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Sycamore Reservoir Trail #39 - 25 members in 105 triplogs have rated this an average 3.7 ( 1 to 5 best )
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105 triplogs
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Feb 12 2026
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 Guides 93
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 Photos 5,131
 Triplogs 4,252

50 male
 Joined Jun 20 2003
 Tucson, AZ
Thimble PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Feb 12 2026
fricknaleyTriplogs 4,252
Hiking11.70 Miles 2,647 AEG
Hiking11.70 Miles   3 Hrs   45 Mns   3.75 mph
2,647 ft AEG      38 Mns Break5 LBS Pack
 
Partners none no partners
it has been a few years. beautiful 10/10 day all around
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229386
Jan 19 2026
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 Guides 187
 Routes 1,026
 Photos 12,518
 Triplogs 905

72 male
 Joined Jun 27 2015
 Tucson, Arizona
Sycamore Canyon, AZ 
Sycamore Canyon, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jan 19 2026
markthurman53Triplogs 905
Hiking10.00 Miles 1,788 AEG
Hiking10.00 Miles   5 Hrs   52 Mns   1.86 mph
1,788 ft AEG      29 Mns Break
 
Partners partners
mamakatt22
Sycamore Canyon and upper Bear Canyon Trail from the Gordon Hirabayashi Picnic/campground. Excellent weather for this hike. The storm a week ago had the Sycamore and Bear Canyon Creeks running (plus most of the little side streams). Took the upper Bear Canyon Trail to where the route up to Thimble Peak connects up. The route to Thimble Peak looks pretty well traveled, in fact saw a group of people coming down from it. We turned around and headed back the way we came at this junction just before the Bear Canyon Trail starts to get serious about heading down the canyon. Sycamore Canyon is quite scenic in spite of the damage done by a fire some years ago (Remnants of the large trees still standing) Quite a few people along the trail today, maybe 15 or so.

Sycamore Reservoir dam was flowing and is always a must stop and visit point. Would be interesting to explore Bear Canyon upstream from here. Not sure if it is easily accessed or not, only one way to find out and that is to try it someday, or if someone else has done it find out from them. Saw an odd plant, looks like an evergreen bush with paper like pods that had seeds inside. I posted a picture in the photo set.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Bear Canyon Light flow Light flow
Light to medium flow but still easy to cross without getting boots wet. (unless you are clumsy)

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Sycamore Canyon Light flow Light flow
Light to medium flow but still easy to cross without getting boots wet (unless you are clumsy)

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Sycamore Reservoir 1-25% full 1-25% full
Really no reservoir there anymore but a good flow over the dam
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228883
Jan 19 2026
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 Routes 345
 Photos 39
 Triplogs 342

female
 Joined Feb 02 2020
 Shallowater,TX
Sycamore Canyon, AZ 
Sycamore Canyon, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jan 19 2026
mamakatt22Triplogs 342
Hiking10.00 Miles 1,788 AEG
Hiking10.00 Miles   5 Hrs   50 Mns   1.86 mph
1,788 ft AEG      28 Mns Break12 LBS Pack
 
no photosets
1st trip
Partners partners
markthurman53
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
We went to the Gordon Hirabayashi Recreation Area to start this hike. As it is a holiday there were lots of people out enjoying the area. The weather is perfect and sunny, no wind. We had planned to do this hike before but it was so windy and cool we had to abort that mission. So today was perfect! What a beautiful area to hike. Well maintained trails and what creeks there were could be crossed without having wet feet. We saw a small tarantula out for his hike. Got a picture and a short video of him. The views along this hike were awesome. Sycamore Canyon is very pretty. We got far enough in to see Thimble Peak. Quite impressive!
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
  4 archives
228829
May 10 2025
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 Guides 12
 Routes 192
 Photos 886
 Triplogs 361

42 male
 Joined Nov 30 2015
 Phoenix, AZ
Palisade Trail #99Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Volunteer avatar May 10 2025
ShatteredArmTriplogs 361
Volunteer11.24 Miles 2,234 AEG
Volunteer11.24 Miles   8 Hrs   36 Mns   1.31 mph
2,234 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Got invited out to do some brush work on Palisades trail. Started working a couple miles in where the trail started descending, and made it almost to Mud Spring before I was spent. There's still a half mile or so above Mud Spring that was still left pretty overgrown, but the rest of the trail is pretty clear.

