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Mica Mountain Trail - 13 members in 32 triplogs have rated this an average 4.4 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Aug 29 2025
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 Guides 264
 Routes 2,797
 Photos 14,494
 Triplogs 5,894

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 1996
 
Manning Camp via Reddington Road, AZ 
Manning Camp via Reddington Road, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Aug 29 2025
joebartelsTriplogs 5,894
Hiking24.48 Miles 5,954 AEG
Hiking24.48 Miles   11 Hrs   8 Mns   2.46 mph
5,954 ft AEG   1 Hour   10 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
End of payment Drive to TH
After a minute of washboard, it's a series of corkscrew turns to gain elevation. After miles of wavy rock road, it turns into moguls. Finally, a sense of sanity for a mile or two passing Bellota Ranch, and you're at the trailhead.

Italian Spring Trail #95
The first 5.25 mi won't excite most. I think it's pretty cool on the edge of the Sonoran Desert with a different vegetation feel versus the outskirts of Phoenix.

Reached a creek crossing at about 5.1 miles, there's well over a hundred gallons of water. A larger pool in an unnamed tributary just 0.15 mi further to the next ravine. 7.2 mi up, you start getting shade and sanity if it's a hot day.

0.25 mi to the NPS gate, I noticed mica often on the trail.

Ferns were waist-high at Italian Spring. It started to sprinkle with calm waves of light rain to follow.

North Slope Trail - Saguaro NP
Only on this for its upper 0.5 mi. Satellite shows the east is torched. At least four fires, but it seemed trivial to me; most of this stretch is pine-covered.

Fire Loop Trail - Mica
Only on this for 0.35 mi. Notable for this out-and-back because the top is the high point at ~8607 ft.

Mica Mountain Trail
Have always taken this trail because it's the shortest distance to Manning Camp. It's not as nice as Jacinto or Big Bear, but seems as nice as Mount Baldy IMO.

Return
Expecting to see people at Manning Camp, I turned the sound off on RS earlier on Fire Loop, figuring I knew the rest of the hike by memory. Realized I was off-trail 0.2 mi up Cow Head Saddle Trail. Instead of heading back, I cut through the forest over a small rise.

Noticed evidence of large bears that ate large seeds. Perhaps hackberry seeds, as one was loaded with berries in various ripening stages.

It rained very lightly for maybe an hour total. Luckily, it was all in the pines and diffused because I ditched the umbrella. Only a couple of claps of thunder.

The Catalinas got pounded with squalls throughout the afternoon.

It was a light rain for the last couple of miles, so the hottest part of the hike never surfaced.

Synopsis
Furthest I've ventured solo since May 2020. This is one of my favorite hikes in Arizona. 2 months shy of 10 years since the good ol' days ended.

Almost in shape for lion season...
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Banana Yucca

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Carolyn's Creek Pools to trickle Pools to trickle
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout About 50 gallons, super clear with just a trickle of water

I didn't notice this on the hike up, even though I heard it through Route Scout.

On the return Route Scout mentioned it again. I looked and saw rain hitting the pool of water.

dry Italian Spring Dry Dry
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout I could not find any pooled water or any trickling water where the seep is notched out of the mountain, as MacEwen describes.

The only moisture in the area was from a recent sprinkle.
_____________________
- joe
 
May 24 2025
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 Guides 4
 Routes 491
 Photos 10,890
 Triplogs 1,257

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Memorial Mica, AZ 
Memorial Mica, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 24 2025
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack33.68 Miles 8,456 AEG
Backpack33.68 Miles3 Days         
8,456 ft AEG
 no routes
Started from Turkey Creek Trailhead after the drive in Saturday morning. A bit warm in the lower slopes but still managable. It's about 2.5 miles before we hit any significant shade which is also about the time we reached Mud Spring and took the first break.

After the break it's into the trees and cooler as we gained elevation up to Deerhead Spring and the ponderoa pines. We passed Spud Rock Campground and then up and over the ridge to Mannign Camp at 8,000 feet. Reaching camp we setup and relaxed the afternoon away. Chumley and 10s were more motivated and hiked over to Reef Rock and Mica Secondary. Surprisingly not much water in the Manning Camp main pool near camp...never seen it that dry before.

Day 2 Chumley came up with a Grass Shack Loop about 10 miles or so. Leisurly start in the morning hiking down towards Cow Head saddle. Ran into a couple of backpackers heading to Manning at the saddle where we took a short break. Contining on and dropping down into Grass Shack it was getting warmer. Not much water at Grass Shack...emergency only!! Took another break before starting the uphill climb to Manning. It got a bit warm in spots but the trees in the upper ascent provided nice shade and a cool breeze helped a lot. Reached camp and ran into the backpackers we saw earlier in the day. Took a break in camp and contemplated another day hike.

Eventually Chumley, 10s and I decided on a 5 mile Mica and Spud Rock loop. Great views on Spud rock as always and very windy as always! Mica is just the high point but nothing special there. After break on Spud Rock we headed back to camp and another realxing night!

Next day it was back out Turkey Creek...however we took the long way past Devils (not) Bathtub and through a really cool Ponderosa Park forest back to the original trail. After that it was down Turkey Creek to the vehicles. Another great Memorial Day trip in the sky islands!!
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  2 archives
May 24 2025
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 Guides 25
 Routes 376
 Photos 5,897
 Triplogs 346

40 male
 Joined Mar 01 2018
 Chandler, AZ
Memorial Mica, AZ 
Memorial Mica, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 24 2025
John10sTriplogs 346
Backpack39.50 Miles 10,156 AEG
Backpack39.50 Miles3 Days         
10,156 ft AEG41.5 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
This was my first backpacking trip in 7+ years, and I was excited to join the group on the second iteration of their previous 3-day / 2-night Memorial Mica trip in 2022.

Day 1 - Saturday
Hike 1: Turkey Creek TH to Manning Camp (8.85 mi / 4,017 AEG / 4h 19m)
Chumley, 9L, and I left The Valley ~5AM and drove to Turkey Creek TH, where we met Karl and Kathy. After some final packing, we were on the trail just after 8AM to start the climb up to Manning Camp. The first two miles were relatively flat as we hiked into Saguaro NP, then the steepness increased as we ascended into higher desert ~ three miles in.

We took a break at Mud Hole Spring, which was a small, muddy pool, and 9L and Chumley dug out some of the mud and debris in the hope that it would look clearer on the hike out on Monday. The steepness increased again as we resumed the climb, with a lot of rock steps built into the trail that increased the difficulty. Deer Head Spring was dry, and we detoured over to Spud Camp and Spring among a nice aspen grove. The campground was empty; the spring itself was dry, and the concrete spring box had some stagnant, murky water a few feet down...not a great time for moisture on the mountain.

9L and I arrived at the empty Manning Camp a little after noon and checked out the water situation. The fenced-in pool near the pump house was dry, and the the main water source below had two stagnant pools that didn't look too appetizing. After a short rest, Johns 9 & 10 explored down the drainage in an unsuccessful search for a more appealing water source. When the rest of the group arrived, we agreed that the pools were good enough to filter, and we set up camp and relaxed for a while.

Hike 2: Overlook Loop (5.22 mi / 1,168 AEG / 2h 5m)
Before dinner, Chumley and I hiked a lasso-loop from camp that included Reef Rock and an unnamed overlook. Great views from both spots that collectively included Rincon Peak, the Galiuros, Wrightson, and Mt. Graham among many other landmarks, and the second overlook included a fun scramble to the top with the help of a short tree stump ladder. Back at camp, we ate dinner and hung out under the party lights into the wee hours of mid-evening before retreating to our tents. We had the campground to ourselves, and comfortable daytime temps dropped into the upper 30s overnight.

Day 2 - Sunday
Hike 1: Grass Shack Loop (11.41 mi / 3,102 AEG / 5h 3m)
After wakeup calls from the wild turkeys, we packed up for a day hike to some lower elevations and started a counter-clockwise loop, heading west along Cow Head Saddle Trail. With the low morning sun, we had pleasant shade and stopped at a few overlooks on the way down, with some steep sections of trail, much of which once again had stone stairs built in courtesy of the NPS. We took a break at the saddle and saw three guys hiking up from Douglas Spring, headed for Manning Camp. Tanque Verde Peak was only 2.5 miles away from there, and I was tempted to rush over there, but time and lack of water kept me from trying it.

We continued down to the deserted Grass Shack Campground and paused for another break. Chumley checked out the spring, which was almost completely dry, then we had the long climb back up to Manning. That included a lot of sun exposure and more steps, and it felt great to get back into the shade and cooler temps of the ponderosas at higher elevations. Chumley and I arrived just as the three guys we'd seen earlier hiked into camp.

Hike 2: Man Head - Mica - Spud Rock Loop (4.96 mi / 1,079 AEG / 2h 23m)
After hanging around camp for a few hours and filtering more water, Karl, Chums, and I went on another short hike to check out some of the upper destinations north of camp. The first stop was Man Head, another landmark that looked nothing like its name...Chumley told me it looked more like an eagle, but I struggled to see any resemblance to Bruce. We passed Mica Meadow, then stopped at the Mica highpoint. Karl had warned me it was one of the least impressive high points of any range in Arizona, and that was true: limited views, flat, and not much to see other than some small remnants of the old lookout.

Then it was on to Spud Rock, which looked nothing like a potato but provided the best 360° views of the weekend. We relaxed on top until the winds got too annoying, then completed the loop back to camp. Chumley and I went over to a water tank that had a random tent setup nearby, and back at the campsite, one other solo backpacker had shown up, along with two hikers from Colorado who'd hiked all the way up from Happy Valley to Manning to filter water because they couldn't find any down below. The most common question from the other backpackers after seeing the pools at Manning: "Did you guys filter that water?"

We cooked dinner, and I learned from the previous night's mistake and ate two of the undersized freeze-dried meals, and we hung out under the lights and had another night in the upper 30s.

Day 3 - Monday
Hike: Manning Camp to Turkey Creek TH (9.06 mi / 670 AEG / 3h 42m)
We ate breakfast, broke camp, and headed out around 8AM. We took a slightly different route down, leaving camp south via the AZT, then passing by the dry Devil's Bathtub, then north past Spud Rock Campground before eventually connecting with Turkey Creek Trail. Going down the upper stretches made me appreciate how steep that climb had been on Saturday. We stopped at Mud Hole Spring again, and the pool was a little clearer after Chumley and 9L cleared out a bunch of the gunk two days prior. We kept a fast pace the rest of the way and were back at the trailhead before noon.

