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Dude Fire Memorial Trail - Walk Moore Canyon - 1 member in 3 triplogs has rated this an average 1 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Jul 20 2024
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 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Dude Fire Memorial Trail - Walk Moore CanyonPayson, AZ
Payson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jul 20 2024
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Hiking1.30 Miles 129 AEG
Hiking1.30 Miles      24 Mns   3.25 mph
129 ft AEG
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1st trip
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Jun 26 2023
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45 male
 Joined Jun 26 2017
 Payson, Arizona
Dude Fire Memorial Trail - Walk Moore CanyonPayson, AZ
Payson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 26 2023
PaysonRealtorAZTriplogs 10
Hiking1.38 Miles 185 AEG
Hiking1.38 Miles
185 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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Remembering the Dude Fire and Lives Lost
I walked up Walk Moore Canyon, on this trail, on the 33rd anniversary of the Dude Fire fatalities. (June 26, 1990) I was headed to crosses that marked where six firefighters died. There was no one else on the trail. The weather was nice with a slight breeze, and the canyon is still green since we had a wet winter and below normal temperatures recently. That’s far, far different than the way it was 33 years ago.

On June 26, 1990, the temperature reached 122 degrees in Phoenix, which is still a record for the valley. It reached 106 in Payson that day. The land was parched and in desperate need of rain. To say that it was inhospitable conditions would be an understatement.

I tried to imagine how things were. Walk Moore Canyon was bustling as crews tried to build lines to protect the Bonita Creek subdivision and to ultimately subdue the Dude Fire. Amongst the crews was a group from Perryville Prison. They had arrived at Bonita Creek at 1 AM and by 2:30 AM they were at the junction of Walk Moore Canyon and Control Road. That was where I started my hike.

On that day, 33 years ago, the Perryville Crew worked with other crews for several hours to build line along a Jeep Trail in Walk Moore Canyon, before turning eastward and following power lines into Bonita Creek. All of this was clearly visible as I walked up the canyon and stated in the Staff Ride to the Dude Fire descriptions, which are available online.

Vegetation in and around the canyon has grown back thick. There are pine trees growing, but there is also a lot of manzanita and scrub oak that fills the canyon, along with Weeping Lovegrass. That grass was planted right after the Dude Fire to prevent erosion, as the summer monsoon season was coming quickly. There was a scramble to get enough seeds – after all, this was the largest fire in Arizona history at the time. Supposedly enough native seeds were not available. The lovegrass was chosen, and it turned out to be a major mistake. It has grown thick throughout the burn area and isn’t easily removed. Cattle do not like it. However, one does not have to look far to see efforts being made to thin the thick vegetation that has grown back. Less than a mile away two masticators have recently started thinning. It will make a huge difference.

The first cross that I came upon was that of James Ellis. He had deployed his shelter along with the others, when the wave of fire hit. He initially survived it, first walking down the canyon, then back up it where he met other survivors. Alas Ellis didn’t survive for much longer. As he was being escorted back to Control Road he said, “I’m dead”, laid down and placed his head on a log and died. The cross isn’t exactly where he died. They moved it out of the canyon bottom because of erosion concerns. Nevertheless, it’s a powerful spot.

I continued further up the canyon, knowing that it would be a little bit before I came to the deployment site. I passed underneath the powerline that the crew had worked so diligently around. Then I got closer and closer to where so many perished.

The crosses of where the five other crewmembers died is a particularly serene spot because of how green things are right now. Curtis Springfield, James Denney, Sandra Bachman, and Alex Contreras all perished near each other. Just past those crosses is a large metal box. It turns out that there are fire shelters inside of it. As per the instructions on the outside of the box, I looked but did not touch them.

The trail goes further into the canyon, and I hiked a little ways before turning around. It’s scenic, a far cry from the scene 33 years ago. Ultimately, the trail swings around the Bonita Creek subdivision near what is referenced as “the corner house”. According to the Dude Fire Staff Ride, “The corner house became a landmark and reference point during the fire. This location served as a meeting point for the numerous resources on this portion of the fire. It was a tactical focal point being at the head of Walk Moore Canyon and the portion of Bonita Creek Estates Subdivision closest to the fire.” Later, after I had completed my hike, I drove into Bonita Creek and found “the corner house”. While it played a huge role during the fire, I found that there wasn’t much to see from the road. I think that one would have to cross onto private property to get somewhat of a feel for it.

As I walked back down the canyon, I paused at the crosses of the fallen firefighters one last time, thanking them for their service.

It is easy to forget that there were survivors who sustained serious injuries that day. Multiple firefighters, including Geoff Hatch and Dave La Tour, suffered substantial burns that day. They had deployed their shelters just north of those who died. They may have survived but they were also permanently scarred in more ways than one. Other people who deployed their shelters in the group, but survived, were Donald Love, William Davenport, and Gregory Hoke.

I drove home through some of the Dude Fire burn. I traveled eastward on Control Road and eventually into an area that did not burn. I turned on another road that took me back into the burn and home. I live less than a ¼ mile from the Dude Fire burn. The fire was and still is a big deal to me. I was 10 years old when it happened, and today I live in the place that my family had then.

