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5 triplogs
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Nov 22 2023
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 Routes 5
 Photos 159
 Triplogs 5

24 male
 Joined Jul 09 2022
 NYC, New York
Picacho Ridgeline Attempt, AZ 
Picacho Ridgeline Attempt, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Nov 22 2023
thesnakefromthelemTriplogs 5
Hiking16.25 Miles 4,520 AEG
Hiking16.25 Miles   10 Hrs   48 Mns   1.70 mph
4,520 ft AEG   1 Hour   14 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Well, this was a minor disaster!

The goal was the original intent of [this hike from May][/ [ popup triplog ] ]; I came much closer this time, but ran out of sunlight before I could complete the intended route.

As opposed to last time, I parked my car near the pumping station at the northern end of the main ridgeline. This had the advantage of cutting out the sketchy drive to the usual trailhead and I imagine that any vehicle with decent clearance (4WD or otherwise) would have little trouble making it to where I started. Judging from the few but unmistakable social trails branching out from the impromptu trailhead, I'm far from the first to have this thought. Those wanting to bag Newman Peak but uncomfortable with the drive to the usual trailhead might find the extra few kms in either direction a favorable tradeoff compared to the standard approach.

The walk along the CAP canal from where I parked to the southern tip of the ridgeline was a little long but mostly flat and entirely straightforward; the only real "grade" was the scramble up a short but loose slope to the canal from the parking spot. I left my car around 08:30 and began diverging from the canal maybe around 10:15.

From there I made a beeline toward the indentation in the otherwise sheer cliffs by which I had accessed the ridgeline last time. The exact path I took up the short but necessary pitch of scrambling differed somewhat from before (this time I stayed a tad more to the north), but as before it was at least class 3+/4- with a hairy crux. Once atop the ridgeline I was able to get a better view of the wash a few hundred meters north of where I met it; following it would entail a strictly class 2 approach to South Newman Peak (4209) from the ridge to its south, a less scrambly alternative to the path I had chosen. I also noticed a potential access point even further south than mine, but did not examine it carefully. I might try the latter one out next time that I'm in the area—I suspect, however, that the scrambling will be at least as tricky as it was these last two times.

Once on the ridgeline the traverses north to South Newman (4209), from South Newman (4209) to Middle Newman (4162), and from Middle Newman (4162) to Newman (4506) were all standard. I once more signed the summit log of the former; as far as I could tell, no one had visited since my last ascent in May. As for the latter two, I was excited to have finally bagged them, reaching Newman Peak by around 14:40. The continuous views of Picacho Peak with several of the Madrean sky islands in the distance were phenomenal; once past Newman Peak, the views of the Supes, Four Peaks, and Pinal to the north were equally magnificent.

It was after Newman that the problems began. On some routes, the structure of the terrain, geology, and evidence of other hikers all confer a certain sense of inevitability to being able to continue forward. I think the Superstition ridgeline is a great example of this. Even before Newman, I often felt the reverse: there did always turn out to be a way to keep going forward (on a few occasions requiring a few meters of backtracking, but nothing egregious or even particularly memorable), but its existence felt entirely coincidental each time. This sense carried over to the segment of the hike north of Newman, except once past the peak I could not even rest assured in others' having completed the hike and posted it here.

So I kept following the ridgeline north from Newman, benefitting from small routefinding miracle after small routefinding miracle, until I finally cliffed out. The point where this happened, a large white outcropping, was fairly predictable, though I forgot to take a good photo in advance. My several backtracks in attempting to circumvent this obstacle are visible on the routetrack. Eventually I did manage to continue, downclimbing a tad to the east and skirting the steep but unexposed slope, but this would set the theme for the remainder of the hike.

The change of terrain required to dodge repeated cliff-outs made progress much more exhausting. I found myself constantly switching back, stumbling through brush (including quite unforgiving mesquite), and negotiating scree and small boulders, not quite scrambling but getting just as exhausted as if I were. The initial cliff-out occurred around 15:30, and by the time the sun set around 17:00 it was clear that I wouldn't have much light left past topomarker 3520 (sunset being at 17:20). Looking ahead, the terrain on the "recurve" segment of the ridgeline to the north seemed just as uncertain, and I had no desire to attempt to hike it at night.