The three of us relaxed in the shade of the sycamores near Happy Valley Campground, then drove into Tucson for lunch at BKs. Much better than I expected since my initial fear when I heard "BK" was that we were headed to Burger King. Traffic wasn't terrible for a holiday, and we were back in Phoenix by mid-afternoon.

Summary
I really appreciated the invite--it was a fun weekend from start to finish. This was 100% uncharted territory for me, so I got to explore an entirely new area. The phrase I heard most often during the weekend was some version of, "There was a lot more water here last time!" I can only imagine how beautiful it would be out there with water flowing. It was great meeting Karl, Kathy, and 9L...I always enjoy a good John-squared hike, and this one was sequentially numbered. And, after a long layoff, it was nice to backpack again...I had to borrow a lot of gear, and especially since I own almost no specialized backpacking equipment, I was happy my pack weight remained manageable. I suppose years of consistently overpacking on day hikes helped prepare me for carrying an actual backpack again :).
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Wild Turkey

dry Deer Head Spring Dry Dry
Completely dry; even with a sign, it was hard to tell where the spring would be

dry Devils Bathtub Dry Dry
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Manning Camp Spring Dripping Dripping
Pool inside the fence near the pump house completely dry. There are two pools of water below that with a sign indicating that's where campers can filter. Pools were stagnant and murky but filterable.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
Small pool that started out murky and full of debris. Looked more filterable two days later after the group cleared a lot of the debris out on the hike in.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Spud Rock Spring Dripping Dripping
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout Stagnant pool deep in the concrete box; the actual spring was dry
  1 archive
May 24 2025
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 Guides 94
 Routes 840
 Photos 22,055
 Triplogs 1,993

52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Memorial Mica, AZ 
Memorial Mica, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 24 2025
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Backpack38.84 Miles 9,491 AEG
Backpack38.84 Miles3 Days         
9,491 ft AEG
 
Spent another long weekend in the islands, which is always a nice option. Mixed it up a little bit from last time to cover some new ground for me.

Saturday
Turkey Creek TH to Manning Camp
8.23mi - 3,901aeg - 4:54
We got started around 8 to mild temperatures and some welcome cloud cover to help temper the morning heat before gaining some welcome elevation. Arriving at Mudhole Spring revealed our first glimpse of things to come all weekend. It wasn't exactly dry, but drawing anything consumable would have been quite a chore. We did some maintenance work with hopes that it would make it a better option for the next visitors here.

The stretch of trail between Mudhole and Deerhead (which I think has long-since ceased being even a seasonal source for water) is impressively steep, and it sort of broke me. Eventually, I regained my step and headed over to Spud Rock Campground. The marked spring there is dry as a bone, but the spring box did have a foul puddle at the bottom. I don't think I'd have figured out how to draw consumable water from this one.

Climbed the Switchback trail to the ridge and the final climb from there to the Fire Loop junction before rolling down into a deserted Manning Camp. Unease began to settle in as the reliable spring that NPS reports has only dried out twice in recorded history was a dust bowl :o . This would make a quick end to any attempt to spend a weekend backpacking here. After dropping packs and doing some investigating, we discovered that there was about 20 gallons of water in the NPS-use-only rainwater collection barrel which eased the potentially very bad situation we found ourselves in. While there was no water in the spring and the pond was empty, there was still a pool of unappealing water in the bedrock below camp. After cutting through the oily surface film and treating a liter, we learned that this pool would suffice.

In later thoughts, I don't know if NPS reports of the spring drying out only 2 times historically also required the skunky bedrock pool to dry out too? If so, this doesn't qualify since there's still water available. If not, this would be time number 3 that the spring is not producing any water. Presumably it will take monsoon rains before this changes.

Reef Mica Head Loop
5.16mi - 1035aeg - 2:05
This was a first Rincon trip for 10s so after setting up camp, I tour-guided an afternoon jaunt across the top of the mountain, hitting a couple of the east slope viewspots. The dozens of miles of trails and cool rock formations at elevations in the 8k range are what make this such an enjoyable destination.

After a couple of hours exploring we headed back to camp. With water issues alleviated, we all settled in for the evening. Some periodic island breezes died down as the night went on and delightful late-May temps settled into the upper 30s overnight.

Sunday
Cowhead Grass Shack AZT Loop
11.51mi - 3014aeg - 5:03
I had never done any of the west side trails here on the east side of No Saguaros National Park, so I proposed the HAZ-reported 10.7 mile loop that dropped down to Grass Shack via the AZT and the parallel Cow Head Saddle Trail. On my suggestion we went ccw down via Cow Head, opting to make the return climb on the AZT, assuming it would be very nice tread and ample shade. I was wrong. Oh sure, the tread is nice, and the grade was great, but despite the forest being nicely wooded, the trail has been so well maintained that there is no shade to be found as the 20-foot wide trail cut takes care of that possibility!

Nonetheless, it was an enjoyable loop and I was glad to knock off another few miles in my quest to never complete any segment of the AZT. Cow Head was a very nice trail to descend to Cow Head Saddle. We cut down to the AZT via the Douglas Spring Trail, which was my least favorite mile of the loop. The low point on the day was 5300 feet at Grass Shack where we took a break in the shade. As with the other typical water sources, there was a small pool of unappealing water here. This one would have worked in a pinch, but we were happy not to have to rely on it.

We all made the ascent at our own various paces, finally reaching the more pleasant pondo shade of the upper mountain at around the 7kft contour shortly after the noon hour with the temp having topped out at 81 about halfway up. We all spent a couple hours recovering in the 71-degree mountaintop shade and breezes at Manning Camp.

Mica Spud Loop
4.85mi - 966aeg - 2:23
Karl and John and I decided to hit a couple of the highlights we hadn't gone to yesterday, with a visit to the technical highpoint of the range, which features the views and excitement of any county highpoint in a corn-growing state. Thankfully, a short distance away stands Spud Rock, and while a few feet lower, it offers the money shot views that should not be missed for any visitor to this mountain.

Back at camp we were joined by a trio of hikers who had come up from Douglas Spring earlier in the day, and one solo hiker who had come up via Turkey Creek. Two additional hikers stopped by on a 14-mile round trip from Happy Valley just to get water! Those 6 were the only other humans we saw all weekend save for a pair down near the trailhead as we finished up.

Monday
Manning Camp to Turkey Creek TH
9.17mi - 573aeg - 3:38
Another morning that started in the 30s but moderated quickly. We hit the trail at 8, taking the southern Tibberroute via the Bathtub Spring Trail across to Heartbreak Ridge. This time we opted for the East Slope Trail which was very enjoyable as it descends to Spud Rock Campground. From here it was a repeat of the ascent two days prior on the Turkey Creek Trail. You definitely notice the grade in the mile above Mudhole Spring and it was nice to take a breather there before bombing down the bottom half back enjoying a nice post-hike snack under the shaded canopy of Sycamores in (the very dry) lower Turkey Creek.

Recap
Incredibly dry out there. Lots of turkey and deer wandering through Manning Camp, probably because it's the only place for miles that has any water at all. Great views and enjoyable hiking on these great NPS trails as always. Good to hike with 19Ls, Karl, and Kathy. Thanks for the company and conversation. Tacos at BKs are as good as always but it's a $20 proposition for lunch now. Alas, the days of $2 tacos are a distant memory.
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Arizona Madrone
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Wild Turkey

dry Deer Head Spring Dry Dry
There's no sign of this spring even existing anymore.

dry Devils Bathtub Dry Dry
Sandy dry.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Grass Shack Spring Dripping Dripping
Not dripping. No flow. Just a small skunky, hot, algae-filled puddle in the sandy drainage.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Manning Camp Spring Dripping Dripping
Spring is dry. The normally fenced in "pond" is dust. There is a pool of water in the bedrock where campers are supposed to draw water from. It's not flowing nor particularly appealing. But it works. It is conceivable that this pool does not last to when monsoon rain arrives.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
A couple of gallons of filterable water in the pool. Barely a trickle otherwise.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Spud Rock Spring Dripping Dripping
Signed spring is dry as a bone. Concrete spring box had a few inches of nasty water about 2 feet below the surface. Would be hard pressed to draw water from it.
_____________________
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
 
Apr 27 2024
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 Guides 1
 Routes 262
 Photos 864
 Triplogs 266

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Manning Camp and Spud Rock via Grass Shack, AZ 
Manning Camp and Spud Rock via Grass Shack, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Apr 27 2024
JackluminousTriplogs 266
Backpack31.19 Miles 7,111 AEG
Backpack31.19 Miles   34 Hrs   50 Mns   2.05 mph
7,111 ft AEG27 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Steven and I backpacked into the Rincons. The plan was to take Douglas Spring Trail all the way to Grass Shack and spend the night there, then hike up to Manning Camp and explore the high country a bit before heading back down to Douglas Spring Campground, then hike out the following morning. It would have been nice to stay at Manning Camp the second night, but the campsites were all reserved and I needed to be back in Tucson, showered, by noon.

Friday morning at 8 we started at DS trailhead. Even then it was quite warm, making it a bit of a sweat-fest to DS Campground. I'd only filled my 3/4 liter water bottle to keep the water carry down. There was quite a bit of water below Tina Larga so I tanked up there, had lunch at DS campground and got more water, then proceeded to Cow Head Saddle. Neither of us had been on DS trail past Cow Head before, so that was new. It was much more lush than I expected.

We made it to Grass Shack mid-afternoon, and had the entire campground to ourselves. There was plenty of water in the creek, and it is a truly remarkable place to camp in the backcountry. I mean, there are bear boxes and a bathroom, miles from the nearest road. Since Grass Shack is on the AZT, it gets a lot of use (or at least the bathroom does). There was a bit of a Matterhorn effect in the WC, leading us to wonder how on earth the Park service cleans out the pit. Do they airlift a pump truck? Should you visit, BYOTP.

At dinnertime, it was apparent that neither of us had planned our meals particularly well and we were going to be short on calories, particularly Steven.

