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Barbershop Canyon Upper - 3 members in 12 triplogs have rated this an average 4 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Jul 27 2024
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 Guides 9
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 Photos 8,433
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79 male
 Joined Dec 07 2010
 Phoenix, AZ
Barbershop Cny from Camp GH #2, AZ 
Barbershop Cny from Camp GH #2, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jul 27 2024
Oregon_HikerTriplogs 626
Hiking3.10 Miles 501 AEG
Hiking3.10 Miles   4 Hrs   20 Mns   0.88 mph
501 ft AEG      48 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
I camped for two nights with my son-in-law and grandson at Camp Grasshopper #2 on FR139C, Mogollon Rim. The summer monsoon rains have turned this area into a paradise with meadows covered with lush green grass and sunflowers covering the meadows. On Saturday we hiked down a section of the Barbershop Canyon after descending to the bottom from camp. Grasshopper provided a gps route to supposedly take us on an easy hike down the steep side of the canyon from camp. However, I don't like to keep my eyes focused on a handheld gps when following a route across somewhat treacherous terrain, so we got off track a few times. We soon had to do some scrambling through deadfalls on the very steep canyon side but eventually found the cairn GH had left to mark the trail location at the bottom. The thick vegetation with lots of sunflowers on display and clusters of ferns sometimes up to shoulder height made for a very scenic hike.

We had gotten a late start and the canyon bottom started to get hot and humid in the late morning. So, after several miles I was ready to exit up to FR139C and head back to camp. Fortunately, GH had provided us with a gps track for a shortcut exit from the canyon. This time we had no problem following the route since it used a well-traveled elk trail. When we reached FR139C along the ridge top, Lloyd and Michael hiked 1.3 miles to the north end of the road where we had left his car at our originally planned canyon exit point. I sat there on the ground in the shade against a large Ponderosa waiting for them to get the car for the drive back to camp. It was a pleasant resting place until some bug crawled up under my pant leg and bit me on the thigh. It felt like a bee sting, and I quickly smashed it and shook out my pant leg without ever seeing the pest. Two mornings later I discovered a track of small red splotches along my thigh that itched like crazy. Perhaps it was Arizona's version of the fire ant that had so viciously attacked me.

On the drive back to camp on FR139C we encountered Grasshopper and his granddaughter just departing Camp Grasshop #3 where they had come for a picnic. It was great to see GH in one of his favorite haunts and to meet his granddaughter once again.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Barbershop Canyon
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  2 archives
Jul 02 2024
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 Guides 187
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 Photos 12,068
 Triplogs 864

72 male
 Joined Jun 27 2015
 Tucson, Arizona
Houston Brothers Barbershop Creek, AZ 
Houston Brothers Barbershop Creek, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jul 02 2024
markthurman53Triplogs 864
Hiking8.20 Miles 1,463 AEG
Hiking8.20 Miles   4 Hrs   57 Mns   1.93 mph
1,463 ft AEG      42 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Partners partners
mamakatt22
After New Mexico we headed to Payson Arizona. We opted to do the Houston Brother Trail to Barbershop Trail and then Barbershop Canyon. Great time to hike in Payson, a few days before the 4th of July. I have never seen this place so empty. On the drive to the Houston Brother Trail only saw 1 car and there were maybe 3 people camping along the way. No one on the trails. Everything was really green. Saw one very large tree that exploded from a lightning strike. Probably occurred during the storm the night before. The pine scent was still in the air and the tree parts dripping with sap. Must of been something to see. Barbershop Creek was running but not enough to make it difficult to cross. Ferns were really thick along the creek. I have done this hike along Barbershop Creek before but it never gets old.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Barbershop Canyon Creek Upper Medium flow Medium flow
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May 07 2022
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 Guides 94
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 Photos 22,055
 Triplogs 1,993

52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Barber Dane, AZ 
Barber Dane, AZ
 
Hiking avatar May 07 2022
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Hiking14.90 Miles 1,756 AEG
Hiking14.90 Miles   7 Hrs   43 Mns   2.06 mph
1,756 ft AEG      29 Mns Break
 no routes
Headed to the rim to put a few miles in the pines. About 80% of both canyons were flowing nicely. A few short stretches were dry, especially at the higher southern ends of each canyon. It might have been possible to stay dry, but it was a whole lot easier to splash than avoid it. Strong winds kept our eyes peeled skyward regularly, but down on the ground it was nicely sheltered.

