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Beamer Trail - 17 members in 37 triplogs have rated this an average 3.9 ( 1 to 5 best )
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Apr 26 2025
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 Guides 2
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 Photos 64
 Triplogs 7

male
 Joined Oct 30 2024
 Kenilworth, NJ
Grandma Spit Trail to Hopi Salt Trail, AZ 
Grandma Spit Trail to Hopi Salt Trail, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Apr 26 2025
ckoss_Triplogs 7
Backpack34.26 Miles 6,217 AEG
Backpack34.26 Miles2 Days   6 Hrs   50 Mns   
6,217 ft AEG20 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Preface
The goal for this trip was to hike from Lipan Point to the Hopi Salt Trail on the Navajo Nation with 2 nights along the Colorado River. The group consisted of 1 experienced Grand Canyon hiker, 1 that has day hiked below the rim, and 2 hikers brand new to the Grand Canyon. In May 2024, I previously completed the Escalante Route from Tanner Trail to Grandview Trail, so I was already familiar with Tanner. Everyone in the group is a strong hiker/backpacker and April was a great time to do this itinerary especially since the Little Colorado River was blue! We planned to camp at Cardenas Beach (BC9 - Cardenas, At-Large Camping) and 0.5 mi down river from the Little Colorado River (LCR) confluence (BA9 - Palisades, At-Large Camping). Ideally, we wanted Tanner Beach on night 1, but a last minute date change made that not possible. This itinerary changed enabled us to attempt an alternate route to descend the Redwall and Tapeats layers from Tanner Trail, called the Cardenas Route or Grandma Spit Trail. More information on this route can be found from Doug Nering, Harvey Butchart, and Green/Ohlman. Breifly, descending this route with overnight packs proved to be very strenuous, more than what I expected. This was the first time that daylight savings became relevant while backpacking since we left AZ time and entered Navajo Nation (observes Daylight Savings).

Permits
This itinerary spans the Grand Canyon National Park and Navajo Nation, so 2 permits are needed: 1) Grand Canyon Backcountry permit and 2) Navajo Nation Parks and Recreation.

Predicting LCR Color
There are 2 USGS monitoring stations that are useful to provide a quantifiable prediction on whether the LCR will be its dazzling blue color. The USGS river discharge flow rate data stations near the confluence and near the spring: aim for equilibrium values of 220 ft3/sec and 0 ft3/sec, respectively. The USGS website has the ability to subscribe to real time water alerts.

Day 1
The first day began with an overload of excitement as we attempted a "short cut" from Tanner Trail to Cardenas Beach. I studied the descriptions of the route several times, including an recent trip report with photos. We started down Tanner at noon and made it to the start of the route at 2PM, which is marked by a couple rock cairns to the left of Tanner right below the drainage leading up to the saddle nearest Cardenas Butte. The view from the top of the saddle was spectacular as we saw the Colorado River bend past Unkar Delta and we were able to size up the monumental height of the Redwall across to the north, where we would descend down its drainage. The route has 2 main milestones: 1) the Redwall Break and 2) the Tapeats Cliffs. This formation on maps / satellite looks like a horseshoe shape. We contoured along the Supai making our way over to the head of the Redwall ravine. There was some loose rocks, but it was manageable with out overnight packs. We took a slight detour, passed the turn off for the Redwall to get another view of the ravine from above. There is a cairn that signifies when to start the descent to the top of the ravine. The descent through the Redwall ravine was surprisingly straight forward. There was a lot of lose scree as we continued below the ravine as we made it to the plateauabove the Tapeats. This section was difficult with overnight packs due to the constant battle of steep, loose scree. Perhaps we descended too soon and should have contoured more first. We were awarded with lots of pink prickly pear cacti blossoms. The final challenge of this route is descending the Tapeats Cliffs with our overnight packs and windy conditions. I knew the break was on the left side of the plateau, but you cannot see it until you are standing right on the edge. Once beyond the edge, an obvious chimney appears and we carefully descended one by one to ensure we did not topple each other with debris. The route then follows the top of the Basalt layer to the north. Again, it takes some time to locate the break to descend. There is a steep series of Basalt "steps" that can be climbed down with some hand work. The large boulders were key to preserve our strength since they generally did not dislodge when hopping on them unlike the ubiquitous scree. We finally reached the drainage at the base of the Red Dox hills at sunset (7PM). We quickly scurried up the slopes to meet the Escalante Route, which greeted us with actual trail! We continued above the Unkar Rapids and made our way to Cardenas Beach, where we spotted lights from afar. A river group of 11 were already setup. We chatted briefly. I slept without my tent and enjoyed the vivid night sky with a new moon while reflecting on our descent.


Day 2
This was the easiest day of the trip since it was all on actual trail, mostly the Beamer Trail. The river group offered us an extra breakfast sandwich so we split it 4 ways for our group. We started hiking towards Tanner Beach at 8AM. The drainage near Tanner Beach looked very different from a year ago. No white sand and a lower water level. Tanner Beach also has a composting toilet, which is convenient. We also ran into a hiker from NJ who shared similar mtn biking locations as us. We continued onto Beamer Trail and took a relaxing break at Palisades beach around 1PM. We planned to camp at the debris fan / beach that is 0.5 miles south of the confluence. The exposure of Beamer Trail was minimal compared to the route from yesterday. We arrived around 5PM and set up camp towards the southern end of the "beach". We could see hints of blue water from the confluence. We also celebrated on our groupmates Birthdays!

Day 3
The highlights for the final day were seeing Beamer's Cabin, seeing the USGS monitoring stations, crossing the LCR, and ascending the Hopi Salt Trail. We expressed some doubt on the best spot to cross the LCR since there were several options. We opted to cross at the Travertine ledges just up river from the biologist's camp. The trail along the LCR was very easy going up until the crossing spot. After crossing the LCR, we were faced with overgrown catclaws and lots of muddy trails all the way to the helicopter landing pad. I think there is a high route to bypass. We started the ascent to the rim at 3PM as clouds began to approach from the west. The Hopi Salt Trail had lots of historic rock cairns marking the way. The final ascent to the rim is quite steep once crossing the drainage atop the Redwall. Be sure to keep an eye out for petroglyphs near the rim. We were greeted with a colorful sunset as we met our driver at the trailhead.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light
 
Oct 24 2024
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54 male
 Joined Apr 13 2011
 Gilbert, AZ
Salt - LCR - Beamer - Tanner, AZ 
Salt - LCR - Beamer - Tanner, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Oct 24 2024
ddgrunningTriplogs 604
Backpack38.64 Miles 8,933 AEG
Backpack38.64 Miles4 Days         
8,933 ft AEG60 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
A bucket list backpacking trip for me ....

In the planning phase, it started modestly with getting a GC permit to camp along the Beamer trail, with an out and back route planned from Tanner. Then it morphed into adding a day hike to the LCR confluence. Then I read @Bifrost's triplog about packrafting back from the LCR to their camp along Beamer, which added a packrafting bug to the plan. Then, as I was driving back from Utah about a month before the trip, I saw signs of life at the Cameron station and, on a whim, decided to stop to see if I could get a permit for the Salt Canyon Trail. Got a permit, and then changed the plan to a point-to-point hike, with a shuttle, from Salt to Tanner. Then, I read @Peter_Medal's triplog about packrafting the LCR. And voila, bucket-list trip planned.

