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Salida Trail #93 - 5 members in 7 triplogs have rated this an average 2 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Jul 02 2025
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 Guides 69
 Routes 37
 Photos 3,010
 Triplogs 2,387

55 male
 Joined Oct 24 2010
 Phoenix,Az
Salida Trail #93Prescott, AZ
Prescott, AZ
Hiking avatar Jul 02 2025
mt98dewTriplogs 2,387
Hiking12.17 Miles 3,044 AEG
Hiking12.17 Miles   6 Hrs   12 Mns   1.96 mph
3,044 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
:pk: Trying to finish off the NE Bradshaw area, which put Salida #93 on my radar. Weather looked good for a July hike so up I went. Got to the Green Gulch TH around 4:30. There had been a fair amount of rain the previous night so I ended up dodging mud puddles in the pre-morning light. The muddiness had me worried about what I might encounter on the hike, but it turned out to be a non factor. I took Red Mountain (#43) up to the Prospector (#42). I really enjoy 43. A nice single track (a rarity for this area) that has an unexpected semi shaded area to start with. If I’m hiking in this area I’m going to try and include 43. Started on the Prospector Trail around 2.75 miles going CCW. Your typical ATV rocky roller coaster, though it wasn’t too bad because it was mainly downhill. Reached the Salida (#93) around 4 miles. Trail started off (surprisingly) relatively flat, passes by a couple of enclosed pastures and then at 4.57 turns off the nice, “flat” road and starts its own version of a roller coaster. Unfortunately, with this coaster was almost all up. :pk: Around 5.4 the trail passes by one numerous tanks (all of which were dry). The two carsonite markers were down in this area, but the road was self evident. At 6.17 I hit the other end of the Prospector Trail. The Salida Trail (93) is marked at this juncture, but this is the last time I see a trail marker for this trail. Shortly after this juncture, this road actually starts to develop periodic semblance of a trail. Nice! Not sure what kind of motorized vehicle could use that trail, but I did see tire tracks. Started to get some shaded sections, some flat sections and unfortunately more climbing sections. Around 7.04 felt like I reached the high point. Looked like it would be very easy to summit, but I’m not sure what peak it would have been. At 8.40, I reached the Charcoal Gulch Trail. I’ve hiked this area before, so this juncture was as I envisioned, but neither trail was signed. From here it was (almost) all down hill. This is not necessarily a good thing with the steep rocky slopes, but I made it back safely.

This is certainly not a fun hike, but there are a few spots to enjoy along the way. There was a chance of rain, but it held off. I just got the humidity and some clouds. Had the trails to myself. Didn’t see a soul the entire day. Wildlife was also near nonexistent. Saw a Red Tail Hawk and a couple of horny toads.
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Apr 13 2025
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 Guides 1
 Routes 209
 Photos 1,231
 Triplogs 196

male
 Joined Mar 14 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Bear Down MountainPrescott, AZ
Prescott, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 13 2025
astrobrewerTriplogs 196
Hiking10.53 Miles 2,543 AEG
Hiking10.53 Miles   5 Hrs   32 Mns   1.99 mph
2,543 ft AEG      15 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Looking for a cooler hike not too far away, decided to go to Prescott. Used the filter on HAZ site to find hikes in season around Prescott. Picked Bear Down Mountain. Never hiked from Green Gulch trail head, but it looked easy enough to get to. Lots of trails in the area, so I figured I would make a loop and also bag Stoneridge Peak. I created a route using route editor and saved it to Route Scout. Very glad I did because there are lots of trails and the off track warning saved me a couple of times.

When I arrived at the large parking area at the trailhead there were only two other cars there. It was about 70 degrees and sunny. The first mile was level and easy. After turning left at the junction the rocky trail started climbing. Not to step at first. It just kept going up and up. After climbing for a couple miles the trail went downhill and steep with loose dirt and rocks making it slow going. After giving up a lot of elevation the trail started climbing again. There were some very steep parts with loose fitting that were fun.

Eventually got to a spot with a view of Bear Down. Looked nice and flat on top from a distance at least, a perfect spot to have lunch. A few minutes later Route Scout let me know that I had reached the "bush whack junction" to Bear Down Mountain. I was hoping for an easy walk to the peak, but it wasn't. There were some ready stretches but not many. Lots of bushes and trees and boulders in the way. Eventually I reached some boulders that must be the way to the top. I climbed up and with some difficulty reached the top of the boulders. The top? No! I could see another big boulder pile that looked higher. Damn. I find a route down the far side of the first boulder pile which has me forcing my way through bushes to get through. Luckily I was wearing long sleeves and long pants or I would have been totally scratched up.