Thus I decided to abandon my original plans and descend the steep wash leading down from topomarker 3520. The next wash just to its north seemed more feasible on the topo, but given that it was already well into dusk I didn't dare risk pushing farther. Fortunately, the wash, while as miserable to descend as any, didn't exceed class 2. I spent the entire descent fearing being impassably cliffed out by a waterfall; the one that I did encounter, maybe 6m or so high, was straightforwardly skirted to the north and then descended by switching back. (The move is visible on the routetrack.)

Sometime during my descent, which lasted from about 17:40 to 18:10, the almost-full moon rose above the ridgeline and illuminated my path from behind me. The light was sufficiently bright to cast shadows; past a certain point I didn't even bother using my flashlight. From the base of the wash, I paralleled the originally intended ridgeline across the open desert, reaching my vehicle without incident (save two old fences, easily circumvented) by 19:15.

On the drive back to Phoenix, I swore all kinds of oaths to never try to do this hike again...I expect to make another attempt at the end of this December.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Benchmark
  2 archives
Nov 06 2023
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 Routes 5
 Photos 159
 Triplogs 5

24 male
 Joined Jul 09 2022
 NYC, New York
McDowell Mountain Mother LodePhoenix, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
Hiking avatar Nov 06 2023
thesnakefromthelemTriplogs 5
Hiking16.51 Miles 6,223 AEG
Hiking16.51 Miles   10 Hrs   57 Mns   1.75 mph
6,223 ft AEG   1 Hour   31 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
A tour of the main peaks of the park.

Despite having family just walking distance from the Preserve, I had yet to wander much farther north than Sunrise. That said, I had wanted to check out Thompson's Peak for some time and although I would have preferred a better weather window (temps in the valley peaked somewhere in the low 30s C), I was leaving town the following day. I didn't worry too much about working out an exact route in advance, resting assured that the scrambling and routefinding wouldn't be too bad thanks to a trip report of Stav.

Still sore and lazy from hiking in the Superstitions two days earlier, I pulled up to the Sunrise trailhead well after sunrise (~08:30 to be exact) with the intent of following the evident ridgeline from just north of Sunrise Peak all to Bell's Pass, from there excursing to McDowell Peak and Drinkwater Peak should sufficient time and enthusiasm remain. This was in hindsight a fairly late start for the hike that I had in mind—and a very late start for the hike that I actually ended up doing—but the many well-marked exits in the vicinity gave me the confidence to keep pushing north.

The first leg of the trip was routine. I accessed Sunrise Peak via Sunrise trail, subsequently continuing north along the Andrews-Kinsey trail. As usual, I encountered several other hikers on my way up, both ascending and descending. At ~09:30 I met one last hiker heading south on A-K, after which I saw no one else, not even from a distance, until dusk (~18:00).

After heading north some ~6km on the A-K trail, I reached a saddle of the aforementioned ridgeline, just below 900m in elevation. There I ditched the trail for the ridgeline, trekking directly up the moderately steep incline, aided by the many mostly-stable boulders which afforded great traction and ample handholds. A while of this got me to "Peak 3585", and a bit of descent followed by more of the same led to Peak 3805. Intriguingly, there were not only a couple of large cairns at the summit but even a faint social trail leading down the ridgeline toward the saddle between Peaks 3805 and 3702. The terrain on this entire portion of the trip was excellent; there was little scree, few moving rocks, and for the most part only a moderate amount of brush.

Having reached this saddle, the next item on the agenda was to summit Peak 3702, a.k.a. "Doubletop". It was apparent looking ahead that the routefinding would not be quite as trivial as it had been earlier in the day. Moreover, the uniquely rhyolitic surface composition of 3702, responsible for its strikingly pale and rugged appearance when viewed from afar, made for a smoother and more fragmented substrate and consequently a more haphazard scramble upwards. Even so, the straightforward route up (i.e., dodging any sheer surfaces to the east, but otherwise gaining as much elevation as possible) worked like a charm, and it wasn't long before I found myself at the two summits, the lesser of which was marked by a single lamp head(?) wedged into some rocks to point toward the sky. The route down was similar, though where it was hard to judge from above the feasibility of scrambling down a vertical drop, I simply descended west and (if necessary) south, eventually finding myself on a well-worn social trail leading to a pullout on Thompson's Peak Road.

