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May 24 2025
avatar

 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Pusch PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar May 24 2025
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking4.43 Miles 2,713 AEG
Hiking4.43 Miles   3 Hrs   46 Mns   1.30 mph
2,713 ft AEG      22 Mns Break5 LBS Pack
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Started at 5:40 am, 10 minutes late, trying to beat the heat. The false summit is nasty. We were making good time upon reaching the summit, where the sun was shining bright and hot. It was nice and windy which offset that, however. I had breakfast and we headed down, trying to beat the sun. For some reason, my legs didn't get as shaky as they have when coming down Pusch and it was fairly manageable. Wind and clouds made the way down quite bearable, in a turn of luck. This was a good one today.
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Saguaro
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Benchmark
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Pusch Ridge  Pusch Ridge Wilderness
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Dec 31 2024
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Table Top TrailSouthwest, AZ
Southwest, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 31 2024
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking9.44 Miles 2,457 AEG
Hiking9.44 Miles   5 Hrs   33 Mns   1.92 mph
2,457 ft AEG      38 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
The drive was not that bad with fwd 8 inches of clearance. We were the only ones at the trailhead except for some campers who were gone by the time we got back. The bathroom doesn't have toilet paper or hand sanitizer but somehow didn't stink. The trail was pretty flat to the old trailhead and to mile 2. There was no breeze so the 50 degree heat was draining. From there the trail goes up a slope and starts switchbacking and a relieving breeze joined us. It is notable how consistent the grade is with the switchbacks, very impressive and consistently tiring. There was an odd rock wall that was when the switchbacks end and the trail ascends the slope to the south summit. Very quickly the views started appearing all around us and was pretty cool. From here the trail was obviously less maintained but nonetheless very defined. The slope of the mountain was also pretty unique.

Before the true summit we found reference mark 2 (1960) which was an "eccentric" mark to see other benchmarks that were blocked by the flatness of the mountain. The main benchmark (1910) was apart of the Coastal and Geodetic Survey's initial triangulation across Arizona which took azimuths (directions) to other benchmarks in the network to calculate their individual positions. From TABLE, the original survey took measurements towards WHITE TANK, SUPERSTITION, CATALINA, and MARICOPA all of which have been destroyed at some point. There was a bunch of ocotillo blocking the views. We found the cross reference and 1936 reference mark.

On the way down right after the summit there was an overlook where we found a car battery and a steep slope that allowed for some scenic photos and views. Going down the rock was a bit loose at first but nothing thoughtful foot placement couldn't avoid. I was going pretty fast downhill but my hiking partner wasn't. I didn't take long until we were back we just had to get through the mileage.
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Dec 27 2024
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Esperero Trail #25Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 27 2024
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking9.37 Miles 2,687 AEG
Hiking9.37 Miles   4 Hrs   14 Mns   2.33 mph
2,687 ft AEG      13 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
I went from the parking lot to the canyon and back. The up was pretty difficult but very doable, a good intensity. Also the trail had a good surface. However, going upwards I had no idea where the trail was going because there is a giant ridge you must climb to see Cathedral Rock, etc. The view and reveal at the Cardiac Gap is pretty amazing and Wrightson always managed to peak out in any view. At that point, my legs were pretty tired but the shade that was offered from the other side of the ridge was refreshing. The forest in the canyon surpassed my expectations in its extent and was a nice spot to turn around. On the way back, immediately after rising out of the canyon, we missed the astounding and expansive view, so make sure to look back at the view before descending into the canyon (check out my photos). The way back was pretty easy on the legs, making it enjoyable. I only went through 1.5 liters of water. This hike would be easier if I actually hiked often.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Esperero Canyon
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Moderate
There were a few orange trees in Esperero Canyon.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
There was a purple one and a yellow one I saw once each.

dry Bird Canyon Dry Dry

dry Esperero Canyon Dry Dry
Dry anywhere you would ever go. There was flowing water at 32.34664, -110.82930 even though it last rained Nov 6.
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Nov 29 2024
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Buster Canyon Loop - TucsonTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 29 2024
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking6.16 Miles 2,072 AEG
Hiking6.16 Miles   5 Hrs      1.46 mph
2,072 ft AEG      47 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
We went counterclockwise. Surprisingly more trail than I thought there would be. We missed the turnoff for the trail but once we were on it, it was pretty obvious where the trail went and plenty of cairns to even more so help find the route. The sun was blocking some of the view on the way up but surprisingly my photos didn't turn out so bad. The "crag" was pretty easy and I had to use my hands on just 1 move.

The peak has pretty fantastic views of Mount Kimball and some gigantic domes of rock below it. Also going this way hid Mount Lemmon until we got to the top. Going to the saddle there was a trail and a few oaks that were nice. From there, there was some resemblance of a trail that faded out into grass. We eventually made it downhill to the spring where we investigated where it was, etc. I found a shell there. From the spring, the trail appeared again and was iffy for some distance until it started going more downhill again. Now the trail was even more defined than going up and cairns weren't needed.

Cool hike and not super tiring.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Summit Register Log
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Isolated
By the Sutherland Wash there are some trees that are orange and yellow at the moment.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
Notably some wildflowers by Buster Spring.

dry Buster Spring Dry Dry
There was a pool in the slippery rock above the spring. (32.407574, -110.889548)

Springbox was dry.