The only downside of the whole trip--and admittedly, it took a bit to get over--was the random rainstorm that came through Northern AZ 5-6 days before our trip and dashed our hopes of a turquoise LCR. That disappointment aside, the trip was amazing!

We left Wednesday afternoon and drove up to drop a car at Lipan Point before heading back to Cameron where we spent the night at the Trading Post motel. Great accommodations.

We rented packrafts from C&D Outdoors in Camp Verde, and picked them up on our way to Cameron. Carlos (the proprietor) was almost as excited about our trip as we were. While we all had experience kayaking, none of us had packrafted before, so we spent about an hour with Carlos giving us a crash course in all things packrafting. We quickly learned that Carlos had packrafted the LCR and Colorado, and we soon put two and two together to figure out that it was actually Carlos who accompanied Peter Medal on the trip I flagged in his HAZ triplog and featured in his Youtube link [ photoset ] !

I had concerns about a packraft holding up to the sharp travertine on the LCR, but Carlos had no worries whatsoever. Turned out he was right. The rafts performed beautifully. He outfitted our group of four with Alpacka Gnarwahls and one of C&D's original rafts. They were a bit bigger than the most compact/backpack friendly rafts, weighing in at 8-9 pounds, plus PFD, helmet, paddle, interior drybags (which he called "twinkies") and a small amount of miscellaneous gear (pumps, patch kits, etc.).

After dropping our return vehicle at Lipan Point, we pulled into Cameron around 11 pm and spent the next hour figuring out how to add the packrafting gear to our packs, which, with water, tipped the scales at about 60 lbs. :o : rambo :

Then, we settled in for a few hours of surprisingly decent sleep. We left the Trading Post just before sunrise and made the 1 hr. 15 min. drive to the Salt Canyon TH. Neither Google nor Apple maps provided the most direct or smoothest route to the TH. Indian Road 6130 (a mile or so past the Gap) is a great starting point, and was pretty good for all cars. But about 2/3 of the way to the TH, IR 6130 peals off to the left at an unmarked fork, while continuing straight on the more well-traveled/defined road puts you on IR 6120. Google/Apple continue on IR 6120, which eventually requires bounding along some faint and definitely non-sedan friendly tracks to get back over to the TH. We had no problems in our Kia Telluride, but our return car was a minivan :scared: , so we committed to find a different route for the pick up on the back end. (NOTE: On the backend, we paid close attention to the fork spot and turned left to "stay on" IR 6130, which is a more direct and smoother (though still rougher than the road leading up to the fork) ride to the TH.

Anywho, after finding the TH, we continued on another 2.5 miles to the canyon overlook, where our strong chocolaty LCR suspicions were irrefutably confirmed. The view was nevertheless pretty spectacular.

After photos, we returned to the TH, which was occupied by a couple of AZ Game and Fish trucks, loaded up our 60 lb. packs, and officially began the adventure.

Day 1: Salt to LCR

The "trail" is, as advertised: not really a trail at all, with the initial chute requiring handing down backpacks in a couple of places and very slow going. The initial chute takes you to the unmistakable spire, which is bypassed on the left.

From there, the cairn hunting begins in earnest, though the challenge of the route is relentless from start to finish. We didn't have too much trouble route finding, except that once we crossed the drainage from the east to the west side, where there is an initial steep climb, then two apparent routes from there--one low and one high. Both are cairned. Our group split and took both. The high route is recommended from our experience, as the low route required a rather precarious downclimb. Both routes meet up again on the other side of the side drainage.

In all, the descent took us 6.5 hours. We initially had planned on inflating our rafts and setting up camp further down the LCR, but after seeing the lovely beach just beyond and upstream of the AZGF camp, we decided to call it a day and reserve the packrafting for Day 2.

We set up camp on the idyllic beach and shortly met 3 AZGF folks coming back from a day of "fishing" and collecting data on the Humpback Chub. They were on day 3 of a 10 day trip, with three additional groups of 3 spread out at other camps along the LCR, doing the same thing. They had all been helicoptered in, and were impressed that we hauled packrafts down the trail. Given the silty LCR, clean water was at a premium. They didn't have any clean water to share (they bring all of their water in with them), but they did have a 5 gallon bucket of LCR water that had settled over several days that they offered us. We accepted. After filtering, it wasn't bad, and the fact that the LCR was flowing at a higher level diluted some of the natural mineral content (a plus for us).

After setting up camp, we decided to head upstream to visit Emerald Pool, the site of a couple of the flash flood deaths in the Canyon (Georg Mancuso and Linda Brehmer). The hike to the pool is relatively short mileage wise, but quite a bushwhack, even with some "trail" trimming done by the AZGF folks. We persevered though, and enjoyed a payoff swim in the Emerald Pool, before returning to camp for the evening.

Day 2: LCR to Lava Canyon

After lovely night on the beach, we awoke, cleaned up camp and got our rafts inflated and situated for the packrafting adventure, hoping that we could remember various tidbits of Carlos's advice. A small "bay" by the beach gave us a chance to paddle around and get our bearings before tackling the downstream current.

At first we were worried about dumping over the travertine falls, but soon we were just having a blast. The cascades were a ton of fun. The biggest challenge was not getting "stuck" on the lip of the travertine, which happened frequently, and required some butt-scooting, and in a couple of places, required getting out and nudging the raft along.

As we went, we got a little better at picking lines that provided the smoothest traverse over the cascades. In between cascades were idyllic smooth sections where we just floated along and enjoyed. We passed each of the additional 3 AZGF groups, and at one, stopped to see their catch--a 3 inch chub that they said was 2-3 years old. It looked like a minnow. They said the chub can live up to 25 years, and while this one was already a few years old, it was not yet old enough to get its hump. They explained that each fish has a chip that allows them to scan and record growth, etc. each time it is caught, for inputting into their database. Each of the 4 groups had a volunteer with them.

We visited and reverently marveled at the Sipapu. Not too far downstream is a lovely beach for camping on the south side of the LCR.

As we approached the confluence, we stopped for a look at Beamer cabin, then went on to the confluence proper. The Colorado was flowing a beautiful green above the confluence, and it was mesmerizing to watch the clean water mix with the silty LCR.

With the LCR as a warm up, we took off the training wheels and paddled into the cold Colorado. Although there aren't any major rapids in this section, there were 4-5 whitewater rapids/riffles that definitely got our blood pumping. We bypassed most of the first one, just below the confluence, but then scouted and ran the rest without incident. The Hopi Salt Wall section was cool to look at as we floated by.

After a combined 10-11 miles on the LCR/Colorado, we arrived at our camp spot at the mouth of Lava Canyon as the evening sun lit up the opposing canyon walls. Another really great camp spot on the beach next to the river.

Day 3: Lava/Carbon Hike to Tanner Beach

We awoke on Saturday morning with the goal of doing a day hike up Lava Canyon and across the upstream drainage and down the Carbon Canyon narrows. At the start of the hike, we also scouted Lava Canyon Rapid (the only named rapid along this section) and pondered whether to tackle it or bypass when we returned.

The day hike was super cool. Lava Canyon is not much to look at (by comparison), but the Carbon Canyon narrows were a lot of fun. On our way back, we crossed paths with a group on a private rafting trip who were doing the hike as a loop. They had 6 rafts. They left 3 at the mouth of Carbon and floated the other 3 down to the beach where we camped at Lava Canyon, where they exited for their hike with the intent of shuttling down from Carbon after they finished their hike.

