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East Slope Trail - 7 members in 17 triplogs have rated this an average 3.6 ( 1 to 5 best )
17 triplogs
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Jun 04 2025
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 Guides 93
 Routes 397
 Photos 4,984
 Triplogs 4,124

49 male
 Joined Jun 20 2003
 Tucson, AZ
Heartbroken Turkey, AZ 
Heartbroken Turkey, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jun 04 2025
fricknaleyTriplogs 4,124
Hiking18.95 Miles 4,882 AEG
Hiking18.95 Miles   6 Hrs   53 Mns   3.27 mph
4,882 ft AEG   1 Hour   5 Mns Break10 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Big Loop taking in Turkey Creek, Spud rock campground, east slope, heartbreak ridge, switchback trail and miller creek. Fantastic trails! did not see a soul today, other than a fat horned toad, two huge gopher snakes and a load of deer :y:
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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.
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I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
 
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
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"…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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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 15 2022
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 Guides 12
 Routes 192
 Photos 863
 Triplogs 356

42 male
 Joined Nov 30 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Mica Mountain meander, AZ 
Mica Mountain meander, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar May 15 2022
ShatteredArmTriplogs 356
Run/Jog21.17 Miles 5,064 AEG
Run/Jog21.17 Miles   7 Hrs   20 Mns   3.02 mph
5,064 ft AEG      20 Mns Break
 
no photosets
Main event for the weekend, and attempt to check off all (or most) of the trail I haven't yet seen in the Rincon Mountains. Started up Turkey Creek (NPS has been doing a lot of work on this trail since last year) and it was already quite warm at 8:30AM, so the grind up to Deerhead Spring trail was quite a slog, such that I felt fine sitting in the shade while my friend checked out the campground. The aspen grove is leafed out, which has not been the case in my April visits.

Took East Slope over to the Heartbreak Ridge junction, so I can hit the 0.6 mile stretch of that trail I hadn't seen yet. Then up to Man's Head for another little break. Still felt warm even up there. Next we headed up Bonita Trail to the summit, which we didn't bother stopping at despite its sweeping views.

At the Spud Rock junction, I had to decide whether to head down past Helen's Dome to do an out-and-back to hit one stretch of trail I haven't seen yet, but opted to skip it, since I was feeling a little rough. So we headed down the Spud Rock connector trail and up the Mica Meadow trail (this section was nice). Back at Fire Loop, I ran out of water, and we made the planned descent to Manning Camp.

At Manning Camp we saw the first, and only, human we would encounter all day, an NPS employee who actually recognized us from a trail work outing a few months back. Filled up at the Manning Camp spigot, and she recommended a dip in the cold creek water. I took this advice, submerging my shirt in the pool, and it was indeed very cold and very refreshing. This was a winning suggestion for sure, and I actually felt pretty good the rest of the way down the mountain.

We took Devil's Bathtub (falls were dry, recently according to our friend at Manning Camp), then Heartbreak Ridge/Deer Head, quick douse in Mudhole Spring, and back to the bottom, where it was quite hot, but for some reason tolerable compared to how I felt up on the mountain.

Still have ~1.5 miles of trail left in the Rincons, but that'll have to wait until cooler weather.

dry Deer Head Spring Dry Dry
Nada

dry Devils Bathtub Dry Dry
No flow, a couple of stagnant pools on top of the falls.

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
Still lots of nice cold water flowing into the pool.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
Still dripping, enough to filter in the little pool.
_____________________
  2 archives
Apr 10 2021
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 Guides 12
 Routes 192
 Photos 863
 Triplogs 356

42 male
 Joined Nov 30 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Mica Mountain outer loop, AZ 
Mica Mountain outer loop, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar Apr 10 2021
ShatteredArmTriplogs 356
Run/Jog21.97 Miles 5,403 AEG
Run/Jog21.97 Miles   7 Hrs   39 Mns   2.89 mph
5,403 ft AEG      3 Mns Break
 
no photosets
1st trip
Didn't have any ideas for other places to go, so I decided to head back to the Rincons for a loop around Mica Mountain. Decided to try the outermost loop possible using official trails, which was almost 12 miles starting at the top of Turkey Creek trail. Parked at the end of the road, and it was already hot at 9am, but the temps were nice past Mudhole Spring. The climb on this route was worse than last weeks Heartbreak Ridge loop, because instead of being more or less done climbing at Spud Rock Spring, the climbing continued all the way up to Man Head.