Speaking of calories, I saw two deer and a whole bunch of bunnies around Grass Shack. Last year we attempted this itinerary, but at the time the Park service had closed the campground due to mountain lion activity. I can see why big kitties might be active in the area.

Saturday morning was cool, cloudy, and breezy. The cloud decks were below the peaks, and we hoped to make it to elevation before they burned off. We broke camp a bit after 7 and made it to Manning just after 10, so we made decent time but it wasn't fast enough to catch the clouds before they lifted.

Manning was definitely being used, as there were about a half dozen official-looking tents pitched around, and the cabin was open with lots of equipment set up. Nobody seemed to be around except a couple backpackers who left about the same time we arrived.

The falls and pool near Manning were going strong; seeing the falls cutting through the rock and cascading into a series of giant pools was pretty cool.

After scarfing a few bars and snack items we proceeded to Spud Rock. It's a pretty sweet view up there, one of the best in Southern Arizona IMHO. Spud was super windy though, so we didn't stay too long.

Since Steven didn't have enough food for the trip, he decided to hike all the way out instead of camping at Douglas Spring. It had been warm overnight at Grass Shack, and both of us figured it would be even warmer at DS. I figured I'd be pretty tired and would probably camp, but as we descended I started thinking about how nice a hot shower and a regular bed would be over sweating in a tent all night. Though my feet lodged a formal protest against the notion, when I reached DS campground just before 3pm I determined I could rest for 30 minutes and make it back to the car by 7. So I filtered water, ate whatever I had left that didn't require cooking (except a couple bars), and took my shoes off. Steven left before I did, so I hiked out solo. I briefly considered camping again, but then what's another 6-1/2 miles, anyway? And a 20-mile day would be kinda impressive.

About halfway I met a snake on the trail. A little stripey guy with no rattle, perhaps two feet long at most. It refused to move. I tapped my trekking poles near it to see if I could gently encourage it to leave the trail, and no response. Finally I stepped over it, and all it did was stick its tongue out at me. Cheeky fella.

Sure enough, I made it to the parking lot by 7pm, in time for sunset. It was a long day.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
Lots of flowers below Cow Head Saddle. Carpets of little yellow flowers interspersed with purple and green seed heads of grasses. Manzanita are blooming profusely. Quite a few Sego Lilies, and the cactus are starting in on it too.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Manning Camp Spring Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout Beautiful cascading waterfalls into a huge pool.
  1 archive
May 27 2023
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 Guides 170
 Routes 148
 Photos 5,914
 Triplogs 2,097

48 male
 Joined Apr 12 2004
 Tucson, AZ
Rincon Hike, AZ 
Rincon Hike, AZ
 
Hiking avatar May 27 2023
PrestonSandsTriplogs 2,097
Hiking17.77 Miles 4,687 AEG
Hiking17.77 Miles   11 Hrs      1.78 mph
4,687 ft AEG   1 Hour    Break
 no routes
1st trip
Jim and Brian and I carpooled out to the upper Turkey Creek trailhead for our long anticipated Rincon hike, negotiating some nasty spots along the upper trailhead road (road 4408) along the way.

We started late morning under a merciless sun, temps being pretty warm, our destination being Reef Rock and Manning Camp. No shade and lots of sweating for us all the first few miles until we reached some much appreciated pines and a small pool of cool water at Mudhole Spring, where we cooled off and ate lunch. A bit more climbing brought cooler temps, full pine forest cover, and a gentler rate of ascent. I made a quick side trip to Spud Rock Campground to see the aspen grove.

We met Mike below Man Head on Heartbreak Ridge Trail, and stopped to rest for a bit. Mike then continued downhill while we went up and on to Reef Rock. The beauty of the forest on top of the Rincons exceeded my expectations and I found myself taking a lot of photos. The views from Reef Rock were incredible, one of the highlights of the day.

We then went west through the mountaintop forest, passing under some massive and very tall pines, and on to Manning Camp, where we took a break, pumped water, and enjoyed the beauty of the area and the old Manning Cabin’s rustic charm. We checked out the little pool below the cabin and the helipad nearby, and then left to begin the long journey down a little after 6 pm, with golden light starting to flood the mountain summit.

We heard a turkey, a whippoorwill, and a poorwill calling on the way down as darkness set in. Also noted was what we assumed to be Mike’s taillights driving down the 4408 road far below. The last few miles seemed to drag on as we descended the rocky trail in darkness and wind.

We were all happy to reach the truck a little before 10 pm, where we ate a well deserved dinner on the ground in the moonlight. The drive down 4408 was less intimidating now that we knew what to expect, and after a long sleepy drive, we all made it back to Tucson, exhausted.

Great hike with Jim and Brian and very nice to finally see the summit of the Rincons, a place I’d been wanting to visit since moving to Tucson in 2013, but had never gotten around to doing. The Rincons surpassed my expectations, absolutely beautiful up there. A lot of effort to get up there, but it was worth it.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Cag Shot
_____________________
"…you never know when a hike might break out" -Jim Gaffigan
 
May 27 2023
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 Guides 73
 Routes 176
 Photos 10,174
 Triplogs 2,324

46 male
 Joined Sep 08 2006
 
Rincon Hike, AZ 
Rincon Hike, AZ
 
Hiking avatar May 27 2023
JimTriplogs 2,324
Hiking17.46 Miles 4,657 AEG
Hiking17.46 Miles   11 Hrs      1.75 mph
4,657 ft AEG   1 Hour    Break10 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Preston drove, which was good as an Outback can no longer get to that upper trailhead, and myself and Brian joined in a hike to the upper Rincons. It was nice to visit Reef Rock where the views are excellent, and also nice to get back to Manning Camp. Trails are in good shape. Really nice day.

We ran into Mike as he was returning to the Turkey Creek TH from Mica Mt/ Spud Rock, and Manning Camp, and so there were 2 vehicles at the TH today. Probably the busiest day it had seen in a long while.

Not 100% sure, but car to car took about 11 hours. Lots of breaks while out.

dry Deer Head Spring Dry Dry
I don't recall there being water. Don't know either way.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Manning Camp Spring Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute
Plenty

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
Small pool one could filter.
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Oct 07 2022
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 Guides 34
 Routes 138
 Photos 931
 Triplogs 111

68 male
 Joined Dec 26 2018
 Phoenix, AZ
Saguaro NP to Molino Basin, AZ 
Saguaro NP to Molino Basin, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Oct 07 2022
GrangerGuyTriplogs 111
Hiking36.88 Miles 8,499 AEG
Hiking36.88 Miles3 Days   2 Hrs   12 Mns   
8,499 ft AEG27 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
In support of the Arizona Trail in a Day fundraiser for the AZT, I volunteered for a segment in the middle of the Saguaro Wilderness. This meant a day walking into the starting point, and two days walking out from the finishing point. As a reminder, walking across the park requires paying a park fee or having an appropriate pass.

Hope Camp Trail
I started at the Loma Alta Trailhead of the Hope Camp Trail. There is a short section of dirt road passable by any car and good parking here. I was surprised there is no outhouse here. This is a popular weekday trailhead for people doing day hikes, apparently. Hope Camp Trail is wide and pretty flat. At about 2.3 miles I met the AZT and …

Quilter Trail
Named after Jake Quilter, an enthusiastic trailworker, who died suddenly while doing trail work. Info on him: [ John "Jake" Quilter ] . According to trail signs, Quilter Trail from Hope Camp Trail to Manning Camp Trail is 5.5 miles, although I measured it at 4.6. It’s always tough to get these right. There was good water where the trail enters the wilderness boundary, at The “Quilter Trail – 1.35mi Water Crossing”. At a signpost pointing right to the abandoned Madrona Camp, begins the …

Manning Camp Trail
Continuing northeast on the Manning Camp Trail, I encountered at seasonal stream flowing cheerfully at several gallons per minute at N 32.1787° W -110.60955°. This trail is flagged for maintenance. It looks like the park service will soon be fixing many places where the trail has become a stream. Thank you, NPS! About 2.3 miles from the Quilter Trail, there is an intersection with the Douglas Spring Trail going off to the left. This intersection is a little confusing. From here the trail heads east and south. The sky was darkening, and rumbling, and I could see I was going to get wet, so I quickened my pace a little to Grass Shack Spring Camp, arriving and getting my tent set up just as it started to rain. Note that camping here requires a paid reservation at Recreation.gov, but it is a nice camp, with good bear boxes that make great tables, and a really nice outhouse. The camp is 3 miles past the end of the Quilter Trail, or 10 miles from the Loma Alta Trailhead.

Saturday morning, I began my commitment to Arizona Trail in a Day, leaving camp around 6:15 am. In 4.6 miles, arrived at Manning Camp, another place where you could camp after making the reservation at Recreation.gov. This camp is a backcountry camp for maintenance and fire crews, and is really well appointed with faucets delivering running water, giant wood furniture, picnic tables, solar showers, cabins, covered corrals, and a propane stove that would serve dozens. It’s a puzzle to me why there isn’t a circle drawn around this place excluding it from the wilderness. No one was around. I enjoyed a hot lunch (using my own stove) at their picnic table, and then continued NE on the …

South Fire Loop Trail
You only go about 0.1 mile on this trail before it bears off to the right, with the AZT / Mica Mountain Trail continuing straight.

Mica Mountain Trail
A quarter mile up this trail, I encountered something I had never seen before, a chronolog.io photo stand. The idea here is you set your camera on the stand and take a picture, which you email to their upload site and they add it to their time lapse photo series. Unfortunately, at 8000’, my brain doesn’t work quite so good, and I am “icon-challenged” in any case, :lol: so I put my camera on the stand backwards. If you are in doubt, take pictures both ways and sort it out when you get home. At 1.5 miles from Manning Camp, I took the short detour left on…

North Fire Loop Trail
… arriving at the summit of Mica Mountain, my high point for the trip. Then back the way I came to the intersection with the Mica Mountain Trail. There is quite the trail network up here, and the trail labeling is imperfect up here, and people have scratched edits on the signs so you don’t lose the AZT. Mostly I was following my GPS, so I had no issue. I continued straight on the north Fire Loop Trail, which seems to be marked Mica Mountain Trail, past the intersection with the Bonita Trail and turning left on the…

North Slope Trail
I headed down this trail 0.6 mi to Italian Spring, which is a large grassy puddle, with good water. Just as I finished up stocking up my water and having a snack, the skies opened up with thunder and lightning and hail. Not my favorite thing on mountain ridges, but I hoped that the radio tower on Mica Mountain would be a better target than me. Hail stings on bare skin. I headed as fast as I could down…

Italian Spring Trail #95
I was much slower than a couple other parties of younger folks dashing from the storm, including an unauthorized dog, but there was no point in rushing and getting hurt. Once out of Saguaro National Park, and entering the Rincon Mountains Wilderness, I had completed my section of Arizona Trail in a Day, but I just kept walking until the rain stopped, setting up camp on a flat spot with great views.