I then followed the road to the peak, marveling that any vehicle could safely traverse even the paved portion given its near-100% grade. It was nice to finally see the radio towers in person, but I didn't dwell long—I wanted to be back at my vehicle well before sunset (lol) and it was already 12:48. Instead, I immediately began the tedious but mostly uneventful descent to Bell's Pass, which included ascending and descending landmark 3515. (Which, I confess, I had initially mistaken for a shadow.) Though occasional winds had done a decent job of tempering the midday heat, I was really beginning to feel it, and decided to postpone any final decision on pushing onward to McDowell Peak until after I had reached Bell's Pass. I arrived there ~14:00.

After taking a few minutes' break, I felt decent enough to attempt to make it to the Peak. The route up proved to be nothing unusual given what had preceded it, a pleasant surprise given its apparent relative steepness on the topo. I was a little surprised by the lack of any survey marker (though there was a solar-powered emergency call station), but I figured that I'd have plenty of time to search for it when I returned from the short traverse over to Drinkwater Peak (3914). Well, at least I intended that the traverse be short—in fact, it ate up a surprising amount of crucial time given the two peaks' apparent proximity and while the views of Scottsdale were certainly better than those from McDowell, they were nothing special compared to those from the days' other peaks.

While resting and Googling the summit marker issue on Drinkwater, I learned to my horror that McDowell Peak, despite its name, was *not* the high point of the range. Rather East End, still some several kms to the north, was. To call this a huge bummer would be a massive understatement; the whole point of this trip was to complete a "McDowell Ridgeline", bagging all the major peaks of interest in the process, and yet here I was omitting the most significant one. I stewed over this failure all the way along the traverse back to McDowell Peak, reaching it at ~15:50. The rational decision would have of course been to call it a day then, hoping to make it back to my car before sunset. At the last moment, however, I made the decision to descend McDowell Peak north instead of south, postponing any irreversible decision on whether to complete the full ridgeline until my reaching Windgate Pass.

Thus I began the trudge down to the Pass, which at first involved some mild downclimbing but quickly resolved to a stroll down a grassy slope. At one point I found myself immediately to the left of an old—but intact—wire fence which I followed it down to the Pass, reaching it at ~16:40. From there I took a short rest, gathering up the courage to commit to the full ridgeline. Shortly after, I continued up to the Lookout, this time on the right side of the continuation of that same fence I had followed earlier. I had worried initially about the apparently steeper grade and looser substrate (judging from a distance) of this ascent relative to those of the previous peaks, but the route that I had scouted from McDowell Peak (following the evident wash above and to the west, traversing it at the last possible moment, and then emerging on a relatively grassy slope leading up to the Lookout) went without a hitch. There was some slickrock in the wash, but nothing particularly noteworthy. I was a little surprised to see a cairn near the top of this stretch—evidently the route that I had found wasn't as original as I had imagined.

At the lookout, I paused to take another break, really regretting not packing extra food. Indeed, I had exhausted the last of what I had brought all the way back on McDowell Peak, not anticipating the long day that it had turned out to be. I decided to watch the sunset from the Lookout (at 17:30 almost on the dot), and then quickly made my way along the Lookout trail to the junction with Tom's Thumb trail.

This I reached about 18:00, and there was just enough light out for me to begin ascending East End peak. I had read on HAZ that there was a spur trail leading to it, but I had wrongly assumed that it was like the faint social trails that I had encountered earlier in the day. Moreover, the evident gully strewn with large blocks of granite appeared quite difficult to penetrate from the south below, so I instead opted to forge my own way directly up to the peak instead of bothering to find the spur trail. This led to some confusing backtracking and squeezing through cracks, but I eventually made it to the summit (~18:30) just as the last of twilight was fading. It was only when I passed the solar panel installation that it became just how well-worn the spur trail that I had not bothered to look for was. At least the descent back to Tom's Thumb trail was easy.

The descent via Tom's Thumb trail to Tom's Thumb trailhead was likewise straightforward, and I was on the way back to where I was staying by ~19:00.