We visited briefly, and they offered to take us through Lava Canyon Rapid if we wanted. By the time we got back to camp, reinflated our rafts and cleaned up camp, the private flotilla of 6 was just about to push off. My wife took them up on their offer to ride with them through the rapid, while one of their crew jumped at the chance to take her packraft through the rapid.

Running the rapid was a blast, and we all came through unscathed. We then bid the rafting group farewell and floated the final 3-3.5 miles to Tanner Beach. Along the way were a handful of additional rapids, and on the last one I apparently got a little too cocky. After navigating the first 2 of 3 big holes in a row, I got hit by a lateral wave, and the next thing I knew, I was swimming the rapid. My raft was upside down (with my strapped pack creating drag), but I had my paddle and with some effort, over what seemed to be a 150 yards or so, I was able to swim my way the bank and right the ship. While we had worried about water temperature, it wasn't too bad, and I was not overly chilled.

The rest of the way to Tanner Beach was without incident, and we set up camp for our final night in solitude and enjoyed a lovely sunset to the sound of Tanner Rapid. We wisely opted to forego a run down Tanner :lol: .

Day 4: Out Tanner

Our final day involved trudging our only slightly lighter packs up Tanner. I've been down Tanner before, but the top half was in the dark, so it was nice to see what I missed previously. All in all, we did great, and had some wispy clouds and an occasional breeze to help keep us cool.

Once out, we drove around to pick up our shuttle car, and the revised route was minivan-friendly enough.

We dropped off our packrafts to Carlos about 11 pm. He was excited to hear about our adventure and likely would have kept talking for hours. But we had 2 more hours of driving ahead, and a full day of work the next day. So, we wrapped up the verbal report, and headed for home.

Apologies for the long triplog, but it was a fantastic trip!

Now, just need to redo when the LCR is running blue ....
_____________________
  4 archives
Mar 04 2023
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 Guides 59
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male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Early March GC Snowdays, AZ 
Early March GC Snowdays, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Mar 04 2023
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Backpack43.28 Miles 11,202 AEG
Backpack43.28 Miles4 Days         
11,202 ft AEG
1st trip
Partners partners
shelby147
This trip was my thirtieth and thirty-first hike entailing Grand Canyon's Tanner Trail.
By far, both the backpack in and out were the most difficult I've ever, quite possibly will ever, have done of this trail. : rambo :
  4 archives
Oct 14 2022
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female
 Joined Mar 26 2022
 Flagstaff, AZ
Beamer TrailNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Oct 14 2022
shelby147Triplogs 119
Backpack45.00 Miles 8,000 AEG
Backpack45.00 Miles3 Days         
8,000 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
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I originally got this permit for a Salt-Tanner trip but couldn't find a ride after some last-minute changes. Instead I went in and out Tanner, which was still nice.

Day 1: Met lots of folks on their ways down Tanner. The camps in the lower Supai and above the Redwall are nice but I've never taken the time to stay in one. I had a quick break at Tanner beach before continuing onto Beamer.

The river was very low and new sandbars were showing. I spent a nice hour playing in the water below Palisades and waiting out the heat of the day. Nevertheless, I was still hot climbing onto the Tapeats around 3:30pm (I swear, 3pm is the hottest part of the day for me! But the park only emphasizes 10-2).

After a couple of miles shade from Temple/ Chuar buttes fell over the Beamer trail and I felt better. As the sun was setting I saw it glint off the desert view tower. It's fun looking back at how far you've come in just one day. I reached the beach below the confluence just before I would have needed my headlamp. My company was friendly and we chatted a bit about canyon routes and watched the stars.

Day 2: I hiked to the viewpoint above the confluence early and watched the "alpenglow" on the buttes/ rim opposite. After a while I continued upstream - after all, I still had a permit for the salt trail. I found the Beamer cabin (*cough* something's waiting for a Brooks inside). There was a decent bootpath for a few miles, probably helped by all the USGS research folks. There was a lot of debris and trash from recent flashing upstream. I found tracks that look like mountain lion, which is surprising because I didn't know they got down to the river.

I returned and packed up my camp around 11. A raven had attacked my rat sack - it didn't get food but it ripped my ziplocks and left me with a real mess. Beamer was hot again but there were shady spots in the ravines. It's all well and good where you're walking above the river and have a nice breeze, but when you turn into the drainages the direct angle of the sun fries you. I overdid things a little and ended up retching after one of the bigger ravines. I also drank water much faster than usual. I was happy to return to my sandbar below Palisades. Then I made the quick hike back to Tanner just before dark. Tanner beach was crowded.... I suspect some parties were meant to be in Cardenas but overlooked that detail on their maps.

Day 3: I started up Tanner trail just after sunrise. After the previous two days, I didn't want to be caught in the heat again. I was in the Muav by the time the sun hit me. I saw several runners heading down to do Escalante, which didn't seem the safest in that weather or with that relatively late start (I'd also start at New Hance if pushing Escalante). I took my sweet time once above the redwall. The climb through the Coconino sucked - big surprise.

I need to stop taking all my favorite snacks into the canyon and expecting to still be able to eat them on the drive home. I was craving more popcorn but stuck with regular ol nuts :(
 
Sep 11 2022
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 Guides 59
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male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Still Spring to Lipan Point, AZ 
Still Spring to Lipan Point, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Sep 11 2022
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Backpack17.57 Miles 5,436 AEG
Backpack17.57 Miles
5,436 ft AEG
 
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GPS was kind of wonky on our third day.
  6 archives
Sep 09 2022
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 Guides 59
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male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Lipan Point to Still Spring, AZ 
Lipan Point to Still Spring, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Sep 09 2022
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Backpack15.67 Miles 1,779 AEG
Backpack15.67 Miles   7 Hrs   31 Mns   2.36 mph
1,779 ft AEG
 
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At Matthew & Julian Thank you!
  5 archives
Apr 09 2022
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 Guides 59
 Routes 1,100
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 Triplogs 1,290

male
 Joined Jan 01 2023
 Arizona
Butte Fault - Day Four, AZ 
Butte Fault - Day Four, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Apr 09 2022
pseudalpineTriplogs 1,290
Backpack12.98 Miles 1,694 AEG
Backpack12.98 Miles   10 Hrs   55 Mns   2.16 mph
1,694 ft AEG
 
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Fourth day backpack with an awesome side trip to Carbon Butte, then over to Still Spring for clear water source, downstream Lava Canyon, packraft across above Lava Canyon Rapids and then south on the Beamer Trail to Tanner beach.
  5 archives
May 08 2021
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 Guides 37
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43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Carbon ButteNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar May 08 2021
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Backpack34.00 Miles 7,628 AEG
Backpack34.00 Miles2 Days         
7,628 ft AEG
 
1st trip
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After a slow start, its shaping up to be a Grand spring after all. Carbon Butte came up on my radar when I did Chuar Butte in the fall. From Carbon Canyon, Carbon Butte is nearly indistinguishable and rather unremarkable when compared to its counterparts in the area like Chuar and Temple Buttes. However, its more eye catching from the saddle of Chuar where I first spotted it and I have been intrigued by the off the beaten path butte since the last time I passed through the area, so I decided to give it a go. I thought I had scouted the line to the summit on my last visit and was told it was pretty straight forward, so I felt confident in reaching the summit, but not as easy with the long approach.

