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Clear Creek Trail - GCNP - 36 members in 89 triplogs have rated this an average 4.5 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Jan 03 2025
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male
 Joined Nov 29 2023
 Rochester, New Y
Bright Angel - Nankoweap Loop, AZ 
Bright Angel - Nankoweap Loop, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jan 03 2025
zachbernstTriplogs 2
Hiking
Hiking
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1st trip
Trip report: Bright Angel - Nankoweap loop via the Butte and Vishnu faults, 12/25/2024 - 1/1/2025.

This was my second trip to GCNP, following last year’s Phantom-Crystal loop in the same Christmas-New Years week (a great time to be in the canyon!). For the second time, I’m left awe-struck by the canyon’s variety, and by how all of its different aspects are each, in their own way, beautiful and fascinating.

There’s a good bit of beta online about this route. Bill Ferris’s wonderful reports are so detailed as basically to serve as guides. Bob Bordasch has a good set of maps. I know of two GPS tracks for the off-trail portion: Peter Bakwin’s (from his trip with Buzz Burrell; see his report on HAZ), and the waypoints from Will Petty’s 2011 speed run (shared in the Grand Canyon Hikers Yahoo group). When they diverged, I tended to go with Petty’s: he had rehearsed the route extensively, and he also seemed to like it more the Bakwin and Burrell did, which suggested to me that he might have avoided some less pleasant bits.

12/25. South Rim Visitor Center to Cottonwood. The shuttle wasn’t running at 7am, and the cab service wasn’t picking up the phone on Christmas morning, so I began with the Rim trail. This proved a nice way to see the sunrise. The walk to Cottonwood was pleasant. I had the wildlife highlight of the trip when my campsite was ambushed by a pygmy owl just after dusk.

12/26. Cottonwood to Saddle Mountain trailhead. I hemmed and hawed over the Old Bright Angel vs the North Kaibab, and went with the latter; the deciding factor was that I could get water at the North Rim admin building, and I needed a lot since I was headed into a dry camp. I then hemmed and hawed some more about the Ken Patrick trail, and ended up taking the road to Point Imperial instead, mindful of the need to make it to Nankoweap creek by the following evening. The roadwalk was mentally taxing (the aspen groves are pleasant, but three hours of them was a lot), and I occupied myself by composing a limerick about our labradoodle. The rim-side sites at Saddle Mountain are stunning, but I took the forest site in the (forlorn) hope that I could protect myself from the wind. It was a frigid and mostly sleepless night, and my water was about half frozen in the morning.

12/27. Saddle Mountain to Nankoweap creek. The Supai traverse lives up to its reputation for exposure—I can’t think of a comparable named trail anywhere. But the exposed bits all have secure footing, so it never felt dangerous—just required focus. The descent from Tilted Mesa was a toenail-buster. I got to the creek in midafternoon and considered moving on, but wasn’t sure if I’d find a good campsite before Kwangut (which I wouldn’t be able to reach in daylight). As it turns out, there would have been plenty of good dry camping spots on the ascent to the saddle. But it was still nice to have a warm campsite by the creek.

12/28. Nankoweap Creek to a site on the descent toward Sixty-Mile Creek. This was a big day, physically. I followed Petty’s route via a drainage a bit upstream from the end of the Nankoweap trail, rather than the more direct drainage Bakwin and Burrell used. This worked well, and the route showed signs of travel—including a nice hat someone dropped! (Let me know if it’s yours...) I descended to Kwangut following the drainage on the right, which had just a few minor obstacles to bypass. I picked up 8 liters at Kwangut. On the way up to the Kwangut-Malgosa saddle, I started by following the ridge Petty used, but it required boulder-hopping that was awkward with my heavy pack, so I dropped to the slope on the left. This was probably a mistake—the slope was loose and slow, and I couldn’t get back to the ridge. After the Kwangut-Malgosa saddle, route-finding through the Fault gets simpler: just follow the drainages through the fault and use the slopes on their sides when the drainages have obstacles or brush. The Butte Fault area is a huge rubble heap, and I sometimes wondered if I was missing better views on the river route—but it was very cool to see the faulting, and the Supergroup rocks underfoot were interesting and varied. In the context of the whole route, I’m glad I took the Fault for the contrast it provided (and I gather the river route has its own challenges). The coyotes in Sixty-Mile held a dinnertime conference call, just like the dogs in our neighborhood at home.

12/29. Sixty-Mile to upper Lava. A day with two distinct halves: hot and arid through Carbon, then lush and wet through Lava. There are pour offs in the descent from the saddle that require significant bypasses. I found the crossover to Lava unintuitive to navigate and ended up using GPS a bit. Lava was gushing all the way up to its source spring. I ended the day by visiting Juno ruins, a few minutes beyond the spring, and scoping out my route for tomorrow. My campsite had lots of wolf spiders … eek. I used my tent (just the bug net) for the only time on the trip.

12/30. Upper Lava to a site a little below the Freya-Vishnu saddle. The day began with the notorious Lava-Unkar saddle. While I haven’t tried the other routes people use, I’m very glad I followed Petty’s waypoints—I think he helped me avoid trouble others have run into. I began with the Tapeats break to the left of the abutment across from the ruins (I think most people use the wider break on the right). This is a steep and narrow slot, but it’s direct and not brushy, and though it looks tough from afar, it isn’t exposed and is just a stiff class 2 or easy class 3. I then contoured and descended over to the main drainage (perhaps descending too quickly), and turned uphill at about the 5000ft contour (others report turning at 5200ft), ascending straight into the Muav. All the way to the saddle, to borrow a formula of Steck’s, I went up when I could and left when I couldn’t. There was minimal brush during the ascent, and a deer trail helped during both the ascent and traverse. All in all, I didn’t find the ascent nearly as bad as I’d feared: a calf-burner, but not much of a thrash, and not dangerous. The descent to Unkar is easy. When I got to the main creekbed, I needed water, and found a very small trickle 10 minutes downstream from the junction. I dredged this out until I had a puddle large enough to scoop water from. (The situation amused me. Do my students imagine their professor spending his free time dredging a mud puddle?)

12/31. Freya-Vishnu to below the Redwall on the descent from the Wotan’s Throne-Angel’s Gate saddle. Today began with a boulder hop up to the Freya-Vishnu saddle. At the crux, where there are several options, I took the ledge on the left, which is a simple scramble and more protected than it seems from below. The initial descent is steep and loose. The traverse at the bottom of the Redwall is facilitated by a deer trail near the wall; staying high limited the feeling of exposure. The talus descent after the traverse is miserable: steep and very loose. I nervously tiptoed one step at a time. Vishnu had lots of water, including a convenient water-bottle refilling station: a spring that dripped directly into my bottles. The ascent up to Hall Butte-Wotan’s Throne saddle was, for me, the hardest feature on the route. It’s very steep and very loose. I went up way to the left and then zigzagged over to get around the Muav cliffs, but I’m not sure that’s a better option than a more direct route: it took ages to contour through all the loose terrain. The spectacular traverse to the Wotan’s Throne-Angel’s Gate saddle was a welcome reprieve. I occasionally tried to follow a use trail that comes and goes, but the terrain is easy enough that it didn’t matter if I wasn’t on it. The descent that follows is a hoot. It’s the most exposed portion of the route, including three 10-15ft pitches of down-climbing that will be easier if you lower your pack (30ft of webbing sufficed). While at times near-vertical, the rock is excellent, the route-finding straightforward, and the climbing is easy, no harder than climbing down a step ladder. I was hasty lowering my pack on one pitch and it slipped the last few feet, smushing a water bottle and soaking some warm clothes. Whoops! As a result of the mishap, it was a chilly night and I didn’t have enough water for coffee in the morning (mixing the grounds with my granola was a desperate mechanism for caffeine delivery).