Had a couple of pups in the group so we managed to avoid any wildlife sightings. Also didn't see any bipeds until a group camping at the Barbershop crossing a bit below the spring. I lost a few dollars when learning that they were actually observing fire restrictions. Seemed like a good bet to me.
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I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
 
Oct 06 2021
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 Guides 116
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 Triplogs 894

63 male
 Joined Dec 20 2010
 Sunnyslope, PHX
Barbershop Canyon UpperPayson, AZ
Payson, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 06 2021
kingsnakeTriplogs 894
Hiking12.14 Miles 803 AEG
Hiking12.14 Miles   4 Hrs   56 Mns   2.46 mph
803 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Last week’s expedition to Greens Peak [ photoset ] did not yield the rainbow of fall color I had hoped for. The best fall color I’ve found in Arizona was a year ago in Merritt Draw & Maverick Canyon. Since Merritt Draw and Barbershop Canyon are maybe a ¼ mile away from each other for most of Merritt’s length, I figured Barbershop would be a viable fall color option. 🍂

My plan was to hike the upper 4½ miles of Barbershop Canyon, follow a cairned use trail up & out, then double back to my trailhead via FR 139C and FR 139.

FR 139 was open just a week ago, but 200 yds. north of Rim Rd., it was blocked by deadfall. I bet the 2″+ of rain yesterday had something to do with it! I hiked the ½ mile to FR 9734X instead.

FR 9734X is drivable for a ½ mile, then the road splits: Left is a legal drive, but FR 9734X goes right. I went right. The path is easy to follow. Just after a very rocky section, as FR 9734X approaches Rim Rd., I dropped left into the head of Barbershop Canyon. 🏞

As soon as I entered Barbershop Canyon, I had to negotiate a 10 ft. rock formation. No big deal. Water was dripping off it. Every river starts with a rain drop, and so it proved as the creek flowed for the next 4½ miles, until I climbed out. Sometimes slower, sometimes faster, but always moving. And with plenty of wide, deep, pools.

Just past that first rock formation, was a small grove of maple, with leaves just turning gold. Pleasant, but not the stunning fall color I was hoping for. Other than maybe hints of lime, I saw no other fall color until I was almost done with my hike. If the leaves are popping, an in & out hike to this grove would be an easy two mile, 200 AEG (accumulated elevation gain) round trip hike.

The upper ¾ miles of Barbershop Canyon are tight, but nothing difficult. Then the canyon opens up a bit, with typical Mogollon Rim grassy shelves, cut by creek banks, for the next 2½ miles. Several of those creek banks have metal pipes under them, I assume to prevent erosion. 🤔

Two thirds of a mile past the metal General Crook (?) sign, is a wood sign for Barbershop Trail #91, where it splits Barbershop Canyon. Most folks will want to cut this loop short, taking Trail #91 west ⅔ of a mile to FR 139. (For a milder 5.4 mile, 400 AEG hike.) If you like getting wet, and steep canyon exits, soldier on!

Barbershop Canyon tightens up north, down canyon, of the wood sign. Unsure how deep some of the pools were, I never took the plunge, instead utilizing the occasional elk trail or grassy shelf. At least I never had to low crawl any deadfall. 👍

Though there were interesting rock formations earlier in Barbershop Canyon, four miles down it was a cliff that actually made me exclaim “Whoa!” A ⅓ of a mile later, I arrived at where I expected to find a relatively easy trail up & out.

