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Telephone Ridge Trail - Largo - 4 members in 6 triplogs have rated this an average 2 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Oct 09 2021
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 Guides 99
 Routes 1,484
 Photos 16,072
 Triplogs 1,374

male
 Joined Jan 07 2017
 Fountain Hills,
Blue Bear Rose, AZ 
Blue Bear Rose, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Oct 09 2021
DixieFlyerTriplogs 1,374
Hiking16.20 Miles 4,029 AEG
Hiking16.20 Miles
4,029 ft AEG
 
1st trip
I decided to go hike up to 2 fire lookouts south of Alpine: Bear Mountain 8560 and Rose Peak. Both peaks are in the Apache-Sitgreaves Forest; Bear Mountain 8560 is also in the Blue Range Primitive Area.

Bear Mountain 8560
Starting at the Blue Camp Trailhead, I did a CW lasso loop hike on these trails: Lamphier-Largo-WS Lake-Sawmill-Telephone Ridge-Largo-Lanphier

Lanphier Trail
I was only on the Lanphier Trail for about a half mile, and I don't have much to say about it. It was in decent shape and easy to follow.

There was a creek crossing near the start of the trail that was a bit too deep to keep my feet dry, so I went back to the truck to put some old shoes on to get across the creek. When I got back to the creek I couldn't remember if I had locked the truck, so I went back to see. This back and forth added almost 1/2 mile to the hike.

Largo Trail
After leaving the Lanphier Trail I took the Largo Trail. The first part of the trail goes up to a ridge between Lanphier and Largo Canyons, and then it descends into Largo Canyon. On the ridge there are nice views of the Blue. I enjoyed hiking through the canyon -- there are lots of hardwood trees which will likely have nice foliage later in the fall. Eventually I came to a junction with the Little Blue Trail, which goes to the east. At this point the Largo Trail heads SW for about 3/4 mile to the WS Lake Trail. The Largo Trail was in decent shape and was easy to follow all the way through Largo Canyon. However, the trail became faint once past the Little Blue Trail junction, and the Largo Trail essentially disappeared some distance before getting to the WS Lake Trail, and I was mostly bushwhacking through chest high ferns until getting to the WS Lake Trail.

WS Lake Trail
This trail goes to the summit of Bear Mountain. It is a steep ascent up the east side of Bear Mountain, but there are several long switchbacks which dampen the rate of ascent a bit. The trail is a bit rocky, but it is in decent shape and is easy to follow. It was a nice summit, although there are lots of trees around which limit views unless you decide to climb up to the lookout.

There were lots of deer in the summit area, including one that was standing almost beneath the lookout. At the lookout I saw one of the biggest bucks that I have ever seen.

Sawmill Trail
This trail mostly exists in name only -- in some places there is a faint trail, but for the most part there may as well not be a trail. In the upper part of the trail I was going through a nice pine forest, and the lack of a trail was not a hindrance, but I stopped to check my GPS fairly frequently to make sure that I was going in the right direction. As you descend Telephone Ridge on the Sawmill Trail, it gets to be a bit brushy.

Telephone Ridge Trail
This trail goes down from the Sawmill Trail to the Largo Trail. It is a steep descent, and the trail really doesn't exist at the upper part of the trail; just head down the best way that you can. About half-way to the Largo Trail I was able to pick up the trail for the rest of the descent. The trail was faint though, and I still checked my GPS fairly frequently.

Once back on the Largo Trail I went back to the TH the way that I came.

Going back on the Sawmill and Telephone Ridge Trails shortened the hike distance by about 1 mile as compared to going back from the Bear Mountain summit the way that I came. However, the going was slow and I doubt if I saved any time by doing the loop; in fact, it may have taken longer.

Synopsis
This is a nice scenic area to hike in, and if you like solitude you are almost guaranteed to find it. However, even thought the entire hike is on named trails, you'll be doing some bushwhacking and route finding.

Rose Peak
I went up and back to the summit on a service road that leads to the summit. There are nice views at the summit, and I enjoyed this hike. I did not get started until about 5:15, and it was twilight before I got back. I can't say that I enjoyed driving in the dark from the TH to Morenci -- that is some kind of road!