On to and up the second boulder pile. And when I get to the top once again I can see another boulder pile that's even higher. Double damn! Got to climb down this second rock outcropping and make my way to the third one. Ugh. This is hard work.

Finally I reach the high point. It's just the top rock on the pile. I sit on it and take a selfie or two. Lunch? Out of the question. All I can think about is getting back to the trail. There were a couple tricky spots, but down was easier than up. Eventually I could see the trail and pushed through more bushes and then I was out in the open back on the trail. Whew!

Back in the game. The trail was fairly level for a while, and then started heading down and down and down. Seemed never ending. Hard to believe I hiked this far up.

Stoneridge Peak looked big. The trail went back uphill steeply as it got to the bushwhack junction. Also the peak is at least a few hundred get above the trail. I would have liked to see the view from the top, but I was not up for another long steep bushwhack and decided to keep going. The neck party of the trail was very steep with loose rocks and bad footing. Slow going. The least fun section of the trail.

Despite that it was a nice day on the trail. Only saw one other person, a guy walking his dog near the start. Nobody else all day. Back at the parking lot my car was all alone.

I might try this trail again to bag that second peak.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Bear Down 6962
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Oct 27 2024
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 Guides 25
 Routes 376
 Photos 5,897
 Triplogs 346

40 male
 Joined Mar 01 2018
 Chandler, AZ
Stoneridge 6542 - Bear Down - Sun Devil Loop, AZ 
Stoneridge 6542 - Bear Down - Sun Devil Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Oct 27 2024
John10sTriplogs 346
Hiking14.00 Miles 4,191 AEG
Hiking14.00 Miles   8 Hrs   43 Mns   1.92 mph
4,191 ft AEG   1 Hour   25 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
I hadn't hiked in Prescott in a while, and we started from Green Gulch TH for a counter-clockwise loop in the Bradshaws with a trifecta of off-trail @Peter_Medal peaks (he authored the guides for Stoneridge, Bear Down, and Sun Devil in 2016-17). It was in the upper 40s when we started on Charcoal Gulch Trail, then connected with Red Mountain #43 after about a mile. The stretch of trail approaching Stoneridge Peak had some nice shade and better-than-expected scenery along Green Gulch.

I took a quick detour up to Peak 6542, and the off-trail wasn't bad at all--the brush wasn't too dense and was usually easy to dodge, and there was some light scrambling on the way up the stony ridge. The peak is flat, rocky, and wide open, with great 360° views. There was a register up there with an odd assortment of items in the jar (a golf ball, a dinosaur, and a business card for Ralph the Qigong healer) along with a geocaching sign-in placed in 2012. The most recent entry was just over a week ago...didn't see any HAZ names, but Peter Medal's casino gold club card was in the jar.

I headed back down, and we continued to Prospector Trail, a stretch that overlapped with a hike we did in June last year. The majority of the trails in the area are a rollercoaster of short, steep up and downs on rocky OHV routes, and that was the case with the trails we hiked for the first time today as well. We connected with Salida Trail for the southern part of the loop, and I decided to go up to the top of Bear Down since it's so close to the trail. I approached from the south when I went up last year, but I went up from the west this time. The brush wasn't bad here, either, and the views were nice from the rocky peak. Didn't find a summit register on either of the high points up there.

Back on the trail, we continued SE on Salida and reconnected with Charcoal Gulch, which was very steep, rocky, and mostly downhill as we hiked north. I eventually left the trail for a third time to go up to Sun Devil Peak, going up the right fork of the trident-shaped mountain, the opposite direction from the official route. The first quarter mile ascending the ridge was very brushy, and I pulled out gloves and clippers and picked up a lot of scratches. It opened up a little beyond that, with more rock outcroppings to navigate around/over, then a lot of talus on top of the ridge closer to the peak. It was a steep climb from the trail to the top, gaining ~1,000' in ~9/10 mile.

Great views from the summit again, lots of ladybugs, and there was a register with a few HAZ entries - @Peter_Medal, @AZHiker456, and RowdyandMe/widowmaker (no longer on HAZ?). The peak doesn't seem to get much traffic, with the last entry more than three years ago [ youtube video ] . I was running short on time but wanted to check out the plane wreckage, so I started down the middle fork of the trident, dropping ~600' over a quarter mile to a spot where I found a wing and some other parts. I'm sure there was a lot more in the general vicinity that I didn't see, but I didn't have time to continue searching. I debated whether it would be faster to continue down the drainage and loop back to the trail vs. backtracking up to Sun Devil and returning the same way I'd come up. I decided to go with the known route and backtrack, but that meant regaining the 600' before starting back down.