I hadn't been up there much besides just passing straight across via AZT, but it's beautiful up there. Still stray patches of snow near Mica Meadow. The reef rock view was impressive, probably my favorite in the range after Rincon Peak. After I got done taking a pano, a coatimundi appeared from over the edge of the cliff, and didn't even see me until he was about 10 feet away. His reaction when he realized his mistake was priceless.

Just a couple minutes after leaving Reef Rock, saw a band of 4-5 coatis. Guess that's the favorite part of the park.

North Slope was nice, not as bad as some of the triplogs suggest. Very few fallen trees left. The unburned stretches have some of the biggest fir trees I've seen.

By Manning Camp, I was pretty tired. That was the first place I saw anybody. Filled up water, then continued down to Devil's Bathtub, and back to Turkey Creek trail. Was worried it would be hot down low, but it was probably just in the 80s, which wasn't too bad with a low level of exertion.

Much tougher route than I envisioned; it took me about the same amount of time to hike, fully-laden, 20 miles out of the grand canyon a couple weeks ago.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Devils Bathtub Quart per minute Quart per minute
Flow above the trail crossing has dried up, but below is still going strong. Some trickle still at the Heartbreak Ridge crossing farther up.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Italian Spring Dripping Dripping
No flow, but there's stagnant 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

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
Still the tiniest seep.
_____________________
 
Apr 03 2021
avatar

 Guides 12
 Routes 192
 Photos 863
 Triplogs 356

42 male
 Joined Nov 30 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Heartbreak Ridge loop, AZ 
Heartbreak Ridge loop, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar Apr 03 2021
ShatteredArmTriplogs 356
Run/Jog19.08 Miles 4,511 AEG
Run/Jog19.08 Miles   6 Hrs   44 Mns   2.88 mph
4,511 ft AEG      6 Mns Break
 
no photosets
1st trip
With an early hot weekend in store, I decided I wanted to do something high up, and figured the window for the Rincons is also getting long in the tooth, so I decided to head back out to Mescal Road. All the usable camping space was packed to the brim, and then I realized it's Easter weekend. Parked at Miller Creek TH and it was already warm by the time I got to Turkey Creek TH.

The climb up was pretty rough, felt like puking a couple times but kept it contained. Mud Hole Spring had a bit of a trickle, so I thought the water situation would be good... And then Deer Head Spring was dry as a bone. Went over to Spud Rock Campground, and the spring there was also dry as a bone (despite there still being a few stray patches of snow lying around). Fortunately there was plenty of shade after Mud Hole, and a slight breeze - really only the exposed manzanita/scrub areas were hot, but there weren't many above 6,000.

Decided I'd head over to Devil's Bathtub and hopefully find water there - if not, I'd probably have to head back the way I came in order to get water at Mud Hole. It was a nice spot and, fortunately, was lightly flowing. Filtering was probably optional on this one. Took a little break and headed back to Heartbreak Ridge, which I quite enjoyed. Lots of good ponderosa pine forest most of the way to Happy Valley Lookout.

South side of the lookout was more exposed, but it was downhill at this point, so nbd. No good water anywhere along Miller Creek trail, but it was mostly shaded, so not too miserable.