We stepped off on Tanner Trail around 4:30 a.m and then it was a pretty standard hike to the Palisades area and our crossing above Lava Rapids. The crossing there always gets my attention, but it seems to be getting easier each time. It was my partners first time in a packraft and his first time on the Colorado River obviously, but he did great, although, he left the crossing with some adrenaline. We cached our overnight supplies before we crossed the river and therefore committed ourselves to reaching the summit of Carbon and making it back down and across the Colorado before nightfall. After filtering five liters of water, we set off towards Carbon Butte. We cruised along the Butte Fault Route and over to Carbon, where we then headed up canyon after leaving behind our rafts.

The hike up Carbon Canyon was warm at times, but the geology was terrific and mindboggling as usual. We left Carbon Canyon proper for a small side drainage below Carbon Butte. Some light scrambling in this drainage brought us to the first steep ridgeline that appeared to gain Carbon´s north saddle and class three approach to its summit. The ridgeline was steep and we ended up scrambling a little near the top, but it "went" and we were on the summit in short time with minimal effort by Canyon standards. We signed the register quickly and headed right back down, as we wanted to ensure we would be reunited with our overnight supplies before nightfall. We found a better descent than the our ascent route and cruised back down to our side drainage with little effort. I would recommend the "painted" and semi obvious steep ridgeline for any future ascents and descents of Carbon Butte.

We generally made good time in getting back to our rafts and lucked out with a shaded descent of the Carbon Narrows. Five liters of water for the two of us proved to be just enough and we found ourselves pretty parched by the time we reached the river. We crossed far more down stream than my last crossing here and it paid off, as we avoided the powerful eddy that was seemingly trying to push us up into the rapids created by Carbon Creek last time. The float back to our crossing above Lava Rapids was pleasant as usual. We cowboy camped near the river and spent the night envious of the boaters celebrating and cooking tasty meals on the other side.

We woke up at 3:15 on Sunday and were headed back to the rim shortly after 4 a.m. We did not break any speed records on the way out, but we had a solid rest and eating plan in place that we followed, which prevented major energy collapses or hitting of the proverbial wall on the hike out.

Final Notes:

I would basically sum this trip up as a five star adventure for a two star summit. Carbon Butte proved to be a summit only a mother could love, but its location and setting can't be beat and we enjoyed the process. Carbon's first recorded ascent was in June of 1963 by Buchart and Springorum. Its on adventures like these that I feel closest to the spirit of Buchart and his feats. I like to think that we were drawn to this summit for many of the same reasons that he was and it satisfies me on a personal level. At 17.5 miles to the summit, I think this may be my new longest single day push to a summit to date. I am already excited for a return to this area and an attempt at Temple Butte. This was my 41st Grand Canyon. It was my partners third Grand Canyon summit. He has now done Zoraster, Hayden and Carbon with me, I can't think of a better first three summits.
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  3 archives
Nov 21 2020
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 Guides 4
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55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Tanner Trail to the LCR Confluence, AZ 
Tanner Trail to the LCR Confluence, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Nov 21 2020
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack29.25 Miles 7,645 AEG
Backpack29.25 Miles3 Days         
7,645 ft AEG
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1st trip
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John9L
I got a last minute invite to join John, Maggie, and Tasha for 3 days on Tanner, Beamer and LCR. Of course I was all in and grabbed the packraft. The hike down Tanner was smooth and then over to Comanche Creek for camp on the first night. Nice spot to spend the first night and get ready for day hike to the LCR.

Next day we grabbed our day packs and hiked the Beamer Trail towards the LCR. It's about 8 miles one way with some tough sections of trail as it crosses several drainage's. So it took fair amount of time and energy to make the LCR which was awesome blue when we arrived. Upon arriving John struck conversation with some boaters who were awesome and offered them a ride back to our camp. They offered me a ride but I didn't haul the packraft all the way down there for nothing. They even told me that if I dumped they would pull me out and grab my boat. Fortunately that didn't happen but I did go through some rough water that I originally planned to portage. I'll echo what John said that it was great to run this section of river together and it will be difficult to top the experience!

Back at camp we all enjoyed the another evening with some extra fun experiences to talk about. Next morning we packed up and headed up for the hike out. Pretty straight forward hike from Comanche back to Tanner Trail and then the long slog back to Lipan Point. A couple of breaks on the way up on top of the Redwall and then again right before the last climb. Made it out around 3pm tired but with another great trip in the books!!
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  3 archives
Nov 21 2020
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male
 Joined Mar 12 2004
 Scottsdale, AZ
Tanner Trail to the LCR Confluence, AZ 
Tanner Trail to the LCR Confluence, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Nov 21 2020
John9LTriplogs 1,647
Backpack29.25 Miles 7,645 AEG
Backpack29.25 Miles3 Days         
7,645 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Linked   linked  
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BiFrost
With my informal goal to hike all of the named trails in the Grand Canyon, Beamer was on the list. I also wanted to see the LCR Confluence before any pipe dreams of a tram become a reality. I planned this about six weeks out with my friend Maggie. Everything was dependent on relatively dry weather. We weren’t going if the LCR was brown. Luckily the weather cooperated and we worked out the details in the weeks leading up to the trip. One of our friends had to bail last minute so I invited Karl. He was excited to join us and brought along his packraft for extra fun.

We would spend three magical days in the Canyon where we spent both nights at Comanche Creek. We day hiked to the LCR Confluence on day 2 and got lucky meeting some rafters that offered to ferry us back to camp. We jumped at the chance and had the trip of a lifetime riding back! It was exhilarating and Karl followed along in his packraft and really earned his wings as his hit some aggressive water in his raft. I’ll savor this trip for a long time.

November 21 - Saturday
We left Karl’s place around 5:45am on Saturday morning and made the long drive to the south rim. We planned on buying a yearly pass at the gate but were told we couldn’t. The computers were down and we’re getting in for free. From there we drove to Lipan Point and began hiking around 10am. The Tanner Trail is a beastly trail. It starts off with 1,800ft drop over 1.3 miles. We worked our way down and dreaded the hike out two days later. Once at the bottom its relatively easy going as the trails wraps around a basin and then slightly climbs along Cardenas Butte. We arrived at the top of the Redwall and took a short break and admired the viewpoint. We could see our camp and the corridor leading to the LCR. We had a lot of hiking ahead of us.

The drop through the Redwall went well. The trail is steep but in good shape. With careful footing we got down and continued down the trail which continues a long descent towards the river. These last few miles took a toll on us. We were ready for a break when we arrived at Tanner Rapid. We hung out to the right on a sandy area just above the river. The Colorado River was cold and clear. It was going to be easy to filter. After a bit, we packed up and headed the last 1.5 miles to Comanche Creek. This section was harder than I anticipated as it wraps around a cliff band overlooking the river. With careful footing we got across and then completed the final section to Comanche Creek where we found a good campsite. We would set up camp and then settle in with dinner. We all turned in early with a big day ahead of us.

November 22 – Sunday
We started our morning with breakfast and filtering water and were on trail around 8:30am. The first two miles as you hike along the river. You then climb up roughly 400ft and begin the long traverse above the Tapeats. The going is a mix of good trail with some stretches right on the edge. You wind in and out of drainages that suck up time and energy. With a lot of effort we passed the final turn and could see the magical blue water.

We would walk up on the Confluence and could see some boaters on the other side. We got down there and chatted it up with them. After a few minutes they offered us a ride back and we jumped at the chance. We would only have another 20 minutes but we couldn't pass up the boat ride. We scrambled to take pics and explore the area. Karl inflated his packraft and played around in the LCR. After a bit the three of us crossed to the island and were picked up by the boaters and we were on our way. Karl fell in behind us.