After 15 minutes, I gave up searching for the cairn, and headed 280 ft. straight up. Other than exiting Woods Canyon [ photoset ] two weeks ago, it was the steepest canyon exit I’ve negotiated. At the top of Hill 7547, I stepped across a barb wire fence, then headed down to FR 139C. 😅

FR 139C was open, but rocky enough I would only drive an SUV on it. FR 139 — other than one large puddle — was in great shape, despite yesterday’s deluge. Plenty of shade on both, even while hiking. I saw some half decent color on the west side of Dick Hart Ridge, but didn’t feel like straying too far off FR 139. However …

A ½ mile north of FR 9734X, on the east side of FR 139, was a fenced enclosure around which were many beautiful maples festooned with orange and red leaves. If FR 139 is open, you could drive right up to the maple grove, otherwise it is the easiest fall color hiking option on this Barbershop Canyon hike. (Only 2.0 miles and <100 AEG, round trip from Rim Rd.) 🤗

Hike Video: https://vimeo.com/628213255
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Autumn - Color Foliage
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Light
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
Not much left this late in the season, but I did see hairy golden aster, western yarrow, alpine leafybract aster, yellow salsify, Wheeler's thistle and Canadian violet. Not nearly as many shrooms as would be expected, given Rim receiving up to 2.5" rain the day before.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Barbershop canyon creek Medium flow Medium flow
Flowing all the way from the head of the canyon, near Rim Rd., 4.5 miles to where I exitted the canyon at Hill 7547.
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http://prestonm.com : Everyone's enjoyment of the outdoors is different and should be equally honored.
 
Jun 04 2021
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 Guides 3
 Routes 13
 Photos 231
 Triplogs 15

male
 Joined Sep 27 2020
 Tucson, AZ
Cabin Loop de Loop, AZ 
Cabin Loop de Loop, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Jun 04 2021
andrewpTriplogs 15
Backpack36.45 Miles 4,620 AEG
Backpack36.45 Miles2 Days   21 Hrs   6 Mns   
4,620 ft AEG
 
1st trip
I came up with a combination on-trail / off-trail approach to the Cabin Loop area as I suspected that the real treasures of were in the canyons. I'm really happy I did it this way as the trails, while beautiful, didn't begin to show off what the area has to offer.

I wanted to do at least 3 days and knew that I wouldn't want to be making the 5 hour drive back to Tucson after a full day of hiking so I added a 4th day and made it purposefully short. This ended up being a smart move as the drive home was taxing enough on a Monday morning, so I can't imagine it on a Sunday night after a full day of hiking.

Day 1 - Pinchot Cabin to Coyote Spring
VERY early start from Tucson and took the back way up through Globe and along Roosevelt Lake rather than the route through Phoenix that Google really wanted me to take. Uneventful drive up, parked on FR139A at the Fred Haught trail intersection, and was ready to start hiking around 11am. Spent a few minutes at the Pinchot cabin and waited for another hiker to get going on the U-Bar trail so that we weren't right on top of each other. We ended up leapfrogging each other all day. Chatted a bit at Dane Spring... nice guy. Pointed him here as he was looking to abandon Alltrails app.

U-Bar trail starts out a bit ho-hum, but improves in terrain and scenery on the approach to Barbershop Canyon. Steep descent and climb out ended up being a workout that I wasn't expecting. Stopped in the canyon bottom for lunch and continued on to Dane Spring. I had originally planned on camping at Dane, but ended up continuing on as there was still some daylight to burn and there was already a group camped there.

Finished off the U-Bar trail and ended up making a campsite for myself on the hill above Coyote Spring. On the way down to the spring to get some water I found the skeletal remains of what appeared to be an elk and this was a little offputting. There only appeared to be remains of one animal so I assumed that this wasn't a popular dinner spot and hoped that I didn't have a visitor overnight. I didn't.

Day 2 - Coyote Spring > Merritt Draw > Camp Grasshopper #2 > Barbershop Canyon (upper-middle??)


Broke camp early and continued on Barbershop trail to Barbershop Spring where I refilled my bottles. After a bit of route finding I found FR139C which I followed a bit to a drainage that dropped into the head of Merritt Draw. Once into the draw I was treated to a really pleasant meadow walk for a mile or so. The riparian exclusion zones erected by the Forest Service appear to have gotten larger from those shown in previous photos and they take up almost the entire width of the draw. They also enclose the springs so pulling water with the current flow levels wasn't possible.