1/1. To the South Kaibab trailhead. The Tapeats break into Clear Creek requires a bit of zigzagging to find ledges that connect. There was plenty of water in East Clear Creek. There were mule deer on the Clear Creek trail. I was tired and depleted as I started up the South Kaibab, but as I got moving and the temperature cooled, I was happy to be able to finally turn on the jets after days of painstaking tiptoeing. Blasting through the Muav in about five minutes, after spending a tough hour working that layer the previous day, was like riding a magic carpet. I topped out in 2:55, and in tears of gratitude. What a week it had been.
 
May 03 2023
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 Photos 268
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female
 Joined Mar 12 2021
 Seattle, WA
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar May 03 2023
rubywranglerTriplogs 17
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Backpack5 Days         
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1st trip
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Now is a great time to visit the Clear Creek zone. All the falls are running including the ever elusive Cheyava! But the water level is dropping fast so go sooner rather than later... It will take me forever to edit the 484 photos I took with my camera so I’ll just add a few phone snaps here.

Day 1 - South Kaibab to Clear creek camping area
With 5 day packs - ugh, what a slog. We took the last hiker shuttle from the BIC at 7am and got to clear creek at ~7:30pm. A long break at Phantom and two lunch beers were a terrible (but also great) idea. Flowers are blooming like crazy. Saw a cute lizard on the big cairns at sumner point and a GC pink right alongside the trail a couple miles from camp. The first rattlesnake I've seen in >20 years and I came within inches of stabbing it with my trekking pole! No water/potholes along the clear creek trail.

Day 2 - Cheyava falls
Apparently rangers had/have been warning hikers against crossing clear creek but that was not the message I got... when I visited the BIC on Tues to check for updates, the ranger confirmed that the falls were running and suggested "tight slippers" for the creek crossings :-k My knock-off crocs were fine. The water was fast but not that deep (just above the knee at worst & I am only 5'4") and all crossings were doable. Poles required for me though. The first three crossings were hardest and the rest (10+) were pretty trivial. Cairns are a little scarce as the trail approaches the falls and it gets a bit hard to follow. But the side canyon that heads to Cheyava is so pretty and the falls were GUSHING. Spectacular!! We forgot to look for the ruins south of cheyava but checked out the Obi granaries on the way there and Gila pueblo on the way back to camp.

Day 3 - Ariel and Obi
Back across clear creek and up the wet arm. Many more creek crossings required and a few looked scary but they were all fine. Met another hiker and traded info; we told him about Ariel falls and he told us about some ruins he found. After lunch at the base of the falls we climbed to the top to see if we could find a high route over to the ruins (maybe possible, but didn't seem worth it; the slopes are steepish, plus snakes.) So we retraced our steps a ways and climbed back up to them. Found a nice big pottery sherd as well as a few more ruins that the other hiker hadn't mentioned. On the way out of this canyon we saw another large black and yellow snake hanging over the creek getting a drink - a very strange sight! On the way back to camp we took the short stroll up Obi to the pouroff there which is also running and quite pretty.

Day 4 - East clear creek
This was supposed to be a quick morning walk before starting the hike out but turned into a half day side trip because the canyon is so cool. Towering walls, a huge agave roasting pit and other detritus of ancient puebloans, tapeats narrows, a slabby watercourse with tons of pour offs and pools, amazing views of wotans throne, angels gate, Thor temple and other stuff! We were disappointed that we had to turn around where the canyon splits. Definitely a place worthy of more exploration. Packed up and hoofed it to camp at sumner point. Saw another pink on the trail.

Day 5 - Sumner point to south rim via BA
I had never been on the BA below havasupai gardens. It’s a nice section of trail so I’m glad we did it, but the mass of humanity was kind of overwhelming after visiting more remote parts of the canyon, as usual. I offended some young punk - er, guy - by suggesting he try headphones instead of blasting me with his goofy death metal :lol:
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Wildflowers Observation Extreme
 
Feb 06 2023
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 Guides 59
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 Triplogs 1,290

male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
South Kaibab TrailNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Feb 06 2023
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Backpack10.52 Miles 5,296 AEG
Backpack10.52 Miles   5 Hrs   8 Mns   2.29 mph
5,296 ft AEG
 
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Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Day four hike out from Sumner Wash.
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 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Tower of Set
  6 archives
Feb 05 2023
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 Guides 59
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 Triplogs 1,290

male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Feb 05 2023
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Backpack6.14 Miles 1,299 AEG
Backpack6.14 Miles   2 Hrs   21 Mns   2.75 mph
1,299 ft AEG
 
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Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
West to Sumner Wash and the little skunky camp.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Campsite
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 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Zoroaster Temple
  4 archives
Feb 03 2023
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 Guides 59
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 Photos 1,191
 Triplogs 1,290

male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Feb 03 2023
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Backpack17.41 Miles 3,077 AEG
Backpack17.41 Miles   6 Hrs   58 Mns   2.72 mph
3,077 ft AEG
 
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shelby147
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First day backpack into basecamp for Thor Temple.
  5 archives
Dec 28 2022
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52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Clear Creek, AZ 
Clear Creek, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Dec 28 2022
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Backpack53.12 Miles 9,968 AEG
Backpack53.12 Miles5 Days         
9,968 ft AEG
 
Chris and Sam had a couple of cancellations on their permit and extended the invitation a month or so ago. Ignoring the manmade point in the revolution of the planet around the sun doesn't seem to phase me much. But I guess that's what the whole plan was. Turns out to be my most memorable random point-passing since that time when all the computers stopped working :) !

The forecast was looking unsettled but we decided that we were all-in, weather-be-damned. We were hoping for the snow to clear out before we got going since we could start late with our day one just the "easy" hike down to Phantom. I had planned to drive through Ash Fork as a precaution and it turned out to be a good plan as the snow had I-17 closed at the Sedona all day.

The 40 was in fine shape climbing the hill to Williams, and the only sketchy part of the drive was the last 20 miles into the park. Pockets of blue sky along the drive devolved into flurries as I packed up to get started. As the others were an hour or so behind me, I decided to get started on my own. I enlisted a local hippy to shuttle me from BA over to SK where we engaged in some shenanigans for the tourists before setting off.

Day 1 - SK to Phantom
7.47mi, 0aeg, 2:58
I set out with microspikes and a poofy as the fresh snow brought the magic of the canyon alive. The rim was socked in and drive-by tourists had no view of anything, but after dropping a couple hundred feet the canyon came into view and looked amazing. Spikes lasted until close to Hoo-hah Point which is when I was also down to short sleeves on a nice chilly day.

