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Hamilton Mesa Trail #249 - 3 members in 4 triplogs have rated this an average 4.3 ( 1 to 5 best )
4 triplogs
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May 26 2019
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 Guides 37
 Routes 556
 Photos 10,872
 Triplogs 1,052

43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Hamilton Mesa Trail #249Northeast, NM
Northeast, NM
Backpack avatar May 26 2019
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Backpack26.53 Miles 4,390 AEG
Backpack26.53 Miles2 Days         
4,390 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
The goal for this little overnighter was Pecos Falls. We did get to the falls, however, not until day two and there were times during day one that I was not sure if we were going to make the falls on this trip, as snow and deadfall blocked our travel on two separate trails.

Day 1:

After spending the night at Iron Gate Campground, Blanco and I started off on the Hamilton Mesa Trail around 8:30 a.m. The Hamilton Mesa Trail is really top notch, it is in great shape and offers some spectacular views of the Pecos Wilderness and the premier mountains that define its high points. I did not have a lot of beta about reaching the tracks, but did have several routes downloaded for the area. The most logical way seemed to be taking Hamilton Mesa nearly all the way to the falls and then dropping down on the Gascon Trail to the falls. However, with about two miles to go to get to the falls, I ran into a couple who warned me of some very deep snow and basically impossible deadfall ahead on the trail. I had already encountered some pretty deep drifts and a little bit of deadfall, so I had every reason to believe their warning was with merit. Especially, since the only other guy on that section of trail that day was someone who also got turned around by snow. Realizing discretion was probably the better option and not wanting to beat up Blanco, I turned around and headed back to the Bob Grounds Trail.

This trail turned out to be pretty miserable and I only had the patience to curse my way through about two-tenths of a mile of severe deadfall before deciding retreat was more prudent than continuing on and soon I was back on Hamilton Mesa and backtracking yet again. Luckily, the third time was a charm and Larkspur Trail #260 proved to be the winner. This perfectly manicured and pleasant trail dropped me right down to the Pecos River, where Blanco and I could finally start heading up stream towards the falls. However, by this point we were at about 12 miles on the day and I did not want to push Blanco with distances on this trip, so I decided we would find us a nice spot along the river as soon as we got out of the no camping zone, make camp and then decide on the feasibility of the falls the next day. Not long after getting camp set up, a pretty decent little squall blew in and we had to spend a couple hours in the tent sitting out rain, hail and a "light" thunderstorm. After the rain cleared, it was the standard camp chores, eating and then bed. Both Blanco and I froze a little during the night. We awoke to frozen water and damp cold conditions.

After a quick breakfast, Blanco and I were off for the falls. The falls were definitely worth the visit, but a little tough to take pictures of due to the tiered nature of the falls. No worries though, it was more about the journey on this one anyways. I had been wanting to get to these falls for over a year now, so needless to say I left satisfied. Then it was a quick hike downhill back to camp, packing and the pleasant hike back to the TH.

Final Notes

The Pecos Wilderness is pretty spectacular and offers some of the finest hiking in the American west in my opinion. I would have no problem putting the Pecos Wilderness as a 1a to anywhere else I have hiked and backpacked in the West. I am already pining for a return.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Pecos Falls Heavy flow Heavy flow
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  1 archive
May 31 2018
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 Guides 94
 Routes 840
 Photos 22,055
 Triplogs 1,993

52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Pecos Wilderness, NM 
Pecos Wilderness, NM
 
Backpack avatar May 31 2018
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Backpack39.49 Miles 7,880 AEG
Backpack39.49 Miles4 Days         
7,880 ft AEG
 
1st trip
I had set my eye on backpacking in the Sangre de Cristos a while ago, and decided to do some research and try to find a good mix of things to see. The bonus of this area for me is that it's national forest, doesn't require permits, and allows dogs! After gathering a bunch of data, I finalized a 5-day, 4-night hike that covered 36 miles with about 10 more miles of side hikes.

On our first night, we re-evaluated the plan and decided to cut it one day shorter. This required a revision to the route and some trails we didn't have mapped out, but it all turned out great in the end, with the exception of missing out on visiting Pecos Falls.