Once I was through the brush and back on the trail, we finished off the loop and were done ~5PM. The trails around here aren't my favorites with the rocky OHV roads and sometimes limited views, but this ended up being more interesting than expected with the addition of the peaks and the crash site. We didn't see much unique wildlife today, just a small snake and a small tarantula, but the weather was great and we didn't see anyone else all day.

Driving back toward Phoenix, we got bogged down in the usual weekend gridlock on I-17. Leaving Prescott, the GPS routed us onto backroads to bypass some of the mess, and we ended up in a lengthy parade of vehicles returning to the valley on dirt roads paralleling the interstate, averaging ~25 mph for long stretches before joining the slow-moving line on I-17 around Bumble Bee, adding 40+ minutes to the drive.
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Tarantula
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Autumn - Color Foliage  Sun Dog

dry Bull Tank 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 Trail Tank 1-25% full 1-25% full
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout

 
Jun 03 2023
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 Guides 25
 Routes 376
 Photos 5,897
 Triplogs 346

40 male
 Joined Mar 01 2018
 Chandler, AZ
Lynx Labyrinth and Bear Down Summit, AZ 
Lynx Labyrinth and Bear Down Summit, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jun 03 2023
John10sTriplogs 346
Hiking12.57 Miles 2,522 AEG
Hiking12.57 Miles   7 Hrs   24 Mns   2.03 mph
2,522 ft AEG   1 Hour   13 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
It was a smoky, hazy drive out of the valley this morning because of a mulch fire in Mesa that's been burning for the past few days, so it was nice getting out into clearer air. I hadn't driven on I-17 in almost a year, so I got my first look at the widening project on the way to Prescott. We started near Salida Gulch Trailhead...not quite in the actual parking lot--between the GPS, some confusing dead end signs, and an unusual pair of parallel roads on opposite sides of Lynx Creek in the residential area, we ended up parking in a pullout along the road...close enough.

Salida Gulch Trail #95 was flat and easy early on, crossing the creek multiple times. A mile in, we passed the petroglyphs, which were better than expected--a lot of rock art concentrated in one area, with various figures of people and animals, some circles of life, etc...and no obvious graffiti, which was a bonus.

Past the petroglyphs, we took a short, unofficial but easy to follow trail that led to Salida Connection Trail #9263 and followed that for less than a mile to Prospectors Trail. The guides for these trails are accurate: wide, easy to follow, and rocky multi-use trails. There's a lot of short, rocky downhill sketches mixed into the general upward climb. It's a complex network of trails out there...in some areas, it felt like we were passing intersections every mile or less. Bull Tank and Quail Tank both had some murky water, and we made our way around the south side of Bear Down Mountain.

TboneKathy was ready for a break from the rocky ups and downs, so she waited near the trail while I made the short bushwhack up to the peak. It was a lot rockier up there than it looked from below. Great 360° views from the top, but I felt like I was back in the Mazatzals with the swarms of ladybugs, which seem to thrive on these ~7,000' peaks. It was tough to tell which rock outcropping was the true summit, but the guide says the westernmost is slightly higher. I searched for the summit register on both and came up empty, despite the detailed photo from @Peter_Medal [ photo ] in 2016...not sure if it's gone or if I just missed it among the many boulders up there.

[ youtube video ]

On the way back, we followed Salida Trail into new territory with the same wide, rocky trail and a mix of ups and downs. We stopped for lunch in the shade near Salida Tank, and thunder started as we got moving again. Thunderheads had started gathering early in the morning and got darker as the day went on. We could see rain streaks under the clouds, and when we reconnected with Salida Gulch Trail, we decided to shorten the hike and skip the originally-planned extension over to Lynx Lake on John's Tank Trail.

When we finished, we'd completed a kind of odd figure-eight/lasso loop route with a hook on the end. The clouds had stayed away, so we decided to tack on a short hike to see the Lynx Creek Ruins and then check out the lake. The petroglyphs and peak were highlights on this hike, and it was pleasant overall, but there isn't a lot of variety in the scenery or terrain--the early stretch along the creek on Salida Gulch was flat and easy, and just about everything else was very rocky, which isn't bad, but does get a little annoying after a while.
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Thunderhead

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Bull Tank 1-25% full 1-25% full

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Quail Tank 1-25% full 1-25% full

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Salida Tank 1-25% full 1-25% full
 
Sep 10 2022
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 Guides 41
 Routes 1,626
 Photos 14,983
 Triplogs 2,760

69 male
 Joined Jan 20 2009
 Far NE Phoenix,
Salida Gulch Stuff, AZ 
Salida Gulch Stuff, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Sep 10 2022
The_EagleTriplogs 2,760
Hiking16.85 Miles 2,950 AEG
Hiking16.85 Miles   8 Hrs   15 Mns   2.32 mph
2,950 ft AEG   1 Hour    Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Joe put together this collection of trails that I'd never been on.