For some reason, they had planned to do this as a shuttle thinking we'd be farther down the trail, so we had a long 7 mile slog down to Hirabayashi, and it got quite warm in sections. Ran out of water at the last saddle, it was quite a struggle.

Mud Spring actually had water despite how dry it had been; would love to see the spring box repaired as this seems to be a fairly reliable water source in a remote area.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Mud Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Pretty good trickle near the spring box area, but no pools to collect from.

dry Pine Canyon Dry Dry
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224731
Jan 29 2025
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 Routes 1
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male
 Joined Nov 10 2021
 
Hutch's PoolTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 29 2025
xvytoTriplogs 2
Hiking17.00 Miles
Hiking17.00 Miles
35 LBS Pack
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Hiked from Molino Basin to Hutch's Pool, stayed the night, then came down to Sabino Canyon via the Phoneline trail. Rain/snow mix while staying at the pools, the area's first rain in much too long. Saw some rabbits and deer near Molino Basin. Ran into a through-hiker on the Desert Winter Through-hike, a route that connects Saguaro NP East with Joshua Tree National Park.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Hutch's Pool 76-100% full 76-100% full
Pools were full of clean running water.
 
220960
Oct 18 2024
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 Guides 2
 Routes 300
 Photos 1,062
 Triplogs 304

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Sycamore Reservoir Trail #39Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 18 2024
JackluminousTriplogs 304
Hiking3.25 Miles 821 AEG
Hiking3.25 Miles
821 ft AEG
 
no photosets
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Day hike on windy, cloudy day. Parked at Gordon Hirabayashi, and took a connector from the campground to Molino. Other than a large hiking group, I didn't see many other hikers.

No water at the dam, except a pool at the bottom. The wind was quite strong, and it was fun to watch the trees sway. The terrain moderated the effects of the wind when hiking, though, so it wasn't at all unpleasant hiking conditions.

My tracking app crashed so I didn't get a route or stats for this one. :(
 
218999
Apr 05 2024
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 Guides 2
 Routes 300
 Photos 1,062
 Triplogs 304

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Sycamore Reservoir Trail #39Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 05 2024
JackluminousTriplogs 304
Hiking5.12 Miles 1,152 AEG
Hiking5.12 Miles   3 Hrs   33 Mns   1.97 mph
1,152 ft AEG      57 Mns Break
 
no photosets
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Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Took wifey to Sycamore Reservoir. It was her first time there, and the climb out the most challenging since we started hiking together. She did great. Lots of water. Not as many wildflowers as in the Rincon foothills but there were still a few to brighten the journey.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light
Here and there, just enough to keep things cheery.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Sycamore Reservoir 76-100% full 76-100% full
Great flow and not as smelly as it often is.
 
214598
Jan 21 2024
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 Guides 2
 Routes 300
 Photos 1,062
 Triplogs 304

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Lemmon Drop, AZ 
Lemmon Drop, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Jan 21 2024
JackluminousTriplogs 304
Backpack20.57 Miles 2,643 AEG
Backpack20.57 Miles   47 Hrs   38 Mns   0.65 mph
2,643 ft AEG26 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
I, Corey, and Jake decided to backpack down Mount Lemmon from Summerhaven to Prison Camp. Our friend John gave us a ride to Summerhaven Friday morning. We originally wanted to start at Lemmon Rock Lookout, but the road was closed, so we started at Mint Spring instead.

