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Stoneridge Peak 6542 - 2 members in 4 triplogs have rated this an average 3.5 ( 1 to 5 best )
4 triplogs
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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 14 2020
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 Routes 5
 Photos 29
 Triplogs 28

43 female
 Joined Aug 22 2014
 Phoenix, AZ
Stoneridge Peak 6542Prescott, AZ
Prescott, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 14 2020
LumberjillTriplogs 28
Hiking5.30 Miles 1,307 AEG
Hiking5.30 Miles   3 Hrs   18 Mns   1.69 mph
1,307 ft AEG      10 Mns Break10 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
We reached the Green Gulch TH around 7:30 a.m. and headed up the trail. The first part of the trail had zero shade, but before long we were in trees and walking on ground that was littered with leaves. It felt like a fall day! We went through one gate before climbing up on a steep trail with loose rock. We reached a second gate and this is where we left the official trail to reach the summit of the peak just to the north of us. This part was really just bushwhacking and scrambling, keeping an eye to the path that looked to be the least filled with obstacles. We turned around a few times but made our way to top safely(ish).

The views from the summit were great! Prescott to the NW and mountains to the south - the rocks were fun to play around on and made for great photo backdrops. After getting our photos and resting a bit, we headed back down and ended up taking a completely different path back to the official trail. Once back on trail, we were reminded of how steep the trail is, and were cursing the fact that neither of us had brought our trekking poles. I would recommend bringing at least one pole on this hike!

We came across a group of 4 people riding motorcycles up the trail - I can't recall ever seeing dirtbikes on a hiking trail, but they were very nice. They stopped to chat and mentioned that they'd never seen hikers here before. When we got back to the TH and reviewed the trail map, we realized that most of the trails in this system are actually designed for off-road vehicles. :lol: Which explained a LOT. Good hike not far from the valley of the sun, and the scramble to the summit was fun.

We saw one murky puddle of water in the wash close to the TH.
_____________________
 
Jun 17 2017
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 Guides 9
 Routes 128
 Photos 1,379
 Triplogs 87

54 male
 Joined Feb 19 2013
 Prescott, AZ
Stoneridge Peak 6542Prescott, AZ
Prescott, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 17 2017
Peter_MedalTriplogs 87
Hiking5.64 Miles 1,344 AEG
Hiking5.64 Miles   4 Hrs      1.41 mph
1,344 ft AEG
 
Partners none no partners
Was hoping to craft the "official route" for Stoneridge Peak (officially on the USGS Maps, unnamed 6542) coming from the north-northwest approach from a route previously taken by Widowmaker, Prospectors Trail #42. Fat chance. The Lynx Mountain Estates residential community is an unincorporated area of Yavapai County (Prescott mailing) where the county does not maintain the roads. So the roads are "private" and sign after sign the locals dont want you there. The previous launch from Widowmaker for the targeted trail is now fenced off and gated with "no tresspassing". Therefore, Stoneridge Peak can only be accessed via Salida Gulch Trail (north of Lynx Lake) from the west or the new Green Gulch Trailhead (Dewey-Humboldt) from the east.

We launched at 5:33am. Took the Charcoal Gulch trail for about 0.9 miles then took the right fork and connected onto the Red Mountain Trail #43. This trail is a legit forest trail. At times tunnels through an Oak thicket and is heavily shaded from the trees. I took a quick detour to water report the Green Gulch Spring. Dry. We continued on 43, which, had a few switchbacks, not shown on the USGS map, but revealed from Google earth satellite imagery.

I had studied the Topo maps and Google earth for the most logical/efficient up and back approach to bag Stoneridge Peak. There is a rocky, kraggy, south ridgeline which showed very large trees on its west ridge. Easily revealed its ridge at 2.39 miles from the TH.

The final ascent had a few spots of class 3 but nothing technical. The views to Prescott, Prescott Valley, and Dewey Humboldt were awesome. The geo cache summit register. Ugh. Once again, forgot a writing implement, so I left my Buckys Casino Players Club card. Ha ha.

Saw no snakes. Lots of Tarantula dens. Glad we started as early as we did. Got hot quick.
_____________________

"Before there was a trail..... there was no trail"
  2 archives
Jan 13 2017
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 Guides 9
 Routes 128
 Photos 1,379
 Triplogs 87

54 male
 Joined Feb 19 2013
 Prescott, AZ
Stoneridge Peak 6542Prescott, AZ
Prescott, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 13 2017
Peter_MedalTriplogs 87
Hiking4.50 Miles 998 AEG
Hiking4.50 Miles
998 ft AEG
 
Partners none no partners
Officially, Stoneridge Peak on the USGS Maps is "Unnamed 6542'" .... Stoneridge Golf Community, Prescott Valley, is located to its north. This ridgeline has 4 prominent hill profiles and is a textbook "ridgeline hike" with summit bag. This peak is the most prominent peak view for the Town of Prescott Valley (aside from Glassford Hill, but thats not a peak). You cant look south from anywhere in PV and not see this pointy peak.

Once on the first bump there is a barbed wire fence line with a trail running along its east perimeter. This is private property. Prescott National Forest is on the west side of this fence line. My hike partner thoroughly enjoyed the trail until it petered out. Hike partner said "This is by far one of the best hikes he has been on in the Prescott area". He enjoyed the ridging it; the lack of any crazy bushwackyness; no people; close to home; and awesome views.

I would compare the ridge portion comparable to Apache Peak in the Whetstones. Complete with Shin Daggers above 6300' (but not that many).

I knew going in that we were going to be bisecting private property so therefore, will not use my route for the official route description (coming soon). But I wanted to experience the full north ridgeline traverse to its summit. This peak can be accessed via the new Green Gulch Trailhead from Dewey and bagged and tagged with Sun Devil Peak and/or Bear Down Mountain. Or accessed from the northwest to the ridgeline.

We bumped into two of the property owners ranch hands on the way down. The guys were servicing the fence and wanted us to be clear that we were on "private property" and the west side of the fence was not. Ok.

The third bump was a rock climb. Nothing scary. Hike partner was loving the scramble.

There were four entries in the summit register which was more or less a geocache. I did not have a pen, so will have to comeback again but via a different approach.

Video from summit: [ youtube video ]
_____________________

"Before there was a trail..... there was no trail"
  2 archives
average hiking speed 1.67 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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