After the open meadow I continued on the abandoned FR9735P which is now a grade which is slowly going back to nature. This area is beautiful and it was interesting to watch the open meadow of Merritt Draw turn into a deep canyon. I continued walking the road around the nose of the ridge and to its intersection with FR139C. I stopped at Camp Grasshopper #2 for a quick lunch and then found the elk trail down the ridge into Barbershop Canyon. The trail was fairly easy to follow, but having the GPS track was definitely nice.

Where the elk trail dropped me, Barbershop was a deep and narrow drainage with a small, dry creek at the bottom. I started upstream in the creek bed and came to some pools within a few hundred yards. The water came and went for the rest of the journey. The canyon remained narrow with hardly any room for a consistent use trail and what little trail was there crossed the stream constantly. This area was beautiful and although there were a number of forest roads about 300ft above I felt like I was miles from civilization.

My intended stop for the night was one of the primitive campsites identified by @Grasshopper , but upon reaching the planned site I realized that it wasn't going to work for me. I was hammock camping and the tree arrangement was such that my hammock would have to span over the use trail. I imagined being awoken in the middle of the night by an elk colliding with me suspended in mid-air. I continued on and after a short distance the canyon opened up a bit and after about 1/2 mile I found an excellent spot on a high bench overlooking the stream.

Made camp, had some dinner, and hit the sack early.

Day 3 - Barbershop Canyon upstream to Rim > Houston Bros > Aspen Spring

I had been awake for about 15 minutes when a crash to my right alerted me to an incoming elk making her way down the ridge. She saw me (or my hammock) and froze. As I reached for my phone to get a photo she bolted back up the hill and from the sound of it she was stepping on every piece of downed wood she came upon!

Broke camp and headed up Barbershop Canyon with the intent of continuing all the way to the rim. This was the highlight of the trip by far as the upper section of Barbershop is absolutely beautiful. From my campsite this was an easy hike and once I reached the head of the canyon it was an easy walk across FR300 to take in the view off the edge of the rim. Spent some time here soaking it up and also took advantage of the cellular coverage to share the view with my wife via FaceTime.

Set off with the intent of following the General Crook trail to Houston Bros and although I was successful for a stretch I eventually lost the blazes and just hiked cross country in the approximate direction. I completely missed the trail and overshot it a bit then in backtracking got turned around. A quick check of GPS put me back on track, but it was an entertaining couple of minutes while I walked in circles.

The initial section of Houston Bros is quite pretty and the broadleaf trees in the drainages were a nice change from all of the pine and fir that I had been seeing for days. There were some good ups and downs in the first half of this trail and it was a bit more of a workout than I was expecting.

Once into Houston Draw the character changes and I was treated to alternating forest and meadow sections. This was easily one of the more enjoyable trail sections of the entire trip and I loved every minute of it. My intention was to camp at McFarland Spring, but after inspecting the area I decided that the area was too overgrown with too much deadfall to make for a pleasant evening.

I continued on and found an excellent site at Aspen Spring just east of the meadow in the side drainage. Nice site with some nice scenery. Setup camp, relaxed a bit, had some dinner, and then hit the sack.

Day 4 - Hike out and drive home

Very early start with a quick hike out to Pinchot cabin and my waiting truck. I was ready to hit the road a little after 8:30 and was very pleased that I had structured the trip this way. The drive home was long and tiring which was made worse by the closures due to the fire. Ended up taking AZ87 to the Bush Hwy and then picking up US60 in east Mesa and finally the straight line of AZ79 back to Oracle junction. Made it home by 1:30, which wasn't too bad at all.