After a week of warm weather, there wasn't much snow on south-facing slopes, but there was still a few inches everywhere else until we started the descent to Romero Pass. It wasn't too badly trampled, even on Mint Spring, which was surprising. No slips and not much ice. Jake and Corey brought crampons just in case, but I had decided not to bother. Nobody wound up wearing them, at least not for their intended purpose... more on that later.

Wilderness of Rocks was gorgeous. We made it to Lemmon Pools for lunch and debated a bit about where to end the day's hike. Corey had originally wanted to camp in Wilderness of Rocks, but I had to be close to an exit Sunday morning so we needed to camp near Sycamore Reservoir Saturday night. Our other friends Bob and Keith were going to meet us there. Sycamore Reservoir was quite a distance from WoR; for Friday night, we needed to camp lower down. We hoped there would be water at Cathedral junction, but we got a negative report from a couple of hikers headed up. Unsure if there would be water past Lemmon Pools, we decided to tank up and carry water down to Cathedral junction.

Corey and Jake, however, each had really heavy packs, perhaps twice the weight of mine. Adding the water carry made traversing the rest of WoR brutal for them. We averaged less than 1 mile an hour with lots of breaks, and by the time we made it to Romero Pass, they were exhausted. So we made camp there, enjoyed a marvelous sunset, and enjoyed an even more marvelous sunrise the next morning.

Rested and two meals lighter (and their associated water requirements), we descended into West Fork. We heard some trickling water in the upper part of the canyon, but all the crossings were dry and there was nothing accessible in West Fork until Hutch's Pool.

Shortly after passing Cathedral junction, Jake announced a halt due to a minor issue: half the sole of his left boot had detached. We at first put on some duct tape to patch it up, as Corey and I had a few wraps, but it was clearly not going to be a lasting solution. Then it occurred to me that crampons could be used off-label to hold his boot together. So Jake hiked the remainder of the trip with crampons, and no snow or ice anywhere. If you're wondering, he said they gave him extra confidence on dirt, but not so much on rocks.

We had a pleasant lunch and a good rest at Hutch's Pool, which was full. We tanked up there. I'd say West Fork east of the Pool had moderate flow, and there were no issues with any crossings. East Fork was pretty much dry, though there were a few pools visible at times but not accessible from the trail.

After climbing out of East Fork we stopped at the first creek crossing. There were a few pools there, but the creek was dry. Bob was there waiting for us, and informed us that there was no other water anywhere... even Sycamore Reservoir was dry, though there was a large pool at the bottom should someone be willing to make the dicey climb down to it. Corey and Jake were pretty exhausted from carrying their heavy packs, and we briefly entertained camping at the creek crossing, but we noticed fresh mountain lion tracks and decided it best not to camp at the only known water source with an apex predator prowling around.

We proceeded down the Sycamore Reservoir trail to a large established campsite about halfway to the reservoir itself. We set up camp there. We decided to have a campfire even though we'd have to backtrack a bit to get water to put it out. It turned out we were spared that effort, as it started raining at 11pm and continued raining until 5:30am.

When I got up at 7 to make coffee, it started raining again. I needed to leave by 8:30 and it showed no signs of letting up, so I broke camp in the rain and hiked out solo. My cheap rain jacket wetted completely through within 30 minutes, and I had no rain pants, so I was totally soaked by the time I made it back to the car at Prison Camp. Pretty sure the rain added a pound or two to my pack... fortunately I had trash bag liners so everything inside stayed dry. Being wet was no big deal, I was never cold. Still, note to self: get better rain gear.

It was a pretty awesome trip this time, a real "clouds to cactus" experience with a little snow and rain thrown in to make it more interesting!
 