Sunday, October 9, I was in no hurry to leave camp, and continued down the hill, with my pruning shears and saw handy. I trimmed a lot of catclaw and mesquite that was encroaching on the trail, but eventually ran out of time for this. Just before exiting the wilderness, I encountered a seasonal stream flowing vigorously, which I have added to the water sources.

Where FR 37 comes in from the left to go to Italian Trap Tank, there is a wide sandy wash flowing that had to be forded, but never more than an inch or two deep. I’m confused as to whether this is the beginning of the Italian Spring Trail or if Italian Spring Trail #95 begins at Reddington Road and follows the alignment of the AZT. Even the Far Out app shows this location as the transition from AZT Passage 9 to Passage 10, while the AZ Trail webpage shows the dividing line at Reddington Road.

From here it was clear I would have to push to get to my intended camp at The Lake where the trail crosses Bellota Road. I picked up a gallon of water I had cached at Reddington Road and pressed on the …

Bellota Trail #15
The hike through the rolling meadows of the Reddington Pass area is beautiful, and far different from the high rocky wilderness to the south. I watched numerous storms meandering through the area, but none hit me. A lot of target shooting goes on in the area, and even after dark :scared: . I wished I was wearing my orange hunting season hiking gear as I walked along the ridge top. I arrived at The Lake just before 6 pm, set up my tent, and had dinner in the dark. A great horned owl serenaded me all evening. As I sat there, a helicopter and fixed wing plane came in and circled for about 20 minutes, looking in the dark for who knows what?

Monday morning, I was walking toward Molino Basin at first light. It is nice rolling country, and I watched the moon set and the sun rise as I went. Took a long break at West Spring, and then made the thousand foot climb up over the pass to Molino Basin.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Carolyn's Creek Medium flow Medium flow
Flowing at gallons per minute of clear, cool water.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Fletch's Creek Medium flow Medium flow
Flowing at gallons per minute across trail.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Grass Shack Spring Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute
The stream flows vigorously through the camp, by all the campsites.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Italian Spring Dripping Dripping
Pretty pool of water in the grass. Good source.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Manning Camp Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
I collected water at the faucet at the cabin. There was water everywhere.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Quilter Trail - 1.35mi Water Crossing Heavy flow Heavy flow
Lots of water flowing in the ravine today, just where the Quilter Trail crosses into the wilderness.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max The Lake 51-75% full 51-75% full
Plenty of water in the Lake, although I did not check it out for drinking quality.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max West Spring Dripping Dripping
There was good water in a pool at the spring.
  1 archive
May 28 2022
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 Guides 4
 Routes 491
 Photos 10,890
 Triplogs 1,257

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Memorial Mica, AZ 
Memorial Mica, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 28 2022
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack34.34 Miles 8,952 AEG
Backpack34.34 Miles3 Days         
8,952 ft AEG
 no routes
Great weekend in the Rincons on a holiday weekend. Car camped the night before and made it to Manning Camp via Turkey Creek Trail pretty early. Surprised we didn't see any other hikers or backpackers. The NPS crew was at Manning Camp but that was it. Then in the afternoon we day hiked to Spud Rock taking a break in windy conditions but still nice. Then a quick stop by Mica Mountain high point on the way back to camp.

Relaxing night around camp with Kathy, Chumley, 9L, Chris and Sam so a good group to spend in this awesome sky island! Next morning slow rolled it out of camp and did about 9 mile loop on top. First over to North Slope hitting Mica Secondary viewpoint taking a short break. Then continued on to Italian Spring and up the trail towards Reef Rock. At Reef Rock we took our lunch break and really enjoyed the spot and views. My personal favorite for views on the mountain with the Galiuros, San Pedro Valley and everything eastside as well as Rincon Peak to the south. Finishing up we headed downtrail passed Manhead and then took an off trail drainage route to Devils Bathtub. Unfortunately no water to speak of in the drainage but still some fun downclimbs. On the way back to camp Chumley and I split and hiked off trail up the drainage that flows out of Manning Camp. Best water on the mountain for sure with a few good pools for a swim.

Back at camp made a short trip over to Helens Dome before sunset. Really can't get to the summit without ropes so Chumley and I opted for the secondary high point which was a solid backup plan. After that another great night in camp.

Next morning we hiked out slightly different route than hiking in with some new trail but still exited Turkey Creek trail for the last 6 miles. Awesome to hike in the Rincons again with a great group!
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  2 archives
May 28 2022
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 Guides 94
 Routes 840
 Photos 22,055
 Triplogs 1,993

52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Memorial Mica, AZ 
Memorial Mica, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 28 2022
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Backpack34.34 Miles 8,952 AEG
Backpack34.34 Miles3 Days         
8,952 ft AEG
 no routes
What better place to spend a long weekend than in the islands!?

We rolled out of the valley late Friday for a car camp in Happy Valley along Turkey Creek. This allowed us to get a relaxed start and still be on trail in time to cover the lower elevation miles before the heat would become bothersome. In actuality, pleasant breezes and a layer of high clouds made the temperatures quite enjoyable.

Turkey Creek 34 was new to me and after a couple of easy miles it really kicks into gear. There was good water at Mudhole Spring, guarded by a beautiful AZB rattlesnake. We took a break here as this is the end of the exposed stretch and the rest of the climb is wooded.

Some of this trail has some pretty rough erosion and can be really steep. Especially just above and below the Mud Hole Spring area. Several reroutes have been constructed to bypass damaged sections with beautiful tread and nice switchbacks. I presume that similar construction will occur to fix the remaining stretches over the next year or two?

We cut over to Spud Rock, a campground I had only previously seen while looking down on it from above, so it was nice to check it out on the ground. It's set in a nice grove of pine and aspen. From here we headed up to Heartbreak Ridge via the Switchback Trail before dropping down to camp on the Fire Loop.

We arrived to a deserted camp and had our choice of sites. Despite the holiday and positively wonderful temperatures, I knew that there were no other reservations for the weekend.

Later in the afternoon, we did a four mile loop from camp to hit up Spud Rock for the views and the true Mica Mountain highpoint. Upon returning to camp we met the NPS ranger along with a small trail crew who had been sweeping the AZT with a fine-tooth comb. Aaaah, NPS money!

Sunday we did a nice 10 mile loop hitting the North Slope Trail, Italian Spring, the east side of the Loop to Mica Secondary, Reef Rock, Mica Meadow and Man Head, before taking an offtrail route down a drainage to Devils Bathtub. The entire drainage was dry, including the bathtub. The ranger said there hadn't been any flow in over a month, so it wasn't surprising that all the pools had dried up by now too. We saw a couple of turkeys that delighted Kathy by gobbling back at her.

The last half mile back to camp, Karl and I followed the drainage that Manning Camp Spring feeds. While the flow was light, there were some nice pools, narrows, and a cave, and we were both able to go for a refreshing swim.

After a break at camp, Karl and I headed out to see if it was possible to summit Helen's Dome, but we came up a little short, settling instead for Helen's Secondary, which is just a few feet shorter, and also keeps the view to about 340 degrees ... with the missing 20 degrees blocking the civilization of the greater Tucson metro.

Monday morning we opted for the Tibberoute, starting on the Manning Camp Trail (AZT) to Devils Bathtub and then headed down Heartbreak Ridge before cutting back via the Deerhead Springs Trail. We saw a couple more turkeys near the Heartbreak Junction and the same snake was relaxing at Mud Hole as it was on Saturday, but that was all the wildlife we encountered on the weekend. From this point we covered the same ground back to the cars as we had hiked on the way up. The last 2 miles seemed to drag a little more than they did two days earlier and I spotted a group of locals a hundred yards from the trailhead ... the only other hikers we saw all weekend!

I really enjoy this mountain. It has some great terrain and you can peel off some good miles in cooler temperatures (it hit 38 at night ... 78 during the heat of the day). It was great to hike with Sam and Chris again.

dry Deer Head Spring Dry Dry
No sign of spring or water or anything that resembles a spring location. Except the NPS sign identifying it.

dry Devils Bathtub Dry Dry
Not a drop!

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Italian Spring Dripping Dripping
Nice pool of clear, clean water.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Manning Camp Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Light flow through the narrows and pool below. Faucet was on at the cabin which made collecting and filtering easy.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
Nice pool with problably 20 gallons at the spring and a few yards of trickling water in the "creek" that it creates. Rattlesnake seen in the same spot two days apart.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Spud Rock Spring Dripping Dripping
Open spring pool was full of very cloudy unappealing water. The covered spring box was cleaner. No noticeable flow, but plenty available for filtering.
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  1 archive
May 01 2021
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 Guides 3
 Routes 13
 Photos 231
 Triplogs 15

male
 Joined Sep 27 2020
 Tucson, AZ
Rincon Tour, AZ 
Rincon Tour, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 01 2021
andrewpTriplogs 15
Backpack41.29 Miles 10,633 AEG
Backpack41.29 Miles3 Days   7 Hrs   1 Min   
10,633 ft AEG
 
1st trip
I’ve wanted to do a multi-day tour of the Rincons since I was a teenager, but interest, fitness, and proximity never seemed to line up. Fortunately for me that alignment finally happened and I had a great (and sometimes challenging) trip.

The overall plan called for a four day / three night trip that included a visit to the summits of both Rincon Peak and Mica Mountain.

Day 1 — Going up!
The plan for the first day was to hike to Happy Valley camp via Miller Creek and drop the bulk of my gear there. I’d then take a day pack to Rincon Peak and return to camp for the night. Since it appeared that water wasn’t available anywhere near Happy Valley I had to carry all that I would need for the first two days. In case you’re wondering that ended up being 11 liters of water (at 2.2lb per liter it made for a heavy pack).