Parting Thoughts

This was my first time in the area and I honestly wasn't sure what to expect. I knew that the trails were heavily forested and feared that the lack of views would get to be a drag after a while. That was absolutely the case and I'm so glad that I planned in the off-trail sections. If I had only done a trail hike I might not have a strong desire to go back, but after this experience I'll gladly make the drive again to explore more of the canyons.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Aspen Spring Dripping Dripping
Very light flow, but enough to create some shallow pools in drainage. MSR pump filter had no issues, but other methods might require some creativity.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Barbershop canyon creek Light flow Light flow
Fair amount of water at the U-Bar trail crossing. Light flow with large pools.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Barbershop Spring Dripping Dripping
Very, very shallow trickle with some small pools. Was able to draw with my MSR filter, but other filters would have trouble. Nearby Barbershop Canyon had large pools and light flow.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Coyote Spring Dripping Dripping
Hard to tell actual flow as it's just a large pool with a trickle down slope. Water was crystal clear which suggests a reasonably consistent flow.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Dane Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Strong flow. Easily qt/min, probably more.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Houston Draw Head Quart per minute Quart per minute
Light flow but created fair amount of surface water in drainage.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max McFarland Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Good flow with pools to draw from

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Pinchot Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Good flow. Lots of pools downstream
  7 archives
Apr 29 2021
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 Routes 154
 Photos 1,505
 Triplogs 266

31 male
 Joined Jun 02 2019
 Phoenix, AZ
East Cabin Loop, AZ 
East Cabin Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Apr 29 2021
LJWTriplogs 266
Hiking21.70 Miles 2,961 AEG
Hiking21.70 Miles   7 Hrs   36 Mns   3.17 mph
2,961 ft AEG      45 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Looking for a day in the cold as the temperature climbs into the 90s in Phoenix, settled on this one. Started from a campsite on the edge of The Rim near the Houston Bros TH and went clockwise.

Rim classic that took me a while to get to. Coming back I'd do the same deal only in reverse. Houston Bros through the nice forest up on the ridges and down in the canyons and draws. Little snow, no mud. Wind in the trees, high 30s. Some deadfall, nothing bad. Watershed exclosures make the canyon feel not so far away. Aspen Spring area probably my favorite bit along the way.

Pinchot Cabin in that heavenly corner of The Rim. Fred Haught is washed out, signage urges hikers to use U - Bar and Houston for looping the time being. U - Bar my favorite trail of the day. Out of the predominant fir and into the open pine. Diverse scenery along the way, ridgetop forests, Dane + Barbershop Canyons.

Barbershop back round. Interesting trail that stitches together a track between the many roads. More diverse forest and great weather. Barbershop Canyon back up. Use trail pretty much the whole way, not that it's needed. That portion was basically a long, long meadow with water trickling down. Really scenic way to end the day. Up to a road and through the forest back to 300. Didn't see anyone, even cars on the hike. Temps high 30s-60s.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Aspen Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Barbershop canyon creek Medium flow Medium flow

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Dane Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max McFarland Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Pinchot Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
  4 archives
Oct 17 2020
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 Routes 175
 Photos 2,335
 Triplogs 191

44 female
 Joined Jan 21 2019
 Pine, AZ
Barbershop Houston loop, AZ 
Barbershop Houston loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Oct 17 2020
jillyonanadventureTriplogs 191
Hiking9.68 Miles 1,617 AEG
Hiking9.68 Miles   4 Hrs   27 Mns   2.24 mph
1,617 ft AEG      8 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Partners partners
jharvey33
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Wanted to get back and explore further into an area we liked last weekend. Someone had their camper parked at our prior entry place, so we opted to drive down FR 139 and drop in over there. There are pockets of fall colors on little side canyons too, so we explored around where we saw the colors. There was a ton of bear scat but we did not see any wildlife. We headed back via the barbershop 91 trail before connecting with the Houston Brothers trail to complete the loop. There was some nice colors along both of those trails. There was a tiny bit of water flowing on the Houston brothers trail. We only saw 4 people total during this hike! Got back to camp in time to enjoy a beautiful sunset!
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Bigtooth Maple
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Autumn - Color Foliage
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Extreme
Fall colors seem at peak here!
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
_____________________
Restless between adventures...
 