There was some water seeping from rock in the stream about 20 ft from the springbox. (32.407720, -110.889456)
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Apr 07 2024
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Romero Canyon Trail #8Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 07 2024
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking14.32 Miles 4,164 AEG
Hiking14.32 Miles   6 Hrs   57 Mns   2.22 mph
4,164 ft AEG      30 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
We set off on this adventure to hopefully build up to Mount Kimball soon, although it's already getting warm. The thing is I don't have time to hike next weekend to keep it up but oh well. After the first Romero Canyon water crossing, we saw 4 people before the next water crossing and none after that for another few miles. It was nice being alone in the wilderness and some decent views of the surrounding mountains, although this hike is not one for scenic views. The amazing part about this area this time of year is that every little stream crossing the trail that could have water had water. You couldn't get away from it. The first campspot was at exactly 5 miles in and the second at 5.6 miles. Both looked very nice and shaded. It was nice to see that only a small portion of the trees in this area got killed from the fire. Around here we saw some trail runners coming down the trail. At 6 miles, we stopped and ate lunch in a nice corridor of trees. I thought it was only 6 miles to the pass and I had obligations but we had come so far to not have made the final push to the pass. At the pass it was about 7.15 miles in. I remember the views being better. I was just glad that there were some plants growing and it wasn't all still burnt, unlike the last time I came up here.

Going down was a bit faster than going up but towards the end my legs were getting pretty tired. We saw a few more trail runners that were coming down after going up Mount Lemmon. The final bit down from the pools to the canyon loop trail was tiring and I just wanted to be done. Up on the hill above the pools, we saw paragliders right above us. Soon enough, we were back at the car.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Extreme
It's that time of year. They were everywhere until the upper grassland area at which point they become more sparse. After 5 miles in, there were no more. There were reds, purples, whites, yellows, oranges, and pinks.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Old Trail Camp Spring Gallon + per minute Gallon + per minute
Didn't know there was a spring here but the canyon was flowing heavily anyways

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Romero Pools Heavy flow Heavy flow
Good flow.
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Mar 21 2024
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Granite Mountain Peak 7626Prescott, AZ
Prescott, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 21 2024
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking9.88 Miles 2,291 AEG
Hiking9.88 Miles   5 Hrs   15 Mns   2.06 mph
2,291 ft AEG      27 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
This hike was pretty fun, but I didn't really know what to expect at first. There was a very alive bee colony in a dead tree next to the trail which was cool. A lot of the stream crossings (and even the minor ones up on the switchbacks) had water, probably because of the recent rains but if it's like that year round that's really nice. What I thought was interesting was the peregrine falcon area and we ended up seeing one soaring around and calling by the cliffs from the switchbacks. The sun was a bit harsh on the switchbacks but thankfully a breeze came once we started getting close to the saddle.

The view from the saddle was spectacular and I knew it would just get better from there. Now that the trail had started to level out, the turn off for the peak came fast. We continued on the social trail following the creek and cairns until we got off track. Well we didn't really want to back track so we bushwhacked through some manzanita and navigated boulders until we got to a more manageable section of trail following a different creek. We still didn't really know where we were going so we followed the tracks more closely. From the creek, we continued up a scrubby, rocky slope and once we crested the ridge, it was a little flat area that was relatively open. We followed what seemed like the most trafficked route and then started heading up using our intuition because we lost track of the route. We generally followed the creek that was covered in giant boulders until it seemed the peak had appeared right in front of us. We whacked up to a relatively clear social path going up to the peak. This part was one that I feared a bit from the satellite image but it was actually pretty easy.

Up at the ridge, tons of ladybugs appeared. We saw some lower down but there were tons up here. Almost every rock we grabbed into for support had them under our fingers. There was a bit of snow in the shadows and I would not trust standing on it one bit. Up at the true summit was the summit register in an ammo can, some wooden debris, possibly belonging to an old sign, and the USGS benchmark. The views from the top were spectacular. You could see so far in every direction. The reference mark was pretty visible and a bit of precarious positioning to get a top down picture. The CGS station mark was on the second highest summit and was next to a big drop. We headed back down to a flatter area before all of the rocks to eat lunch.

After that, we headed down. Now, I forgot my watch to record the track so I am using my hiking partner’s and he diverged from the easiest route right at the beginning but got back onto it right after. It was so much easier to find the path going down and there was almost a clear path the whole way down. And the interesting thing is the path that we took up vs. down was very similar, despite the difference in effort and time. We tried to set up cairns along the way but definitely missed a few spots. We found the key point where the optimal path continued and we followed the wrong one. There is a little rocky part that rises up from the creek and the clear path follows the creek. We took the clear path when it really leads you nowhere. We laid some sticks over the wrong way and set up some puny cairns the right way. The hike down to the trail seemed to fly along and ended up being about 10 minutes faster. Along the way we saw many cairns, some dictating different routes to the top but ultimately route finding skills are necessary for most of the route if you get off track even a tiny bit.
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Ladybug beetle

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Alkali Spring Dripping Dripping
Didn't look for the spring but there were a few streams in the area lightly flowing

