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Kino Peak 3197 - Organ Pipe National Monument - 2 members in 3 triplogs have rated this an average 5 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Feb 25 2024
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male
 Joined Jan 07 2017
 Fountain Hills,
Kino Peak 3197 - Organ Pipe National MonumentSouthwest, AZ
Southwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Feb 25 2024
DixieFlyerTriplogs 1,377
Hiking13.18 Miles 2,235 AEG
Hiking13.18 Miles   9 Hrs   58 Mns   1.67 mph
2,235 ft AEG   2 Hrs   5 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
This was a hike to Kino Peak, a P1K peak in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. Kino Peak is on the Sierra Club Desert Peaks Section (DPS) peak list, so I knew that would not be an easy peak to summit.

The DPS peak list is composed of 95 mostly desert peaks in California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and northern Mexico. Nine peaks in Arizona are included on the list. In addition to Kino, the others are Mount Tipton, Signal Peak (KOFA's), Castle Dome (KOFA's), Superstition Peak 5057, Weavers Needle, Baboquivari, Humphreys Peak, and Mount Ajo. I have been on all of them except Babo and Weavers Needle.

Kino Peak was named in 1945 in honor of Father Eusebio Francisco Kino (1645-1711), the "padre on horseback". Father Kino was the leader of the Jesuit missionary effort in this area in the late 1600's and early 1700's.

Kino Peak has a unique shape and is very recognizable in all directions in this area. We started the hike along Bates Well Road, about 1,000 feet or past Bates Well Ranch. The drive was about 17 miles from pavement, and Bates Well Road was well graded the entire way.

The first (and last) 5.25 miles of the hike were on a road, although at times the road overlapped a wash. This part of the hike was fairly easy with modest elevation gain and no route finding issues.

Things got quite a bit tougher after that though. We made a steep uphill climb, going on the right side of a large rock outcropping in the way. We kept going up past more rock outcroppings on fairly loose terrain, doing nothing worse than class 2 or class 2+.

Eventually we made it to a ridge that is east of Kino Peak, and here we got a view of the impressive east face of Kino Peak. The face looked quite daunting, to say the least.

The first problem is that there was a gap between us and Kino Peak. Fortunately there was a landbridge below us that bridged the gap. However, to get to the landbridge, I had make a class 3 downclimb into a messy, ugly, loose gully; then wrap underneath a rock outcropping, and then make a class 3 climb up to a ledge above the landbridge. Once across the landbridge I had to angle up to the north across the east face to get to the summit ridge of Kino Peak. There was some class 3 climbing along the way, but nothing worse than that. It looked worse than it was, especially if you just took it a section at the time. Basically you climb up, then go across a ledge underneath the summit ridge.

Once on the summit ridge, it was a fairly easy stroll to the summit. I located the benchmark and both reference marks, and enjoyed the views before heading back down.

On the way down I ran into @Mike_W and his friend Brian near the landbridge on the way up. I had hoped to hike with them but we got our signals crossed and I wound up starting before they did.

I returned more or less the way that I came.

There was a good bit of smugglers/migrant trash in the wash that we were in, some of which looked very recent.

Here is a video showing a short section of the climb: [ youtube video ]

Here is a video showing a short section of the descent: [ youtube video ]

here is a short video of a couple of sheep that descended on the "trail" that I ascended: [ youtube video ]

Synopsis
This was an awesome hike in an amazing area, and it turned out to be one of the craziest hikes that I have done. It was a much crazier hike than some of the other Arizona scrambles that I have done, including Brown's Peak, Flatiron, Picketpost, Capitol Butte, and Sheep Mountain near Yuma.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light
There were some decent poppies in a few places along the way.
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Civilization is a nice place to visit but I wouldn't want to live there
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Feb 25 2024
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53 male
 Joined Dec 30 2005
 Tucson, AZ
Kino Peak 3197 - Organ Pipe National MonumentSouthwest, AZ
Southwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Feb 25 2024
Mike_WTriplogs 528
Hiking14.75 Miles 2,606 AEG
Hiking14.75 Miles   11 Hrs      1.34 mph
2,606 ft AEG
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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I first attempted this hike in April 2023 as a solo hike and could not complete it because of time. Last year, I made the mistake of starting this hike at Noon, not knowing how difficult and long it was. I turned around about 5 minutes after crossing the land bridge because I did not want to be on any difficult climbing section after dark. This time, Brian was able to join me on this challenging hike. We decided to camp near Ajo, off Bates Well Rd, and get to the trailhead early, which ended up being 7:35 am, by the time we had breakfast, left camp, and did the fairly long drive down Bates Well Rd. I highly recommend doing this hike with someone else. Hiking it alone can be dangerous...