Below the tipoff a shower started to pelt me with graupel and I donned my skirt. A few flashes of lightning and zero-delay claps of thunder kept things spicy. Five minutes later it was nice again. Late afternoon on a snowy day made SK peaceful and deserted. I think I saw 3 groups between Hoo-hah and the ranch and took advantage with a lengthy break taking inappropriate photos for the gram. :sweat:

The others arrived after I had set up camp and sauntered up to the Cantina to enjoy a beverage.

Day 2 - Phantom to Clear Creek
9.69 miles, 2500aeg, 4:19
This was all new trail for me, and it was very enjoyable. The views from the trail down to the ranch are quickly eclipsed by the views into the inner gorge and the two bridges. The next mile traverses just below the supai in one of the great stretches of trail in the park. We endured the countless little ups and downs that add up and as we approached camp the cloudy skies began to mist a little bit. We set up camp and the nuisance mist had us all in our tents once dinner was over.

Day 3 - Clear Creek to the Colorado

13.34mi, 1500aeg, 6:32
Wednesday's storm dropped a foot of snow on the North Rim, but there was no runoff of note in any of the drainages we had seen thusfar so I assumed that Cheyava would not be flowing and decided instead to make the trip to the river. It's a long river spur, but a mostly pleasant creek to walk along. I managed to keep my feet dry with about 50 deliberate landing-spot calculations on crossings.

There's a waterfall about 3/4mi from the river that has a dicey bypass. I didn't know if I'd be able to do this one and upon arriving there I was skeptical at first. As I was by myself on this daytrip, I had a higher threshold for poor decision making, and still convinced myself that I could not only get down, but also get back up on the return. Phew!

Reaching where Clear Creek hits the Colorado, there's no "delta" or anywhere to hang out. Just a canyon straight into the river. I was able to find routes both upstream and downstream of the confluence that lead to small beaches. This is the first time I've stood on the banks of the river comfortably wearing a poofy, beenie, and gloves -- and that might not happen again!

The trip back up creek was uneventful. After getting up the waterfall climb I was able to relax and motor back to camp where the others had just recently returned from their dayhikes.

Day 4 - Clear Creek to Phantom
9.91mi, 1000aeg, 3:43
Saturday we reversed course and headed back to Phantom. It was another cloudy cool day with no rain. Some snow showers were visible near the rims, but the inner canyon was great. I took the time to access cell signal along the trail and check the weather update. We knew Sunday was supposed to be stormy with a lower snow level for the hike out. The updated forecast confirmed the previous and we planned for a suckfest hike out.

Day 4 - River Trail Loop
2.34mi, 300aeg, 1:03
First we set up camp preparing for the rain. We checked for a cancellation thinking a rainy night might be more pleasant in a cabin, but none was available. There was plenty of daylight so we took an hour to loop the River Trail crossing the two bridges. This is a great little hike out of camp if you're ever staying at Phantom.

Ranger Della stopped by camp near sunset to invite us to the scorpion drop at the ranger station. Phantom celebrates at backpackers bedtime, so somewhere around 8:04pm the scorpion was lowered down the flagpole and 50 or so folks enjoyed the festivities over hot beverages and maybe a flask or 3. A few of the folks there are recognizable names to people who frequent this place. We had a blast and polished off whatever treats were being served before settling in prepared for packing up and hiking out in the rain tomorrow.

Day 5 - Phantom to BA
10.45mi, 4,668aeg, 4:35
We were all up shortly after first light ... earlier than previous days, but we all realized the rain had not arrived and figured we should get started as soon as we could. The others had parked near SK and headed back up that way. I had never hiked BA before ( :D ) so I opted for the longer walk, also, mostly because that's where I parked!

There was a spritz of rain climbing out of Pipe Creek but otherwise it was a surprisingly pleasant hike out -- until the 3-mile resthouse. :sweat: It rained and it rained hard. It was actually quite enjoyable knowing I only had to endure an hour of it rather than the 5 hours I had prepared for! Several wet rats jealously made fun of my skirt and umbrella. I laughed.

The rain had turned to snow by the lower tunnel, and spikes were required a few steps later, with several inches of new snow by the time I got to the top. It was pretty much a blizzard at this point, so I got into my truck and changed out of my hiking clothes before snowshoeing over to El Tovar for a bowl of chili at the bar.

The snowfall was intense and it made the drive home entertaining. The 40 was closed so headed to Flag to risk whatever the 17 would provide. It took 3 hours to get there, so I invited myself to stop at a friends house where I napped for a couple hours before heading down the hill around 11pm after the cluster of snow traffic was long gone and I saw only 5 other cars and a plow in the first 30 miles.

