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Mar 26 2016
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 Photos 83
 Triplogs 3

41 male
 Joined Feb 14 2014
 Mesa AZ
Rogers Canyon - JF Trail LoopGlobe, AZ
Globe, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 26 2016
legshurtbackhurtsTriplogs 3
Hiking13.05 Miles 2,700 AEG
Hiking13.05 Miles
2,700 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Man I’ve been bad about posting triplogs. But I’m trying to do better because I love the hell out of everyone else’s triplogs. Plus: triplogs are incredibly useful.

This was our sixth backpack of the semester (we’re teachers) (Lower La Barge Box, La Barge Spring, Upper La Barge/Red Tanks Loop, Horse Camp Seep, Aravaipa, and now this). Happy to give anyone info on those places, but you guys know all about those places. All great.

First time to Woodbury Trailhead. Road’s fairly gnarled-up. We just got a Subaru, and were totally fine in that. Before the Subaru we were driving a Mustang, and I wouldn’t have gone to the Woodbury Trailhead in the Mustang. Anyway. Hit the trail. Cruised up JF (hot, no water, surprisingly tiring/long, nice views, happy to be out there). Made it to Tortilla Pass. Had celebratory clementine oranges (side note: people are tossing mad orange peels in the Rogers Canyon area – this was not us – not fans of the tossed orange peels). Made our way down to Angel Basin. Little bit of flow in the creek at Angel Basin. Plus it is very green there now. Also: most of the trees have just grown new leaves, so they’re all pretty as hell. We stayed at one of the creekside campsite between the ruins and Angel Basin. Great spot. Nice flow in the creek right there. Heard what we thought were goats/sheep braying (?) nearby. Went to look for them. They heard us coming. Stopped braying.

Spent the afternoon/evening up at the ruins. We’d been here once before but were in a hurry, and totally missed the upstairs room. The upstairs is incredible. My wife and I spent a couple hours at the ruins. Warm evening, cool breeze. Found some pottery sherds. Cruised down. Went to Angel Basin for the sunset.

Well: you can’t beat Rogers Canyon. Oh also: there are a million butterflies right now of all different colors. We noted at the campsite that at any moment there was at least one butterfly present. Slept like a champ. Gurgling brook was audible from the tent. Some screeching birdies but that was part of the fun. Morning campfire. Said our goodbyes to the space.

Good lord Rogers Canyon between Rogers Trough trailhead and the ruins is incredible! Shade/water/views pretty much the entire way. Nice breeze. High canyon walls with alcoves/caves to gawk at. Butterflies. Made it to the trailhead. Road-walked to where 172A hits the Woodbury trail. Honestly the road to Rogers Trough is not even that bad – the worst part is before the Woodbury turnoff (in my opinion).

Made it back to Woodbury. Saw a rattlesnake on the drive out.

Watching the trees in Rogers Canyon from the vantage of the ruins was the most peaceful thing ever. I know many of you have had the same experience. Happy to share that with you all.
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Feb 12 2016
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 Photos 83
 Triplogs 3

41 male
 Joined Feb 14 2014
 Mesa AZ
Aravaipa CanyonGlobe, AZ
Globe, AZ
Canyoneering avatar Feb 12 2016
legshurtbackhurtsTriplogs 3
Canyoneering11.00 Miles 200 AEG
Canyoneering11.00 Miles3 Days         
200 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
We went to Aravaipa Canyon for Valentine’s weekend. Permit process was incredibly easy. Started at the west trailhead. Mustang was fine for the road. Hit the trail. Hit the creek pretty much instantly. Of course it was beautiful. On the way in, met a guy who said that he saw a mountain lion from his campsite (at the entrance to Horse Camp Canyon). The whole way in was gorgeous. There was a great blue heron we were basically chasing down canyon. We pretty much sloshed up the creek most of the time. Hot and sunny. Fish in the creek. Several places before Horse Camp would’ve made incredible campsites. Pretty easy hiking once you commit to just slamming through the water. The more established-looking campsites begin just west of Horse Camp Canyon. One dude was camped at the first campsite, which was incredible (overlooking the creek). We went to the last (eastern-most) campsite, from which we had a view of Horse Camp Canyon. This was the campsite where the guy had seen the mountain lion. We were chilling at the campsite, and suddenly across the canyon this giant tail is sticking up over the grass, and I yelled to my wife, “Oh **** it’s the mountain lion!” And it kept getting closer, kept getting closer, and then disappeared up Horse Camp Canyon. And then behind it came another tail sticking up over the grass, and another one, and another one, etc. Anyway, turns out they were coatimundis. But the crazy thing is how many there were in this roving, single-file pack (thirty-forty). So that was crazy. We just watched them from across the river like: whoa.