There is a lot more that I could say here about the fire. A lot of people deserve mention but there is a practical limitation in this space. There is a lot of other information out the fire. The Dude Fire Staff Ride (https://www.nwcg.gov/wfldp/toolbox/staf ... /dude-fire) information online is terrific, probably the most comprehensive place of information. I wrote about the Dude Fire in my book Zane Grey’s Forgotten Ranch: Tales from the Boles Homestead. I had neighbors who raced the fire out around midnight that night. Somehow, they survived. That’s just the tip of the iceberg.
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Jul 19 2013
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 Guides 117
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63 male
 Joined Dec 20 2010
 Sunnyslope, PHX
Dude Fire Hike, AZ 
Dude Fire Hike, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jul 19 2013
kingsnakeTriplogs 894
Hiking8.92 Miles 1,952 AEG
Hiking8.92 Miles   4 Hrs   20 Mns   2.06 mph
1,952 ft AEG
 
1st trip
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I Shall Bear Witness*

I moved to Green Bay, Wisconsin, on June 25, 1990. I always found it ironic that the same day that was the hottest in Phoenix history was the wettest in Green Bay history. (It was raining hard, a not unusual event, when we went to a restaurant for dinner; when we came out, the streets were under four inches of water and Baird Creek was up so high it was washing over the bridge we had to take to get home.) I never knew about the Dude Fire.

I'm not sure when or where I first heard about it, but the more I have read about it recently, the more I wanted to hike the fire, to see where the Perryville crew met their tragic fate.

As is my usual habit, I did a thorough topo & satellite recon, putting together a half dozen potential routes: Some up jeep trails, some cross country up hillsides, some down hillsides, in various combinations. I finally settled on heading out from Washington Park on Highline Trail #31 with the intent to hike down the wide Hill 6510 to Hill 5850 ridge line, to the Prescott IHC position, then descend into Walk Moore Canyon. As an alternate, which I ended up doing, I could instead take an un-marked jeep trail between Bonita Creek and Perley Creek south, then cut across the north end of the subdivision to Walk Moore Canyon. (The trail, as many others, shows on satellite, but not on the topo.)

It is a good thing I took the route I did, as the brush has come back with a vengeance. The Highline Trail #31 itself is good in some spots, but completely disappears in others. At the western end of the fire zone, it is obscured by grasses, whereas near Dry Dude Creek it disappears in a tangle of leafy foliage. In many places the trail is eroded due to rain runoff channeling down the track; in one place the erosion was a good three feet deep.

The trail ranged from moist to muddy -- and that before the 20 minute downpour that started at noon.

The fire damage starts just southeast of Washington Park. In some places there are acres of dead trees, in others plenty of trees, obviously older than 23 years, which were never touched. Depending on where you are on the trail, you are either in the midst of damage, or survivors, and may see swaths of damage in the distance ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXk2B-CjfV4 ). In a fire which burns so many acres, not all the acres are actually burnt. It's random. A checkerboard. Who lives, or dies, is a matter of luck. And not only trees.

The western branch of Dude Creek was clear and flowing a gallon+ per minute; the eastern branch, a half mile on, was dry. Both branches of Dry Dude Creek, a separate entity, were also dry. Bonita Creek was clear and flowing a gallon+ per minute.

Just after Dry Dude Creek, I lost the trail, bashing through a quarter mile of neck-high manzanita. They are not stabby, but very stiff and strong. It was a workout. By the time I got to the north of Hill 6510, I decided I could forgo repeating that pleasure for 1.5 miles in favor of my alternate jeep trail.

There is a fence, with several people gates, around Bonita Creek Estates. There are also barbwire fences running perpendicular to the perimeter fence, three of which I had to low crawl. Between the manzanita and the low-crawling, I managed to lose my trail mix, Gatorade and paper topo. (I had a GPS, but perhaps more important had so thoroughly studied my route that I was never in doubt where I was.) It almost goes without saying that the Bonita Creek community failed to learn its lesson, and has rebuilt right up to and between heavy vegetation.

There's a lot of black cattle in Walk Moore Canyon, which nowadays shows less evidence of damage than many other parts of my hike. (The canyon is also more of a wash than a proper canyon.) I walked what I believe to be the fire line, from the Redmond IHC position north of the subdivision, west past the ZigZag IHC and Flathead IHC, then south past the Prescott IHC and Alpine IHC positions to where the Perryville crew made its final stand.

In the staff ride video ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EaV5WKgKVH0 ), taken nine years after the fire, the fallen firefighters were memorialized by metal crosses, painted white, and staked in the ground. So, when I saw a number of stake stubs, I thought that might be it, and wondered what had happened to the memorials!? I slowly walked south, scanning the brush for the white crosses. Just around a left hand corner, I instead saw stone crosses. I shivered. Then I got teary. Alex Contreras was first. A few feet away was Sandra Bachman. Several yards further, by a trail sign, was Curtis Springfield, his cross knocked over by cattle. (I righted it.) Finally, a few yards further, lay James Denney and Joseph Chacon, who died protecting Denney with his own body ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHB2up7vT24 ). I'm not religious, but I knelt and said a prayer.

I kept walking, wondering where James Ellis was. I found his cross, by the stump on which he sat & died, a half mile south, just a few hundred yards from the relative safety of Fire Control Road / NF-64. I started to lay my hiking sticks on the stump before realizing the significance of the stump, and how disrespectful that would be. So, I laid them on the ground, then knelt to say another prayer.

My wife was waiting at the trailhead. I gave her a long hug, and told her I don't tell her often enough how much I love her, thinking how the convicts, especially, never got a chance to say a final "I love you." They were in prison one day, and dead the next. Brave men (and a woman) all. Whatever else they might have done in life, they will always be heroes.

-----

* I borrowed the title from a diary kept by a Jewish man in the Dresden ghetto during WWII. Though vastly different in scale, bearing witness is, I think, an important thing to do. If you are interested in the diary: http://www.amazon.com/Will-Bear-Witness ... ikearizona
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http://prestonm.com : Everyone's enjoyment of the outdoors is different and should be equally honored.
 
average hiking speed 2.06 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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