The ride down the river was a total thrill! This was my first time in a boat like this and it was so much fun. The rapids are mild in this stretch and it was a good way to experience the Canyon from the river. We would float 5.5 miles and it took just over an hour. It was one of the funnest experiences of my life. And somehow Karl kept pace with us. He did amazing and even ran some riffles in his packraft. All of us had a great time and were sad to say goodbye to our new friends. They dropped us off a quarter mile from camp. We spent the rest of the day relaxing and then settled in for our last evening.

November 23 – Monday
We woke early and packed up and were on trail around 7:30am. The first mile and a half back to Tanner took some work as we traversed our way back. Once on Tanner we started the long ascent. We took our time as we climbed and climbed. With a lot effort we topped out above the Redwall and took a break. From there it's a few easy miles as you wrap around to the final climb. We took another break and then it was the long slow typical grind out of the Canyon. We topped out and then packed up and headed out back to Phoenix. Another wonderful trip in the books!
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Campsite
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Nov 07 2020
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38 male
 Joined Mar 07 2009
 Colorado Springs
Tanner TrailNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 07 2020
ultrazonaTriplogs 204
Hiking7.70 Miles 4,597 AEG
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4,597 ft AEG
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Oct 16 2020
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43 male
 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Chuar ButteNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Hike & Climb avatar Oct 16 2020
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Hike & Climb39.50 Miles 10,749 AEG
Hike & Climb39.50 Miles
10,749 ft AEG
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seanpeters
After 20 plus years of scrambling around the Grand Canyon, there was only one summit left on Seans’s to do list, Chuar Butte. I’ll be honest, it was not really on my radar, but it did not take much to sell me on the massive summit in the eastern Grand Canyon. We had permits for this trip back in the spring, but Covid cancelled those plans, which made this attempt and summit all the more fulfilling for us. Carlos joined us as well, as he was also on the original permit.

We started our mini expedition from Lipan Point and utilized the Tanner Trail to descend to the river. We got a very late start by Canyon standards, as Sean and I drove from Phoenix that morning. Nevertheless, we were across the river and topped off on water for the next day and a half by 3:00 p.m. Carrying six liters of water a piece and our pack rafts we lumbered the three miles or so to our camp at Carbon Canyon. Once at camp, it was the usual camp chores and then a very early bedtime for all of us.

We set off from camp at 4:50 in the morning on the second day. Luckily, the lack of light was not an issue for our approach, as one can’t really go wrong following the Butte Fault Route there. Upon reaching the saddle of Chuar and Temple, we utilized the steep ridge to our south to gain the pesky Supai. Insider tip: Traverse as high and as close to the coconino cliffs of Chuar, for a more pleasant traverse. After gaining the Supai, we made the semi tedious traverse to the gully that would reveal the “summit” of Chuar. I say summit in quotations, because once you top out from the gulley, you have close to another mile of hiking to reach the high point of Chuar on its far western end. I am sure I have said this before about other summits, but Chuar may offer some of the best views of the Canyon there are to be had. Highlighted by some dramatic views of the confluence and the geological wonderland that is the great fault. Descending Chuar was not too bad and we cleaned up our approach route pretty nicely on the way back, which led to a generally more pleasant walking experience.

We were back to camp just before four and quickly back down to the CO river sometime around five, where our armada of packrafts departed shortly after. We floated to the point where we had put in the other day and then backpacked up trail another half mile or so to are pretty nicely developed campsite along Tanner just below the rapids.

The hike out on day three was pretty standard. I felt pretty good about getting to the rim just after noon, but that feeling quickly dissipated after learning Carlos and Sean had already been there an hour. That last mile to the rim just destroyed me. I was crashed on energy, the muscles were sore and I had reduced my hike to one switchback at a time by that point. But alas that is how the hike out goes at times in the Canyon. This was my 38th Grand Canyon summit.
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Nov 21 2018
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55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Lava-Carbon Canyons - Juno Temple, AZ 
Lava-Carbon Canyons - Juno Temple, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Nov 21 2018
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack43.50 Miles 12,200 AEG
Backpack43.50 Miles5 Days         
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GrottoGirl
slowandsteady
Great trip in the Grand Canyon! Belinda offered up Lava and Carbon Canyons with a side of packraft for Thanksgiving and we couldn’t refuse. Our group of 7 hiked in Tanner Trailhead heading down Tanner Trail and eventually the Beamer Trail. The goal on day 1 was to hike up the Beamer a few miles which we did camping around Comanche Creek.

Day 2 the group got a leisurely start since the goal was to packraft across the Colorado in the morning to access Lava Canyon. Near Palisades Creek we arrived at the crossing and scouted for the best launch spot before inflating the rafts and getting all the gear ready. The weather was perfect despite threat of rain that day and the crossing went smoothly. Once on the Lava side we packed everything up and hiked up Lava Canyon to find a camp spot. Eventually we found a spot up canyon about 3 miles from the river that we would spend the next two nights. However, the rain forecast turned out to be correct with 40% chance and it rained for several hours in the afternoon before clearing up for dinner.

Day 3 was reserved for day hiking the area of Lava Canyon. Several attractions in the area included Hartman Natural Bridge and some ruins. However, I decided to attempt Juno Temple and found one other interested in our group Jonathan willing to check it out. I didn’t have a ton on data on the route but it sounded fairly straight forward and @friendofThundergod had summited the temple recently. We relied on route finding to get around a pour off and then contoured back into canyon below the redwall. We then stayed in the main canyon drainage until just below the upper redwall break with the last 50 feet the only difficult part. I know there are route descriptions which I didn’t read before hand so curious if we were anywhere close to that route or are there multiple ways. Either way we made the saddle just below Juno and continued up through the Supai navigating some pretty obvious breaks to the summit. We enjoyed the views on top and had some lunch before heading back down. Now knowing the route the return trip was much easier and we made it back to camp quickly.

Day 4 the plan was to hike the Carbon Canyon narrows and packraft some of the Colorado. From camp we hiked directly over a steep ridge that separated Lava and Carbon Canyons which was roughly part of the old Butte Fault Route. The group had a lot of fun hiking down Carbon Canyon with easy terrain before the narrows. At the mouth of the narrows we took snack break before continuing. Once in the narrows it was very scenic and worth the trip however, we were carrying full backpacks so that made the pour offs and other canyon obstacles a bit more difficult. After taking our time and pictures in Carbon narrows we arrived at the beach on the Colorado.

We inflated rafts and geared up for the float. From Carbon we launched and floated down to Lava Canyon just above Lava Canyon Rapids which we all portage around before getting back in. From there it was a fun float down to Comanche another 2 miles on the water. There was a rapids at Comanche which is smaller and not marked on the maps but several of us decided to drop the packs and run the rapid a few times for practice. It was a fun intro getting a feel for some whitewater without doing any of the really big stuff. After that we settled into camp another night at Comanche Creek.