Overall, I greatly enjoyed this route, but the Rincons seem way dryer than they should be this time of year.


water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Devils Bathtub Quart per minute Quart per minute
Light flow above and below the trail crossing

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Miller Canyon Pools to trickle Pools to trickle
Nothing up high, couple of stagnant pools just west of the park boundary, gross cow water down low.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping

dry Spud Rock Spring Dry Dry
Just a dry hole in the ground
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Apr 25 2020
avatar

 Guides 3
 Routes 569
 Photos 11,976
 Triplogs 1,634

50 female
 Joined Sep 18 2009
 Tucson, AZ
East Slope TrailTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Apr 25 2020
GrottoGirlTriplogs 1,634
Backpack18.27 Miles 5,582 AEG
Backpack18.27 Miles2 Days         
5,582 ft AEG
 
no photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
J and I hiked up to Spud Rock Camp in the late afternoon Saturday. We had a relaxing dinner and went to bed early. In the morning, we headed out on our objective - to travel the old East Slope trail. Things started off great. We could find trail bed, blazes, and even cairns. This continued for a short while through beautiful ponderosa pine forest. Then all hell broke loose. We were obviously in an old burn area. When I returned home, I asked around and learned that it might have been a fire in 1996. Anyway things got extremely hard to follow. We’d look up from our GPS to find that we were surrounded. Surrounded by impenetrable brush of locust, oak, manzanita, buckthorn, you name it. We crawled, pushed, and fought our way forward. The pokey shrubbery trying to rip off our clothes and skin. At one point I found someone else’s map in a ziplock that had been chewed on. Later in a drainage, a dead bear. He must have found it impossible to travel through the terrain so he just curled up and died. I’m sure we, too, consider that an option. At some point we pondered whether it would be easier to go forward or retreat. Neither of us answered so we continued to go forward. J needed a pants repair so we stopped for a break. I gave him all my duct tape. We had a snack huddled in the bushes, out of the sun, while we taped up his pants. Then we continued our struggle. Then things got worse. We had to struggle up hill. We kept ourselves as close to the ‘trail’ as possible by following the line on the GPS. That line was just an idea. A suggestion. It didn’t help us one bit. However, we had a moment of confirmation - we found one of the metal blazes in the middle of no where! It flooded me with hope and perhaps a bit of confirmation that I wasn’t all that crazy. So we continued through what was probably some of the worse bushwhacking I’ve done. After what seemed like many hours, we finally hit a clearing. It was heaven! Then I saw Mica Secondary! I rejoiced! We had made it. We persevered through hell to emerge at a trail as wide as a highway! Oh boring, lovely trail! Oh how I love you! I checked my GPS, we had just gone 2.75 miles in 4.5 hrs. And to think the first part was more or less a fun walk in the Park! We decided not to stop and we cruised back to camp to collect our belongings and head to the truck. Another adventure logged in our history. One grueling enough that returning to Covid times didn’t seem nearly too bad.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Spud Rock Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
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  2 archives
Apr 02 2019
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 Guides 187
 Routes 989
 Photos 12,068
 Triplogs 864

72 male
 Joined Jun 27 2015
 Tucson, Arizona
Turkey Creek & Misc Trails, AZ 
Turkey Creek & Misc Trails, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Apr 02 2019
markthurman53Triplogs 864
Hiking17.30 Miles 5,049 AEG
Hiking17.30 Miles   9 Hrs      2.26 mph
5,049 ft AEG   1 Hour   20 Mns Break15 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Did a trail closer to home this time. Headed over to Happy Valley to do the Turkey Creek Trail and various other trails on the east slopes of the Rincons. I have been up in the Rincons many times from the 60's to the present but have never been on a majority of these trails I was on this time. I took the jeep road up to the trail head. This road is definitely a High clearance 4WD road. 4WD is not really required on most of this road but there is one section that definitely requires 4WD, don't know if you could just power up this anymore. Getting to the trail head cuts off 2 miles (4 miles round trip) from this hike making it only 17.3 miles instead of 21 miles and 400 feet less elevation gain.

The first 1.8 miles before the Saguaro National Park Boundary are in National Forest. Nice easy walking along a grassy and sparse juniper tree ridge. Once in the park the trail is very nicely constructed at least for the first half mile, this is to lure you in, then it becomes more like a typical trail in the Catalina and Rincon Mountains, steep and rocky. Some places along this trail the manzanita has encroached on the trail but nothing closely like the Rock Creek Trail in the Mazatzal mountains. The trail does get a little vague in places on the upper end in the pine forests but nothing that should cause a concern if you keep a sharp eye. Definitely not a heavily traveled trail and just coming out of the winter season doesn't help. Mud spring was running lightly and no mud. The sign that says 1 mile from Mud Spring to Deerhead Spring is wrong, someone scratched it out and put 1.2 but it is actually more like 1.4. But what's a couple tenths of a mile here and there, A big deal if it's all uphill.