Oct 11 2020
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 Routes 175
 Photos 2,335
 Triplogs 191

44 female
 Joined Jan 21 2019
 Pine, AZ
Barbershop Canyon UpperPayson, AZ
Payson, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 11 2020
jillyonanadventureTriplogs 191
Hiking1.89 Miles 171 AEG
Hiking1.89 Miles   1 Hour   5 Mns   1.80 mph
171 ft AEG      2 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners partners
jharvey33
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Day two of rim fall colors exploration! Most of the wandering we did was just random canyons/pops of foliage we saw from the road and was not recorded. I did start recording at one point when we were wandering down near the Barbershop Canyon sign off of Rim road. Loved this little section and want to come back when water is flowing. We saw a huge elk and I was SO happy! Lots of color anywhere off trail on the rim right now!
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Autumn - Color Foliage
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Substantial
Tons of fall colors, lots of leaves already fallen.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
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Restless between adventures...
  1 archive
Aug 10 2020
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 Guides 94
 Routes 840
 Photos 22,055
 Triplogs 1,993

52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Barber Merritt, AZ 
Barber Merritt, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Aug 10 2020
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Hiking7.48 Miles 600 AEG
Hiking7.48 Miles   3 Hrs   45 Mns   2.16 mph
600 ft AEG      17 Mns Break
 no routes
1st trip
God help anybody who doesn't have a masters degree in Hazology to figure out where they've hiked here. Is it Merritt Draw Loop Lower or Merritt Draw Loop Mid-Lower? Or maybe just Merritt Draw? Is it a riparian area? :-k

It's a good thing I didn't look these things up ahead of time or I'd still be trying to figure them out and missed out on the hiking altogether! :sweat:

Kudos to @oregon_hiker who descended into Barbershop directly from Camp Grasshopper Mogollon Rim-C/Site#3 (don't worry, I linked that one too!). That's a steep and sketchy descent. One and done for that approach, thanks!

The canyon is pretty dry. Plenty of water, but not continual. We took a break at the U-Bar junction before heading up Merritt Draw (Lower?). There was no water in Merritt for the first mile but slowly more pools appeared which was great for Roshi to swim and cool off on what was a slightly warm day up there. Still beats the valley.

It was nice to cruise on the closed-to-driving road 9735P after miles of rock hopping in the canyon bottoms. It's nice to explore these drainages, and I don't think I had done this stretch before.

[I edited the 4,177 feet of gain that apparently I recorded :roll: ]
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I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
  1 archive
Sep 14 2018
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 Guides 187
 Routes 989
 Photos 12,068
 Triplogs 864

72 male
 Joined Jun 27 2015
 Tucson, Arizona
Barbershop Dane Canyon Upper Loop, AZ 
Barbershop Dane Canyon Upper Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Sep 14 2018
markthurman53Triplogs 864
Hiking6.40 Miles 673 AEG
Hiking6.40 Miles   2 Hrs   45 Mns   2.43 mph
673 ft AEG      7 Mns Break15 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   linked  
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On this trip I camped along the rim road between the upper reaches of Barbershop and Dane Canyons. On the first day of hiking I completed the lower portions of Merritt, Barbershop and Dane Canyons. By lower Barbershop I mean where it is joined by Dane Canyon. There is still an even more lower portion of Barbershop (to where it empties into West Clear Creek) but that will have to wait for another trip. On the second day I hike along the General Crook Trail to the upper reaches of Barbershop and return via Dane Canyon and back to my camp site. Decided to camp this time so I don’t have to drive 17 miles in and then back out 2 times. Of course camping means I don’t get the usual Pizza and Mexican food I usually get when in Payson, instead I get beef stew.