Day 1 - 10 miles, 1000 feet, 2400aeg
We started from Jack's Creek TH and took the Hamilton Mesa Trail #249 toward Iron Gate Campground. The trail drops 500 feet and then parallels the Pecos River before climbing 1000 feet to the campground at 4 miles. From there we took Mora Flats Trail #250 down toward Mora Flats at about the 8 mile mark. There's a couple of great campsites here along the Rio Mora. Next we headed upstream on Rio Valdez Trail #224 to its intersection with Bob Grounds Trail #270, where we set up camp for the night at a great site a short distance upstream.

Day 2 - 9 miles, 1200 feet, 3000aeg

The day started with a moderate 500 foot climb along the Bob Grounds Trail. The trail climbs up onto Hamilton Mesa, and the upper part is on open grassy slopes where the tread is difficult to find in spots. This area featured my first wolf sighting, though at a quarter mile distance, which is probably just about how far away I'd prefer to be! The next 2+ miles led down to the Pecos River. This stretch of trail has not been maintained in a while and there were several thickets of deadfall that really slowed us down. We took a break at the river, before a quick side trip up to Beatty's Cabin. There are actually 3 cabins and they are nicely appointed and get regular use. There's even running water!

We headed upstream on Beatty's Trail #25 for a mile before turning onto Chimayosos Trail #246, which parallels the scenic Rito de los Chimayosos. This was an unplanned route based on our revised itinerary so we didn't really know where we would camp. We set our minds on a spot along the creek near the 11,000 foot contour and the junction with the Jack's Creek Trail. We were a bit disappointed with the options here, but didn't want to push on any further. There was running water, and enough flat ground for us to make a camp work. So we did!

Day 3 - 8 miles, 1200 feet, 2300aeg
Our morning began with a 1000 foot climb over 1.5 miles to the Skyline Trail. From there it was a mile west to the beautiful alpine Truchas Lakes, set 1500 feet below the crest of the Sangre de Cristos. We took a break here, and I was a little disappointed that our revised plan made this no longer one of our camping nights. It would be a fantastic place to spend a couple of nights! But a pair of backpackers at the lake informed us that the night before had been extremely windy, so perhaps we lucked out after all.

Skyline #251 heads south along the slopes of Truchas Peak for about 2.5 miles before emerging from the forest and heading up along the exposed grassy Trailriders Wall. The next two miles were some of the most scenic of the trip, as the Skyline Trail flirted with 12,000 feet and views in all directions were spectacular. (Side note, this is the only place on the entire trip that there was any hope of cell service at all.) The next mile drops about 500 feet to a scenic lake at the foot of East Pecos Baldy where we would make our camp for the night.

Day 4 - 7 miles, -2700 feet, 150aeg
The weather forecast had always called for a chance of showers on Sunday, so we were all prepared for that possibility. However, on Saturday when I had gotten cell service, I checked for an update and was not particularly pleased by the new information. Words including "severe storms" "damaging hail" "high wind" "lightning" and "possibly a tornado" were not the kinds of things I like to read about when I'm backpacking in the wilderness above 11,000 feet on the crest of a major mountain range.

So we decided to skip any side hikes and get off the mountain early in the day. Even that caught us off guard as we awoke to light drizzle. It was actually quite pleasant in retrospect. These mountains really need the rain, so a chilly, foggy, drizzly morning was actually nice. It made for a great hike out too, with gray skies contrasting the bright greens of the newly dampened trees around us.

We headed down on Jacks Creek Trail again, before meeting up with the lower portion of Beatty's Trail #25 which took us back to the trailhead and completed the loop. We finished on the horse trail rather than the hiking trail, which is about half a mile longer. Thunder rumbled, the rain picked up a bit, and we were on a mission to be done. Back in the truck by 11am!

With the trip cut a day short, we went into Santa Fe for a good lunch before heading back toward Arizona with plans to stop for the night along the way. During the drive we encountered that weather we didn't want to be on the mountain for, and I can unequivocally say we made the right decision! It was some of the heaviest rain and hail I have ever driven through, and only the second time I have ever stopped driving and taken refuge under a gas station canopy.