At the junction with the Deerhead Spring Trail I headed north to the Spud Rock Campground and the East Slope Trail. Deerhead Spring had a light flow or more like an area ground seep, the stream below the creek was running slightly. Aspen trees at the campground still haven't produced leaves yet. Still had some climbing to do and took the Switchback Trail up to the Heartbreak ridge Trail. This is a short .4 mile connector trail. I have not been on the Heartbreak Ridge Trail in over 50 years and it is no longer the super highway it use to be. This use to be one of the main trails up to Manning camp when the X9 ranch was still allowing passage. I took the Heartbreak Ridge Trail to the Fireline Trail and returned on this trail to just below the Devil's Bathtub Trail (I have another hike planned to finish this trail as a loop on the Turkey and Miller Canyon Trails). Did not go to Manning camp since I have been there and done that many times before. Near the summit of the trail there are good views to the south with Rincon Peak being the obvious landmark. There are occasional views to the east from certain sections along the Heartbreak Ridge Trail. Water was still flowing in a couple of the creek crossings on the upper portion of this trail.

Devil's Bathtuib trail is yet another of the trails I have never been on. This is a fairly level trail between the Manning Camp Trail and Heartbreak Ridge Trail. In the middle is Devil's Bathtub. Light flow at the tub and falls. Took my lunch there at 5 hours in. Still a little snow in patches on the sections that don't get much sun, none on the trail. Returned the same way and headed down the East Slope Trail. This is a short .7 mile fairly level trail that will connect up with the Deerhead Springs trail at the Spud Rock Campground. From the Campground it is a long downhill trek back to the trail head.

Great hike and a real good workout. Will probably take me a couple days to recover. Probably good for another couple weeks before it gets too hot and the water stops flowing in the streams. Not sure how permanent any of the springs are.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Mud Hole Spring - Mica

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Deer Head Spring Dripping Dripping
more of a ground seep but the creek below was running at about a quart per minute.

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

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
More than a drip and less than a quart. Not muddy

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Sycamore Creek Medium flow Medium flow
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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
Nov 14 2015
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 Guides 1
 Routes 37
 Photos 470
 Triplogs 808

67 male
 Joined May 25 2014
 Lake Shastina, C
Devil's Bathtub Trail - Coronado NFTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 14 2015
mdfabbriniTriplogs 808
Hiking4.11 Miles 890 AEG
Hiking4.11 Miles   3 Hrs   26 Mns   2.09 mph
890 ft AEG   1 Hour   28 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
A day hike to and from our camp at Spud Rock Spring to get water and to explore the area. The overall backpack trip is described at [ triplog ] .

Coming out of the Spud Rock Spring campsite, we weren't clear on whether to head back towards Deer Head Spring or up the Switchback Trail to catch the trail to Devil's Bathtub. It ended up we took the "wrong trail" or the Deer Head Spring Trail, causing us to drop about 500 feet. This trail, like the Turkey Trail, hasn't got much use or maintenance. But it was pretty, and at the end of the day, created a loop for us. We met the Heartbreak Ridge Trail, headed north for .5 miles until we got to Four Corners, then headed 20 minutes west to Devils Bathtub.