212630
Feb 10 2023
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 Guides 2
 Routes 300
 Photos 1,062
 Triplogs 304

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Sycamore Reservoir Trail #39Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Feb 10 2023
JackluminousTriplogs 304
Hiking5.33 Miles 1,070 AEG
Hiking5.33 Miles   3 Hrs   2 Mns   2.42 mph
1,070 ft AEG      50 Mns Break
 
no photosets
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Took LE down to the Reservoir for a picnic lunch. Very windy today! I hoped hiking behind the front range would moderate the winds a bit, and other than feeling like we were going to be blown off of Shreve Saddle, I was mostly right.

LE got to try her new water filter, and was quite pleased with the results. We talked about how to set up an emergency blanket as a shelter, which was fun. The wind was helpful to demonstrate how to block it. We didn’t have enough time to get into different shelter setups though as she had an afternoon math class. To be continued!

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Sycamore Reservoir 51-75% full 51-75% full
Water was less foamy and stinky than usual. LE got clear tasty water from a side drainage nearby.
 
203784
Dec 26 2022
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 Guides 2
 Routes 514
 Photos 5,614
 Triplogs 4,365

male
 Joined Mar 01 2009
 Aztec, NM
Sycamore Reservoir Trail #39Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 26 2022
PivoTriplogs 4,365
Hiking6.25 Miles 977 AEG
Hiking6.25 Miles   2 Hrs   42 Mns   2.93 mph
977 ft AEG      34 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
no photosets
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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GrottoGirl
MyRudy
apparently this member prefers to keep an air of mystery...

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Sycamore Canyon Light flow Light flow
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  1 archive
201948
Dec 11 2022
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 Guides 2
 Routes 300
 Photos 1,062
 Triplogs 304

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Santa Catalina Front Range TraverseTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Dec 11 2022
JackluminousTriplogs 304
Backpack20.96 Miles 6,007 AEG
Backpack20.96 Miles   53 Hrs   30 Mns   0.58 mph
6,007 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Got a small group together for an abbreviated front range traverse. We left two cars at Gordon Hirabayashi, and Bob drove us to Catalina State Park in wifey’s minivan.

I’d never hiked Romero or West Fork above Hutch’s Pool. Romero Canyon was a treat. We hung out at Romero Pools, had lunch, got water, and chatted with the parade of day hikers. The water was flowing strong after the big rains the week prior.

Past the second set of pools we saw no one the rest of the day. Camped at the first of the two campgrounds. I knew of Old Trail Camp but still am not sure if it’s the first or second, but it ought to be the second because it’s way prettier.

The first night was chilly but not too bad. We got a nice fire going that was practically smokeless.

Next morning was a slow start, and the sun didn’t climb above the mountains till late. We packed up and hit the trail by 10. Romero Canyon is beautiful. At least until you get to the burned area at the final push to the pass, then it’s not too spectacular.

We had heard many warnings about poor trail conditions above the camp site, but someone had done a lot of work recently as the trail was in great shape all the way to the pass.

We stopped for lunch at the pass, which wasn’t windy but had a lovely breeze. After taking photos and chatting with a couple AZT section hikers, the first people we saw on the day, we headed to Hutch’s Pool. West Fork was in good shape tread-wise but definitely in need of a haircut. We heard water in side canyons further up, but no water in the canyon bottom except in a couple trickling pools about halfway to Hutch’s Pool. We tanked up there.

We were worried Hutch’s Pool would be crowded but passed a couple guys headed west who said there was no one there as of 3pm. Sure enough, when we arrived about 45 minutes later we had the place to ourselves. With fall colors the Pool seemed even prettier than usual. We set up camp below the main pool. It was much warmer the second night, and we didn’t bother with a campfire. I was sweating in my sleeping bag. :sweat:

It was much easier to get going the next morning with the sun up earlier and the warmer temperatures, which was good because we needed to get to the cars by 2:30.