After an especially brutal 4:00am alarm I was on the road and heading for the trailhead before dawn. I arrived at Miller Creek around 6:30am and upon opening the rear hatch of the truck found my pack in a puddle of water! Not an auspicious start. As best I could tell the pack rolled over onto the hydration bladder mouthpiece and the bladder drained outside the pack. Fortunately something told me that I should put an “emergency” gallon of water into the truck the day before so all I had to do was refill out of that. I was extremely lucky that the leak was external to the pack. Although my entire sleep system was in a dry bag it would have sucked to have the rest of my gear get wet.

I was intent on getting to Happy Valley as quickly as I possibly could. Not only did I want to ensure that I had plenty of time to make it up and down Rincon Peak I knew Happy Valley was fully booked and I wanted to ensure that I got one of the two “good” sites there. I pushed hard up the Miller Creek trail with only a few brief stops.

Lesson learned — never race up a steep trail while carrying a heavy pack! By the time I got to Happy Valley I was absolutely spent. I had never pushed myself that hard on a hike and I was feeling it. The entire campsite was empty so I snagged site 3 for myself, hung my hammock, and got my daypack setup.

After a quick break I set off for Rincon Peak and was marveling at how much better I felt with such a lightweight pack. Then the trail started climbing and my morning adventure really started taking its toll. Getting up Rincon Peak was hard. My legs were spent and my energy reserves were depleted. On top of that I was concerned about water. I knew that I had plenty, but was a bit concerned that this day’s hiking was going to have a heavy impact on the water I had available for myself tomorrow.

After a lot of stops to take pictures and give my legs a break I arrived at the peak. The views were outstanding as expected, but the wind made it really hard to enjoy. I snapped some photos and took shelter behind the remnants of the giant cairn to have a snack.

The hike down was mostly uneventful, but due to the steepness of the grade and my overall exhaustion I was getting concerned that I would end up rolling an ankle. Ultimately, I made it down without any injuries and returned to camp.

The evening was relaxing and the campsite never did fill up. After dinner I read a bit and turned in really early.
Day 2 — Moving to Mica Mountain
Although I got over 9 hours of sleep I was still up before dawn. The plan was to break camp and hike Heartbreak Ridge to cross over to Manning Camp, which would be my home for the next two nights. Knowing that part of this hike was exposed I wanted to be sure to get an early start. I had a quick breakfast, broke camp, and was on the trail by 7:20. I have to say that switching to a hammock has made camp setup and breakdown sooo much easier.

The hike was mostly uneventful. Knowing that I really overstressed myself the day prior I made an effort to keep my overall exertion level in check. I didn’t want to risk overdoing it again as that would be a surefire way to injure myself.

I made a stop at the Happy Valley lookout (the hantavirus hotel) and found it completely locked down. The views were stunning, but the wind was just as bad as the day before so I didn’t stay too long.

After the climb to the lookout the rest of the hike was nice and easy. I routed via Devil’s Bathtub and was bummed to find that there was barely a trickle of water over the falls. I took another break here, but not for long due to the wind.

With a little more climbing I made it to Manning Camp and found the place completely empty. At first I though that the cabin was open, but that was only the door to the breezeway. The kitchen was setup out back and it looked like it had been recently occupied, but there wasn’t a ranger in sight. I didn’t see one the entire time I was there.

I walked through the camp and ended up selecting site 3 (farthest from the cabin). Found some trees for my hammock, cleaned myself up, and took a little nap. After that it was dinner and another early night.

I have to say that Manning camp is a bit spooky after dark when there’s no one else there. It’s kind of like the summer camp setting from a bad horror movie. As I was reading in my hammock I swear I saw a headlamp coming up the trail and later some spillover light from the direction of the cabin on the trees above me. I didn’t think much of it as I assumed that it was a late arrival (it was only about 8:30pm at this point).

Day 3 — Touring Mica Mountain
I had another very restful night (loving this hammock thing) and used the fact that it was 33 degrees to lounge in my quilt for an hour. My view was of Rincon Peak and I spent the time watching the change of colors on the mountain as the sun rose while listening to the forest wake up and get on with its day. I can’t imagine a more peaceful way to start a day.

After getting up I walked around manning camp expecting to see the owner of last night’s light, but found no one. None of the campsites were disturbed and there was still no sign of life at the cabin. Spooky…

I had a lazy morning and eventually hit the trail with a day pack. My intention was to hike as many of the Mica Complex trails as I could. I set off on a counter-clockwise walk of the Fire Loop trail and went off trail on several occasions to take in the view from a rock outcropping or to investigate the forest around the trail. The views from Reef Rock were outstanding and as luck would have it the wind wasn’t too bad so I was able to soak in those views for a bit longer than at prior stops. One thing that caught my eye was a stand of aspens on the hillside below me. At the time I didn’t realize that they were adjacent to the Spud Rock campground which I would end up visiting on my way out.

I continued on the Fire Loop and ran into a pack of 5 or 6 Coatimundi just a little bit past Reef Rock. Based on other trip reports this appears to be a popular spot for them. I always enjoy a Coati sighting as they always appear to be having so much fun.

Shortly after the Coati I started getting a very uneasy feeling as if I was being watched. I stopped several times to look around and saw no one and nothing. I kept moving and the feeling subsided, but I do wonder if I had caught the eye of a bear or mountain lion. It was all very unnerving to say the least.

Throughout this hike I was struck by the overall health of the forest. Sure there was evidence of recent fire, but it wasn’t the scorched earth that I’ve grown accustomed to in the Catalinas and Santa Ritas. I don’t know if it’s a difference in how the NPS manages the land or just pure luck, but I was thrilled to be able to experience it. This is what Mt Lemmon used to be like when I was growing up.

I continued on the Fire Loop and made a stop at the Mica summit then took a detour to scramble up to the top of Spud Rock. This was another impressive view and I had to chuckle to myself that even the most mundane lookout points had stunning vistas and I was becoming a bit jaded. Unfortunately, the wind had picked up again to I didn’t stay longer than a few minutes to take it all in and have a snack.

At this point I was debating on doing the North Slope trail or heading back to camp. It was still early but I also wasn’t sure I wanted to deal with what some trip reports had described as an exhausting bushwhack. Ultimately my stubbornness won out and I dropped down to check it out. I promised myself that if the trail got too sketchy I would turn back. Of course but the time I hit the bad sections I felt I was too far in to turn back.

If you’re not familiar with the North Slope trail it generally parallels the NW Fire Loop, but does it 200 - 300 ft down slope. In 2003 this area was hit HARD by the Helen’s 2 fire and it still hasn’t recovered. This was a hot fire and is one of the few spots on the mountain where it is truly scorched earth. Very few trees are left standing, but most of what has fallen has been cleared from the trail. There were still some rather large obstacles to climb over, but it wasn’t one tree after another as I had feared.

Overall the trail wasn’t too bad and some of the reports either exaggerated its state or were of very different conditions. The trail did simply disappear in several places, but most times I was able to find a blaze to get me back on track. In the times that a blaze wasn’t available I realized that there was a certain method to the madness of these trails and I could generally predict where it should go if the pattern held. I never had to backtrack and always ended up back on the trail so it wasn’t too bad. The biggest issue was overgrowth of thorny bushes (fortunately no cat’s claw) but those areas were limited and easily pushed through.

There were a couple of unburned areas in the middle of the overall carnage and they provided a picture of what the forest had been like. This was a beautiful stand of Douglas Fir with some Ponderosa Pine mixed in. As mentioned by @ShatteredArm the trees that are still there are enormous (especially by AZ standards). The most impressive healthy section was at the NE end of the trail near Italian Spring. The trees were amazing in this area as was the view from a large granite outcrop.

Once I hit Italian Spring I hung a right on the AZT and took that all the way back to Manning Camp.

Upon arrival I met my new camp neighbors who had a clogged water filter. After filtering some water for them I settled in for a relaxing evening.

Day 4 — Going down
I was greeted with another chilly morning, but knowing the stats of the hike ahead of me I knew I had to hit the trail as early as possible. The cold was slowing me down as I wasn’t packed up and on the trail until 8:30. This was a little later than I had hoped.

The plan was to follow Fire Loop trail :next: Heartbreak Ridge :next: Switchback Trail :next: East Slope :next: Spud Rock CG :next: Dear Head Spring Trail :next: Turkey Creek Trail :next: Road walk :next: Miller Creek TH. That’s about 3 miles of trail before I hit Turkey Creek and started descending in earnest.

The first part of this hike was beautiful and I was making good time. While the Switchback Trail is an apt name, I do think that a better one would be the ‘Overgrown Thornbushes with Ankle-Rolling Rocks’ Trail. I was glad to be done with it.

I wanted to stop by Spud Rock campground in order to see what it was like and decide whether or not I would want to stay there on a future trip. Upon arrival I passed through the aspen grove that I had spotted from Reef Rock and it really was a beautiful sight up close. The campground was nice, but I’m not sure I would want to make it a destination. I really appreciated the solitude, but feared that it might be a bit far from everything to be a good place to stay. The spring was bone dry and that further underlined the disadvantage of this site.

Once on the Turkey Creek trail I was making reasonably good time, but was slowed down in spots by the steepness of the trail. Add in some really annoying gnats swarming my head and I was not enjoying myself at all. Fortunately, I had brought along a head net or I would have been truly miserable.

Roughly halfway into the hike I had to stop in order to attend to a hotspot on one of my toes. This was a bit of a shock to me as I haven’t had a blister in decades, but something wasn’t right. Turns out that my big toe was rubbing in a small gap between the edge of my orthotic insole and the upper. Apparently the descent had made the geometry just right to form the start of what looked to be a pretty nasty blister. Out came the Leukotape and after wrapping my toe I was able to stand and walk without pain so I pressed on.

Soon after the steep descent stopped and the trail transitioned into a combination of shrub and grassland. The tree I stopped under to attend to my toe was one of the last spots of shade that I had until I hit the bottom of the road. While I was thankful for the gentler trail tread I was cursing the exposure. I could make good time on this trail, but with the temps already in the high 80s and the sun directly overhead I had to manage my exertion very carefully.