Distance and AEG for the 2 hikes are below. Stats above are the sum of the 2.
Bear Mountain: 13.5 miles with an AEG of 3,537 feet
Rose Peak: 2.7 miles with an AEG of 502 feet
 Meteorology
 Meteorology [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Sunset
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Isolated
A few leaves were starting to change on the Largo Trail, but there is not much to see at this time.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Dutch Oven Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
I could not tell how fast the spring was dripping, but the spring box was full
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Civilization is a nice place to visit but I wouldn't want to live there
 
May 27 2016
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 Guides 37
 Routes 556
 Photos 10,872
 Triplogs 1,052

43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Bear Mtn Loop - Blue RangeAlpine, AZ
Alpine, AZ
Backpack avatar May 27 2016
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Backpack40.65 Miles 7,778 AEG
Backpack40.65 Miles3 Days         
7,778 ft AEG
 
I headed back to the Blue Range for Memorial Weekend and for the first time, I brought company. We had a loose plan to cover some pretty good ground with a relatively ambitious loop that involved some must-see side trips in my opinion. The plan was enough for myself and Karl, but Chumley and John were not at ease without having everything perfectly laid out. But I assured them it was a little flexible and we had a few plan Bs and Cs worked in there and they were pretty cool with the rough plan I laid out to them.

We drove up Thursday night and despite being pulled over twice on the way (both warnings), we made great time. In fact, we were there in time to enjoy a fire and relax a little. We woke up to frozen water on the rim, but our day got noticeably warmer as we made the last part of the drive down Red Hills road to the trailhead.

We made good time up Largo, but it was a tad dry and warm to appreciate. Telephone Ridge was a bit of a big boy climb with full packs, but we all had enough energy to drop our packs for a quick trip up Bear Mountain. After Bear Mountain, we decided Bear Valley was starting to look like an ideal first night's camp. This was further confirmed when we arrived at the quaint meadow, rich with prime campsites and a trickling creek. After setting up, myself, Karl, Chumley and Blanco hiked further down the Little Blue Trail. This turned out to be an excellent hike, as the trail was in great shape, there were stretches of flowing water and it took a path through some very cool narrows before opening up to a nice section dominated by giant rock spires and monuments. After seeing what seemed to be about the best 2.5 mile section of that trail, we headed back to camp.

On day two we opted for a short trip with our big packs and then a rather large loop into New Mexico via the Tige Rim Trail. We chose Franz Spring and cabin area to camp. After setting up, we all took off for a 15 mile day hike. The Tige Rim loop was hot and dry. The views from the rim were nice and there were a few cool stretches, but the warmer temps and lack of water took away from some of the loop's normal appeal. We we got back to Franz, the worst possible scenario had played out. A group of no likely less than ten people had popped a squat next to us. I knew there was a chance we might bump into some backpackers, but I could have never imagined running into that many people out there. They ended up not being the worst neighbors and our dogs got along, but they were definitely louder than our small group and they insisted on using the outhouse for some reason. To each their own, but it was probably not designed for large backcountry groups with its three feet deep hole, no maintenance and no chemicals. Nevertheless, it was business as usual at camp and we still enjoyed the great spot and did get a chance to chat with a few from the large group. No sour grapes about sharing one of the nicer areas in the Blue Range, I was just not ready to share it with ten people and it ended up not being the nice serene spot I had described. So a small damper on the backpacking trip in my eyes.

A lot of hikers on the trail on the way out, but a quick hike with pretty good trail and very scenic along the flowing sections of Lamphier. A small disappointment on day two, but I enjoyed my three days in the the Blue. I would have liked to cover some more new ground, but it was nice to revisit some spots that I had been intrigued by before and the section of Little Blue we covered on the first day will instantly go on my list of favorites for the area. But overall great times as usual with these guys and I hope the newbies to the area were happy with the change of scenery.

.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Cashier Spring Dripping Dripping
Filterable water in area of spring, seeps in area trickling out of ground

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Dutch Oven Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Full clean trough, overflowing, strong flow from source

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Franz Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Full trough, and overflow.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Indian Canyon Light flow Light flow

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Lanphier Canyon Light flow Light flow
Light to moderate flow from Indian Springs to Blue/TH
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May 27 2016
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 Guides 94
 Routes 840
 Photos 22,055
 Triplogs 1,993

52 male
 Joined Sep 18 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Bear Mtn Loop - Blue RangeAlpine, AZ
Alpine, AZ
Backpack avatar May 27 2016
chumleyTriplogs 1,993
Backpack42.12 Miles 8,216 AEG
Backpack42.12 Miles2 Days   2 Hrs   1 Min   
8,216 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Lee took the lead on planning this one and it turned out to be a great introduction to the PBR. I was a little surprised to find that this area is much more like the rim country near Payson than the White Mountains as I was expecting. The Blue River valley is only 5500 feet, and while our route took us up to higher elevations, the landscape overall reminded me of the same Mogollon Rim 120 miles farther west.