Other than that: spent the entire next day kicking it on the beach in front of Horse Camp Canyon. Read The Invention of Morel by Bioy Casares (guy, fleeing the law, seeks refuge on this island that supposedly infects all inhabitants with deadly/skin-eating virus, guy survives alone on the island until one day the island is visited by a buttload of Europeans, one of whom is this beautiful woman, so the refugee/exile is like, sweet, I will now woo this woman, but then when he tries to talk to her she stares off into the distance without even registering his presence, then leaves, and then, slowly, the refugee/exile begins to realize something very strange about these European visitors…).

Spent two nights in Aravaipa. Amazing place. On the way out we found use trails that avoided much of the water, so that’s available too.
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Feb 14 2015
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 Photos 83
 Triplogs 3

41 male
 Joined Feb 14 2014
 Mesa AZ
Fish Creek Canyon - Bridge to Roger's CanyonGlobe, AZ
Globe, AZ
Canyoneering avatar Feb 14 2015
legshurtbackhurtsTriplogs 3
Canyoneering21.00 Miles 2,500 AEG
Canyoneering21.00 Miles2 Days         
2,500 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Partners none no partners
This was a loop hike my wife Kathleen and I did from the 2WD Tortilla Trailhead to the JF Trail to Tortilla Pass then up Rogers Canyon Trail, stopping to camp for the night just north of Angel Basin along Frog Tanks, then in the morning up to the ruins, back north on Frog Tanks, departing Frog Tanks at the junction with Fish Creek, through Fish Creek to the exit trail at Lost Dutch Canyon, back onto FR 213 and the trailhead. Very special thanks to Vaporman, wallyfrack, and nonot for their descriptions of this loop – so, so helpful to hear what other folks encountered before venturing into new territory (even if the particulars of their triplogs escaped me when I needed them most!)

This was a Valentine’s Day hike. (Last Valentine’s we camped in Lower LaBarge Box.) We’ve had the ruins on the list forever, but the lack of 4WD made it a challenge. We looked at renting a 4WD vehicle for the weekend ($200?) then talked ourselves into this 20+ mile loop from the 2WD Tortilla Trailhead. Glad we did it. Beautiful sections throughout. Amazing to see the desert change incrementally moving west to east across this central portion of the Supes. I will say, though, that given the weight of our gear (we packed water in too) and the tremendous amount of water in the creeks right now, this was a real humdinger.

Sunny, breezy day. Got to the trailhead late morning. Lot of cars at trailhead (nobody parked at 4WD trailhead). Met a nice guy at 2WD trailhead, Jeff from Brooklyn, who got in from Brooklyn that morning. He'd never been to Arizona (let alone the Supes) and had randomly decided on the Hoolie Bacon trail for an overnighter. Cracked us up! Hoolie Bacon? Ran into some more friendly folks along FR 213 and also a rattler in the middle of the road (disconcerting as we’d hiked Hog Canyon the week before, just tromping along through the tall grass thinking the snakes weren’t out yet – :scared: yipes). The rattler hissed and slid out of our way. Nice snake. Reached 4WD trailhead. Peter’s Trail caught our eye.

JF trail was tougher than expected with camping gear, exposed to the sun. Took a lunch break after ascending the first ridge beneath a lone tree with a fire ring on the ground. Kept going. JF wouldn’t quit. Finally made it to Tortilla Pass with a few hours of sunlight. Caught Rogers Canyon and took it to Angel Basin where we saw the first people we’d seen since 213. We’d planned on camping in Angel Basin but there were two nice dudes already there, so we headed north along the creek in Rogers Canyon and improvised a nice spot along the sandy shore. Sound of flowing water. Plenty of firewood. Also the views of the Rogers Canyon cliffs are magnificent – plenty of alcoves and ruin-looking walls to keep you busy just staring from your campsite. Would love to spend some time checking things out here, climbing around. Rogers Canyon: better than expected. Rogers Canyon: a view in every direction. Hit the hay. Sound of the creek was sweet.