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water 4 out of 5 Granite Basin Lake 76-100% full 76-100% full
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Mar 10 2024
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Mount BallardTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 10 2024
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking4.19 Miles 1,707 AEG
Hiking4.19 Miles   3 Hrs   22 Mns   1.51 mph
1,707 ft AEG      35 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Junipers are getting ready to bloom. The false summit was nasty; don't let it get you. Found main benchmark but reference marks remain not found. The horrible vegetation made searching for the reference marks a pain. The azimuth mark from 1938 was at 31.4416, -109.96028. To get there follow a pack trail (or my route) and use common sense. It is on the summit of the closest hill. The 1936 azimuth was at 31.46813, -109.94311. Good hike. Also Fissure Peak is 7 feet higher than Mount Ballard.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Mount Ballard
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  1 archive
Dec 27 2023
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Pusch PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 27 2023
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking3.90 Miles 2,645 AEG
Hiking3.90 Miles   4 Hrs   30 Mns   0.87 mph
2,645 ft AEG
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
The visibility today was very good and the views from the top were excellent. I wish I had a good camera because it really was that pretty and my phone does it no justice. The benchmark had some new stamping that reads "GGS 2023". Going down was as bad as I remember it. By the end I would have to mentally prepare myself for each drop my foot had to take (hopefully that makes sense).
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  2 archives
Oct 13 2023
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Miller Peak from Crest TrailTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 13 2023
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking10.35 Miles 3,204 AEG
Hiking10.35 Miles   5 Hrs   22 Mns   2.12 mph
3,204 ft AEG      29 Mns Break7 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Wanted fall colors and something new without driving too far. The views of the peak and adjacent Carr Peak were spectacular from Sierra Vista, with lots of red, orange, and yellow. Today was a wonderful day in terms of weather, partly cloudy and a good temperature. Were the only ones at the starting parking lot. There is water at the visitors center for the monument. I brought 3 liters of water for the hike itself, more for the drive. The bathroom at the pass was phenomenal, toilet paper, no smell, likely freshly emptied. The trail is nice, some cool adits were along this part of the trail. The views from the wilderness boundary were spectacular. The peak was still a while away although that was okay. Up to this part, we had already gained a majority of the elevation pretty quickly so it was nice to get it out of the way.

The rest of the hike is awesome because there are taller (and thus shadier and even more pretty!) most of the way up to the peak. However this portion of the hike lacked a lot of views of the peak and not a lot of fall colors. Along here, I saw a solar panel sticking up from out of the trees. It was a trail cam mounted on a tree at approx. 31.38369, -110.29599. There was a camp spot here. I wouldn't recommend camping at this spot. The junction with the trail to the spring has a post that had a sign but the sign is now gone. Once the trail starts switch-backing, the rocks and pines were like the rocks by the top of Mount Lemmon with cliffs and pines. Along this section there were also many lizards (likely Sceloporis jarrovii AKA Yarrow's spiny lizard). Some had more blue than others, some of the blue being navy and others being a more aqua color.

At the junction for the peak, there were some very nice views of Carr Peak and some of the grassland and aspens that Miller Peak does not offer. A lot of this part of the trail had vegetation bleeding over onto the trail, a common theme throughout this hike. I would recommend pants if the weather allows it. Had lunch at the top. There were a few ladybugs in some of the scrub. The views were awesome, it's hard to beat the tallest peak in a range with no visual obstructions from vegetation. There was this one tree that I wanted to know the species of. It is some sort of scrub pine/juniper/something similar. I couldn't find it online after a bit of search. Didn't think to get a closer photo. Going down was way easier and faster. Since it was shadier in the afternoon, it made some of the slopes look even better.

After the hike, we went to the visitor's center just before closing (at 4:00) and were able to see some javelina appear just for us at the watering hole and wash our hands. I guess there was a cave in the monument that looks cool but I didn't know it was there. We got McDonald's soft serve afterwards.
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Mexican Silene
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Montezuma Pass  Mount Wrightson
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Moderate
The oaks on south slope of Miller Peak are beautifully red and orange. Lots of oak along the trail that is yellow. Currently yellow aspens appear around summit spur trail.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
Some yellows, whites, orange-red, and purples. Not lush wildflowers however!
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May 28 2023
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Chiricahua Peak from Rustler Park THTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar May 28 2023
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Backpack19.37 Miles 4,564 AEG
Backpack19.37 Miles1 Day      44 Mns   
4,564 ft AEG27 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
TL;DR: Very pretty, senic, and green set of trails. There's good water at Tub Spring, Anita Spring, and Cima Spring right now. Stick to the Crest Trail to avoid deadfall.

I've wanted to go up to Chiricahua Peak for a while and I was able to arrange plans to go this weekend. The road up from the west we were able to go up with 2WD and 8 inches ground clearance. On the way up, two deer dashed in front of our car and down into the canyon on a very steep section right by the saddle. Up at elevation, it was probably in the 70s in the mountains with wind blowing east. Stopped before the road to Barfoot Campground to hike up to 31.9132, -109.2658 for a wonderful view into NM and the expanse of the mountains. After this we parked at the entrance to Barfoot Park.

The park was very pretty with irises all along the flowing creek. The park was fenced off so there was only one way in/out. After this we hiked up to the Crest Trail. The trail up to it had ~5 trees crossing the trail. One of these gave my splinters so avoid touching them with your hands. One or two of these we had to squat under. The views of Barfoot Peak were very pretty from the trail with the peak's lush aspens and beautifully colored scree. Up to the peak it was slow going but offered pretty views. At the top there were views to all sides and everything was very pretty. There was a benchmark, summit register, some sort of antenna at the top, and a few ladybugs. These would be the only few we saw on the hike. Under the summit register from 2022 in the center of the foundation of the lookout house was a ladybug graveyard. Headed down to the Crest Trail again and took that to the Bootlegger Trail. The only deadfall on the crest trail was here and it was easy to step over. What was surprising is all around this area we had 4G signal with Verizon. The trail in this section had a few plants bleeding onto it and the soil and therefore the tread was loose, a common theme with the Crest Trail. From here continued on to some cliffs which were nice to lay underneath and look at the views.