The upper portion of Sawmill along Telephone Ridge was the highlight of day 1, with big views and a pleasant climb after the steep connector that climbs up from Largo. Bear Mountain is obscured by trees, and the old lookout tower isn't tall enough to see over them. Maybe that's why it's been decommissioned!

Bear Valley is a great spot. I could set up a base camp here and explore. The trip down Little Blue was a great suprise with running water and amazing geology. Huge spires loom above the canyon. I climbed up the ridge adjacent to the canyon to get a better view, but the afternoon sun made it tough to capture any photos. I tried to find trail 341 on the way back to Bear Valley, but I couldn't find even the slightest sign of old tread amongst the fire deadfall and new growth.

Saturday we made the quick trip over to Franz spring and set up camp near the old cabin before heading off to check out the Tige Rim. I had been excited to see this area, but found the reward not to be worth the rest of the hike. It's just a long, hot, dry slog to get to a couple of great view points. In retrospect, I'd skip the loop and just hike the south part of the loop to the views and head back from there.

We returned to camp to find a huge group of people camped right next to us. I'm guessing it was a meetup kind of thing. Apparently they don't backpack into the wilderness looking for peaceful solitude because it didn't occur to them to find a spot to camp that might be just out of view or earshot of others. I've encountered this before, and it is something I will never understand. Might as well have headed for Woods Canyon Lake! :-({|=

In the morning we headed down Lanphier back toward the trailhead. We passed numerous groups along the way. It was actually quite surprising even on a holiday weekend in the Blue. We figured that articles last year in Backpacker (Nov 15) and possibly AZH (July 15) contributed to the 21 cars :o in the parking lot. (We were the only car when we started).

While Lanphier is a pleasant canyon with shade and a stream, I'm not sure I'd like to use it for the ascent. It is steep in places and I could see it really taking it's toll on somebody carrying a heavy pack.

Thanks to Lee for the intro to the PBR. Sorry we didn't make it down to Ladrone. Next time!
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Benchmark
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Bear Valley Cabin Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Seeps provide light trickle into good pools downstream of corral.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Bear Valley Spring Dripping Dripping
Visible seep, muddy water. Irrelevant due to good flow in adjacent creek.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Cashier Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Lots of seeps with ample opportunities to filter from many different pools

dry Cow Flat Spring Dry Dry
Just some wet mud. Would be nearly impossible to get anything from this, and not worth the effort.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Dutch Oven Spring Dripping Dripping
Full springbox

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Franz Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Full springbox. Plenty to filter.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Indian Canyon Light flow Light flow

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Lanphier Canyon Light flow Light flow

dry Uee Spring Dry Dry
Couldn't find spring source. A couple of nasty muddy pools in the canyon.

dry Yam Canyon Dry Dry
Canyon is sandy and bouldery from flash flood damage presumably due to upstream fire.
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I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
 
May 27 2016
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 Guides 6
 Routes 183
 Photos 5,612
 Triplogs 1,647

male
 Joined Mar 12 2004
 Scottsdale, AZ
Bear Mtn Loop - Blue RangeAlpine, AZ
Alpine, AZ
Backpack avatar May 27 2016
John9LTriplogs 1,647
Backpack35.50 Miles 7,100 AEG
Backpack35.50 Miles3 Days         
7,100 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
FOTG has spoken glowingly about the Primitive Blue Range and pics of the area looked intriguing. I jumped at the chance to go when he mentioned it a couple weeks ago and said he would drive. Chumley & Karl joined us and we made a loose hiking itinerary and headed out.

Our group of four, plus Blanco, left Phoenix on Thursday after work and made the long drive to the Primitive Blue Range. We car camped off Red Hill Rd at roughly 8,000ft elevation. I had a hard time sleeping that night. We woke early on Friday and drove to our trailhead and started the hike in. I wasn’t feeling too well from the lack of sleep and was partially dehydrated. Plus I was carrying a heavy pack so that didn’t make things easy.