We started at 62 degrees and sprinkles. Needless to say, the humidity was up.

We started and finished on two different sides on the Salidas Gulch Trail. This trail is by far in the best condition of all the trails we were on all day.

Next off to the Salida Connection Trail 9263 to hook up with The Salida Trail #93. Both of these trails are multi-use and steeply rollercoaster on mainly ankle busters. There are some nice views, but the ankle busters wear on you.

Past Beardown Peak, the views open up to the North and East. We turned around at FR 9419 and took a break for lunch at a boulder outcrop.

On the return trip, we took a couple of different tracks which were much more enjoyable.

It was great to be back on #95. Smooth trail, gentle grades, cool breeze, puffy clouds, babbling brook, chirping birds, quiet Joe.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Bull Tank 1-25% full 1-25% full

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Quail Tank 26-50% full 26-50% full

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Salida Tank 76-100% full 76-100% full
water report recorded in the field on our app Route Scout
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There is a very fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness."
Dave Barry 🦅
 
Sep 10 2022
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 Guides 264
 Routes 2,797
 Photos 14,494
 Triplogs 5,894

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 1996
 
Salida Trails, AZ 
Salida Trails, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Sep 10 2022
joebartelsTriplogs 5,894
Hiking16.20 Miles 3,016 AEG
Hiking16.20 Miles   8 Hrs   15 Mns   2.29 mph
3,016 ft AEG   1 Hour   10 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Salida Gulch Trail #95
We tackled this counterclockwise. It started in a better ponderosa pine Forest than I expected. After a half mile, it drops off to what I expected, more pinion and scrub. It gets a new life passing the highpoint of the trail and soon after John's Tank.

Old #93 Stub
We used a use-trail that I found on satellite to jump up to #9263. It is the old alignment of #93 before they split off the bottom as #95.

Salida Connection Trail #9263
Motorbikes, E-Bikes, and sissy crawlers are allowed on the upper portion of 9263. Which typically translates to horrid tread but it's not as bad as #93. They put in zipper switchbacks at what appears to have been a former bad area. Based on satellite, the motor crowd can still get their kicks on the old rock slide, so this is a rare case of a multi-use trail working for both worlds.

Salida Trail #93
I liked portions of this trail. Most will give it a one-of-five based on the ankle-buster tread. It's nowhere near as bad as Tompkins Trail #513 but I realize hardcore explorers need stroller smooth surfaces.

Prospectors Trail #42
I created today's hike as an out-and-back on #93 so I could get good details for a guide page. As expected, Bruce tried twice to switch it up. This cuts off the worst of #93. There is a nice pocket in that roller coaster of ankle-busters.

That said, he was a good sport doing this hike instead of nicer nearby hikes. Going up bad tread is easier than descending so he didn't have to twist my arm again to cut out the ankle-busters. It was interesting hearing him trying to sell the deal: Waterfalls, palm trees, cheerleaders, and half the distance.

#93 [ youtube video ] & #95 [ youtube video ]
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- joe
 
Nov 18 2017
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 Routes 189
 Photos 7,236
 Triplogs 1,740

57 male
 Joined Apr 25 2011
 Goodyear, AZ
Prospector Loop, AZ 
Prospector Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Nov 18 2017
NightstalkerTriplogs 1,740
Hiking10.30 Miles 2,091 AEG
Hiking10.30 Miles   4 Hrs   56 Mns   2.40 mph
2,091 ft AEG      39 Mns Break16 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
My bestest hiking buddy Maria joined me in a Prescott hike. Got to the Salida Gulch gate at 6:58 this morning to find a closed, locked gate. Burned some time driving down Walker road and back (20 minutes) and return to find the gate now open. Drove down to the trailhead and started our hike at a brisk 27 degrees. Headed up Salida Connector trail to Prospector to Salida Trail back to the connector and then jumped on a short trail down to Salida Gulch trail to return to the trailhead. Found an old lean-to type structure on Salida trail and old cabin ruins on Salida Connector. Wasn't planning on dropped down to the Gulch, but sure glad we did as we found some nice petroglyphs along the creek about a 1/2 mile or so from the trailhead. Didn't see a single soul over the whole 10+ miles.
_____________________
 
average hiking speed 2.13 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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