We stopped at Hillside Spring for a lunch bar. It was very tasty and the shade of the pines made it cool. Here we saw the only person we would see on the trails on the road beneath the spring. They were wearing all white and carrying an insect net. After this we moved to Fly Saddle and then up to Flys Peak. At the saddle were good views westwards. Going up was hard since my legs were already starting to get tired. The peak was so pretty though because of all of the aspen surrounding us on the way up, a green tunnel. At the top was a fire pit and a couple camping spots. There was also the concrete piers for the lookout tower. There 3 benchmarks up here in 2010, but we could only find the reference marks. The arrows were known to be off and we weren't sure exactly the spot the mark should have been. We searched for 30 minutes but to no avail. Looks like I might have to bring the metal detector to find this one in the future, if it is still there.

Going downhill was fast but time was passing by quickly. There were cairns on this side of the peak but the trail was easy to see. We decided that we would look for water, then camp and do Chiricahua Peak in the morning. We walked right past the junction for the Anita Park Trail as the sign was on the ground and not obvious. At the park we saw the perfect camp spot but continued on to the spring. There were 15 pieces of deadfall on this trail. The way down from the park was cairned well although it helped having the route on my phone. The spring had water so we filtered a few liters and carried it up to the campsite. The campsite had a few stumps and was situated right next to a stand of aspen, protecting us from the winds. A bit north there were two fire pits where we boiled water and rehydrated our dinners. Before this we realized we forgot our sporks so we widdled a dead aspen tree into forks with a multitool. I had beef stroganoff. It wasn't bad. A bit more north of this we hung our food and other smelly items in a dead tree. I was in my sleeping bag by 8 and fell asleep afterwards.

My sleep wasn't the best, waking up several times during the night for a matter of minutes. At 12 or so I looked up at the stars. I could just make out the cloud that makes up the milkyway. It was the most I'd ever seen of it. All the pictures I see of the sky seem fake. How am I supposed to make out so much detail? I woke up at 5-ish.

We slowly packed up and got ready. My breakfast was rehydrated biscuits and gravy. It was hard to finish by the end, not the best one I've had. We decided that we had enough water already so we would go to the helipad and then Chiricahua Peak without our backpacks and then come back and depart for Barfoot park. The helipad offered impressive views. Do not skip this if you come past here. The climb to the top was slow and steady through a tunnel of green aspens. We saw some stale bear scat on the trail. There was maybe 3 ground-level pieces of deadfall on this trail. At the top was a benchmark with the elevation off by ~20 feet. Saw Chumley had summited the day before. Headed down, got our bags, and headed back. I wanted to survey some of the springs on the way back so we went down to the cabin down the Greenhouse Trail. There was no deadfall on this trail. The stream was flowing pretty good but there were a ton of gnats/flys. There was a bathroom as well which was in good condition, if you bring your own toilet paper. Cima Spring can be spotted from the trail because of the typical lush plants that grow around water here. Approach the spring from the east, not the west. The scent of the pine forest was really nice here. It was a bit hotter today though because the sun was right on us and the wind had died down, although the skies seemed a tiny bit clearer.

We turned down the Bear Wallow Trail to the Bear Wallow Spring. NOTE: The sign for the Booger Spring Trail has the arrow pointing the wrong direction. The Bear Wallow Spring had good water. Before this, the trail was pretty visible from the saddle but so much deadfall appeared out of nowhere. For the next tenth of a mile or so it was just tree after tree that we navigated over and around. Some of the trees I crossed required decent flexibility so be prepared if you want to cross this section. We linked back up with the trail and made it to the Centella Trail. The trail was much more defined but there was still some smaller deadfall on the trail. An unmarked spring at (31.8781842, -109.2802300) had good water, on par with Tub Spring, which we saw next. This section of the trail was surrounded be trees so we couldn't see much.

We met back up with the Crest Trail and decided to check out Fly Park Spring (31.8813200, -109.2839600). I saw on OpenStreetMap there was supposed to be a trail there. Nope. Ended up cutting myself on some deadfall in the process of making it to the spring. The spring was some seepage out of the ground and was only a small trickle. Don't bother with this. Take the hike to Tub Spring instead. We took a break under the shade of a pine and headed up the hillside to the Long Park Trail, which had little deadfall and was pretty short up to the trail. This is definitely the recommended way. We went back to the Crest Trail and trucked our way all the way back to Barfoot Park. We fixed/propped up any signs that we were able to fix at junctions along our way. Some of them need replacing. We saw one turkey fly away from us when hiking back. We also saw two deer on the way down the road. We got chocolate dipped cones at the DQ in Wilcox afterwards. Also gas is a dollar cheaper in Wilcox than in Tucson right now. Stop in Wilcox or at a Loves.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
Rocky mountain irises were common in the grasslands at saddles. Some other purple flowers, maybe purple locoweeds or new mexico lupines were also present, although less frequent. The occasional small yellow flowers were around as well.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Anita Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Rocks seep from rocks into the basin which is overflowing slowly in the canyon. The basin had some earth at the bottom but still plenty of water which was clear and tasty after filtered.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Barfoot Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Really good water flow. Didn't open spring box but safe to say it had quite a bit in it.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Bear Wallow Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Spring box had cover off which revealed good quality water pretty deep. The creek adj. to the box had a light flow.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Cima Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Spring box did not have overflow water. Didn't lift the cover but dropped a rock under it which revealed water in the box. Water was seeping in the surrounding area. By the cabin there was good water flow.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Hillside Spring Dripping Dripping
Didn't open catchment. The exposed box had water slowly seeping into it with about an inch of murky water. The spring source had deeper water of better quality.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Tub Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Box is a couple inches deep but filled with leaves and sticks. The stream is running pretty well probably a couple quarts per min, although it is shallow which might make it hard to collect water from it.
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  4 archives
Apr 16 2023
avatar