Barbershop Canyon

I hiked west along the rim road to about .5 miles east of FSR 139 and headed down hill, not downhill south but downhill north. Crossed the old General Crook Trail and almost immediately the ground was damp and mushy, a little further and I dropped down below a rather large rock that had a trickle of water coming from it. I designated this as the start of Barbershop Canyon. While this running water didn’t flow too far downstream it showed evidence that it was flowing pretty well a week or so earlier. Continuing down what appeared to be the stream it slowly got larger as more small streams entered from the south off the rim. Very soon you notice you are on a game trail that follows this creek and will continue all the way to the Barbershop Trail, 2 miles later. This trail is fairly well maintained, have to take my hat off to the elk for how well it was maintained (have to give credit to the deer and bear also because I saw their tracks here to). This trail actually follows along both sides of the stream a little further down; I guess the traffic is so heavy they put in a divided highway. This is a very pleasant hike all the way to the Barbershop Trail. Along the way you pass by three tanks that are in fairly bad condition being breached but still holding back some water. There was also a set of caves on the East side of the canyon about .5 miles up from the Barbershop Trail. Wonder how many bears have used these to hibernate in. At the Barbershop Trail I headed east to Dane Canyon.

Dane Canyon

At Dane Canyon I headed up stream. This is an easy 2 mile walk through a “U” shaped Canyon. Unlike Barbershop Canyon I was surprised at the lack of a well traveled game trail; in fact it was almost nonexistent. Not much to say about this portion of Dane Canyon, it’s almost a yawner. At about .5 miles from the rim road the area gets a little mushy from water seeping in from off the rim. Appears there is a spring there but I don’t see one called out on maps. Shortly after this the canyon gets a little steeper and harder to travel so I headed up the west slope to FSR 145 near where it joins the rim road. Not a real interesting portion of Dane Canyon but if you want to hike the whole canyon this is part of it.
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Sep 13 2018
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 Guides 187
 Routes 989
 Photos 12,068
 Triplogs 864

72 male
 Joined Jun 27 2015
 Tucson, Arizona
Merrit Barbershop Dane Lower Loop, AZ 
Merrit Barbershop Dane Lower Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Sep 13 2018
markthurman53Triplogs 864
Hiking14.10 Miles 1,277 AEG
Hiking14.10 Miles   7 Hrs   43 Mns   2.26 mph
1,277 ft AEG   1 Hour   28 Mns Break15 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Lower Merritt

This trip to the rim is to finish up some undone sections of Barbershop and Dane Canyons. I started out on FSR 139c that follows the ridge between Merritt Draw and Barbershop Canyon. At about 2 miles in parked along 139c and continued on foot along 139c to FR 9735p, which is an old logging road now closed to vehicles. This old logging road takes you to the drop off point to Merritt Draw which is just at the point where Maverick Canyon enters Merritt Draw from the west. Merritt Draw at this point all the way to Barbershop Canyon is fairly easy to navigate unlike the central portion of Merritt Draw which is all choked up with dead fall. Both times I’ve been to Merritt Draw the central portion was dry but on this trip the lower portion the stream was flowing above ground. At about .4 miles from Maverick Canyon is Drift Fence Spring, I did not see the spring but I was not really looking for it either. After two miles of fairly easy walking along the stream Merritt Draw empties into Barbershop Canyon. The U Bar Trail also crosses Barbershop at this point.

Lower Barbershop

Lower Barbershop Canyon from the Merritt Draw intersection to the Dane Creek intersection is 1.6 miles. There was a trail crew working on the U Bar Trail where it crosses Barbershop Creek. After a short chat I continued on down Barbershop Canyon. This canyon is a little bit more overgrown than Merritt but still easy to walk with just a little bit of maneuvering around rocks and dead fall. In almost no time at all Dane Canyon joins Barbershop from the right. Took a short break at the Dane Barbershop junction and pondered about Barbershop Canyon as it continues on down to East Clear Creek, Wonder how doable that is, Oh well, that’s another day.

Dane Canyon

One look at Dane Canyon as I approached it from Barbershop Canyon and I got this feeling this was going to be pure torture. The entrance to the canyon was choked with brush. As I took my break I also kept thinking about how hard was Dane Canyon going to be. As I found out when I started hiking in Dane, it wasn’t as bad as I anticipated. It is more congested than the other canyons I was in but wasn’t terrible. I worried about nothing. This canyon would be a little harder if the water was higher especially in the marshy areas. Beautiful canyon and the almost 3 miles went by pretty quickly with all the scenery. Well worth the effort to see this lower part of Dane Canyon. I'm usually very careful about tripping or falling since I am alone but this canyon did me in twice. Luckily both falls didn't result in injury. The first time it was a hidden branch that snagged my boot the second time it was while crossing a stream stepping on a rock that had small logs on it hanging onto a bush to keep my balance and the logs under my feet shifted and I went down. The sad part is all while I was performing this maneuver I was thinking to myself this is a bad idea. I need to listen to that little voice in my head when it is screaming "BAD IDEA". I took the U Bar Trail where it crosses Dane Canyon back to Barbershop Trail and headed up Barbershop from there.

