June 9 - Light rain so five of us walked down Greenhouse trail and took out one log while enjoying the natural conditions. Joe scouted the trails around Chiricahua Peak and in the afternoon, six of us (Fred, Jody, Joe, Jean, John) cleared trail for about ½ mile from Aspen Saddle toward Chiricahua Saddle.
June 10 - Cleared trails from Aspen and Junction Saddles out to Chiricahua Saddle. Lunch, then a smaller group out to Monte Vista but removed trees from trail out to Paint Rock.
June 11 - Returned to Round Park and worked the Bear Wallow trail to the junction with the Centella Trail. Cut out trees, tread work, brushing, and trail reroute south of the spring. Ended at big Douglas Fir.
June 12 - Back to the big fir and with Zac's help, Terri and Jeanie did an underbuck - 25 inches, a tough one. Cleared trees and lopped out Centella Trail with a break on the overlook. Could see to the Florida Mountains south of Deming; fires in the Peloncillos and Animas Ranges. Returned to Flys Saddle with lunch at Tub Springs cut out a number of trees and brushed as we went. Returned tools and gear to Zac's truck at the Long Park Trailhead.
June 13 - Broke camp and hiked out to Rustler Park and se dijimos adios.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light

dry Anita Spring Dry Dry
usually running but stagnant in early June; other springs: Bear Wallow, Tub, Eagle, Booger, Kuniper all had some flow; flow in Cima Creek at Cabin

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Booger Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
_____________________
it's the only earth we have
 
Jun 07 2008
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81 male
 Joined Mar 26 2004
 Houston, TX
Crest Trail #270C - Jct Sdl to Sentinel PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 07 2008
sumnergeoTriplogs 24
Hiking6.30 Miles 1,100 AEG
Hiking6.30 Miles7 Days         
1,100 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   linked  
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Chiricahua Wilderness Area - Sierra Club Service Trip, June 5-14, 2008

With twelve of us on the Service Trip plus the Trails Ranger, we cleared:

- Crest Trail of all downed timber from Rustler Park to Juniper Saddle (6 + miles); members of the Bozeman Engine Crew helped with some of the big logs outside the Wilderness Area.
- Trail from Long Park TH to Fly Saddle (< 1 mile)
- Trail to Chiricahua Peak from Crest Trail (1 mile)
- Trails to Anita and Booger Springs ( about ½ mile total)
- Snowshed Trail from Juniper Spring to switchback about ½ mile below Deer Spring (1 ½ miles)
- Trails to Fly Peak; south side cleared and about half of the north side (1 ½ miles)

Still many logs on the north trail to Fly Peak - perhaps next year. Didn't quite get the Snowshed Trail completely cleared down to Pine Park.
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it's the only earth we have
 
Apr 04 2008
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 Guides 2
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81 male
 Joined Mar 26 2004
 Houston, TX
Crest Trail #270C - Jct Sdl to Sentinel PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 04 2008
sumnergeoTriplogs 24
Hiking6.00 Miles 800 AEG
Hiking6.00 Miles   6 Hrs      1.00 mph
800 ft AEG
 no routes
Partners none no partners
Trail Head, FR 42D, 31.90592, 109.27708, 8370 feet

Low 30s overnight at Herb Martyr. Drive to Rustler Park was uneventful but the last mile of road to the trail head is rougher than most jeep trails. One car in the parking lot so headed out around 8, bound for Cima Cabin with a load of white gas for the volunteer trail crew that will be here in June. Went up the road to the turnoff to Boot Leggers Saddle and followed the Crest Trail (#270) to Cima Saddle and the Greenhouse Trail (#248). Made the seven mile round trip in four hours because I moved every small log off the trail on the way in and carried out a pack's worth of trash that was on trail between Round Park and Cima Saddle. Clearly some illegal traffic through the area in the last few months.

Perfect weather with views across the Sulphur Springs Valley to the west and Cochise Head to the north Many yellow-eyed juncos - do they ever leave? - and four cows keeping the tread in good shape. I think I counted five cows when we were here in November 2007 and am surprised that they didn't leave the high country with the snow. Two little icy patches near Round Park; quite a contrast from floundering through deep soft snow at this time last year. Springs might be iffy come June.

Met the dad and two sons in Bootlegger Saddle and heard their tales of a really cold night.

Counted over 30 trees across the Crest Trail between Bootlegger and the cabin. Returned via the Long Park trail head and found a big blowdown outside the Wilderness Area. Looked like a tornado touched down with trees lying every which way.
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it's the only earth we have
 
average hiking speed 1.72 mph

WARNING! Hiking and outdoor related sports can be dangerous. Be responsible and prepare for the trip. Study the area you are entering and plan accordingly. Dress for the current and unexpected weather changes. Take plenty of water. Never go alone. Make an itinerary with your plan(s), route(s), destination(s) and expected return time. Give your itinerary to trusted family and/or friends.

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