 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Old Baldy - Super Trail LoopTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Apr 16 2023
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking14.08 Miles 4,695 AEG
Hiking14.08 Miles   6 Hrs   35 Mns   2.33 mph
4,695 ft AEG      32 Mns Break5 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
I've been wanting to do this for a while but the snow has been very persistent. Luckily, a week getting highs of 95+ in Tucson helped melt some snow. This weekend seemed decent enough since it's only gonna get hotter and the snow seemed mostly gone when checking satellite photos.

On the way in, I saw a White-nosed Coati and a turkey. There were plenty of birders with gigantic cameras, no doubt photographing the elegant trogon. I forgot sunscreen so I'm was gonna get sunburned. Got to the trailhead at 9:56 am. Up to Josephine saddle was uneventful. I could hear birds screaming in the distance the whole way up to the saddle. Not too many people were at the saddle, surprisingly. The Baldy Trail going up from here was fun. I could start to feel the burn. There was one vista with a wonderful view of Mount Wrightson and the peaks north of it. Birds circled the top, riding the wind. Just beyond this, snow started appearing along the edges of the trail but could easily be avoided. Bellows Spring seems to have broken pipes so the box was empty but the stream had plenty of flow. The switchbacks were fun to go up, but tiring. Views from Baldy Saddle were impressive and I took a little break. There was more snow than I expected. There were mini snow traverses and the trail was a mini stream from snowmelt. The switchbacks going up the peak were hard. My legs were really feeling the burn. After a short break, I had 10 turns to the top. I counted each and soon enough, there I was. The summit was smaller than I expected. The coolest thing was the tiny birds that flew above the summit at super speed. Someone left a can of baked beans in the summit register.

There used to be 3 benchmarks up here, only one remains. The original, set in 1903, was destroyed in 1928 when the lookout house was built on top of it. The foundation of the house still remains. A second, set in 1935 was a replacement but was removed since. The drill hole still remains. The third is still there, a reference mark for the replacement benchmark. The original benchmark had a reference point, a chiseled cross. It was a bit hard to find but it was there. I didn't even notice there was more engravings on the rock until I looked in post. It has an arrow pointing towards the cross. Underneath the arrow it says "RP" (reference point) and "USGS" but the first "S" is backwards. Close to this, the rock has "1903" engraved. In 1910 a survey was made using the original benchmark and the Superstition Mountains were observed in this survey. I could barely see the Tortilita Mountains.

After eating a PB&J sandwich I started heading back down. The Wrightson Spring had some flow from the snowmelt and I decided to filter some water for the way down the Super Trail. I only brought 2 and a bit liters and I had finished one and then some. If you do this hike, bring 4-5 liters of water if you don't bring a water filter. From the termination to Josephine Saddle I saw no other hikers along the Super Trail. And everyone who missed coming down the Super Trail missed out. This easily was the prettiest section of the hike. The views looking south on Josephine Peak and the row of pines on her west slope is so cool. The view looking up from the shrub oak to Mount Wrightson is so epic. The trail seems to have had some work done clearing some of the shrub oak from a small saddle after Baldy Spring to Riley Saddle. The trail was very enjoyable here and spacious. At Riley Saddle there was a sign that the trail to Josephine Peak was destroyed in 2005. Does anybody have photos or GPX of the route up to the peak (pre 2005)? Got to a shaded area and saw 2 deer below the trail foraging. From here on the trail felt sluggish. My legs were getting worn out and there was still a bit under 4 miles left. It was pretty hot around here when I wasn't in the shade or the wind wasn't blowing. The canyon under Bellows Spring sounded like it was really flowing. The canyon the Super Trail crosses had a bit of water and there were some cool waterfalls. Soon enough, I was finally back at the trailhead. I saw so many lizards along this hike. Got some McDonald's soft serve afterwards. :DANCE:

I would say that the mountain itself is more beautiful than the views beyond it, especially on a typical hazy day like today. If you want to do this hike then do it soon because soon enough it is going to get too hot.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
Saw some along the super trail near the trailhead and some along the trail above Josephine Saddle.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Baldy Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Spring had quite a bit of water and was overflowing. Tank below spring was dry.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Bellows Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Canyon itself was running well but the spring box was dry.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Sprung Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Spring itself was dripping with a full tank but canyon was running well.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Upper Gardner Canyon - Santa Ritas Medium flow Medium flow
Not flowing where the trail crosses but above and below it. Snow available for melting.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Wrightson Spring Dripping Dripping
There was some flow from the snowmelt. Filled up here for the way down on the Super Trail.
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Mar 25 2023
avatar