Nothin like a little winter to spice up a good backpacking trip! I might have to make this a thing. :)
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 Geology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Unidentified Geology
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 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Grave - Identified
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I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
  3 archives
Mar 30 2022
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 Routes 26
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66 male
 Joined Oct 28 2003
 Andover, NJ
GC Waterfalls Trek, AZ 
GC Waterfalls Trek, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Mar 30 2022
big_loadTriplogs 124
Backpack57.80 Miles 12,000 AEG
Backpack57.80 Miles6 Days         
12,000 ft AEG39 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Intro
Sumi, who organized our great 2019 GC trip, snagged these permits last year and the memory of hard parts of that last trip had dimmed enough that I jumped at the chance.
Participants were Sumi, her son Aidan, Rebecca and Katherine. We’ve hiked some 14ers with Rebecca in CO over the years. Katherine lives in Grand Canyon Village and one of her photos has been on the National Parks Pass. I wish I could have posted her photos instead of mine.
Day 1 – South Kaibab through Phantom Ranch, Clear Creek Trail to Sumner Wash
Despite snow the day before, it was clear and warm from the start. The shuttle was crowded with dayhikers, but the trail much less so. We had it pretty much to ourselves after O’Neill Butte. The only exception was mule station at the Tip-off. Somewhat before we had passed a freshly euthanized, tarp-covered mule and the wranglers were grim and tense.
Another train passed as we crossed the Black Bridge in the blazing sun. After napping at the trail junction while the rest caught up, we hung out in the shade at Phantom Ranch to wait out the heat. We eventually cooked dinner there to haul less weight back up to the Tonto.
The climb up the other side was a slog. Fortunately, the late afternoon views were a welcome distraction. I was asleep for the night about 45 minutes after reaching Sumner Wash.
Day 2 – Sumner Wash to Clear Creek
This was a shorter day in theory, but warm. The classic Tonto in-and-out and up-and-down in bright sun would have been tough if not for a few well-placed shady spots behind boulders. The descent into Clear Creek on the red scree slope was relentless, too, so the riparian campsites at the end were a big relief.
We set up tents under quickly gathering clouds and light rain commenced just as we finished. We all napped until it was over and started on dinner. Around that time, we met the only other party there, a family from Colorado with young kids returning from a day hike. A bit more rain fell and I was asleep before dark.
Day 3 – Dayhike to Cheyava Falls
The first and last miles each way were poky, scratchy bushwhacks with a handful of stream crossings. The route in between was more trail-ish with some classic filtered sunlight views. Cheyava Falls itself wasn’t running but, another quite impressive falls was running nearby and we stopped for a nice lunch.
Back at Clear Creek, everyone collected water, a bit less tired than the previous nights. We learned at dinner that nobody was looking forward to climbing back up the scree slope onto the Tonto. Once again, I was asleep before dark.
Day 4 – Clear Creek to Phantom Ranch
We knew the sun would shine early on the climb out, so Rebecca and Katherine left at the crack of dawn, with me in the middle a bit later. I put my head down and powered out as fast as possible. I got out quick, but the heat was already building on the Tonto. I pushed hard to Sumner Wash, which was pretty well baked by then. It was a slog from there down to the Ranch.
I dumped my pack at the nearest picnic table and saw Katherine and Rebecca drinking lemonade and eating potato chips in the shade. It was cheating, but I committed a similar retail transaction (twice) before Sumi and Aidan trudged in.
The thermometer read 87F by then. The Ranch was jammed with ultrarunners on the final leg of their Saturday rim-to-rim-to-rim, and they were suffering. One of them was Katherine’s husband, whose appearance was a total surprise. We lolled a couple more hours in the shade and changed venue to the campground. I waded in the creek, ate dinner, and was asleep again before dark.
Day 5 – Dayhike to Ribbon Falls
Rebecca and Catherine left before the crack of dawn again to beat the crowds to the falls. Sumi opted for a rest day, so Aidan and I followed them at a departure time more normal for someone 23 years old. However, we also followed at a 23-year old pace, reaching the crossing to Ribbon Falls (where our buddies had recently started waiting) in an hour and 50 minutes, .
We crossed easily and spent at least three hours enjoying the splendor of this cool oasis. Amazingly, only a few other groups stopped by in that time and none stayed long.
The trip back in wet boots was slower and much hotter, but there was a treat to look forward to. Many months ago, Sumi had scored dinner reservations at the canteen. Not only was it real food, it was food we didn’t have to carry. It was a lot of food, though. Except for Aidan, we could hardly finish it. I guess riding mules gives you bigger appetite.
We waddled back to the campground and watched the stars turn to clouds. I reluctantly pulled my tent out of the stuff sack, but only used it as a blanket during a few minutes of rain.
Day 6 – Out
Rebecca and Katherine unsurprisingly left at the crack of dawn. I was next, with Sumi and Aidan a way behind. I allowed myself one long glance at the distant rim. The sky was clear and bright from very early and I thought of nothing but getting out as fast as possible. It was bright but still cool when the Devil’s Corkscrew rose to slow me down. I pressed on to Indian Garden for my first break. A downhill mule ride arrived at the same time and blocked me from the water, and an uphill ride did the same. I guess backpackers go last here. I battled the squirrels constantly while trying to snack. One even hissed at me when I flung it off my leg with a hiking pole.
I broke further only near the 3 Mile and 1 ½ Mile Rest Houses, which were increasingly clogged with dayhikers. They weren’t much impediment and not the yahoos I remembered, though many lacked enough water, perhaps ignoring the many signs about the water being off. As the ascent wore on, it brought cooler air that kept me going. I emerged still quite mobile after 5:30 of hiking time (1:30 of breaks).

Sumi and Aidan topped out ninety minutes later and before long we were enjoying end-of-the-trip burgers at Yavapai Tavern. It wasn’t quite the pre-pandemic El Tovar feast after our Confluence/Escalante trip, but it was mighty satisfying. I was asleep not long after dark.
Coda
After the others left, I lingered the next morning on the Rim, walking from Kolb Studio to Mather Point and back. My constant hill workouts really paid off, since I didn’t have even a hint of soreness, although I was moving slower than usual. Unfortunately, it was time to go back to real life.
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Wildflowers Observation Isolated
A few each in flower: yuccas, globemallows, sego lilies, paintbrush, primrose, prickly pear
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  4 archives
Mar 26 2022
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42 male
 Joined Nov 30 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Lower Clear Creek, AZ 
Lower Clear Creek, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Mar 26 2022
ShatteredArmTriplogs 356
Backpack50.00 Miles 10,500 AEG
Backpack50.00 Miles2 Days   7 Hrs   30 Mns   
10,500 ft AEG
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1st trip
Partners none no partners
2nd straight year hiking out to Clear Creek. Backcountry Office decided I needed to be warned that hiking in and out of there in one day is aggressive, despite having done it last year, but I'll assume they're just following the legal department's orders... Anyways, the plan this time was to explore Clear Creek downstream from the camping area.

Saturday

It was significantly warmer this year, and it actually felt warm going down the upper stretches of Bright Angel. By Phantom Ranch, it seemed downright hot. Not fun, it made the 10 miles out to Clear Creek seem much longer. Luckily we got a little bit of cloud cover in the afternoon, so the Colorado River area ended up being the most miserable. Didn't get to the campsite until 6pm or so, but at least we had a bit of daylight left to set up. The sun had been behind the cliffs for a couple hours by this point, so the temperature at camp was gorgeous, and remained nice all night. Left the rain fly off the tent, perfect sleeping temperature.

Sunday
Woke up earlier than the others and did a little wandering around. Noticed my friend didn't secure his beers properly, and they wandered off somewhere. I decided to check out some of the other campsites downstream, and walked back up the creek to our campsite, and recovered one of the stray beers along the way. Was really excited about this, as it meant I didn't feel obligated to share one of mine...and some rafter on the Colorado River might decide that God is real upon stumbling upon the other.

Headed downstream around 10am. Not much of a trail most of the way, it's usually easier just to stay in the creek. Vegetation kinda dies out and gets more desert-like after the first mile. The most interesting aspect of this canyon is the rock formations. About a half a mile from the Colorado River we got to the top of the falls, which didn't seem passable without a rope. Really cool, narrow stretch of canyon, and according to heat maps, most see it from below, rather than above. A bypass would've been nice, though, but there wasn't an obvious one.

The way back seemed faster, although I stabbed my toe pretty good on a dead agave.

Fun day, although I'd say the area upstream from the end of Clear Creek trail is far more interesting than the lower part of the creek. I'd go back to see that area again, but venturing downstream was probably a one time thing.

Monday
Got up early for the hike out, after another great night's sleep. The stabbed toe felt pretty sore, but it wasn't too bad with the shoes on. We got really lucky with cloud cover; only had about a half mile of direct sun on the way back to Phantom. It got a little sunnier after that, but a lot windier, and a couple of times I had to stop and cover my eyes to avoid the blowing sand.

The climb back up BA was nice on account of the lower temperatures and weather moving in, and I think I stopped a lot less than last year. Beat every single one of the day hikers up the hill. Once again, the hike out was just as fast as the hike in. Once on the rim the temperatures dropped about 40 degrees and we went from baking at Indian Garden to shivering 5 miles later.