We started off with the Largo Canyon trail and hiked in several miles and took a break by Dutch Oven Spring. From there we connected onto the Telephone Ridge Trail and headed for Bear Mountain at 8,550 elevation. The climb to the summit took its toll on me and I was glad to finally reach it. We took a break there and then headed southeast for Bear Valley where we set up camp. The others then went for a short hike while I stayed in camp to filter water, prep the fire ring & relax. I was finally feeling better when the others returned and we settled in for dinner and a nice campfire.

We woke on day two and packed up camp and headed northeast for Franz Spring & the cabin. We wanted to get there early hoping to beat other groups to the prime camping spot next to the cabin. We made good time as we climbed the trail to Campbell Flat and then continued on to Franz Spring where we arrived to a vacant camp around 9:30am. We spent the next hour setting up camp and filtering water and then headed northeast for the Tige Rim for a hardy day hike.

The lasso loop around Tige Rim was long, dry & relatively slow going. Most of this section was okay and there were some nice views on a ridge around the halfway point. The heat took its toll on us and Blanco seemed to be having a hard time as he rested in shade every chance he got. Chumley, Karl & I shared our water with him while FOTG looked on with indifference saying he’s been through worse. We continued our lass loop and finally topped out on the high point and it was relatively easy going back to camp as we headed downhill.

We arrived back to Franz Spring to find a large meetup group camped close by. They had a fire going and were very noisy and generally crappy neighbors. One of them walked through our campsite several times to use the outhouse rather than going in the woods. It was annoying but didn’t ruin the weekend for us.

All of us were up early on our third day and packed up camp and hit the trail. We headed down Lanphier Canyon and passed several groups making their way in. The Blue was busy this weekend! We arrived back to the trailhead late morning and packed up our gear. Our backpacking portion of the trip was over and we had plans to day hike & car camp that night.

The Bear Mountain loop is fantastic with great views and the trails are in good condition. I expected more solitude but wasn’t totally surprised considering it was a holiday weekend. I would definitely like to explore more of this area another time.
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May 27 2016
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 Guides 4
 Routes 491
 Photos 10,890
 Triplogs 1,257

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Bear Mtn Loop - Blue RangeAlpine, AZ
Alpine, AZ
Backpack avatar May 27 2016
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack42.49 Miles 7,974 AEG
Backpack42.49 Miles3 Days         
7,974 ft AEG
 
FOTG offered up 3 day backpacking in the Primitive Blue Range for Memorial Day Weekend so naturally I was ready to see the Blue again. I've been to this area before but always up for more as this area has always been one of my favorites.

Day 1 was the most difficult with the majority of elevation in the first 6 miles with heavy packs. We started from Lanphier TH, then up Largo Canyon to Telephone Ridge and dropped our packs 1/4 mile from Bear Mountain and then hit the summit. The summit is scenic with cabin and tower however the tower does not have great views which is blocked by trees. Guessing the trees have just grown over time and blocked the view. We enjoyed the summit and then headed back down to our packs and eventually into Bear Valley where we found a cool camp spot. Arriving camp fairly early we had time to day hike about 2.5 miles down Little Blue Creek. As mentioned in the others triplogs it's lush, with intermittent flowing creek and cool rocky spires. It was out and back so we had time to really check out the canyon before returning to camp.

Day 2 we decided to hike over to Franz Spring/Cabin and setup camp. We got to Franz early hoping to be the first and we were. Setup camp near the cabin and then packed up for a 15 mile day hike. The day hike was lasso loop over to Hinkle Spring, then Tigre Rim and loop back to Bonanza Bill trail to Franz Cabin. The loop was a bit hot and dry with only water at Hinkle Spring in 15 miles. Blanco was definitely glad for the day hike to be over. Back at camp we settled in but had to share the camp with a somewhat noisy group of 10+ that had rolled in while we were on our day hike.