 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Pima Canyon Trail #62Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 25 2023
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking3.83 Miles 771 AEG
Hiking3.83 Miles   2 Hrs   8 Mns   2.00 mph
771 ft AEG      13 Mns Break
 
no photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Slow pace in a group. There's quite a bit of water in the canyon, some of it coming out of rocks. Explored the canyon a bit. Found a tortoise in a rock cave. Managed to stay dry and unscathed. Found a dam at 32.359260, -110.931436.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
Brittlebush blooming everywhere. Some wildflowers along the canyon.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Pima Canyon Medium flow Medium flow
Good flow
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Mar 19 2023
avatar

 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Pass BenchmarkTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 19 2023
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking1.88 Miles 625 AEG
Hiking1.88 Miles      55 Mns   2.05 mph
625 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Was out today driving from Patagonia to Canelo on a benchmark run. This was a spur of the moment decision to grab this but it was definitely worth it. Pro tip: Wear pants on this one. The route I took follows an unofficial trail from the pass up to the peak. It's pretty direct. There is a lot of grass that can really scrape you up if you aren't wearing pants (learned that the hard way). At some point I had to cross a barbed wire fence. There's a spot you can step over it on a rock or a spot where you can step over it where a log is compressing it down. I took the log up and the rock down. The last summit push is super fun with all of the grass cleared out in a line from something. There is a new fire repeater at the top of the hill. It blocks a the view a bit which sucks but none the less it was a very scenic view. All benchmarks on the hill were found.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Harshaw Creek
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation None
None
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation None
None

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Flower Tank - Canelo 26-50% full 26-50% full
Not sure on % full but it visibly had a good amount water.
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Jan 08 2023
avatar

 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Bridal Wreath Falls LoopTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Jan 08 2023
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking7.42 Miles 1,302 AEG
Hiking7.42 Miles   2 Hrs   53 Mns   2.73 mph
1,302 ft AEG      10 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
A bit hotter today than I would have liked. The second mile or so was brutal because a whole lot of sweat got in my face and there were so many steps. I hate steps so much it is hard to describe. After that section it was easy going to the falls. The falls were very rewarding. I wasn't expecting much: a dried up wash with some 10 ft drop in rock. Suffice to say, my expectations were blown away. The falls look smaller in photos. Maybe that is just me misremembering it. The way back was nice. There was one astounding view of the Santa Catalinas appearing out of nowhere. The way down had no steps and was instead nicely switchbacked. A few of the switchbacks were completely unnecessary though, going uphill just to go back down and some with an obvious shorter path, cutting off the whole switchback. Perhaps that was the old route of the trail. The hike was over soon enough. Good outing. The fee for the park is expensive though!
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Steel Tank
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Isolated
Most-all trees have lost their leaves by the falls. All of the other trees lower down had no stragglers.

dry Aguila Tank Dry Dry
Old dam broken through. The wash is not running

dry Mica Tank Dry Dry
Old dam broken through. Wash not running

dry Steel Tank Dry Dry
Pipe to tank broken; everything dry as a bone
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Dec 28 2022
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
SANTA & SAN Benchmark, AZ 
SANTA & SAN Benchmark, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Dec 28 2022
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking1.61 Miles 329 AEG
Hiking1.61 Miles      50 Mns   2.20 mph
329 ft AEG      6 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Rained the whole time I did this. At the entrance to the neighborhood just saying I was going on a hike got me through. I planned on following the power line road as seen on Google Maps satellite view but the summer rains made the grass prosper here leaving no trace of the road. Luckily, there was an "emergency road" with an unlocked gate that allowed for fast travel. The grass made the benchmarks a bit harder to find as most of them had relatively low prominence. SAN had remnants of the height of light.
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Dec 25 2022
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Pusch's FlatironTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 25 2022
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking3.32 Miles 1,298 AEG
Hiking3.32 Miles   2 Hrs      1.95 mph
1,298 ft AEG      18 Mns Break4.5 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
I really needed this today. Like really. I loved doing the climb up the rock face at a mile in. The view from the top was amazing. The lack of cars on Oracle was so weird. It made this whole experience even better. The steepness was great. This was great. This is great.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Pusch Peak
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation None
None
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation None
None
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  2 archives
Nov 13 2022
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Bog - Kent Springs LoopTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 13 2022
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking5.07 Miles 1,937 AEG
Hiking5.07 Miles   2 Hrs   20 Mns   2.25 mph
1,937 ft AEG      5 Mns Break3 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
The trees and a benchmark were calling to I answered at 3 pm. Driving in I found a benchmark from ~1904 that I had scouted out. I decided I should go from the campground because it would make the route shorter with the fading sunlight. The uphill on the bog springs trail is a real calf burner. The sycamores at Bog Springs were very pretty. There was a canyon with intermittent water popping in and out of the ground. The canyon adjacent to it had very good flowing water and was a sight to see. Mount Wrightson glowed a bright orange during sunset. By the time I got back to the trailhead, it was dark out.
This was a fun trip. I'm glad I went. :)
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Arizona Sycamore
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Moderate
More local to canyons, lots of evergreen.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation None
nada

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Bog Springs Dripping Dripping
Standing water. Possibility of small dripping.