Another fun trip... Clear Creek is probably one of my top 3 camping areas in the canyon, although it's a haul to get out there. We had it all to ourselves, possibly because of the current reduced capacity at Bright Angel.
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Mar 19 2022
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 Guides 4
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 Triplogs 1,257

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Butte Fault Route - Nankoweap to Clear Creek, AZ 
Butte Fault Route - Nankoweap to Clear Creek, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Mar 19 2022
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack57.98 Miles 19,580 AEG
Backpack57.98 Miles5 Days         
19,580 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Partners partners
Dave1
The plan for this hike was to do Butte Fault Route and the high Redwall passes to Clear Creek and then out South Kaibab Trail. There was debate on how long it would take. My vote was 6 days but Dave insisted we could do it in 5….only one way to find out. Thanks to Kathy for dropping us off at Saddle Mountain Nankoweap trailhead on the North side Saturday morning.

Day 1 Nankoweap 9.36 miles 1394 AEG
With a late scratch from the trip Dave and I were off down Nankoweap Trail about 9.5 miles to camp on the creek near the start of Butte Fault route. Easy first day compared to what lay ahead so we enjoyed somewhat early camp around 345. Clouds rolled in making for scenic skies, but we also had rain in the forecast for the next day Sunday.

Day 2 Nankoweap to Sixty Mile Canyon 8.17 miles 3883 AEG
In the morning under cloudy skies we rolled out about 7am and headed off trail over our first pass of several on the trip. Hard to describe the fault geology over to Kwagunt but the pics give some idea…very cool! Around 1400 feet over Nankoweap pass mostly following the main drainage to Kwagunt Creek which was flowing nicely. Arriving about 9am we took a break and anticipating a dry camp that night we filtered about 6 liters of water each for our projected camp at Sixty Mile Canyon. After the break with heavy packs, we ascended the next pass of again around 1400 feet over into the Malgosa drainage. Arriving around lunch time as expected it was dry but we took our break to rest up for the next pass.
Fortunately, the next pass over to Awatubi Canyon only required about 800 feet of climbing up the obvious drainage to the visible pass and then 600 down the other side into Awatubi which was also dry as expected. Another short break and then we started what was the easiest ascent pass of the day over into Sixty Mile Canyon again following the main drainage to visible pass above. The descent into Sixty Mile was a little more interesting with some bypasses to navigate but the canyon though dry was the best one on the day. Very happy to call it camp in such a cool spot! We did some more exploring downstream through short narrows in Sixty Mile about 1/3 of a mile before you can go no further with a huge pour off maybe 300 feet straight down. After that headed back to camp and setup for the night. Surprisingly the rain that was forecast never showed up except for light rain of only 5 minutes!

Day 3 Sixty Mile Canyon to Unkar Creek 12.49 miles 4131 AEG
Next morning, we packed up and headed out about 645am from Sixty Mile up the drainage about 1100 feet to the next pass. It was clear after the rainless front moved through but a cold wind was kicking on the pass so we descended quickly into the drainage east arm of Carbon Creek. This was a really fun and interesting descent. There are some sporty downclimbs and a small bypass that eventually goes through a very rocky chute. Soon after that the canyon flattens out into the wash and the next few miles we had the easiest hiking of the whole trip. Nice flat hard packed sandy creek bottom that was better than walking on a sidewalk. Along the way there were a couple of spots with water in the main Carbon drainage that would work but not needed if you can make Lava Creek which was relatively close.

The cross over to Lava Creek really doesn’t count as a pass since it’s barely 200 feet climb. Once over the top we checked out a spring which was flowing nicely but so was Lava Creek. Plenty of water here after not seeing any since Kwagunt. We continued up canyon enjoying the scenery of cottonwoods beginning to leaf out and the constant creek flow. We stopped to filter water farther up Lava Creek because we were not sure if tonight’s camp would be dry again. Also stopped by to check some ruins in the area before hiking up the first Redwall break of the trip.

The Juno Redwall break was over 1600 feet up with some challenges along the way. First, we had to get around 400 foot pour off ascending a steep brushy drainage canyon right to get above the Tapeats. Above that we dropped back into the main canyon and then began another steep ascent through loose talus scree and more thick brush. It took about 2 and half hours on the ascent which put us behind our camp goal for the day. Dropping over the other side at 4pm we quickly descended boulder hopping about 2.5 miles to another pour off above the Tapeats layer. It was now about 530 so we decided to call it camp since we were unsure of the camp sites below the pour off and wanning daylight. It was a very nice camp spot and actually had one pot hole of clear water so it was not completely dry camp.

Day 4 Unkar Creek to Clear Creek 12.85 miles 4514 AEG
In the morning, we had to navigate the bypass first thing on creek left. Somewhat sporty downclimb into east arm of Unkar Creek. Once below the pour off it was easy hiking across to the approach of the next Redwall break at Freya Saddle. We also had some really cool views of Vishnu Temple on the approach as that is just left side of the saddle. Again, another Tapeats pour off to navigate drainage left but nothing major before continuing up the drainage for about 1600 foot ascent. Near the top the crux Redwall break has a ledge on the left and right. I went left and Dave went right but they both work. Dave had done both and mentioned that ledge left was probably the better route. After that it’s relatively short steep scramble to the saddle.

Other side was steep rocky scramble as well to another large Tapeats pour off drainage right. On the bypass we didn’t recall from a previous ascent and we traversed too far ending up on a nasty scree slope that took 30 minutes more than it should have. Once done we headed down Vishnu Creek to some good water below a spring. Had lunch and filtered some water. Continued downstream into the Vishnu Narrows which are very cool. Then found our exit drainage right for the next Redwall approach.
To our surprise the side drainage had good water part way up. Eventually it runs dry, and we ascended towards Hall Butte break and the last one of the trip. No pour offs or bypasses on this one but still steep and rocky on the ascent. Finally reaching the top we took a break. I headed out to Hall Butte which was only 30 minutes round trip from the break spot. Took a few pics but didn’t stay long because we still had some miles to cover to reach camp. We had 2 mile traverse on top the Redwall over to Angel’s Gate saddle.

That traverse went relatively quick and that put us above the down climb on Angel’s Gate which was by far the most sketchy of the entire trip. There are 3 down climbs that get your attention with some exposure and crappy Redwall limestone rock as hand and foot holds. We made it through those down climbs and the rest of the descent which was steep but no more exposure. Eventually it levels out into the drainage to another pour off bypass creek left that we navigated to access east arm of Clear Creek. There was water where we hit the creek but we proceeded to the main Clear Creek canyon. Camping at the confluence it was now about 615 our longest day of the trip. Very happy to be in camp we settled in the for night.