Woke and headed for the ruins. Three other camping parties in the Angel Basin area (one in the Basin, two just south). Gorgeous camping just south of Angel Basin. I think my favorite part of the ruins was looking onto the beauty of Rogers Canyon from the ruins (large trees, vegetation, high canyon walls, the creek visible to the south and west) and feeling like I understood why the ruins had been built in that exact spot. Who knows. We had fun. Back to camp, north along the gorgeous Frog Tanks Trail (immaculate between Angel Basin and the junction with Fish Creek – guess it gets a bit hairy north of Fish Creek/Rough Canyon). Take that back – it would have been immaculate if it weren’t for that gigantic heap of garbage. :o Looked to us like someone left a cache of goods somewhere near the trail and an animal got to it. Just loads of stuff torn up all in one spot. But besides the trash heap Rogers Canyon north of Angel Basin was incredible. Again – so many cliffs and caves you could explore around here. (Rough Canyon caught our eye too.) Several campsites near the Fish Creek/Rough Canyon entry had us wanting to stay another night – elevated benches on west side of the creek covered in green grass surrounded by big trees. Rogers Canyon: more than ruins.

Fish Creek from Frog Tanks to Lost Dutch was a legit wilderness challenge that day. Took us somewhere in the vicinity of six hours. There was so much water in Fish Creek Canyon that stepping stones weren’t always available, and traveling on either side of the creek was catclaw misery. Both of us got stopped and yanked back by catclaw just so, so many times – we couldn’t help leaving the creek from time to time because of all the water.

Then we hit the famed “pool that needs to be bypassed,” which Vaporman and others have mentioned, but I misremembered their triplogs and thought that the north side of the creek was the side that afforded a bypass (also the north side just looked like a more feasible route ](*,) ), so we went up the dry waterfall on the north side, then kept going up the slick rock above the waterfall (none of this is advisable obviously unless you’re looking to crap your pants), holding shallow handholds to get to the top of that little ridge to the north, at which point I saw that the other side was a sheer drop. Went slowly back down. Wife suggested swimming. I hate swimming. Wasn’t prepared to swim. But we didn’t want to turn around, and it was a pretty hot day, so in we went, crazy dog paddling our way across. Deeper and colder than expected. Over our heads in the middle. Ice cold. Slimy getting out. Then my wife saw her Nalgene still on the other side! (She plunked back in, swam to go get it and swam back.) Our gear actually stayed really dry in our packs, and our backpacks actually seemed to float a bit. :y: Got all our stuff back on and kept going.

Fish Creek was just unrelenting. We got battered, man. Fell a few times apiece. Got our boots/pants wet dozens of times. The dilemma of “several steps in the creek vs. vicious bushwhack on the bank” presented itself innumerable times and there wasn't ever a good choice. Don’t get me wrong – I don’t regret doing it (my wife doesn’t either). I’d do Fish Creek again given the choice of Fish Creek vs. a return on the JF. The solitude and beauty of Fish Creek were way more than enough to make it worth doing (the flowing creek, the breeze, the crazy-looking caves) but we were hurting pretty bad by the time we got to Lost Dutch Canyon – and running out of daylight (it struck me about 3:30 that we were one time-consuming Fish Creek obstacle from having to spend another night out there). Finally about five we made it to the point where Fish Creek bends hard to the north. We were looking for the exit trail up Lost Dutch, traveling in the southern-most part of the creek, and our relief was tremendous when we saw the giant cairn marking the exit trail. Took the exit trail up, so thankful to not be in Fish Creek just then. Lost Dutch trail was well-cairned and easy enough to follow even in the fading light. Came out basically within sight of the 4WD trailhead. Hiked 213 during sunset. Didn’t quite make it out before dark. Got lost on 213 just before 2WD trailhead in dark. Put on headlamps. Used GPS. Made it! Drove back to Mesa. Had beers.

Over dinner Kathleen says: "I feel like I'm still in Fish Creek."
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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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