Day 5 was just about hiking out and back to Tanner Trailhead. With all the fun of the four previous days it was hard to leave the canyon. But the weather was perfect despite cold on the rim at about 38 degrees when we arrived. Another great trip…thanks Belinda for the Thanksgiving offering!!
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Oct 08 2018
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 Joined Jan 21 2013
 AZ
Juno TempleNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Oct 08 2018
FOTGTriplogs 1,052
Backpack60.00 Miles 15,400 AEG
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I had loosely been planning a backpacking trip into this area since I got my first taste of the Butte Fault Route last spring. Initially, I had a seven day permit and the plan was to leave from Nankoweap Trailhead, travel along the Butte Fault Route and hopefully make it as far as Hartman Land Bridge and then return the way I came. However, I found out on September 31 that the Nankoweap Trailhead was still closed from the fire in the area and I would have to change my plans. I decided to bank a day on my permit, cut it down to six days and enter the Chuar use area from the Beamer Trail by packrafting across at the mouth of Palisades and Lava Canyon, which is the crossing used for those completing the Horsethief Route. My packrafting experience was non-existent and I had to order it the night that I had to alter my trip, but I figured if the crossing was too intimidating, I had an extra day built into my schedule and I could was as long as one day for a ride across if need be.

Day 1:

I got a real late from the Tanner Trailhead, but that was by design. I knew the weather was kind of nasty and rushing up there to hike all morning in the rain and then sit in a tent during the rain did not appeal to me. As a result, I did not start hiking until nearly 11 a.m. I still dealt with about 2-3 hours of sporadic rainfall, but nothing overly drenching. The hike down was a bit relentless when carrying a six day pack plus a packraft, paddles and a life jacket, but the section along the river offered a little reprieve. I arrived at my crossing and where I was going to camp for the night, just before it was about to get dark. I was immediately offered a ride across by a very friendly and welcoming commercial boating trip (maybe AZRA). I took the ride with no shame and kept the packraft rolled up. They were a little surprised to see that I had a life jacket when they got across the river. I sheepishly admitted I had a packraft too, but a ride across from them seemed a lot more appealing. The boaters treated me too good. They fed me barbecue chicken for dinner, let me top of my water, gave me "groover" rights and then fed me some nice breakfast sausage in the morning. Their hospitality was so much, I almost felt like I was somehow cheating.

Day 2:

After breakfast and after the boaters pushed off, I set off for my first objective of the day, Lava Butte. I used beta from the Obscure Grand Canyon Summits book and the summit was pretty straightforward. However, some might find the traverse to the southwest corner a little sketchy in spots. There is certainly some exposure along there and its a little steep and loose. The summit offered some great views of an area of the Grand Canyon that is geologically unique and fascinating. However, the highlight may have been doing the first third of the summit climb with a large bighorn sheep, who stayed just above me on the ridgeline as we climbed in the same direction. After Lava, it was on to the Carbon Canyon narrows and then Chuar Lava Hill.

The narrows are a worthy detour if in the area and there is an actually a trail in generally good condition between Lava and Carbon Canyons. After checking out the narrows, I turned around and headed back up canyon to the area where I would scramble out to summit Chuar Lava Hill. C.L.H. was a pretty straightforward summit as well. There is a steep loose area to navigate to reach the final ridgeline of summit, but other than that it is a pretty easy summit by Canyon standards. Camp chores later that day were compounded greatly by the muddy Colorado River. I thought I resolved the problem when I found some clear pools of water near the rapids at the mouth of Lava Canyon, but after filtering three liters of it, I realized it was all very salty tasting. I then remembered someone noting that water at the mouth of Lava tends to be salty in their blog they wrote about completing the Horsethief Route. I was not overly annoyed about dumping out a couple liters of water, but I was annoyed about the 1.5 liters of hard earned water that I had wasted when I mixed a liter of the salt water into my bladder. I ended up filtering only enough water to cook and drink sparingly after that because I had grown so frustrated with the process. I then let three liters of river water set overnight near my campsite and filtered the much clearer water in the morning. I knew three liters was enough to eat breakfast and get up to the perennial section of Lava Creek.

Day 3:

I started off day three by discovering that all of my tracks were gone on Route Scout and the app had completely reset on me. I almost accepted defeat and stayed in the area to practice pack rafting and exploring some things closer to the river, but a voice in my head said, "you have a map, a compass and several definitive landmarks, if you are not able to navigate Lava Creek without a GPS then you probably don't belong out here," nevertheless, I pushed on. It really was not that bad without a GPS, my only concern was taking a feeder canyon on accident, but once the water started flowing, it was pretty easy to determine I was in Lava Creek/Canyon. The hardest part was just not knowing how many miles I had traveled and if I would recognize the area where I wanted to camp and the starting point for a Juno attempt. Although I should note, that I told myself there would be no way that I would be attempting Juno or the redwall break up to Juno without a GPS track. As it turned out, I had some great written directions from a Grand Canyon vet and my next two days would turn out perfectly in upper Lava. I had no problem recognizing the area where I would be camping and making my day trips up to Hartman Land Bridge and "potentially" Juno. After filtering some water at the near by spring, I left my pack under a large overhang and headed up canyon for Hartman. It was a nearly three mile boulder hop up canyon, but the going was never overly difficult. There was also ample water in upper Lava as well and a dripping spring along the way. My first glimpse of the large land bridge was very exciting, however, it also lead to a small moment of defeat, as I realized I had a pretty dicey little scramble to reach the actual bridge. The scramble ended up not being as bad as it initially looked and I was standing under the land bridge in no time. The area was absolutely amazing and almost had a spiritual feel to it. The sky was moody and the lighting was bad, so no amazing pictures, but I still stayed up there for nearly an hour. I simply felt no need to rush away from this spot and kind of just soaked in the solitude of the area and marveled at the sense of remoteness and detachment from the world I was feeling right there. The hike back to camp went quick and before I knew it I was warming up food under a nice overhang shielded from a steady drizzle, as the last slivers of daylight disappeared from the high canyon walls around me. I binge read several pages of, The Man Who Walked Through Time and then went to bed.

Day 4:

Day four would be my Unkar Pass, Juno attempt. I got a relatively early start and was heading off for the off trail bushwhack to the saddle by 7:30 a.m. The climb to the saddle and through the redwall went off without a hitch. I did not have an electronic route to follow, but I did have some very detailed, spot on written directions to reference. Everything matched up and fell into place as I slowly made my way to the saddle and honestly I was shocked with how easy it went. From the saddle it was a relatively quick scurry up to the summit of Juno. The summit is protected by cliffs of sandstone, but there is an obvious break that will take you through the cliff bands with relative ease and little real climbing. The summit was gloomy, but I still thoroughly enjoyed the moment. I also had to do the dreaded and checked in with the real world too, as one of the reasons I was running behind on Monday was because of a nasty ear infection on Cup that I wanted to check on and I used the moment of service to download my route to R.S. again. No issues with it the rest of the weekend. It took a couple double takes climbing down from Juno and then I over shot my first layer of muav in the redwall break and cliffed out, but overall the descent back to camp was smooth. I already had my pack packed, so after a little refueling I was on my way back down Lava to the Colorado River.