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Kent Spring Dripping Dripping
Standing water. Looked murky although that might just be an effect of the shallow dirty bottom.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Sylvester Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Good flow; Easy gallon/m flow in the side canyon.
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  1 archive
Oct 15 2022
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Romero Canyon PoolsTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 15 2022
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking5.10 Miles 1,179 AEG
Hiking5.10 Miles   2 Hrs   32 Mns   2.15 mph
1,179 ft AEG      10 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
I haven't done this one in a few years, fire definitely influenced it. Today was nice and cloudy but there was some rain forecasted for 12 pm. Check out the Bighorn Fire board at the trailhead. It has some nice information to learn. This hike was steeper and longer than I remembered. After this hill I go downhill to the pools, right? Nope just up and down. With only about 3/10 of a mile left I could see some low lying clouds moving quickly by Romero Pass. Then there while looking downwards to have good footing I saw a bright flash. One, two, three, four, five, six, then thunder. Just over a mile away. I decided to head back. That was a bit too close for comfort. Decided to check out Montrose Pools instead. There were 5+ people there. I saw a single tadpole and a group of fish swimming. At the trailhead there was a showing of Tucson local reptiles. The diamondback rattlesnakes were very scared.
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation None
nada
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation None
nada

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Montrose Canyon Light flow Light flow
Flowing at Montrose Pools.

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Romero Pools Light flow Light flow
Flowing downstream of the pools, likely a decent bit of water there.
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  1 archive
Oct 11 2022
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Ventana Canyon Trail #98Tucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 11 2022
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Hiking5.45 Miles 1,349 AEG
Hiking5.45 Miles   3 Hrs   8 Mns   1.85 mph
1,349 ft AEG      11 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
First time in the canyon. Started at ~7:50am. Hiked up to Maiden Pools. I saw on All Trails that people were saying the trail was super overgrown. If you're okay with checking a gpx track every time you don't know where the trail goes and small branches getting in your face then this should be fine. Immediately from the trailhead there is a section with dense tree cover and some water in the wash. It was nice. There is a new development planned on the west side of the fence and one of the houses being built was causing a ruckus for about half a mile. Immediately the towering canyon walls were pretty cool. All the rock formations were cool. The ground was surprisingly damp in some places and others were dry as a bone. The further I went into the canyon, the harder it was to find the trail on the other side of the wash. The trail had a few plants bleeding onto the trail at this point. At 1.8 miles it was not clear where the trail went. The cairns did not help because it just showed a mass of green scrub. Checked the gpx eventually and got on the right track, for about for 50 feet. I turned right on a short dead-end trail. Got back on the actual trail after turning around. My advice for this part is to look for and follow the cairns and head towards the prominent rock formation at the east side of the canyon. From here the trail is "overgrown". Branches from the scruby trees around the wash bled onto the trail. The lower shrubs also were bleeding on to the trail. After you leave the canyon, there is a brief period of no vegetation quickly followed by knee-waist high grasses. The grassy part of this hike was really pleasant because of the expansive views down the canyon and unique feeling given by hiking through tall grasses in Tucson. At one point I wasn't sure where the trails went to I walked through the grass to where it showed on my phone. Some 5 big red ants got on my left leg and bit me. Hurt a bit for about 20 minutes. Shortly after that I reached the point where the trail starts going down again. Here there is the best view of the hike. A group of 2 was there and they said that after the pools had become super overgrown and the vegetation has changed a lot. Take what they said with a grain of salt but be prepared if you go past the pools. After a short trip downhill I was at Maiden Pools. There was a trickle of water. Some tadpoles in the water was nice to see. After a break, I continued back to the trailhead. It's easier finding the trail on the way down. I didn't see the view as much on the way down which sucked, in hindsight. The hike back was uneventful, until I saw something moving in the bushes. A white stripe moving across the wash from me. I knew it was a skunk. First one I've ever seen in the wild. Afterwards, I went to Beyond Bread and had a BLT. :) This was a successful Tuesday outing.
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Skunk

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Ventana Canyon Pools to trickle Pools to trickle
Some portions of the canyon had pools flowing into other pools filled with algae. The rest was dry.
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  3 archives
Apr 02 2022
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 Routes 30
 Photos 893
 Triplogs 28

male
 Joined Oct 14 2021
 Tucson, AZ
Tanque Verde PeakTucson, AZ
Tucson, AZ
Backpack avatar Apr 02 2022
BubbaJuiceTriplogs 28
Backpack18.18 Miles 4,666 AEG
Backpack18.18 Miles1 Day   4 Hrs   10 Mns   
4,666 ft AEG
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Me and someone else had a backpacking trip planned where we would go up to Bear Canyon and down Sabino Canyon. Turns out though, they started doing some maintenance in the recreation area and it seemed like a lot of the trails got shut down. So that wasn't an option anymore so I thought this might be a good alternative.