The hike out to Gordon Hirabayashi was quite enjoyable. Our group drifted apart as we had different paces. Ellen and I were ahead. On the way down from Shreve Saddle we saw tracks in the dried mud that looked like they were left by a mountain lion taking down a pronghorn or small deer. 8-[

We reached the cars just after 2 and headed home after a most satisfying trip.
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Moderate
Really pretty around Hutch’s Pool.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max East Fork Sabino Canyon Medium flow Medium flow
Good flow at least from the start of the switchbacks on down.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Hutch's Pool 76-100% full 76-100% full
Big waterfall and good flow through it.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Romero Canyon Medium flow Medium flow
Plenty of cool, clean water with falls and pools galore.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Romero Pools Medium flow Medium flow
Water, water, everywhere and plenty to drink.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max West Fork Sabino Canyon Medium flow Medium flow
Very little above Hutch’s Pool but plenty of flow below it.
  1 archive
201599
Nov 11 2022
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 Guides 2
 Routes 514
 Photos 5,614
 Triplogs 4,365

male
 Joined Mar 01 2009
 Aztec, NM
Sycamore Reservoir Trail #39Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 11 2022
PivoTriplogs 4,365
Hiking5.17 Miles 971 AEG
Hiking5.17 Miles   2 Hrs   42 Mns   2.42 mph
971 ft AEG      34 Mns Break10 LBS Pack
 
no photosets
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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MyRudy
apparently this member prefers to keep an air of mystery...
_____________________
 
200783
Jan 29 2022
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 Guides 2
 Routes 300
 Photos 1,062
 Triplogs 304

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 29 2022
JackluminousTriplogs 304
Hiking15.48 Miles 2,568 AEG
Hiking15.48 Miles   5 Hrs   28 Mns   2.83 mph
2,568 ft AEG
 
no photosets
1st trip
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Glorious trip to Hutch’s Pool via East Fork. Met a couple buddies at the pool who came up from Sabino. It was dreadfully windy for them but pleasant for me, sheltered by the front range.

This is by far my favorite route to the Pool. Didn’t see a soul past Sycamore Reservoir on the way in.
 
200173
Jan 24 2022
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 Guides 93
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 Photos 5,131
 Triplogs 4,252

50 male
 Joined Jun 20 2003
 Tucson, AZ
Hutch's Pool via East Fork Sabino CanyonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 24 2022
fricknaleyTriplogs 4,252
Hiking14.55 Miles 2,589 AEG
Hiking14.55 Miles   4 Hrs   59 Mns   2.92 mph
2,589 ft AEG10 LBS Pack
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Partners none no partners
first time out to Hutch's Pool in a long time and it was indeed a beautiful site to see. Sycamore Reservoir was flowing nicely. Lot of water everywhere on a perfect, crisp, blue bird winter day.
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193412
Jan 08 2022
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 Guides 2
 Routes 300
 Photos 1,062
 Triplogs 304

51 male
 Joined Mar 24 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Sycamore Reservoir Trail #39Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 08 2022
JackluminousTriplogs 304
Hiking5.89 Miles 1,062 AEG
Hiking5.89 Miles   4 Hrs   46 Mns   2.33 mph
1,062 ft AEG   2 Hrs   14 Mns Break
 
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Spent the day with my daughter along the creek past Sycamore Reservoir.
 
200172
May 01 2021
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 Guides 10
 Routes 699
 Photos 7,568
 Triplogs 4,827