Fortunately, I had plenty of water and was able to maintain a sensible pace, but I wouldn’t want to be on this trail at all if it were any warmer. After about a mile I completely understood the benefit of an umbrella for hiking and made plans to acquire one as soon as possible. Hell, had I run across a pop-up umbrella stand on the trail I likely would have paid a premium for anything that would provide shade.

Aside from the brutal conditions the trek to the trailhead and then down the road was uneventful. Once I hit the campsites near the junction with FR35 I stopped and took a much-needed break in the shade. Continued on and found my truck just where I left it. Fired it up, cranked the A/C, had some lunch, and then started the drive home.

All in all this was a fantastic trip and I have tons of great memories and photos to serve as a reminder of the challenge and sense of accomplishment. Most importantly I learned a lot about myself and some of the stupid things that I end up talking myself into (like rushing up Miller Creek). This experience pushed me outside my comfort zone on many occasions and will definitely impact choices that I make on future trips.

The Rincons really are a special place and I definitely want to spend more time exploring Mica Mountain (off trail) as well as the area around Happy Valley and Rincon Creek. The forest is beautiful and since it requires so much effort to reach you are unlikely to see many people. I saw a total of 7 people over the course of the entire trip and that isolation made it much easier to enjoy nature. There weren’t any noisy people over the ridge disturbing the wildlife nor were there the constant reminders of human presence that you see on so many other trails.

I have to say that I’m somewhat in awe of the people who manage to do a similar loop as a day hike / run. That’s a level of strength and fitness that I can’t really fathom right now. On the other hand I couldn’t fathom doing the trip I did 6 months ago so my perspective will likely change. Even if I get to the point where I could do this in a day I’m not sure that I would want to give up the overnight part of the experience. This forest is truly magical in the early morning and that’s something that can only really be appreciated when you wake up in the middle of it.
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Douglas-Fir
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Benchmark


water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Devils Bathtub Dripping Dripping
Very slight trickle over the falls to a very shallow pool below.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Italian Spring Dripping Dripping
Small pool of algae soup.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Manning Camp Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Reasonable flow over the falls to decent sized pools below. Saw deer browsing inside the fenced area so this water really should be filtered, treated, or boiled before use.

dry Miller Canyon Dry Dry
One damp spot just up from the trailhead.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
Very small amount of water dripping down from the spring.


dry Turkey Creek Dry Dry
 
Dec 02 2020
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 Routes 154
 Photos 1,505
 Triplogs 266

31 male
 Joined Jun 02 2019
 Phoenix, AZ
Mica - Spud - HVLO Loop, AZ 
Mica - Spud - HVLO Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Dec 02 2020
LJWTriplogs 266
Hiking24.45 Miles 5,503 AEG
Hiking24.45 Miles   8 Hrs   31 Mns   3.15 mph
5,503 ft AEG      45 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Hoping for a thorough introduction to the Rincon Mountains, I gave this loop a go. Covers a lot of ground on the eastern side of the mountains and reaches the high points of Mica Mountain, Spud Rock, and the Happy Valley Lookout. Sort of fell in love. Saguaro NP East designation means the trails are in tip-top shape, but the lack of access roads, along with the current lack of traffic on the AZT, ensures good solitude for walking under the pines. Started at sunrise and went counterclockwise from Miller Creek TH.

Road to Miller is bumpy, but I made it just fine with low clearance and economy tires. Started with the 2.5 mile road walk to Turkey Creek TH. Temperature was around 20 degrees and felt it in the shade. Warmed up quickly as the road climbed out of the creek bed and up the ridge to Turkey Creek TH. Saw the first people of the day, a few hunters spread out down the trail surveying Turkey Creek just outside the NP boundary.

Trail is pretty tame before the NP boundary and makes it easy to find a rhythm. Starts climbing beyond the gate and gets steeper and steeper. Payoff starts around Mudhole Spring as the trail enters the forest. TC to Deerhead Spring Trail. At this point the trails come in quick succession. There's a nice network on top of Mica.

Switchback Trail is short and leads up to Fire Loop. From this point until after Manning Camp the trails wind through the healthy forest of pines and between the rock outcroppings on the top of Mica Mountain. Trails are superb and cushioned in pine straw. Took Bonita past Mica Meadow to the AZT, which runs right over the top of Mica Mountain. There were three hikers on the summit, so I kept going to Spud Rock and was on top in about 15 minutes.

Down at first toward Helens Dome, but I quickly talked myself out of it and backtracked to Spud Rock Trail and took that to Mica Mtn Trail. Manning camp in no time. Can't say enough about the forest around there and on top of Mica generally. Worth every step.

Manning Camp Trail to Devil's Bathtub. Worst fire damage to be found on the west side of DB. Heartbreak Ridge big views and intermittent pines. Suffered for the fire. Happy Valley LO to soak in the last views of the Northern Rincons and then down to Miller.

Miller is bouldery and drops off the mountain fast. Clear and well cairned. Got down in the shadow of the mountains with two hours of sunlight left having only seen the half dozen or so people.
  2 archives
Dec 15 2019
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 Guides 12
 Routes 192
 Photos 863
 Triplogs 356

42 male
 Joined Nov 30 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Rincon Mountains - AZT #9Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Run/Jog avatar Dec 15 2019
ShatteredArmTriplogs 356
Run/Jog26.65 Miles 6,607 AEG
Run/Jog26.65 Miles   7 Hrs   54 Mns   3.37 mph
6,607 ft AEG
 
no photosets
1st trip
Over a year ago, I started an endeavor to run the entire AZ trail, south to north, in chunks (usually 1-2 passages). Yesterday I finally found a decent opportunity to run the next passage (weather and logistics are the biggest factors).

Quilter Trail to Grass Shack really just has two climbs, interspersed with flattish, runnable terrain. All of the drainages were flowing. Grass Shack was beautiful, much more so than I expected from a place called "Grass Shack". Would be an excellent camp ground when there is water in the creek.

Grass Shack up to Manning Camp was a long, slow beast of a climb. Not extremely steep, but very few flat sections of trail. The views looking back are excellent, and once you hit the Devil's Bathtub junction, you're in beautiful forest. Another creek crossing, a short steep climb, and then I was at Manning. It was cold up there, and there's still some snowpack just upcanyon.

Past Manning Camp was a beautiful flowing creek and lovely woods. I skipped the little out-and-back to the Mica summit because it was cold (and now windy), and I've already been there and know there's not much of a view... Whatever snow was left on the north slope was thin and icy, not much of it but it did require a little attention. Stopped at Italian Spring to top off my water; the seep was pathetically small considering the fact that everything else was flowing (water tasted good though). There's water charging out of the ground where the trail crosses back across the same drainage a mile down the trail...

All the little creeks down low were flowing. Even the wash near Italian Trap had water, and I had to get my feet wet crossing it.

Good little adventure. Gotta be one of my favorite passages thus far (Passage 1 is tough to beat though).

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Grass Shack Spring Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Italian Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Water tasted good.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Quilter Trail - 1.35mi Water Crossing Medium flow Medium flow
Plenty of water.
_____________________
  1 archive
Apr 05 2019
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 Guides 4
 Routes 491
 Photos 10,890
 Triplogs 1,257

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Rincon Backpack, AZ 
Rincon Backpack, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Apr 05 2019
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack35.20 Miles 10,146 AEG
Backpack35.20 Miles3 Days         
10,146 ft AEG
 
1st trip
We did 3 day backpack in the Rincons which John put together. He got permits for first night at Happy Valley campground so we drove up from Phoenix early and started hiking around 9am. Took us only 2 hours to make it to Happy Valley where we setup up camp. Then headed up Rincon Peak for the afternoon. Nice hike with decent trail and carrying day packs made it easier. Took about 20 minute break on the summit which would have been longer except the strong winds kept it short. Hiked back to camp and then enjoyed a relaxing night around the fire.

Next day we backpacked over to Happy Valley Lookout on Heartbreak Ridge trail. The lookout is still very much intact and was open for us to check it out. Cool spot and glad we took the extra 20 minutes to check it out. The eventual goal was to camp at Manning Camp but from there we stopped by Devils Bathtub first to check it out. Good water at Devils Bathtub with some cascades and some pools. Water was the theme of the weekend as we had no issue finding water at any point. From Devils Bathtub we headed to Manning Camp and had some hail and rain but nothing too bad. Arrived at Manning Camp and setup camp around noon.

In the afternoon it was off to day hike the top. There are many trails on top so we made a loop hitting Spud Rock first and then Mica Mountain. Great views on Spud Rock but Mica is just a high point but no views. A few patches of snow lingering on the north facing slopes. Next stop was Reef Rock which is on the east side facing the Galiuro's with great views and the sun came out so we took a fairly long break there. Then it was back to Manning Camp for the night. It was bit colder at Manning which is 8,000 feet as opposed to Happy Valley which is 6,200 feet. Still relaxing night around camp and there were several other groups in the campground.

Last day we hiked out Turkey Creek trail to make it a loop. Turkey Creek trail is steep but it gets the job done and we were at the bottom in 3 hours. However, to make it a loop hike we did have to walk some road past the Turkey trail head and connect with the Miller Creek trail head. Regardless it went fast and we were at the vehicle before noon. Great weekend in the Rincon's and thanks to John for getting the permits!!
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  2 archives
May 12 2017
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 Photos 75
 Triplogs 10

54 male
 Joined Mar 17 2014
 Tucson, AZ
Turkey Creek Trail #34Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar May 12 2017
gunungapiTriplogs 10
Backpack22.50 Miles 2,839 AEG
Backpack22.50 Miles
2,839 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
My friend Sam and I, along with three of my kids and one of his, hiked the Turkey Creek trail to Manning Camp for a two-night backpacking trip. We had made a similar trip six years ago to Spud Rock Camp, when the kids were much younger, and we’ve been itching to get back to the Rincons since then.

The jeep trail to the trailhead is a little rough in spots. There’s one steep uphill that we attempted and failed in four wheel high, so we had to back up and use low range.

The weather was pleasant. Still, the several miles of trail from the wilderness boundary to the where the ponderosas and firs start in earnest felt pretty hot. This section of trail is exposed, steep, and rocky. Once in the trees, however, the hiking is a very enjoyable. It took us over six hours to reach Manning Camp, including some fairly generous rests.