Our plan was to once we got to the camp, we would decide whether or not we had the resources to bag the peak or just head back the next day. Starting off, we forgot to lock our transportation about a quarter mile into the hike at the register. Before I knew it, the landscape started changing. Just over a small ridge, a few junipers and oaks appeared, more grass was present around me, and the saguaros disappeared. At a little saddle with a ton of ocotillos, there was a crested saguaro. At 32.16478, -110.70747 there were small pools of water a few feet downstream of the trail. (When we were hiking back it was 3/4 gone.) This gave me hope that there would be some water at the campground. More trees appeared and the ones next to the trail were perfect for taking a quick break and rehydrating. There was a pine tree along the way perfect for getting into for shade. Many planes passed over us and in the distance, passing behind the Catalinas. Eventually, the gnats came. Right about as we got to a stream that has a sand bank. They were persistent beasts. They got in front of our faces, distracting us from the beauty of the moment, and just annoyed us in general. This was combined with the sun. It was a bit breezy before but now the basin blocked the wind from coming through, leaving the exposed 85 degree weather coming down on us. We got to a stream about half a mile before the campground. I had seen reports there is sometimes water here and there were pools. They looked decently clear. There were pools 100 feet up and down from the trail. I noticed here, after taking a deep breath, that I was short of breath, as if I only got 3/4 of my breath. I suspect this was because my pack was too tight. Shortly, we got to the campground at around 3 pm. There were a couple of algae filled pools in the stream by the campground. (Read on for better water reports though.) We explored the campground. Campsite 1 had a bear box, a flipped over grill, a campfire ring, and a couple of spots for camping. It was a bit sunny at the time. Campsite 2 and 3 were north of Campsite 1. Campsite 2 had a bear box, grill, campfire ring, and multiple spots for camping. It was mostly shaded there. Campsite 3 had no amenities, just like Grass Shack. (I can't remember if Grass Shack had an actual sign for Campsite 3 or not.) Obviously, Campsite 2 was the best option.

The "restroom", if you can even call it that, was up on a hill with a trail from Campsite 2 leading to it. Things looked sketchy immediately because the building was basically crappily thrown together wood boards. The backside of the "restroom" had no wall whatsoever. There was an old toilet right by it. The restroom is kind of like a step, the door is at the bottom of it, and there is a 2 foot high plastic step up to the toilet, placed on the edge of the step. The toilet had no hinges but two rocks placed on top of it so it wouldn't blow away. When the seat is off, it does not provide the most amazing of smells. It's truly a ridiculous specimen.

We did not decide to go up to the peak because of a lack of a strong water source and an overdependence on there being water here. (We didn't bring enough.) That combined with me being short of breath made us decide to skip it for now at least and possibly do it in the morning. I slept until about 5 or so when we boiled some water and rehydrated some meals. I had fettuccini alfredo with chicken and it was pretty darn good. Sleeping wasn't the best but that's what you have to accept when doing things like this. At 7 we started moving again. I explored the surrounding area a bit, going down washes, hearing the morning dew drip off of grass like a subtle rain, and going to the top of a little hill. On my way down, I decided to go a bit downstream on the main wash next to the campground. It was all rock but not too slick at all. I saw more pools of water of medium clarity but I noticed the pools of water were flowing into each other. Flowing water! I told my partner and we had decided that we would go up to the peak, head back down, filter the water, and head back to the trailhead. We estimated we would be back at the trail head at around 2:00-2:30 pm.

Going up to the peak was by far the best part of the hike. The forest engulfed the area and when it did fade away, stunning views emerged. The sea of green of the basin was beautiful and the surrounding landscape made it even better, with far off mountains improving it. Towards Mica Mountain and Rincon Peak, you could see all of the trees they held and all of the great views they probably hold. The trail at some points was more of like a ditch carved into the Earth to keep the trail at a steady gradient, not going straight up. The peak was visible from this point in the trail, with its large rocks standing tall. We eventually had to go through some of the rocks, kind of like in Chiricahua National Monument. I was unsure of how difficult it would be to get to the summit because I knew it was a rock. All I knew was that there was a sign, up at the top. Right as I said that to my partner we turned a bend in the trail and the peak emerged with a sign clearly visible on top. It doesn't look the best on camera but it is pretty cool in person. There was also some mountain lion poop on the trail. Thankfully, we only saw birds and lizards along the trip.

Soon enough we were at the junction of the peak spur trail. One of the signs was knocked over so we set it back up again. We signed the summit register (not on the summit). I'm glad it actually had a pen and paper instead of just a few business cards like by the trailhead. The summit was on a rock about 8 feet tall. It wasn't vertical though. The west side of it had a small amount of exposure. It was pretty easy to get up. I have a photo of the route. Immediately, the views were stunning. It's a 360 degree panoramic view. The summit rock is also pretty large so there is no need to get close to an exposed cliff. There was an ammo can summit register at the top. I instantly am glad we didn't skip the peak. After a couple of minutes of enjoyment, we got back down. We had our last bit of food and started heading down.

Heading back down to the campground wasn't too bad. The views were less impressive this time because the peak topped them all. Constantly looking down to check your footing also made you not see them as much. The footing in fact wasn't too bad. The gnats came back. I opted to use one hand with a pole and the other constantly waving in front of my face. We got to the camp and we went downstream to the water. We found a suitable pool and started filtering. We decided to have 2 liters worth each. The gnats settled down while we were filtering thankfully. Heading back was a bit painful. I noticed the large hills the trail summited and then descended to a saddle, just to go back up another one. The lack of wind here did not help. Only after the last hill could we feel the wind. Along the way, the vegetation reversed back to desert scrub by the end. We got back right around when we thought we would. Before leaving the park we snagged a benchmark.

I saw a report from October 2021 saying the trail was overgrown. If you consider occasional
Hesperaloe funifera (or something similar looking) bleeding onto the trail and towards the top, some juniper bushes.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Reference Mark
foliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observationfoliage observation
Autumn Foliage Observation Light
Some of the trees had yellow leaves still. Some of the trees were just green slightly tinted yellow.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Light
Light (sparse) wildflowers throughout the first 4 miles or so.
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average hiking speed 1.96 mph
1, 2  Next

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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