67 female
 Joined Nov 17 2008
 phoenix, az
Azt #11 & #12, AZ 
Azt #11 & #12, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 01 2021
trekkin_geckoTriplogs 4,827
Backpack34.00 Miles 7,521 AEG
Backpack34.00 Miles2 Days         
7,521 ft AEG16 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
these two passages have been on the list, partly because john would now be finished with 1-19
i love the sky island terrain, and most of the trails would be new to me
drove to gordon hirabayashi and got going around 0700 saturday morning
a nice downhill to begin, with the realization that we had a lot of elevation gain ahead of us
stopped at hutch's pool to filter and snack, then headed up west fork
john flushed out a nice sized coatimundi somewhere along here
there was a little bit of poison ivy on this section
a moderate grade on good trail until romero pass
good views, but a lot of burned area and very windy there
mount lemmon trail is steep - a challenge all the way to wilderness of rocks
we had planned to camp right at 15 miles, but someone was in the best spot so we went on
found a good campsite near lemmon creek around 1500 and set up
i read, john napped, we filtered water, cooked dinner and were in our tents before dark :lol:
a lot of aeg saturday
up early sunday, coffee and breakfast while breaking camp
usually our second day is shorter - not this time
set out around 0700 again with an uphill to marshall gulch
nice downhill, then the walk through summerhaven (where nothing was open) to the start of oracle ridge
it was extremely windy sunday, with gusts pushing us sideways and blowing up dust and soot
this section was badly burned, and the trail was rocky
that, and a lot of up and down along the ridgeline made for slower going
passed by rice peak, and didn't go up due to time constraints
no water along here either, and we carried extra from camp
the tank was pretty green, but we filtered a liter anyway
the last three miles of this stretch is on the very smooth cody trail, gradually downhill
finished up just before 1500, about an 18 mile day
john's wife janie was waiting for us, and shuttled us back to my car
a big shout out and thank you to janie for making this combo possible
the shuttle is very time consuming, driving all the way around mt. lemmon
another two sections, making 15 for me in just the past year :)
i have a few gaps to fill in on the southern passages
i've enjoyed tagging along with john on these
random thoughts:
hard to describe how much of the santa catalinas burned in the bighorn fire last year
probably 30 of our 34 miles were burned to some degree
always good to practice backpacking
i would have traded my book for a chair
cinched up my quilt correctly and was toasty warm all night
it's nice to have a light pack but there are trade offs
we want to start doing some longer trips
great trip with john again - thank you
good times!
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Arizona Cypress
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  1 archive
186005
May 01 2021
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 Guides 1
 Routes 15
 Photos 7,285
 Triplogs 5,254

68 male
 Joined Mar 16 2008
 chandler,az
Azt #11 & #12, AZ 
Azt #11 & #12, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 01 2021
johnlpTriplogs 5,254
Backpack34.20 Miles 7,521 AEG
Backpack34.20 Miles2 Days         
7,521 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Big two day backpack. Started Saturday morning at the Gordon Hirabayashi trailhead on AZT segment #11 and finished at the American Flag trailhead at the end of AZT segment #12 Sunday afternoon.
A lot of beautiful scenery and a lot of burn. I prefer to focus on the good. Even in the worst burn areas there were wildflowers and signs of regrowth especially oaks.
We camped by Lemmon Creek in the Wilderness of Rocks the first night. There were enough pine needles covering the charcoal from the fire to make our campsite pleasant. Most of this area survived the fire pretty well. The top half of Romero canyon burned pretty hot. Not much left.
Sunday morning we left camp bound for Summerhaven and segment 12. Lots of nice scenery through here. Once on Oracle Ridge #12 the burn returned. The top half of this segment got hit hard by the fire, but again regrowth is already starting.
All through both segments there was a nice scattering of wildflowers. More than expected. We didn't see a lot of wildlife though I almost stepped on a coati sleeping on the side of the trail a ways above Hutch's Pool.
The bottom half of Oracle Ridge is in good shape and the last few miles were on smooth tread.
Tough but rewarding two days. We pushed pretty hard for a couple of boomers. Good times. Thanks Kelly. :)
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Cooper's Hawk
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186038
Apr 14 2021
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 Guides 2
 Routes 514
 Photos 5,614
 Triplogs 4,365

male
 Joined Mar 01 2009
 Aztec, NM
Prison Camp to Palisade, AZ 
Prison Camp to Palisade, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Apr 14 2021
PivoTriplogs 4,365
Hiking11.24 Miles 4,509 AEG
Hiking11.24 Miles   5 Hrs   39 Mns   2.20 mph
4,509 ft AEG      33 Mns Break20 LBS Pack
 