Day 3 we just had a short mostly downhill 6 miles out to the TH at Lanphier so light work for this group. Very surprised to see several large groups either camping or on their way into the Blue. FOTG did some research and found that backpacker magazine had published a recent article for this exact area and also Arizona Highways had one around the same time. Having been to the Blue many times in the past 15 years I've never seen so many people at such a remote TH as Lanphier so I can only assume this was the reason. Regardless we had a great 3 days in the Blue!!
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Dutch Oven Spring

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Bear Valley Cabin Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
water in the creek near the corral

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Bear Valley Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
pipe dripping clear water

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Cashier Spring Dripping Dripping
lots of seeps with filter options

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Dutch Oven Spring Dripping Dripping
full tub of clear water

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Franz Spring Dripping Dripping
clear tub to filter from

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Indian Canyon Medium flow Medium flow
good spring flow into Lanphier Canyon confluence

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Lanphier Canyon Medium flow Medium flow
good flow for about 3 miles in the creek

dry Uee Spring Dry Dry

dry Yam Canyon Dry Dry
mostly dry but did see one small pool if needed water
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Jul 17 2014
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 Guides 37
 Routes 556
 Photos 10,872
 Triplogs 1,052

43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Primitive Blue Range East, AZ 
Primitive Blue Range East, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Jul 17 2014
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Backpack40.76 Miles 11,153 AEG
Backpack40.76 Miles3 Days         
11,153 ft AEG
 
I made another semi ambitious trek into the Primitive Blue Range. More specifically, I made my first significant indents into the more remote eastern portions. I say "semi ambitious" because I took along Cup and had to scale back some of my ambitions. However, Cup ended up doing just fine, Blanco loved carrying her food and we only had to alter our day two plans slightly in her consideration.

Day 1: I stayed at the Foot Creek Trail head and decided to just make the quick 2-3 mile drive up 191 in the morning to the trail head for P-Bar Lake Trail. Foot Creek TH is further off road has basic restroom facilities and forest service does not mind. The P-Bar Lake Trail is literally just a pull-off on side of road, not conducive to car camping with dogs. Day one miles seemed to go by and pile up fast. Grant Creek Trail is a really solid trail with minimal areas of complete fire devastation. The Paradise Park area is certainly in recovery phase, but looking very promising, with some stubborn ponderosa still alive and healthy guarding the meadows edges and several young 3-5 feet pine starting over among a mixture of fast growing aspen. Grant Creek Trail is a tad bittersweet though, as one can't help but think that eventually 9000 feet will have to be reached again after hitting a trip low of about 5,100 feet above sea level on the first day. Made camp at the intersections of Lanphier and Largo Canyon, great spot, probably pushed cup a little hard, (16.5 miles)threatened several times to storm but no significant rain.

Day 2I wanted to go the Bear Mountain look out, but Cup was a little beat after a tough day one, so I decided to skip Bear Mountain and return to the Blue River via Telephone Ridge Trail and Sawmill Trail. Was nice to finally get some data for this area of Primitive Blue Range. It will come in handy when I make my next trek there, hopefully to finally include a little dual state action and a quick cross over into New Mexico. Something I think Blanco and I could have knocked out with about a 55 to 60 mile trip, oh and maybe another day. Day two camp superb, had Cup off trail very early in afternoon, read some, prepped camp, cooled off in creek.

Day 3: A pretty standard hike out, however, did make a slight detour back down to Grant Creek via Paradise Trail #74. I am just trying to accumulate as much info for this area as I can, and I had not did that trail yet. In terms of miles, small detour, however, certainly added some more AEG to hike that I probably did not need and Cup almost certainly did not want. But the trail proved to be great! A real slice of "paradise" in spots, a tad tough to pick up near creek, some dead fall and erosion have really taken their toll on this trail's once much deeper cuts along the steep hillside leading down into Grant Creek. For a good laugh see my GPS Track where I turned around to go get my nice 16 dollar map, then stopped just under two tenths of a mile to return to pack where I was now sure I put it. Nope not in pack went back for map again, found about 100-200 feet further up trail from when I turned around first time. I had set map down to move a log in trail, never picked back up, but certainly not to proud to turn around twice in an attempt to recoup a $16.95 map.

Final Notes: AEG is probably a tad inflated, however, hard to hide from AEG in Primitive Blue Range easy to rack up out there and while it may look high, it is probably not as off as some might think.

Had to do more road walking then what I generaly like, but spirits were brightened by seeing a random white van with no windows driving around remote back roads with a personalized plate reading AMBRLRT, my thoughts exactly! At least he comes about it honestly.

Product Review I brought out my new Big Agnes Fly Creek 2 Platinum. Two thumbs up, was initially worried about durability with dogs, however, had both in tent by second night, no issues. So light and compact, found myself stopping to make sure I packed tent! I was not able to field test it in a good storm, but nice results for steady lighter drizzles.
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Red Raspberry
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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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