Final Thoughts
I really enjoyed this area and would go back in a heartbeat. There are a whole bunch of trails and beautiful streams, lakes, and amazing mountain peaks. All this and it's only about 8 hours of driving from the valley. I'd like to go back in the fall as the aspens here would add an extra touch of perfection to this place. Top 10!

Note: my mileage stats include extras not part of the base mileages listed above.
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Bighorn Sheep
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Fire Burn Area & Recovery  Hail
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I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
  1 archive
May 31 2018
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 Routes 67
 Photos 2,708
 Triplogs 755

89 male
 Joined Mar 28 2008
 Phoenix, AZ
Pecos Wilderness, NM 
Pecos Wilderness, NM
 
Backpack avatar May 31 2018
Tough_BootsTriplogs 755
Backpack34.00 Miles 7,403 AEG
Backpack34.00 Miles4 Days         
7,403 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
This was a fantastic four days in NM. The Skyline Trail was definitely the highlight of the trip. I was glad to be able to take the dog on this one-- Lily's biggest trip to date. Glad we shaved it back from the original five days-- elevation is a killer with a heavy pack. Thanks for putting this together, Chums.
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May 31 2018
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 Guides 6
 Routes 183
 Photos 5,612
 Triplogs 1,647

male
 Joined Mar 12 2004
 Scottsdale, AZ
Pecos Wilderness, NM 
Pecos Wilderness, NM
 
Backpack avatar May 31 2018
John9LTriplogs 1,647
Backpack35.00 Miles 7,156 AEG
Backpack35.00 Miles4 Days         
7,156 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Chumley was in charge and planned a solid trip to New Mexico. Our original plan was to spend five days in the wilderness but we cut it short one day due to weather and other factors.

We departed Phoenix on Wednesday after work and stayed in a hotel in Albuquerque. We woke on Thursday morning and drove the final two hours to the Jacks Creek Trailhead in the Santa Fe National Forest. The months of planning were behind us and it was go time!

Thursday, May 31st
We arrived to our trailhead and packed up and started the hike in. We started by dropping a few hundred feet to the Pecos River. We followed the river for a bit and then the trail makes a solid climb to the Iron Gate Campground. We took a break there and then continued to the northeast. The miles were tough with our very heavy packs loaded with five days worth of food and warm gear. With much effort we arrived at our camp and found a nice site situated along the Rio Valdez. We spent the rest of the evening relaxing around camp. There will be no campfires for us due to stage 2 fire restrictions. We all turned in relatively early because it was cold out.

Friday, June 1st
Our day two started with a solid climb up to the mesa above. Along the way Chumley and I saw a wolf roughly a half mile away. We questioned if it was a coyote but I saw it again 15 minutes later and it was way too big to be a coyote. We continued on and took a break just below Beatty's Cabin. During the break, Chumley and I hiked up to it. There are a few cabins and they are in great condition. It appears the forest services uses these.

We continued hike and gained elevation. We eventually selected a campsite in a drainage. Water was close by and our camp was comfortable. We settled in for the evening and it was warmer than our first night. We stayed up a bit later but were in bed by 10pm.

Saturday, June 2nd
Day three started with another solid climb. We were at high elevation of roughly 11k ft. With much effort we reached the Skyline Trail and then started our Traverse. We took a short break by Truchas Lake. From there we continued for our third night's camp. Chumley detoured to Truchas Peak while Kyle and I headed for the lake. Once there I made a loop around the lake and then picked a campsite by the trail. Chumley showed up a bit later and we settled in for another night. Chumley said some nasty weather was going to move in the next day so we decided to bail the next day.

Sunday, June 3rd
We woke early on Sunday and started packing up. It was an overcast day and it looked like rain could fall any second. We quickly packed up and the weather cooperated. Once packed, we started our return to the trailhead. The going was very easy as it was all downhill. We arrived back to the trailhead and then packed up and headed for Santa Fe where we grabbed lunch.


Final Thoughts
This was a great hike in an amazing area! I'd really like to return another time and see more of the wilderness. There is a lot to explore out there. Thanks Chumley for planning and thanks for driving!

 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Pecos Baldy Lake  Truchas Lakes
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  2 archives

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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