The plan was to cross the Colorado that night and hike out Friday. I had an extra day in the area, but I had seen what I had wanted to see and the extra day was really only for if I was not feeling good about crossing the river and had to wait for a boat ride. Speaking of feeling good about crossing the river, I am not sure if I felt that good about the crossing when I reached the Colorado. I quickly said to myself, "yup not happening," I'll get a ride from the "chubbers" in the morning, or some other boat crew. However, honestly I did not want that. I did not want to end such an amazing backpack with another cushy ferry ride across the Colorado. I didn't carry a pack raft, paddles and life jacket 12 miles because they looked cool. I came to cross the Colorado in a packraft and that was what I was going to do. Then without even really thinking much about the crossing itself, I just started prepping my raft. I did not allow any doubting thoughts to enter my head, I knew the crossing was good from the boaters and I knew the only thing that would stop me from crossing was my own mind. I simply just started setting up the raft and getting ready to cross only thinking of positive outcomes and reaching the shore on the other side. I didn't even prep my pack, I just sat it in the raft, zipped Kyle's PLB in my rain coat pocket and then nudged the nose in the water a little, where I then sat with the pack and took some practice paddles and made sure they were facing the right way. Then with some major nerves flowing, I shoved the paddles into the mud and nudged myself out to the point where I was fully floating and no longer touching the bank. I now knew it was go time. From that point on, I paddled like my life depended on it (I think technically my life did depend on it). I knew the first half would be the toughest part, there was a clear current visible from shore and it was quick and strong. The first thing I noticed when I hit that current was just how powerless I was against it. My plan A landing site very quickly became an after thought and I was on to plan B further down stream on a little chunk of sand jutting out from the weeds. Most of the short paddle is honestly a blur, but I do remember that as quickly as my mind said there is no way I am going to make it to that shore before the rapids, I was saying oh my God, I am almost there and I was coasting in much slower water to shore. The landing spot could not have been worse and I had to wade in the water along the shore until I got to a temporary sand bar upstream a ways. After reveling in my victory for a minute, I made the poor decision of thinking I could just blast my way through the vegetation along the shore. I probably toiled in there for 15 minutes before actually breaking through and making it up the embankment. It was absolutely diabolical in those trees and tall grasses along that river's shore. I had a ton of adrenaline pumping after my "epic" crossing, but it was quickly tapered by the bushwhack through the jungle and by the fact that the rain had picked up with some intensity. I would set up my tent and not leave it for the rest of the night, apart from sticking my arms out to cook.

Day 5:

Slept in hoping for some sun, but it never came. The hike out seemed like a slog at times. My pack felt as heavy as day one, due to everything being wet and carrying two days worth of extra food. The temperature was nearly perfect though and the views were superb with the dramatic clouds dominating the sky. Rain threatened all day, but I never had to put my rain jacket on.

Final Thoughts

Having the ability to cross the Colorado River really opens up the Canyon for me. The possibilities are really endless for me now and I am already brainstorming another excursion into this area. Although, not the feat of the century, going a couple of days without a G.P.S. was a nice confidence booster and reaffirmed some feelings of confidence and a certain understanding of the Canyon that I have developed over the last couple of years.

Thank you to @sirena and Jamie C. for the inspiration and beta for that area and thanks @hippy for giving me the best advice, "cinch up your life vest when you cross the river."

 Fauna
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  4 archives
May 02 2017
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 Guides 8
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39 female
 Joined Dec 02 2009
 Grand Canyon
Salt-Tanner, AZ 
Salt-Tanner, AZ
 
Backpack avatar May 02 2017
HippyTriplogs 662
Backpack30.00 Miles
Backpack30.00 Miles5 Days         
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1st trip
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Took a leisurely backpack between working seasons at the Canyon.

Had our former coworker Ryan drop us off at Salt trailhead, we began our scramble down this historic route around noon on May 2nd...

It was already warm. Oh well.
The first section was definitely the steepest and I stopped at one point and was reminded of a section of Marble Canyon i.hiked with Jamie once... "We go where?!"

It looks pretty intimidating those first few "switchbacks" but it's a lot easier than it looks.

There was apparently a "climbing" spot.
Jamie suggested we hand down packs so we did and then I monkeyed down the "hard part"...
That climb section isn't difficult at all even with a large pack, the climb is protected and surrounded by large blocky boulders full of hand and footholds.

There was an old frayed rope there. If anyone is hiking out/up salt maybe you can haul that out the last half mile or whatever?
It was day one for us so...yeah, sorry I couldn't grab it.

But yeah, certain folks but a stress on the climby spot and it gave me undue stress even though I knew I could handle anything thrown my way...but it wasn't scary or nerve wracking or anything like that.

In fact, if you look at it from above...there is clearly a "staircase" awaiting your boots! People, I swear...

The rest of the trail is very straightforward,well loved and worn in. A few rockslides here and there near the redwall but nothing too intense.

In fact, the redwall break was my favorite part! It was fun and involved hands a f ew times, maybe just because I'm short.

We camped at the base of Salt on the helipad.
The creek water coming down from. The redwall is VERY salty tasting and I think even with treating and boiling my stomach is against its use in the future. Tea, coffee, food, Crystal light mix.... everything will taste incredibly salty and the thickness is like milk! Drink the LCR instead that's what the fish hatchery crew does...

Route to confluence from salt was easy "just go that way -- :next: "

I recommend crossing the river above the travertine dams, you'll know em when you see em. I think Chumley triplog from way back when had a great photo of em.

We opted to cross walking atop or rather just a behind the top of the travertine dams...I don't know why.
Those of you who know me know I'm quite petite and there were a few times the water was up to my hips! Whoa!
It actually felt very nice thanks to the day's heat but after my accidentally swim in Granite Falls Rapid back in December I was still a bit "mehr" regarding water...the water was swifter in the LCR toward river left, the further we crossed the faster it swept us.

So crossing further above the dams might be better.


I got to play in quicksand!!! First time ever... hilarious fun.

Confluence was packed with "river runners"... Big group on a big pontoon boat I forget which company but took photos. They were quiet and waved and we're respectful.
Of course Jamie and I were on the other side of the river so...maybe we couldn't hear them ;).

We apparently walked right above/under/past Beamers Cabin...how the heck did we manage that?! Oh well...

Took my first step into Beamer Trail and we camped about half a mile down along the Colorado River. Awesome campsite! Much tastier green Colorado River water!


Third day headed down Beamer and camped at Palisades I think it was called and explored some gorgeous mudflats...gotta ask Wayne about those...why are they there?! And "found" the old mine and of course went right up almost into it.
It's a sensitive bat habitat just like all the others now. But still wet and some seepage around the tailings piles.

Beamer Trail is exactly how I always imagined it to be. Long, winding, hot but with Gorgeous views of everything! We could even see snow on the North Rim!

The entirety of Beamer we had company...down on the river maybe 1000ft below us?
Some sort of science river trip with a small motor boat that kept zipping upriver and Down again. Our third night the boats crew was going from camp to camp in the dark...collecting nocturnal specimen maybe?? It amused us and was akin to watching a sitcom on TV haha

Fourth was our shortest day I think, a whopping three miles to Tanner Beach!

Jamie explored up Canyon a bit and found the pouroff where the old man fell and died and the one young boy built a raft a lived...
About a quarter mile away Jamie said he found a Tapeats break that took him right to Tanner Trail...hmmm...

We met a couple of guys who may have been illegally camped at Tanner Beach and boasted their "100 miles in 7 days" while I boasted "I've been napping on this beach since noon" haha

The two guys wanted to hike out wit us at 3am...so we slept in.
Started hiking out on May 6th (day 5) at 4am...it was 84° at the beach.

3 hours later at the Redwall it was 96°...
We reached Lipan point at 10:30 on the dot and it was a cool 75°. Ah, perfect.