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MyRudy
Ugh, it's now worse since the last time I did this. Burn Scar is huge, so no canopy; full sun exposure.A few wildflowers.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated

dry Mud Tank Dry Dry
Dry, in the spring box, yet a good flow you can contain and filter

dry Sycamore Reservoir Dry Dry
Some good pools up trail
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185504
Apr 13 2021
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 Guides 187
 Routes 1,026
 Photos 12,518
 Triplogs 905

72 male
 Joined Jun 27 2015
 Tucson, Arizona
Sycamore Reservoir, AZ 
Sycamore Reservoir, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Apr 13 2021
markthurman53Triplogs 905
Hiking8.45 Miles 1,315 AEG
Hiking8.45 Miles   4 Hrs   39 Mns   1.96 mph
1,315 ft AEG      20 Mns Break
 
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mamakatt22
This hike was a rehash of a section of trails I did a few years ago. Arizona Trail #11 or the Sycamore Reservoir Trail from Gordon Hirabayashi Campground. We hiked to the ridge that separates Bear Canyon from Sabino Canyon. There is a short section of trail that Connects the Bear Canyon Trail to the Sycamore Trail that I was not able to locate the last time I hiked this area so I wanted to locate it and get a GPS route for it on this hike.

The Sycamore Trail is in good condition starting at the Gordon Hirabayashi Campground crossing Soldier Canyon(dry)and ridge Separating Soldier from Bear Canyon then dropping into Sycamore Reservoir. The ridge between soldier and bear is just slight increase in elevation when heading west but a good 500 feet when approaching from the bear Canyon side. Not a difficult climb but it gets your attention after the easy walking in Sycamore Creek. Bear Canyon Creek had a light flow over the dam at sycamore Reservoir. The Sycamores were just coming out of their winter sleep with lush green leaves.

We headed east up Sycamore Creek to the ridge that separates Bear Canyon from Sycamore/Bear Canyon. Not much of a ridge, maybe 30 feet of elevation separates these two water sheds. This looks like a great example of stream piracy if sycamore creek ever breaches that ridge. There is a good 500 foot drop into East Sabino Canyon Creek. Before we got to that ridge I looked for the Spur Trail that connects up with the Bear Canyon Trail. My route shows me searching for it. Found the trail and continued up to the Bear Canyon Trail. Not sure how I missed the trail before, great condition but not marked on either end. From the junction with the Bear Canyon Trail we headed down (north) the Bear Canyon Trail to the Sycamore Canyon Trail at the ridge. East Sabino Canyon is about 500 feet below to the west and Sycamore Creek is about 30 feet down to the East. Along this trail we spotted an animal that resembled a racoon or badger but didn't quite fit either of those, turned out to be a Coatimundi. First one I have seen in the Catalina's. Sycamore Creek had water flow in the lower end near the reservoir.

Stopped for a lunch break in the shade of some trees in upper Sycamore Creek. Headed back to our start point after lunch. Great weather the whole hike with a slight breeze to ward off the suns heat.

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

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Sycamore Reservoir 1-25% full 1-25% full
The reservoir is filled with sand and gravel but there was pooling above the dam and light flow over the dam.
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Feb 02 2021
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50 male
 Joined Jun 20 2003
 Tucson, AZ
Thimble PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Run/Jog avatar Feb 02 2021
fricknaleyTriplogs 4,252
Run/Jog11.65 Miles 2,461 AEG
Run/Jog11.65 Miles   3 Hrs   25 Mns   3.68 mph
2,461 ft AEG      15 Mns Break5 LBS Pack
 
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I’ve been itching to get out to Thimble Peak this winter. Picked a gloriously perfect day for it. There was actually water in the creek which was awesome to see. Nothing really at sycamore reservoir though. Climbed the north summit, which I love. Nobody out there and just a smattering of people all day.

Ran about half of it, when it felt good.

Love this hike
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183514
average hiking speed 2.02 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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