We were the only people in Manning Camp the first night. What a great place to camp. The pit toilets are even somewhat pleasant. The only fly in the ointment was the Mexican whippoorwills that sang quite loudly for what seemed like most of the night.

The second day we hiked a circuit of trails around the top of the range, visiting Helen’s Dome, Spud Rock, Mica Mountain, Reef Rock, and Man’s Head. This was the highlight of the trip for me. The views from Spud Rock and Reef Rock were especially noteworthy. We lay for awhile on Spud Rock, sucking the warmth from the rock while a cold wind rushed over us, pulling our body heat away.

My boys were able to climb to the top of Man’s Head, but I was not. I made it up the lower half, where inching on our bellies along a shallow ledge was the worst required, but the upper half required skinnying through a really narrow crack, right through the middle of the “head”. I got part of the way through but turned around when I found myself stuck horizontally and several feet off the ground, able to move only when I exhaled all the air from my lungs. If you want to know how skinny you have to be to make it through this crack – I’m six feet tall and 150 lbs, and I was too thick.

The second night we were joined at Manning Camp by a group of three backpackers. I was kind of disappointed to have company – by this time in the trip, I was thinking that we might end up with the mountain to ourselves from start to finish.

Hiking back down on the third day we took the slightly longer route that goes past the Devil’s Bathtub, and I’m glad we did. Beelzebub’s Tub is definitely worth the couple of extra miles. If we had had more time it would have been fun to climb down the cliff to the pools below.

Sam’s daughter had serious shoe/blister problems within a few miles of the trailhead, so she hiked the remainder of the trip barefoot. One tough cookie!
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Spud Rock
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  1 archive
Dec 24 2016
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 Triplogs 2

49 male
 Joined Dec 18 2016
 Tucson, Arizona
Miller Creek Trail #28Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Run/Jog avatar Dec 24 2016
SwanTriplogs 2
Run/Jog23.00 Miles 6,394 AEG
Run/Jog23.00 Miles   5 Hrs   48 Mns   3.97 mph
6,394 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Headed over to Happy Valley on Christmas Eve to get up in the high country ahead of the big weather system that was predicted to dump a bunch of snow. No cars at Miller Creek, perfect clear cold weather. Miller Creek trail in good condition, a little confusing in a spot or two as it crosses some drainages. Headed up Heartbreak Ridge, my first time on that trail - wasn't sure what to expect as I figured it didn't get much traffic. Trail in excellent condition, surprised to see tons of steps build on a trail so far in the backcountry - a total contrast to the brushy thrash-fests on all the trails on the "back side" of the Santa Catalinas (like Samaniego Ridge or CDO). I guess the National Parks have a much larger budget for trail maintenance... Lots of water along the way to Devil's Bathtub, which I had never visited, which was also flowing strong. Headed up to Manning Cabin, nobody there either except for a few deer, think I had the whole mountain to myself. (Plenty of water at Manning, as always...)

Ran up to Spud Rock, and the weather started changing fast, was suddenly in a windy cloud with the temps dropping fast and smoky wisps of fog blowing through the forest. Put on some layers (tights, windshirt, buff), ran up to the summit and didn't even stop, and bailed down the Bonita trail, and by the time I hit Heartbreak, I was beneath the cloud ceiling that was enveloping Micah and back in the sun, but the temp kept dropping. Crazy wind along the ridge, literally pushed me off the trail a few times, lots of birds flitting around, couldn't figure out how they don't get blown off the mountain. Made time to run up to the Lookout on the way out, another first - incredible views of Rincon and San Pedro Valley, worth the side trip.

Tried to keep a strong pace coming down Miller, but that is one steep, boulder-filled descent. Returned to the truck in a total time a bit under six hours for 23mi and 6400aev, and cracked a beer just as the sky went black and that huge weather system hit, exciting drive back to Tucson rocking down the freeway in the old 4x4 truck with high winds, sideways precip, and wrecks here and there...
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  2 archives
Sep 18 2016
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 Guides 19
 Routes 40
 Photos 5,624
 Triplogs 341

52 female
 Joined Nov 22 2005
 Tucson, AZ
Your shoe's untied - Rincon's North Slope Loop, AZ 
Your shoe's untied - Rincon's North Slope Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Sep 18 2016
writelotsTriplogs 341
Hiking8.32 Miles 1,580 AEG
Hiking8.32 Miles   7 Hrs   11 Mns   1.76 mph
1,580 ft AEG   2 Hrs   27 Mns Break
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Partners partners
tibber
Argh! What was going to be an easy day turned into a hard workout. But, it was truly amazing to see how resilient the mountain is.
_____________________
-----------------------------------
Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.- Barack Obama
 
Sep 18 2016
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 Guides 21
 Routes 1,182
 Photos 36,858
 Triplogs 1,570

69 female
 Joined Feb 26 2004
 Phoenix, AZ
Your shoe's untied - Rincon's North Slope Loop, AZ 
Your shoe's untied - Rincon's North Slope Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Sep 18 2016
tibberTriplogs 1,570
Hiking8.32 Miles 1,580 AEG
Hiking8.32 Miles   7 Hrs   11 Mns   1.76 mph
1,580 ft AEG   2 Hrs   27 Mns Break
 
1st trip
It says "would I do this hike again?". Not the North Slope for sure unless there is some trail maintenance. You do get some sweeping views, nice flora from time to time and it does make a loop but not much else to say altho you know I'll end up with several paragraphs.

After a nice nite, other than all of us getting cold feet in our sleeping bags for some reason, we had a leisurely breakfast before heading off for our various hikes of the day atop this mountain. Wendy wanted to go say hello to Helen so we headed northwest out of camp. Once again, there are sweeping views as you get to the edges, and there are lots of edges up here. We stopped for a selfie with Wrightson in the far background since we both were up there together in 2010. From this same point we could hear and then see Karl on Helen walking around so we got a couple pictures before heading on our way.

We continued on a nice trail across to the other side of the mountain where we met up with K&K as they were coming down from Helen. They headed off to Spud and we continued toward Italian Spring via the so-called North Slope Trail except that Wendy decided she was hungry. We stopped so she could fuel up and then she decided she wanted to go up and close with Helen. I waited below as I was still a bit sore from the previous day's climb, I mean hike. I could hear K&K up on Spud Rock and soon Wendy came back and off we went.

Well as soon as we rounded the corner to the other edge of the mountain, the trail blazing began. I think both of us thot it would be short-lived so we pushed thru ferns and over downfall and searched out the missing trail. But this went on for nearly two miles. We were going thru a burn section (I think from 1994). It was quite obvious there hadn't been any trail maintenance for a very long time. By the time we were wanting this to be over, it was really too late to turn back. My hopes were that after Italian Spring that the trail conditions would improve. So we pushed thru trees and brush and over and around deadfall that was on a narrow path of this slope. We were constantly having to tie our shoes :bdh: on top of trying to find cairns and metal blaze markers. Many times we found the markers but they were in the deadfall that we would have to negotiate. Oh, and one time we saw a big pile of bear scat and went "oh ya, bears"... kind of forgot about that.

We did stop to take in the views as you could see quite far today. As we paused for lunch not too far from Italian Spring in amongst some boulders, I pondered that we were the only ones up here; what would happen if something happened to us? No one would have a clue where to find us. Well that soon passed and we headed on down to Italian Spring. The trail from here on out was not too bad altho there were still moments when we lost the trail. Glad we stopped where we did too because there was nowhere to really sit around the spring area as it was surrounded by ferns and bees. At the spring there are two different trails to take too.

We continued up the hill thru the turning ferns with the light coming thru the forest for the trees. I'm still not fond of this "UP" process again but it wasn't too bad. Toward the end of the climb I was doing my tired dog imitation and hiking from shade to shade :lol: . Now our original goal for the hike was to do this little loop and then head back to camp where we would go to the Devil's Bathtub. Well that plan went out the window so Wendy suggested we hike to Reef Rock, a place she hadn't seen up here. We used the Fire Loop Trail once we topped out.

Now this plan worked out very well and we had a nice hike on this east side of the mountain. We came to where you could start seeing far yonder and came upon a flat rock area with a big boulder. I thot this was Reef Rock but it wasn't. So I just call it the Eastern Overlook. We had incredible views here including of Rincon Mountain. We checked out the area and then continued on our way to Reef Rock at 8300 feet. The views were equally awesome from here and you could see the trail we came in on way below between the Park Boundary and the TH saddle.

From here we headed UP again but I knew there wasn't much elevation to be gained on this mountain so we eventually ended up on a nice forest floor and headed toward Mica Meadow. We hung a right and headed up to the meadow but then realized we didn't want to go that way. The signs are a little confusing up here so you have to decipher them. For instance, :-k the question became: are we on the trail to Mica Meadow or is this the Mica Meadow Trail? The trail we eventually took is somewhat marked on the topo but not a named trail. So we took that and when it didn't quite match up we got a little worried but once it hung a left, it joined up with the Mica Mountain Trail... at least I think it did. We're not sure if that's a re-route or what.

But from here it was pretty much clear sailing back to camp. We followed a creek, altho those are not named on the topos, and thru some more fern-covered forest floors back to Manning Camp. It wasn't quite what Wendy had in mind for the day and I certainly didn't want to put those kind of miles on but it was quite an adventure and we covered a lot of the top of this mountain. We did encounter water everywhere too.

This mountain top has so much to offer as to its terrain with meadows and rock mountains and overlooks and creeks and all sorts of stuff; definitely worth a two-nite stay. However, please heed our warning, the North Slope Trail is really not and according to Karl, neither is part of the East Slope. It's too bad but if there's not enough traffic to justify the maintenance, I guess it's understandable.

K&K showed up about 1/2 hour later I think. I had quite a few scratches at that and some bruises from the day. K&K covered a lot of the mountain as well. We made ourselves some dinner, Karl kept a nice fire burning or we would have retired much earlier.