From the place where we parked walk the road for about 0.5 miles until reaching a sandy wash. You should find tire tracks that enter this wash, turn and head right (or West) at the wash. Follow the wash until you have hiked a total of 1.1 miles since the start of this hike. Then, look for a road on the left side of the wash that exits to the wash and goes up to more solid ground. The road will be less sandy here and easier to walk. Continue on the road across mostly flat land. You should see a wash crossing after having traveled a total of 3.4 miles. At 3.63 miles, the road enters the wash and you'll stay in a wash for a while. Shortly after entering the wash you should be able to look South/Southwest, in the direction of the peak, and see a variety of odd shaped high points. From left to right, you should see a triangular point that's lower than all of the others, followed by a large rounded mountain, followed by a square looking piece, followed by a triangular point that only looks higher because it's closer. The summit is behind the rounded mountain and quite a bit higher but it can't be seen from this angle.

After the road enters the wash, you will continue for roughly one mile and then look for a trail that exits the wash to the South. I saw 2 possible trails exiting, one being further to the right. Take the path furthest to the right. You'll then be on a more narrow trail that leads to the East of Kino peak. We saw some poppies along this trail and by this time, many were already open.

Continue on this trail until you reach a huge saddle which is East of the summit. At this point you should have traveled about 5.6 miles since the start. Looking up, the summit is above the high cliffs, but you will be able to go around those to the right. Here is where you will need to take a sharp right turn and start heading up. Start heading up the slope and look for cairns. I felt like there were not enough on this lower portion but higher up we did find some cairns which helped a lot. By the way, the route from this point is not trivial and not intuitive in any way. You will need a GPS device and you will need to rely on cairns. Expect to get off the trail a few times even if you're following a route on your GPS device. After going UP for about 1/4 mile you will see a large butte above you. You'll find a cairned trail that goes to the right of this butte. Once around the butte, the trail turns left and goes above the butte. Once above the butte, you should see more cairns leading up. Somewhere in this area, we saw a desert tortoise on the trail above us. I was only 5 feet away from the tortoise before I saw it. We got a video, and continued following cairns up. Shortly after this we found a natural arch/window right next to an organ pipe cactus.

Next we followed the trail up and around the left side of some cliffs. From here we could see the high point, but there was a rocky butte in front of it. But, we would need to hike around to the North side of this rocky butte to get past it. This is one area that we got off the trail and the cairns were spaced quite far apart. We ended up climbing up higher and higher, nearly summiting this rocky butte, but then we saw some cairns which led us around to the North side and around. We continued and met up with Wade's friend Ewon (sp), who decided not to go any further at this point because up ahead was a steep class 3 down climb through a messy rocky canyon followed by a class 3 climb up and over to the land bridge. Before doing the class 3 down climb, we looked up and watched Wade, who was already on the steep climb going around the cliffs. From this angle, the climb looked dangerous, but obviously we could not see what the trail looked like. We saw Wade reach the top ridgeline and disappear around the side, so then we decided to proceed with the class 3 down climb. The class 3 parts of the climb are short, but there's some exposure in these areas. There were a lot of good hand and foot holds and I felt comfortable enough to continue.

Shortly after watching Wade disappear around to the top ridge, we saw 2 bighorn sheep moving across and down the steep cliff area. We saw them climb from way up high to way down low in about 3 minutes and then they were out of sight. That same hike for us, if even possible the way they went, would have taken us an hour. I recorded a 2 minute and 45 second video of the bighorn sheep. By the way, this is roughly the area where I saw 5 bighorn sheep last April of 2023.

OK, now back to the class 3 section. First you start off climbing down a narrow ledge to the right. Once down to that level, you make a sharp left and there's a 7 foot wall to climb down which was fairly easy because it was not completely vertical and there were some good rocks to use as hand and foot holds going down. Next, the trail goes down into a messy canyon. There's a lot of loose rock in this area so you will need to zig zag a bit. Straight ahead is a huge cliff wall going UP and a rock formation that's close to the cliff. I found it easier to go along the cliff wall and behind the rock formation. I kept going down, zig zagging until I could look right and see a path leading over to a ledge. An organ pipe cactus arm extends out across this trail. I found it to be easier to go around it rather than under it. Because of the steepness, I didn't want to risk sliding or falling into any cactus. After going around the cactus arm, I continued over some rocks and onto a ledge. The ledge curved around the cliff side and once around this turn we could see the land bridge. The erosion was quite bad below the land bridge, which made it look near impossible to climb it straight on, but I'm sure there are some people who could do it. Since I was here before, I knew how to proceed. Right near the right turn on the ledge you will see a rock formation that looks like a small cave. To the left of that area, there's a short class 3 climb up with good hand and foot holds that will get you up to a higher ledge where you can weave your way over to the land bridge. Once we got to the land bridge, it was already after Noon and we were ready for lunch.