Water was plentiful here. After lunching and napping for an hour and a half, we headed back to Spud Rock Spring via the Devil's Bathtub, East Slope, and Switchback Trails.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Devils Bathtub

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
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et deinceps per nebula
  3 archives
Mar 24 2015
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 Guides 73
 Routes 176
 Photos 10,174
 Triplogs 2,324

46 male
 Joined Sep 08 2006
 
Rincon Loop, AZ 
Rincon Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Mar 24 2015
JimTriplogs 2,324
Hiking16.40 Miles 4,500 AEG
Hiking16.40 Miles   8 Hrs   10 Mns   2.14 mph
4,500 ft AEG      30 Mns Break15 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Wanting to return to the Rincons since last fall, today was to be a great hike in the main body of the range, though without the Mica MT area. I was really pleased that my car got me to the four wheel drive trailhead, as I took it up the 2 track and started from there, instead of lower down. This gave me more time higher up, and I was able to visit Manning Camp, as a result. The 4WD road was less about clearance, than actual 4WD, and beefy tires would make a difference. However, a fictional AWD civic never would have made it.

The hike was better than expected and I was up in the pines in under 3 hours. I really just hiked through the Deer Head fire area and was less impressed with it than I hoped. This is no central Gila Wilderness. Most of the affects seem to be top killing brush and oaks, and needle cast consumption, but there was less grass than hoped for. I did hike up a ridge (not GPSed) and look at some old growth pines, still with some grass under them. I found the area around Manning Camp to be highly reminiscent of some of the low spots in the WOR, specifically around the nice camping spot with the massive pines. This is because it is almost all pine litter, little grass, and a dense stand of tall poles, with some larger orange barkers, but nothing characteristic of the way it would have been 120 years ago.

The Fire Loop is one of the nicer areas, and the granite domes are fun to look at, and climb on if you chose. In that regard, the Rincons have a Yosemite feel to them. Manning Camp itself is OK, but it just feels like a NPS camp area, nothing that special, save for the water and weather station. The Manning Camp trail south of the camp does have great canyons, falling water, and westward views to the Tucson Mountains. The Devil's Bathtub trail and area is really nice, and if flowing when warm might be a nice place to hangout, but I expect it is dry when warm. Heartbreak Ridge has great views, and as always looking east is fantastic.

With the current appearance of the east slopes, the species composition, and the fire affects, I would almost prefer it had not burned, since the oaks and other brush will coppice, some younger pines were killed, a lot of soil will and has eroded post fire, and it isn't going to return to pine, or mixed oaks over grass anytime soon. The grassy and pine covered areas do look better, and at least fuel loads are reduced. Still, the top of the mountain would benefit from something it will never get: mechanical thinning. The current composition of this area seems to have been influenced by (the Manning's?) grazing a lot more than Mica Mountain proper, but there appears to be slightly more soil here, too.

Overall, a great hike, my longest of the year, and with some serious AEG. It was nice down low, and cool, but tolerable while constantly switching between a sweater and t-shirt up higher. It was also breezy, but that created some lenticular clouds. I think it is still early in the higher terrain, as despite the above normal temps, it is still only late March, and there were fewer bird calls than expected. I did see some mountain quail, I think, or some other birds with flight sounds like a quail. Most of the life is still below 6,000'.
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Lenticular Cloud
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated


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

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 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Quart per minute Quart per minute
_____________________
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Oct 03 2014
avatar

 Guides 11
 Routes 123
 Photos 818
 Triplogs 257

62 male
 Joined Jul 14 2011
 Tucson, AZ
Heartbreak Ridge TrailTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 03 2014
Mountain_RatTriplogs 257
Hiking16.92 Miles 4,086 AEG
Hiking16.92 Miles   10 Hrs   6 Mns   1.81 mph
4,086 ft AEG      45 Mns Break18 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Had a day off and was passing by Mescal, so I whipped it over to Happy Valley for a Rincon Mountain traverse. Not much to report, but with zero negative issues, it was as perfect as this day could get. Headed up the Turkey Creek trail, hit Spud Rock campsite, took the East Slope to Heartbreak Ridge, over to Happy Valley campsite, down the Miller Creek trail and back to the Exploder. Pretty much a sunup to sundown stroll :)
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Sep 01 2012
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 Guides 1
 Routes 11
 Photos 691
 Triplogs 94

45 female
 Joined May 14 2008
 Tucson, AZ
Spud Rock Camp/Manning Camp Lollipop, AZ 
Spud Rock Camp/Manning Camp Lollipop, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Sep 01 2012
SaraeTriplogs 94
Backpack21.11 Miles 5,609 AEG
Backpack21.11 Miles3 Days         
5,609 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Had a fantastic time on our first Rincons trip!