2-14-17 Part 1 to Helen's Dome and starting on the North Slope Trail [ youtube video ]
Part 2 North Slope Route not too far from Italian Spring [ youtube video ]
Part 3 Italian Spring via Fire Loop [ youtube video ]
Part 4 Reef Rock to Manning Camp via Mica Meadow [ youtube video ]
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Throwing a Wendy
_____________________
For me, sometimes it's just as much about the journey as the destination.
Oh, and once in awhile, don't forget to look back at the trail you've traveled.
  4 archives
Sep 17 2016
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 Guides 4
 Routes 491
 Photos 10,890
 Triplogs 1,257

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Rincon Manning Camp Turkey Creek, AZ 
Rincon Manning Camp Turkey Creek, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Sep 17 2016
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack28.91 Miles 7,443 AEG
Backpack28.91 Miles3 Days         
7,443 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Long weekend 3 day backpack in the Rincon Mountains exploring the top of the range. Angela invited us on this trip with Wendy and so we headed out early Saturday morning for Turkey Creek TH. The actual trailhead is near the campground but the road continues on 4wd track another 1.5 miles to where the road stops. We parked there and started about an hour behind Angela and Wendy as we headed up Turkey Creek Trail #34. First 2 miles is along a ridgeline until we hit the Saguaro National Park boundary and shortly after that a register. At this point the trail is pretty much all up gaining about 1100 feet in the next 1.2 miles to Mud Hole Spring. The spring had water but very little to get a filter going. As we took a break we heard voices which would later turn out to be Angela and Wendy and we caught up 3/4 mile above Mud Hole Spring. Above the spring the trees get much thicker with Ponderosa and Oak providing ample shade up to Deerhead Spring. After Deerhead we went by Spud Rock Campground and checked out the spring which had good pool before continuing on to Manning Camp. Once at Manning we were surprised to find no one in the entire camp site and didn't see anyone for the 3 days on the mountain.

Next day we had the whole day to explore the top area....Kathy and I headed out towards Helen's Dome and made it up to the part where rock climbing gear is required. Then we continued on to Spud Rock and took a break enjoying the views....probably the best views of the Catalinas! Next up we hit Mica Mountain which of course is bit of let down from the great views on Spud but it's still the high point. Then we headed down to Mica Meadow Trail which is really nice stroll through the Ponderosa pines and ferns. The trail eventually reaches Reef Rock area so we arrived on the Reef and had lunch with another great view.

From Reef Rock we continued on to Manhead which is right along the trail but requires climbing gear to make the top. Then went over to Duckbill which was a rock scramble to make the top but nice views. And finally the highlight of the day we hiked down to Devils Bathtub to relax the afternoon away. Really nice spot to hang out and next time I think we will wander down canyon further. After hour and half at Devils Bathtub we headed back to Manning Camp for another night around the fire! Interesting note was the amount of water we encountered all weekend. Once on top it seemed like even the smallest drainages had some water in them from all the summer rain. Definitely the most water I've ever seen in the Rincons :)

Next morning we took our time hiking back out Turkey Creek Trail to the vehicles. Very nice weekend...thanks for the invite Angela!
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Benchmark

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Deer Head Spring Dripping Dripping
just enough water to filter

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Devils Bathtub Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute
good flow in the bathtub pool and plenty of water for filtering or any filter system

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Manning Camp Spring Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute
really strong flow in the creek with large pools for filtering

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
small amount near the source...maybe just enough to filter

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Spud Rock Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
nice large pool at the spring source...plenty of water to pump or dip sawyer bag
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  3 archives
May 21 2016
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 Guides 28
 Routes 199
 Photos 7,422
 Triplogs 188

female
 Joined Nov 07 2015
 
Mica Mountain Marathon Loop, AZ 
Mica Mountain Marathon Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar May 21 2016
AZHiker456Triplogs 188
Hiking27.45 Miles 6,929 AEG
Hiking27.45 Miles   11 Hrs   34 Mns   2.83 mph
6,929 ft AEG   1 Hour   52 Mns Break
 
1st trip
I put the MF’ing smack down in the Rincons, knocking off Mica Mountain, [which had been on the bucket-list for 3+ yrs], and then some, [Spud Rock, Helens Dome, Manning Camp, Duckbill, Man Head, Mica Meadow, & Reef Rock]. 8) In the process, I logged 27.45 miles for the day, destroying my previous PR of 20.05.

The previous weekend ended with my surprisingly strong 15+ miler [during which I bagged 12 peaks], followed by four days of high volume mileage relative to what I’m accustomed to. By Thursday evening, I’d logged 50 miles for the first five days of the week and felt very strong which was pretty awesome given that I hadn’t cracked 30 miles/week since the end of March during my Chiricahua peak bagging trip. Given how good I felt, I decided that the 20-21 miles from the Italian Springs TH [or rather from the parking area at Reddington & FR 37], to Mica Mtn & Spud Rock was a very reasonable target. The timing could not have been better; my flight landed at around 5:15 PM Friday evening in Tucson, and I proceeded to head straight from the airport to the mountains.

Once on Reddington Rd, I couldn’t help but notice the road signs emphasizing NO shooting / camping between mile markers 5 & 7… and how the sign for mile marker 8 was shot beyond recognition. There is a small parking area right by the start of FR 37. From what I’ve read, along with recent reports from those who’ve driven FR 37 this year, I was not even planning to attempt it in my Forester; in fact, it would’ve taken lots of skill and luck just to make the turn from Redinton Rd onto FR 37 without slamming bottom [luckily the was a second turn into the parking area just a few feet further up the road that any HCV could easily manage].

After an incredibly peacefully night of car camping, I kicked things off at 6 AM, heading down FR 37 on foot, toward the Italian Springs TH. Midway there, I noticed a faint, unmarked jeep road to my left. If the faint jeep road continued in the direction it was headed, then it would be a shorter, more direct way to the TH. I looked on the topo and decided to chance it. I figured the jeep road would take me at least as far as the Italian Trap Tank; and if I had to bushwhack after that, at least it was only a short distance. Sure enough, the jeep road led to the tank but did not continue in the direction I needed to go… and luckily it was only a short bushwhack because to say conditions were less than ideal would be an understatement! The brush wasn’t terrible and maneuverability was decent; visibility, on the other hand, left much to be desired. There were times when the grass was up to my knees! Luckily, I made it to the TH without drama and continued on my way.

The journey to Mica Mountain via the Italian Springs TH is an incredibly beautiful one. I actually enjoyed being on a trail for once, and as someone who rarely does repeats, I would totally repeat this one; enough said! The reports of Mica Mountain are spot on in that there are no views from the highpoint due to being almost completely obstructed by trees. However, the nearby Spud Rock and Reef Rock have some exceptional views. After Mica Mountain, I did a counterclockwise loop; and, in the process, hit up the following:

Spud Rock – The highpoint is literally a hop, skip, and a jump from the main trail, offering exceptional views! There were some bees up there, so I didn’t hang around for too long. Luckily they were not interested in me.

Helens Dome – If only I had a route for this, then I would not have fallen for the false summit! A very last minute decision, I headed off-trail to bag Helens Dome, which was way-pointed but not routed on the track I was following. Upon reaching what looked to be the highpoint, it was obvious that the waypoints were slightly off and that I had simply reached a false summit. It was tempting to descend the boulder crag I’d ‘summitted’ and try to find a way up to the highpoint, but after my Chiricahua trip in March, I got a sense of just how exhausting [and time-consuming] attempting to reach such craggy summits could be. And, given that I opted for a lollipop loop instead of an out-and-back from the TH to Mica Mtn/Spud Rock [which would be around 27 miles RT], I decided to press onward to the next point of interest [Manning Camp]. NOTE: According to a very reliable source, the highpoint of Helens Dome is reachable w/o rope/gear. I will have to knock that one when I go for TV Peak.

Manning Camp – After missing a turn, I found myself approaching in a more direct fashion and decided to continue heading ‘as-the-crow-flies’. From where I accidentally ended up off-trail, it was a short, fun bushwhack with excellent visibility and maneuverability. Just after arriving at Manning Camp, I bumped into a group of four hikers from SAHC. Leading them was a super experienced / hardcore woman who I’ve hiked with before… for almost every summit register I’ve signed to date in Southern AZ, her name is in there at least 3-4x.. and sometimes upwards of 8-10x. I was honored that she remembered me; she is really a living hiking legend in Southern AZ! We chatted a bit and then she and the other SAHC hikers went on their way, while I spent some time checking out Manning Camp, which was a lot more interesting in ‘real life’, relative to what I’d read about it. While not gushing, there was still some nice flow from the beautiful creek, along with mini-waterfalls and deep pools.

Duckbill – A rock formation [boulder pile] on the topo that I had to hit up since I was passing right by it. There are some well-beaten routes, and I had a blast scrambling up the boulders to the highpoint.

Man Head – Like Duckbill, this was another rock formation [boulder pile] on the topo that I had to hit up since I was passing right by. Unlike Duckbill, I did not make “summit” on this one; [although after removing my pack, I did manage to scramble part way up]. I’m not sure of the direction, but those familiar with area probably know exactly the spot I attempted to ascend: the face of the boulder formation that contains a narrow chute, mid-way up. Before even reaching the cute, there’s a bit of scrambling / maneuvering that’s required, including one section where the two options are: inching along on two feet on the ledge of a boulder while risking tons of exposure OR getting on your stomaching and slithering like a snake further in on the ledge under the boulder above, which forms like a “roof”. Those who make it this far then reach the narrow chute, [which is where I tapped out after several attempts]. I’m guessing some with more experience like Joe could make it without ropes/gear; but even then, it wasn’t entirely clear if it would in fact lead to the highpoint of Man Head.

Mica Meadow – The least interesting, but I was going right by and did not have to take a step off the trail to see it.

Reef Rock – The views were just spectacular; just as good if not better than Spud Rock! And, with NO bees, it was definitely much more enjoyable. This is not a summit but more or less of a rock outcropping right along the trail with awesome views. The “highpoint” involves getting on a small boulder and should be reachable by just about anyone, but climbing on the boulder is not necessary to enjoy the awesome views.

Once I got back to the Italian Springs TH, I took the beautiful Bellota Trail, [which had excellent footing and was part of the Arizona Trail], back to my vehicle at the junction of Redington Rd. & FR 37. It sure beat bushwhacking and/or the super rocky FR 37!
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God save the Prom Queen, cuz [reality check!] AEG's King...!
 
average hiking speed 2.05 mph
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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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