By this time, we saw Wade coming down the trail and watched his route. There were some areas which looked like cliffs and we didn't see how it was possible a trail could even exist there, but it did. We realized we could not see the depth from the angle we were at. We finished our lunch, crossed the land bridge and met up with Wade, shortly after crossing the land bridge. He said the hardest part of the hike was probably the class 3 climbing that we just did in 2 places. It was a relief to hear that because we didn't know much about how the trail was going up from this point. Right in this area, I saw a brown rock hoodoo with a gray rock on top of it. This was about the place I turned around in April 2023 because it was getting late, around 5:15 pm, if I remember correctly. This time, we were here much earlier and I knew we had time to make the summit. Wade continued down to the land bridge and to the class 3 sections, and we continued on the trail, looking for the next cairn. We were able to follow the trail pretty well, but there were a few areas of confusion along the way. At one point, we didn't see any more cairns, so we just climbed UP and that turned out to be the correct path. After following the trail up for a while, we reached the top ridgeline and knew the rest was going to be easier than what we just did.

We noticed there were less cairns on the top but that was OK because from here, we knew we just had to follow the ridgeline up. The ridgeline was rocky in some places, so we stayed to the right of it and in some places we were right on top. We just took the path of least resistance. Up ahead we saw a high point that was not the true summit, but we decided it would only take a few minutes to get up there so we went for it. Then, once there we could see what looked like a small cave at the high point. We continued and the peak turned out to be a 10 foot tall rocky knob. There was sort of a doorway where it was possible to step inside. We climbed up to the top of the knob, saw the US survey marker labeled TESMO, which was placed in 1962 and this was the official summit. There was a small ammo box that contained a registry which we signed. We also saw Wade's entry who signed it just before us. At this point, my GPS read 7.29 miles. It was a long way from where we started in the morning. I knew by the time we were done we could be at nearly 15 miles. We took a break, had some snacks and hydrated. Then, got several photos, videos, etc. By this time, we had already been on the peak for nearly an hour. It was time to start heading back. We were very confident that we could make it down to the road well before dark.

We took basically the same route back, and it took us just under 1 hour to get from the summit back to the land bridge. We took a short break at the land bridge, then continued across the class 3 climbing sections. It seemed to be a bit faster in this direction. I believe it took us around 35 minutes to get past those rough sections and back over to the Northwest side of the butte. From here, we knew we could relax a bit because we had the hardest parts behind us. We continued down at a comfortable pace and got to the lower butte by about 5 pm. Then, got to the big saddle by 5:55 pm. It was still light out and we had only easy trail and road left.

After it got dark, we put our headlamps on. On the road, on the way back, we saw 4 or 5 birds sitting in the road. All we could see is a red dot which was the eye. When we got closer, the birds flew away, sometimes we were able to get as close as 6 feet away before the birds would fly off. We also saw 2 rabbits in the road/trail which hopped off much sooner, potentially 40-50 feet away from us, and 2 frogs in the road/trail which were so camouflaged by the rock it was amazing. When the frog wasn't moving it was hard to tell what was a rock and what was a frog. We wondered how they survived out there with so little water. Finally, we made it back to the big wash near the end of the hike. From here we heard a lot of quail flying out of the big trees, even though they were safe being way above us.

See my timeline below for more details.