Barbershop Canyon

At the junction of the U Bar Trail and Barbershop Canyon I headed upstream about 3.5 miles to my exit point to FSR 139c. This portion of the Barbershop like the previous portion was fairly easy to navigate. Would definitely be a little harder if the water was higher. It does require a lot of stream crossings and in places going around dead fall. There was one spot that required crossing a log jam in the creek. Even though it’s a little bit of extra work it is worth it to see this portion of the canyon.

The sandstone rocks in all these canyons are Coconino sandstone of the Paleozoic era about 260 Mya and are an eolian deposit, remnants of sand dunes. You can see the cross hatched pattern typical of windblown deposits. Occasionally these deposits are swept away flat by some ancient event only to have more windblown deposits laid down and this is repeated over and over again. I wondered what that event was and how much time passed between events. Barbershop and Dane Canyons had some excellent examples of this along some of the canyon walls.
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Aug 12 2012
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 Guides 107
 Routes 249
 Photos 2,067
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male
 Joined Nov 18 2005
 Phoenix, AZ
BarbershopCynMerritDrawLoop, AZ 
BarbershopCynMerritDrawLoop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Aug 12 2012
nonotTriplogs 514
Hiking13.50 Miles 1,250 AEG
Hiking13.50 Miles   6 Hrs   30 Mns   2.08 mph
1,250 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Parked along the Barbershop trail and headed down into Barbershop Canyon. Down Barbershop Canyon is initially easy, with good elk trails on benches. After awhile the going gets a bit tougher, but Barbershop Canyon is wonderful, with plenty of flowers, intermittent water, and two impressive springs along the way.

With monsoons clouds forming at the time I started the hike, it wasn't surprising I got rained on. After getting a bit wet, I finally found a spot out of the rain to wait out the second half. Thoroughly wet, I continued down the last part of Barbershop, where the elk trails got much better, and found the Ubar intersection.

Barbershop canyon is a true gem on the rim, probably the best hike anywhere in the area.

I went up Merritt Draw, which initially wasn't too bad but quickly required scrambling, bushwhacking, and crawling over many, many downed trees. After awhile of this the elk trails began to improve and I headed up the draw at twice the speed. Reaching Hank's "best entry point", I surprised two elk. One of the elk spotted me and ran away. The other elk didn't see me, but panicked when the other ran.

The elk happened to end up running right at me, not having spotted me. This was good and bad - the bad part was that I had 600 pounds of animal barreling right at me at 15 mph and about 1.5 seconds to react. What to do? Dive behind the tree! While moving, grab the camera, fire off a shot! I haven't checked, but I think I go it!

The rest of the trip wasn't as eventful, I used an elk trail to bypass a portion when I wasn't having any fun climbing over tree after tree and bushwhacking. I think I skipped about a quarter mile. The upper part of Merritt Draw has lots of fences to keep the elk out.

It was pleasant walking through the vast meadows of Merritt Draw. This part is an easy hike that anybody can do, and it goes on for quite a ways. Lots of flowers and green fields. Very nice indeed!

I continued all the way to the top of the draw, cross country to find the trail, and crossed through Barbershop canyon again to finish the loop.

Spring reports - the springs in Barbershop were flowing quite well. They are amazing, but not on the map!

Couldn't tell with the Merritt Draw springs - too many fences in the way.
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Elk
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Maverick Canyon  Merritt Draw
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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Hike Arizona it is full of sharp, pointy, ankle-twisting, HAZmaster crushing ROCKS!!
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average hiking speed 2.03 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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