Day 5 Clear Creek Trail and South Kaibab Out 15.1 miles 5658 AEG
Next day we got going about 645 and passed through Clear Creek campground and onto the first trail we had seen since leaving Nankoweap. It was strange and nice to be on real trail for a change. Followed Clear Creek Trail to Phantom then over Black Bridge and up South Kaibab. No real stops accept to filter some water upstream of Phantom and arrived on the South Rim at 315. Physically demanding trip but a lot of fun with Dave pushing our limits every day. As it turns out Dave was correct and it took 5 days!!
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  1 archive
Jan 28 2022
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 Guides 59
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male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Phantom Overlook, AZ 
Phantom Overlook, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jan 28 2022
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Hiking0.74 Miles 225 AEG
Hiking0.74 Miles      35 Mns   2.34 mph
225 ft AEG      16 Mns Break
 
no photosets
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
Quick out and back from BA Camp #1 to the bench. My GPS tracking was wonky, so it shorted me some route miles.
  2 archives
Mar 27 2021
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 Guides 12
 Routes 192
 Photos 863
 Triplogs 356

42 male
 Joined Nov 30 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Cheyava FallsNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Mar 27 2021
ShatteredArmTriplogs 356
Backpack50.00 Miles 8,000 AEG
Backpack50.00 Miles2 Days   8 Hrs      
8,000 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Partners none no partners
This one has been on my radar for a few years. Hiked to Clear Creek from BA trailhead; the first few miles were a bit icy but nothing too crazy. Temps were awesome on Saturday. Took it easy most of the day, but we saw another group coming up behind us so my competitive streak kicked in the last four miles or so. Got to camp, set up, drank lots of whiskey.

Lazy 10am start on Sunday; headed upstream and found the ruins. Cool spot. A half mile or so after that the creek dried up, and stayed that way for a mile or two. More vegetation as the creek flow resumed, and before too long, we saw the big white streak on the canyon walls where the waterfall would be if it were flowing. We were just about to head back down, but I poked around a bit further and saw there was a flowing waterfall just around the corner, so we checked that out. Some topo maps incorrectly have this as the location of Cheyava Falls, so I'm sure many a party has been here thinking they saw Cheyava Falls with water. It was a cool series of waterfalls nonetheless, and well worth the visit. Headed back down drank more whiskey.

I took the 8am late start Monday morning, and with my pack a couple beers lighter, made good time. Much hotter than Saturday; going up BA was a bit rough, but pushed pretty hard and managed to get to the rim by 3:40PM, which actually made the hike out almost an hour faster than the hike in.

Definitely want to go back and explore that area more, especially since it's such a nice camping area.
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Oct 23 2020
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 Guides 37
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 Photos 10,872
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43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Angels GateNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Hike & Climb avatar Oct 23 2020
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Hike & Climb1.00 Miles 1 AEG
Hike & Climb1.00 Miles3 Days         
1 ft AEG
Second I  • Trad • 5.5 Sandstone  • 2 Pitches
 no routes
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Pro: Single, light rack to a four, maybe a #5 if you want to protect the short OW finish.
I teamed up with a couple of absolute crushers in the Grand Canyon community to climb Angels Gate over the weekend. They do not use social media, or spray about their accolades on silly websites like me, so I will just share a couple of details from the trip and some nice pictures.

We hiked into the confluence of Clear Creek and its East Arm on Friday. At a little over 17 miles, it was a pretty long way out, but we were at the creek and to camp after only about 7.5 hours.

We left camp a little after 6:30 in the morning on Saturday. It is a pleasant and scenic hike up East Clear Creek and navigation is simple. Take the obvious weakness in the tapeats to bypass the impassable dry fall and then continue up stream to the obvious break in the redwall that will place one on the saddle between Wotans and Angels.

From the saddle one begins the puzzle that is the Supai. Ample cairns made finding our breaks and weaknesses in the Supai pretty obvious, however, the climbing was a little tricky in spots and there was enough exposure to keep one's attention.

The one pitch of technical climbing on the main summit is a little meh, but the summit views and the experience more than made up for it. We were back to the base of the climb by 12:30. I chose to hang around in the shade and rest while they climbed a few lesser known routes on the unnamed pinnacles informally referred to as the belly, toes and feet of Snoopy. After linking up again, we rapped down a far more direct route to reach the saddle of Angels and Wotans.

From the saddle I said goodbye to the team, as they were staying there for another night for an attempt on Dunn Butte the next day. I made it just about through the redwall before turning on my headlamp, luckily, the hike back to camp was pretty mild by Canyon standards and it took barely more than an hour and a half even in the dark.

The hike out was pretty standard. I did much better with energy and nutrition management than the week before and made it out with relative ease and a nice steady pace. The Grand Canyon was a ghost town on the way out. No campers at Clear Creek, one tent at Phantom and I had the Tip Off to myself. I guess, like flies, the wind has a tendency to keep the tourist down.

Final Notes:

This summit had been on my wish list for a long time, perhaps since the moment I knew it could be climbed. I had permits for it in the spring, but covid, so as with Chuar it was nice to finally tick this one off after an unexpected cancellation. And as luck would have it, the cancellation led to another set of partners and I could not be more grateful to have been able to team up with these two prolific members of the Canyon community for this one.
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  3 archives
Sep 19 2020
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 Photos 117
 Triplogs 23

48 male
 Joined Apr 25 2017
 Phoenix, AZ
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Sep 19 2020
desertadaptedTriplogs 23
Backpack30.60 Miles 8,770 AEG
Backpack30.60 Miles2 Days         
8,770 ft AEG10 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   linked  
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Ok, this one was a little bit awesome and a little bit debacle. I started down South Kaibab at 4:15 a.m. Unfortunately within the first ten minutes one of my trekking pole wrist straps snapped. I love the poles, but the timing wasn't auspicious.
During my time on the Kaibab I was overtaken by between 20 and 30 trail runners, so it's definitely R2R season. Windy as all get out with a lot of dust in the air. Made it to Phantom Ranch ~ 6:30 and hung out there for about 30 minutes. It's a different scene down there with meals being taken in little plastic containers and all socially distanced.
Next came the part I was really excited for. After a brief jaunt up North Kaibab, I made the right hand turn towards Clear Creek. While not as well maintained as the Park's main trails, the trail quality was outstanding for an AZ desert trail (until the final ~mile where it's a bit sketch). After a beautiful ~ 2 miles climbing up to the Tonto platform, what ensued was an exposed and beautiful hike along the platform. The views were great, though impaired somewhat by the dust still hanging in the air.
I took it slow and felt every bit of the heat. Not sure of temps, but it was 103 in the Valley, so I assume is was around that. I hike with an umbrella, and it really helped me out. I don't know if it was the solitude (saw no one the entire time) or the different perspective, but I found the trail much more beautiful than when I've hiked the Tonto Trail between Kaibab and Hermit. My camera skills and my camera just don't do it justice.
Clear Creek itself is flowing well and helped cool me down. Note: It's incredibly windy down there. I was thankful it settled down after dusk, or I'd not have been able to sleep.
The only downside to hiking this early in the season is that I can't hack the higher temps, and so hike early. That left me with a lot of time to kill after arriving at Clear Creek, but no real energy to do more hiking.
Wanting to avoid a hike back up Kaibab too late in the morning, I got a really early start. Although I was trucking up Kaibab, I was fatigued enough that I forgot my glasses on the trail. By the time I realized my vision was fuzzy, I'd come too far to hike back down safely. So trekking pole repairs and fingers crossed for GCNP Lost and Found in my future. . .
I'm not sure how much solitude you get at Clear Creek when it really cools down, but I think I'd do it again during the winter season rather than with triple digit temps in the valley. With cooler temps, I think a trip down to the Colorado would be a lot of fun.
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Mar 06 2020
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 Guides 4
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55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Mar 06 2020
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack48.32 Miles 10,831 AEG
Backpack48.32 Miles4 Days         
10,831 ft AEG
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
We hiked to Phantom Ranch and stayed in the dorm with the plan of hiking out to Clear Creek next morning. Grabbed early breakfast at the cantina and head out about 630am. Arriving at Clear Creek we had the place to ourselves. Two people were just leaving so we picked out a spot for next few days.