The sun really beat me up that time...I need to spend more time IN the Canyon and less time gallivanting on the rims and summit apparently ;)
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Apr 24 2015
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35 female
 Joined Oct 23 2014
 Phoenix, AZ
Tanner - Beamer - Salt Trails, AZ 
Tanner - Beamer - Salt Trails, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Apr 24 2015
mandolynTriplogs 1
Backpack27.00 Miles 4,597 AEG
Backpack27.00 Miles3 Days         
4,597 ft AEG
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1st trip
Partners none no partners
Friday: Arose at 5:00am and left one car at the Salt Trail head, and drove the other to Lipan point to start our decent down Tanner Trail. We left the TH at 8:00am and arrived at Tanner beach at 12:30 pm. It was threatening rain all day, but we were only spit on a little bit. The wild flowers were absolutely gorgeous all the way down. Many of the cacti were in bloom. We ate lunch at Tanner Beach. We had originally intended to camp at Tanner, but we were feeling good and it was not late, so we decided to start the trek down Beamer Trail. We left at 2:00pm and arrived at Lava Rapids sometime around 4ish? I was not too happy at that point because there was some sand walking involved. ](*,) We decided to make camp, estimating that we made it a little past half way down the Beamer Trail.

Saturday: Left camp around 8:00am and continued along Beamer Trail. That trail is one of the prettiest trails I have ever hiked. It was view on view on view and we could not have loved it more. We got to the confluence at 10:30 and were happy to find that it was BLUE! The colorado was a lovely green, so I was hoping the LCR was blue. We got down to the confluence, quickly de-clothed and jumped in. At the same time, a rafting photo tour showed up, so they got some free models for their pics. :) We had lunch at the confluence and tanked up on water, since this was our last clean water source. We headed down the trail at 1:30. I am not sure what time we arrived, but it was a very long day. We travelled on the east side of the river for a ways and it had a trail, but then it got bushwacky and we should have moved to the other side. Eventually, we did, and made better time. Eventually you cross again, go through some reeds, and arrive at the bottom of Salt Trail! Last time I was there, it looked like Willy Wonka's chocolate river. So it was much better to see it a lovely blue. We thought it may be brown when we woke because there was a chance of rain, but the blue held through morning.

Sunday: We left camp at 7:40am. Two of the members had done Salt Trail before. This helped us not veer off track so much, as we knew what we were looking for. We took about four solid breaks, said many cuss words, but finally made it out at 11:25, beating our goal of 11:30. From there it was a short walk back up to the truck, our cooler, and some flip flops. We popped over to the GC to get our other truck and made it home to PHX by 6:30.

All in all, one of the most beautiful trips I have done so far.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Substantial
Many wildflower. Most prickly pear were in bloom, tons of yellow blossoms, some oranges, blues and purples.
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  1 archive
Feb 04 2015
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 Guides 1
 Routes 6
 Photos 10
 Triplogs 16

71 male
 Joined Dec 28 2009
 Oro Valley, AZ
Beamer TrailNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Feb 04 2015
kwpapkeTriplogs 16
Backpack12.00 Miles 1,000 AEG
Backpack12.00 Miles   8 Hrs      1.50 mph
1,000 ft AEG30 LBS Pack
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
Took the Tanner down on Monday afternoon, camped at the beach that night. The Colorado was the color of chocolate milk from all the recent rains. According to a couple of guys that came from the Little Colorado confluence, that river was the same color instead of the azure blue I was hoping for.

Set off on the Beamer the next morning, but it was slower going than I planned for - all those cuts into the side washes slow a guy down. Ended up turning around about 2 miles from the confluence, as I was getting low on water due to the slow pace. Pulled into Lava Rapids around 4PM.

Hiked up to the Tanner campsite on Cardena Butte the next day - highly recommend the scenery, though it was a little breezy.

Hiked out the rest of the way to the trailhead the next morning - out by 10AM. The last mile or so on Tanner was VERY icy - crampons would have been nice...

Not a big fan of the Beamer. There's what, like 20 washes to cut in and out on and they got a little old after a while. Nice view of the rafters going down the river though - kind of feel like you are on an airplane ride through the canyon when you're up on the Palisade wall.
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Youtube channel for gear testing: https://www.youtube.com/c/KurtPapke
 
Nov 09 2014
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 Routes 29
 Photos 1,548
 Triplogs 1,802

49 male
 Joined Jan 25 2009
 Phoenix, AZ
Tanner TrailNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Backpack avatar Nov 09 2014
Dave1Triplogs 1,802
Backpack37.00 Miles 8,100 AEG
Backpack37.00 Miles2 Days         
8,100 ft AEG
 no routes
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
Set off down Tanner Trail at about sunrise. About 1/2 mile down I realized my camera wasn't working so I went back up to my car to get my cell phone. Followed Tanner down to the Beamer junction and then took Beamer east until I was across from the appropriate creek I needed to access. Crossed the Colorado by packraft and then followed a side canyon up to Juno Ruins. Got to the ruins at about sunset so I had just a short time to look around and snap some crappy cell phone pics. I went back down canyon in the dark and then found a nice campsite for the night. It was a windy night with a near full moon, was glad I brought a bivy sack to block the wind and light. Crossed the Colorado back to Beamer the next morning. The current was strong here and I had to paddle furiously to avoid being pulled down into a small rapid.

Ran into Jim H. on the way up Tanner. I almost fell over when he said Tanner wasn't that steep :o

7 liters
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Apr 21 2014
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 Guides 4
 Routes 491
 Photos 10,890
 Triplogs 1,257

55 male
 Joined Nov 20 2012
 Phoenix, AZ
Salt-LCR-Beamer-Tanner Trail, AZ 
Salt-LCR-Beamer-Tanner Trail, AZ
 
Backpack avatar Apr 21 2014
BiFrostTriplogs 1,257
Backpack31.04 Miles 8,670 AEG
Backpack31.04 Miles3 Days         
8,670 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Some old hiking friends were visiting from Finland and wanted to show them the Grand Canyon that most tourists don't see so the Salt Trail was good choice. We did the trip as thru hike starting at the Salt Trail and had someone drop us off to avoid the long shuttle. Headed down Salt Trail and followed the cairns as suggested in previous triplogs. The route was pretty easy to follow with only few spots looking around for cairns. We made the LCR by lunch time and then headed over to Big Canyon to check it out. Real nice pools and took a swim before heading back to LCR. Talked to the Game&Fish guys who offered us fresh water which we happily accepted instead of LCR water :yuck: We then continued 3 miles down the LCR enjoying the awesome blue until finding a sandy beach spot for camp.

Next day the main objective was the LCR-Colorado confluence. We made good time and reached the confluence by 930. With time on our side we spent two hours enjoying the confluence and swimming in the relatively warm waters of the LCR. After long break it was down the Beamer Trail to camp at Comanche Creek about 1 mile from our Tanner exit. One issue we had was very strong winds on the Beamer Trail and with some exposed sections it made the traverse sketchy at times. Everyone made it safely thru and happy hour at Comanche:)

Next day we tanked up on water at the Colorado and headed out Tanner Trail for the rim. First time up Tanner and really enjoyed the views and quality of the trail. Only downside was the tourist mob scene at the TH. Cars backed up and tour buses but I guess that is the South Rim. Great trip and fortunate to see the LCR so blue and Colorado very green :D
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Cag Shot
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Apr 16 2014
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 Guides 27
 Routes 61
 Photos 2,620
 Triplogs 700

69 male
 Joined Jan 23 2008
 Phoenix, AZ
Beamer TrailNorthwest, AZ
Northwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 16 2014
AZWanderingBearTriplogs 700
Hiking1.50 Miles 300 AEG
Hiking1.50 Miles
300 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Put in at the Little Colorado and hiked a portion of the trail while on a raft trip. Beautiful area.
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All you have is your fire...
And the place you need to reach
 
average hiking speed 2 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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