My Stats:
-------
Distance (round trip): 14.75 miles
AEG: 2,606 feet
Strava moving time: 6 hrs 53 mins
Strava elapsed time: 13 hrs 25 mins

My Timeline:
------------
7:35 am - started hike (0 miles)
7:46 am - reached wash (0.5 miles)
8:00 am - exited wash on the left side (1.13 miles)
8:28 am - crossed a wash (2.44 miles)
8:52 am - crossed another wash (3.4 miles)
8:58 am - road enters wash and stay there for a while (3.63 miles)
9:42 am - reached end of road portion of hike (4.68 miles), exited wash using a trail heading South
10:12 am - took trail to saddle (5.61 miles), then started heading up the East ridge
10:31 am - just below butte, found cairns heading to the right of it (5.89 miles)
11:31 am - kept following cairned trail up which was hard to follow in some places (6.31 miles)
12:00 pm - met Wade's friend Iwan (sp) before the class 3 scramble DOWN (6.46 miles)
12:21 pm - had first view of land bridge after going down a messy canyon area (6.53 miles)
12:24 pm - reached land bridge, decided to take a water break and lunch (6.55 miles)
1:00 pm - met Wade as he was coming down from the summit (6.68 miles)
1:05 pm - continued to climb up the cairned, sometimes steep trail across ledges to the high ridgeline
1:34 pm - reached the high ridgeline (6.97 miles)
1:48 pm - reached secondary high point (7.16 miles)
1:55 pm - arrived at summit, took a break, photos, videos, signed registry, etc. (7.29 miles)
2:45 pm - left peak (7.35 miles)
3:05 pm - turned right to get off main ridgeline heading back to land bridge (7.65 miles)
3:41 pm - reached land bridge again (7.97 miles)
4:18 pm - climbed around steep area, across ledge and up class 3 rocky canyon area which was easier going UP (8.14 miles)
5:05 pm - above butte, following trail on the left side (8.61 miles)
5:55 pm - back on the road/trail (9.21 miles)
6:25 pm - stopped for a water break and food break (10.11 miles)
6:44 pm - getting dark, so turned on headlamp (10.16 miles)
7:17 pm - road exits wash, finally (11.11 miles)
7:22 pm - road crosses wash (11.35 miles)
8:37 pm - road reaches wash, turned right (13.88 miles)
8:49 pm - road exits wash (14.32 miles)
8:58 pm - back at vehicle, starting point (14.75 miles)
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light
poppies, lupine
_____________________
Michael Williams
IT Professional
Rocky Point Vacation Rentals
Ocean Front Condo in Rocky Point, Sonora, Mexico
www.beachfrontmexico.us
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Apr 13 2023
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53 male
 Joined Dec 30 2005
 Tucson, AZ
Kino Peak 3197 - Organ Pipe National MonumentSouthwest, AZ
Southwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 13 2023
Mike_WTriplogs 528
Hiking13.53 Miles 2,158 AEG
Hiking13.53 Miles   9 Hrs   20 Mns   1.45 mph
2,158 ft AEG
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
It was a cool day with a high temp of only 71, probably the last cool day in a while. I was at my condo in Rocky Point, Mexico and planning on driving back to Tucson today. I arrived at the Bates Well Ranch around 11:20 am. I took about 10 minutes to see the historical stuff and get a few photos. I figured that I would have enough time to summit this peak before dark. I was wrong, as I realized at around 4 pm! It was possible to make good time on the road portion of this hike. On the uphill portion, route finding was quite difficult. I definitely missed a few cairns and ended up wandering around a bit and then after double checking and triple checking my GPS device, I was able to get back on the route. This route was very technical and it's important to look carefully for cairns. I did see a few rock piles that could have been fallen cairns. I guess I should have read more triplogs. Maybe I would have summited if I arrived 1 hour earlier. I finally reached the last saddle before 4 pm and I didn't have my lunch yet. I was starved and running out of time quickly. I was only 1/4 to 1/3 mile from the peak, so close, but I definitely didn't want to be hunting for cairns or stepping on rattlesnakes on my way down. I wanted to definitely be on the road before dark, so I decided to turn around here and try to summit a different day. It would have been better to do this hike with someone else. Hiking alone in such a remote area requires a lot of focus and good decision making. I also didn't rush at all.

When I was approaching the high point North of the last saddle, I saw a bighorn sheep. I got a video then I saw about 4-5 more sheep West of the last saddle traveling Northwest. In all my years of hiking in Arizona and Northern Mexico, I've only seen 1 bighorn sheep at a time, never more than one. Today I saw at least 5 and was able to get some good video also. Even though I didn't make it, my hike was still very long. I will make this summit on my next attempt! I may try again in May if there's a cool day. If not, this will need to wait until the Fall.

Total distance = 13.53 miles
Total AEG = 2,158
_____________________
Michael Williams
IT Professional
Rocky Point Vacation Rentals
Ocean Front Condo in Rocky Point, Sonora, Mexico
www.beachfrontmexico.us
Image
 
average hiking speed 1.49 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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