After setting up camp I headed downstream to explore. Plenty of water in the creek with some nice pools. Went down about 2 miles before turning around and heading back to camp. Nobody showed up that afternoon so we still had it to ourselves.

Next morning the goal was to hike to Cheyava Falls. The report was that the falls was dry but we were going to check it out regardless. Heading up Clear Creek just your standard boulder hop for most of it especially as we got close to the falls. About ¼ mile out I could see the top waterfall and was certainly not dry as reported. We made our way up slope which was not easy. Very brushy and steep but worth the effort. Kathy stopped at the lower falls while I checked out the upper. It comes out of the base of the Red Wall and top of Tapeats layer. After checking it out I returned to lower falls and we had lunch.

Finished lunch and headed back downstream. On the way back briefly explored another side canyon but it started to rain and decided to head back to camp. Fortunately, it didn’t rain much only off and on sprinkles. When we got back to camp there was another group but they were cool. Spent another nice night in camp.

Next morning we got relatively early start because we had to hike all the way out with a break stop at the cantina. The hike out turned out to be easier than anticipated but still lots of AEG. Great weekend in Clear Creek with some unfinished exploring yet to do. We will be back!
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Cheyava Falls
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Sep 22 2019
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 Routes 26
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39 male
 Joined Apr 14 2019
 Phoenix, AZ
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Sep 22 2019
richvoskoTriplogs 282
Hiking13.00 Miles 2,050 AEG
Hiking13.00 Miles
2,050 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
 
Aug 09 2018
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 Guides 1
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 Triplogs 64

70 male
 Joined May 29 2013
 Oakland Gardens,
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Aug 09 2018
roaminghikerTriplogs 64
Hiking7.30 Miles 1,682 AEG
Hiking7.30 Miles   5 Hrs      1.46 mph
1,682 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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Clear Creek Trail provided me a gorgeous, dare say spectacular, morning hike.

Some background. My wife and I stayed two nights, three days at Phantom Ranch down in the Grand Canyon. On the middle day, my wife walked and relaxed amidst the scenery, and I took some modest hikes.

As temperatures were expected to exceed 100 degrees by afternoon, I set out early – a bit after our 5 am breakfast sitting – to travel in the cooler morning air. (Note, camera for photoset had East Coast time, 3 hours ahead.) I aimed first to cover a short section of North Kaibab, to the second bridge from Phantom Ranch, then to double back and catch Clear Creek, not far in, just until it rose onto the plateau in front of Sumner Point on Zoraster Temple. All in, maybe a total of 7 plus miles round trip, including both the North Kaibab and Clear Creek legs.

The hike did not disappoint – I was graced with amazing views.

First, North Kaibab. North Kaibab runs essentially flat on the section to the second bridge, and was covered in shade in the early morning. The going was easy, and the lower canyon walls towered up around me, as I took in the gnarled shapes, bulges and incursions created by the intense pressures that formed the ancient rock of those walls.

And for me, the lower rock walls exuded a powerful vertical thrust, as what I presume actually happened a couple billion years ago. Collisions of land masses flattened out rocks not horizontally, but vertically, and hot magma rose upward through any cracks.

In contrast to North Kaibab, Clear Creek does not run horizontally, at least at the start. The first mile or so involves a vertical gain, modest, of about 1200 feet. The trail runs somewhat rugged in places, but the grade remains moderate and consistent, and the switchbacks and climb readily navigated. After the climb at the start, the trail levels out, gaining just several hundred feet in elevation to my end point below Sumner Point.

Clear Creek offered long, deep vistas. As I walked along, great lengths of the lower canyon walls with their powerful vertical lines and interlaced colors stretched out in multiple directions. Soft green expanses of low vegetation on talus slopes offset and counterbalanced the power of the walls. The Colorado river poked into view at spots. The horizontal strata of the lower sedimentary layers of the canyon laid stacked atop the lower walls, with their horizontal lines creating a sharp contrast to the vertical thrusts of the lower walls. And in the far distance, above, the bands of rock under the south rim prodded through visible amidst the distant haze.

Then the in-your-face close-ups. The level section of Clear Creek I traversed ran along the boundary between the hardened lower walls and the first set of horizontal sedimentary layers. The solidified magma and metamorphosed rock of the lower walls, warped and twisted though they were, reached up as if columns of a roman building, to hold up the great horizontal lengths of red and orange sedimentary sandstone. And while the sedimentary sandstone originated far into the past, many hundreds of millions of years ago, the magma and rock supporting them overshadowed this sandstone in age, having originated over a billion years ago. The boundary between the two represented eons and eons of ancient rock gone.

Finally, I met a complete change of scene once up on the plateau. On the plateau, gone were the vertical and horizontal strata that had for the last stretches stood at essentially arms length away and towered dozens and hundreds of feet above. Now I stood on gently undulating ground, not unlike that on the trail to Plateau point, amidst low cactus and scrub. Visible now, though, its view no longer blocked by the walls, rising a thousand feet above, rose the front face of Sumner Point, itself despite its size just the forward wall of one arm of the gigantic Zoraster Temple.

I turned around here, but Clear Creek ran for many more miles, to reach, well, Clear Creek proper, and along the way to the creek, provide stunning views further up the Colorado and further around Zoraster Temple.
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  1 archive
Apr 06 2018
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 Guides 59
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 Triplogs 1,290

male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Z I A D, AZ 
Z I A D, AZ
 
Climbing avatar Apr 06 2018
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Climbing26.56 Miles 10,527 AEG
Climbing26.56 Miles   21 Hrs      1.26 mph
10,527 ft AEG
 
no photosets
1st trip
Partners partners
seanpeters
Zoroaster In A Day via the Screaming Sky Crack.
  7 archives
Mar 30 2018
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 Guides 9
 Routes 118
 Photos 1,079
 Triplogs 118

35 male
 Joined Mar 06 2016
 Salt River Valle
Phantom Canyon - LowerNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Mar 30 2018
arizona_waterTriplogs 118
Backpack33.07 Miles 11,961 AEG
Backpack33.07 Miles2 Days   6 Hrs   16 Mns   
11,961 ft AEG
 
1st trip
I have two friends who have never been to the Grand Canyon before. They wanted to go backpacking, so I put them on a six-person permit. Quite the intro to the Canyon and to backpacking... :lol:

Day 1
We left Phoenix at 5:15am, hoping to beat spring break/holiday weekend traffic at the south rim entrance gate. Fail. There were long lines of traffic when we pulled up at 9. This, and a long line for the shuttle bus put us on the South Kaibab 10:45, which was much later than I felt comfortable starting. The group had no issues until the Utah Flats route. I must have not done a good enough job of mentally preparing everyone for the second half of their day because they were quite surprised with the elevation gain. Piano Alley was cool, and we experienced some minor route finding in the cactus maze on the plateau before finding the easy-to-follow trail. We arrived at the established campsite at Phantom Creek at 6:40pm. I ran over to the webbing anchor to verify that the rope was solid and the anchor was in good shape. Returning to camp, I realized that my hopes of exploring up-canyon would have to wait for a future trip. What a nice place to sleep! The sounds of flowing water are hard to beat when it comes to nighttime noises.