Saturday -- Got to Turkey Creek Trailhead at 5:30. Parked the Matrix, which did okay on the dirt roads, and said hi to the campers who had set up their compound at the th. We geared up, making sure we had packed all of our water for the dry camp at Spud Rock, and headed out on the trail around 6 to start the uphill climb. The morning light was fabulous and we made good time to the forest service trailhead at 1.5 miles, and then to the National Park border at 3 miles, and then the trail register. Then the real climbing started. We took our time heading up the exposed slopes, and made it to Mud Hole, which is nicely shaded, around 9:30am. The spring was dribbling a bit and there is a small pool that is mostly clogged with water plants. After fueling up, we continued up the slopes, gradually getting into cooler temps and piney woods. We arrived at Spud Rock Camp at around 1:30 and took a moment to locate the campsites and find the perfect set of trees for setting up both of our hammocks under one tarp, then quickly set up camp. Of course, nap time was soon to follow, but I couldn't sleep, so I took a walk around the campsites and checked out the spring, which was dry. We had set up at campsite #1, and it turned out to be closest to the toilets. Sites 2 and 3 were a bit further down slope and tucked in amongst large boulders. If we hadn't been so tired, I would have moved camp to one of those. I got back to camp and we made dinner, played some cards, and fell asleep by 7:30pm.

Sunday -- Got up bright and early. We were skimping on water, so we skipped coffee and had our breakfast that used the least water, Texas scramble breakfast burritos, yum! We quickly packed up camp and started up the Switchback Trail around 7:30am, where I almost stepped on the first rattlesnake of our trip. He was easily bypassed, and we made our way along the trails, settling in to Manning Camp around 9am. The cabin was deserted, so we got to work filtering water, setting up camp and checking out the surroundings. Around noon, we decided to try to explore some of the trails around Mica Mountain, even though the clouds had been forming since we had arrived at camp. Well, we got about half a mile down the trail before being pelted by quite large amounts of hail and then the lightning started. So, we turned around and ran back to camp, so at least we got that exercise in :) We waited out the storm and then spent the rest of the day around camp and scrambling down the nearby stream. We found some great spots with pools and small waterfalls to enjoy. We found some boulders a bit south of camp that have a good view of Rincon Peak, so we decided to cook and eat dinner there, and it was perfect. We saw our only other person as the day ended. He had come up from Douglas Springs and was pretty wiped out, so there wasn't much socializing.

Monday -- Tried to get up early... we are so bad at that. Cooked up a big breakfast to super-fuel up, and managed to hit the trail around 7am. We were feeling pretty good, so kept up a good pace. We passed Devil's Bathtub and it was running enough to have a nice falls. We also passed through several park areas that made us wish we could stay. Soon we got to the intersection with the East Slope Trail and followed it down to Turkey Creek Trail. The East Slope Trail actually provided me with another rattlesnake stepping opportunity :o , this one was a much closer call and I"m afraid I upset the poor snake. So, we quickly went our separate ways. Whew! As we dropped elevation, the temps got warmer of course, and we started moving slower. We eventually passed through a burnt area that I believe might have been the Fox Fire that happened back in June. The end of our hike came at 12pm, topped off with a free beer from the campers.

What a fun trip! We definitely need to get back up there and check out some more of the trails. I'm thinking in the Spring, when the water sources are more likely to be reliable.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light

dry Deer Head Spring Dry Dry
soil was damp, but that's it

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Devils Bathtub Quart per minute Quart per minute
water was filling up the tub at the top and trickling down to fill the large pool at the bottom

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
There was a good flow and large pools in several locations along the stream

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Mud Hole Spring - Mica Dripping Dripping
dribbling a bit and there is a small pool that is mostly clogged with water plants

_____________________
In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks. ~John Muir
 
average hiking speed 2.2 mph

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

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