Day 2
We easily down-climbed the 20ft rope into Phantom Creek Canyon and enjoyed the next 4+ miles of enticing creek hiking. This section was by far the highlight of trip, with narrows sections, waterfalls, and waterslides. We had 3 mandatory swims, but keep in mind that Phantom Creek appeared to be flowing at a lower rate than in previous photos on HAZ. This is likely due to a low snowpack on the rim.

The confluence of Phantom Creek and Bright Angel is amazing because it is uncommon to see a true triangle confluence in small riparian areas. We proceeded up the Clear Creek Trail to a campsite below Sumner Butte. I expected this to be a mediocre dry camp after the previous night's perfect campsite. However, the views were stunning and it was fun to look around and identify all the different points and temples. After sunset, we had a light show as headlights were flashing all around the canyon. I was surprised to see two lights coming down the Brahma Saddle. I was curious about their itinerary, but mostly jealous. :)

Day 3
It was an uneventful hike down to Phantom Ranch and out Bright Angel. We had three rangers stop and talk with us, asking if we approached Clear Creek trail from the Brahma Saddle side. I found this question a bit odd since approaching the Sumner Wash area from the north (departing from phantom creek canyon) would be a considerably difficult hike in one day. One of the rangers had talked with the two climbers who I saw the previous night, coming down from the Brahma Saddle. The ranger told me they were climbing Zoroaster, but in a single day from the SK. While I understand doing Brahma in a single day, the trad climbing up Zoroaster seems like a bit of an EXTRA long day... respect!

Overall, this trip had many high points and only one low point - I lost my sun hat. So if you see an Outdoor Research broad brim hat on the Clear Creek, let me know. ;)


water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Phantom Creek Medium flow Medium flow
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  2 archives
Feb 22 2018
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 Guides 19
 Routes 40
 Photos 5,624
 Triplogs 341

52 female
 Joined Nov 22 2005
 Tucson, AZ
Clear Creek Trail - GCNPNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Feb 22 2018
writelotsTriplogs 341
Backpack35.00 Miles 6,000 AEG
Backpack35.00 Miles4 Days         
6,000 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
Trip in the snow and the sun - the canyon does give you everything it can! Pictures tell more story.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Throwing a Wendy
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  3 archives
Feb 17 2018
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 Guides 37
 Routes 556
 Photos 10,872
 Triplogs 1,052

43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Brahma TempleNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Feb 17 2018
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Backpack35.41 Miles 13,334 AEG
Backpack35.41 Miles3 Days         
13,334 ft AEG
 
Partners none no partners
So Brahma was the plan for this three day excursion into the Grand Canyon with @carriejane and Brahma it was! We had permits for two days in the area, one for the AJ9 use area and one for the AK9 use area. The original plan entailed camping at the top of the redwall break on the way to Brahma a summit in the morning and then camping at Sumner Wash on the second day. However, the prospect of carrying 8 liters of water up the redwall break on day one, may have lead to a liberal interpretation of Grand Canyon backcountry rules on the first night. Nevertheless, our summit attempt was a resounding success and it was one of my more memorable three day trips into the big ditch. I was very worried about how my surgically repaired right shoulder would handle a Brahma summit attempt less than two weeks after getting the green light for the resumption of full physical activities, but I learned that I can do a lot of things with one arm and Carrie pushing up on my butt. Speaking of learning things, we also learned that a Nalgene can survive a 50 feet fall through the redwall and that tents are best when staked during high winds and that the poles that come with the Fly Creek Platinum are very durable under stress.

Day one was a pretty standard and at times warm hike to Sumner Wash, where after filtering six liters of water we decided that a loose interpretation of the backcountry zones was a better option than lugging our heavy packs up through the redwall. Especially, with some worries about my shoulder as it was. After setting up camp, we did a little day hike further east down Clear Creek Trail and then returned for an amazing night in the shadow of Zoroaster.

Day two was a play it by ear day. The goal was to go as far as my shoulder could take us and to just enjoy the journey along the way. Thinking my shoulder would only take us as far as the redwall break, I told Carrie to pack enough snacks and water for a return around lunchtime. This turned out to only be a seven hour miscalculation, as the shoulder was feeling great. With every obstacle cleared, I began to feel more confident and our determination to reach the summit grew. The rope sections certainly proved difficult, but it can be done with one arm and a little nerves. Similarly, the short climbs and scrambles can be negated by a nice two handed push on one's bottom. The traverses and wind tested Carrie's nerves, but even they proved just minor obstacles in our quest for one of the Canyon's ultimate summit gems. There was a little route finding Snafu to contend with on the final scramble, but there was no way it was going to stop us at that point and we quickly got back on track. The summit finally became a reality by 2 p.m. There are not a lot of names in this register and someone had replaced the book about ten days ago, but I was pleased to see that my now barely discernible entry and ode to my old man was still there on some loose papers in the register. We knew we had a long day still ahead of us, so we turned around after only a few minutes on the summit. The way back was pretty uneventful aside from the wind, which had me looking back several times to see if Carrie was still attached to the earth. The tougher of the ropes proved to be a little difficult going down, but it did lead to one of my classic quotes of the day. When I told Carrie I needed her help at the bottom, she asked, "What do you want me to do?" I yelled down, "Just catch me if I fall!" She looked up a little dumbfounded at what I thought was a pretty reasonable request. Going back was a slog, we were both basically out of fuel to eat and water to drink, but we got back to camp sans headlamps (both of us had left ours in the tent) about ten minutes before dark, just how we had drawn it up.

We endured some of the worst and most sustained high winds I have ever encountered while backpacking Sunday night, but were still able to get a pretty early start Monday morning despite the nearly sleepless night. We later learned that those were most likely 40 plus mph winds that we were dealing with for about 12 straight hours. The hike out started off quick and then became a bit of a slog around the tip off point when some quarter inch sized hail began to pelt us, luckily this turned into some softer snow very quickly, but the high winds and white out conditions required us to draw on a little grit for the final three miles of the climb out. We were rewarded for our tough little climb out with the road closed and gated off right before the trailhead due to the snow and ice on the road. However, just as we were contemplating how we were ever going to get home with a gated off road now in front of us, a tow truck driver came and unlocked the gate for us and some other pretty anxious travelers. I was not even aware the forest service gated off that rim road during poor road condition events!

In the end, the second time proved to be a charm and I could not think of a better person to share that amazing summit with! It was team work the whole way, nothing came easy and it was always interesting!

The return route I posted to the track is just a leg of the official route for anyone examining route. I turned off Route Scout on our return from the summit to conserve my battery, so just used the official route for an estimation of stats.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Bright Angel Creek Medium flow Medium flow
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average hiking speed 2.14 mph
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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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