I'm glad that I managed to hit all the highlights of the Preserve, even if the views I enjoyed from East End would have been much nicer with the sun still out. No doubt this hike could be made substantially more enjoyable with proper planning in advance. On balance, however, I'm quite content with how things turned out.
 Flora
 Flora [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Saguaro
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Giant Centipede
  5 archives
Nov 03 2023
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 Routes 5
 Photos 159
 Triplogs 5

24 male
 Joined Jul 09 2022
 NYC, New York
Canyon-Avoidant Superstition Ridgeline, AZ 
Canyon-Avoidant Superstition Ridgeline, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Nov 03 2023
thesnakefromthelemTriplogs 5
Hiking20.19 Miles 5,746 AEG
Hiking20.19 Miles   13 Hrs   23 Mns   1.78 mph
5,746 ft AEG   2 Hrs   4 Mns Break
 
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
This is a repeat of a hike that I first completed this March. Unlike last time, I actually managed to get to the trailhead before sunrise, albeit still later than I had initially wanted. Nevertheless, given the relatively shorter November daytime and the addition of a handful of new elements, I ended up finishing in around the same amount of darkness. Moreover, daytime temps in the valley (so presumably also on the ridgeline) were about 10C higher than they had been in March, peaking in the low 30s. Curiously, I was, as far as I could tell, alone the entire day between the scramble toward balanced rock (during which I heard folks' voices at Hieroglyphics Falls at ~07:00) and the walk along First Water Road to SR-88 (~20:00).

The biggest difference between the two trips, however, was that I was forced to complete this one almost entirely without my glasses. I somehow managed to lose them just above Hieroglyphics Falls scarcely half an hour into the day. (They didn't fall off my face or anything like that—I simply set them down to wipe them and they disappeared.) I looked for them for over 20 minutes to no avail. Given how the rest of the weekend was predicted to be even warmer, I ultimately decided to continue without them. It's my impression that things move slowly in the desert absent rainfall, so I'll search for them more thoroughly when back in town... The silver lining was that between the binoculars that I had packed and my relative familiarity with the area, I didn't really have any severe issues with routefinding on the off-trail segments of the hike, even despite my abysmal eyesight (something like -5 in both eyes).

At any rate, I made it up to Peak 5057 without any other incidents via the "Balanced Rock" route modulo the modifications detailed in my previous triplog. From there, I carried on to the Three Sisters as before, after that beginning the long walk to Peak 5024.

I must have misplaced the main Ridgeline trail on the way back just southeast of Peak 5057 near where the spur trail diverges; I found myself following a well-trodden alternative, skirting the "tuft" of hoodoos just north of 5057 below and to the east as opposed to adjacent and to the west. I made it back onto the trail proper just fine, but it's visible on the GPS track where I backtracked along the main trail to figure out precisely where I had gone astray.

I then made it down the "crux" by which the summit block of 5057 is accessed from the north and from there to the base of topo marker 4790 in a reasonable timeframe. I ascended up to 4790 via the same crevice that I had previously accessed it, only this time I brought my backpack with me (using a rope to lower it on the way down). This emboldened me to wander around on top of the platform for a bit; the views of the remainder of the Superstitions were amazing, and those of Weaver's Needle were in particular arguably better than those from anywhere else on the mountain. Having rested and eaten/drank sufficiently, I descended the way I came and then continued moving north along the ridgeline.

The stretch of ridgeline between 4790 and Peak 5024 were all more or less as I remembered, albeit warmer, with Hiero Saddle, "Peak 4869", and Peak 5024's Key Col all passed in due time.

Once I made it onto the large block on which Peak 5024 and the Flatiron rest, I diverged from the Ridgeline trail as before, following the hoodoo-decorated "minor ridgeline" over to Peak 5024. This segment of the hike was more taxing than it should have been; I had forgotten the intricacies of the many routes through the hoodoos and had to do a fair bit of scrambling up and down that I otherwise could have avoided. I knew that I was almost in the home stretch when I saw the particularly memorable hoodoo whose silhouette is strongly reminiscent of a man with a green lichenous beard.

I then descended down to the Flatiron from 5024 ascended back to 5024 from the Flatiron via the standard route through the hoodoo maze; I had wanted to do this back in March but had ran out of food and time so skipped it. This was my first visit to the Flatiron all year and I was pleasantly surprised by how short the trip from 5024 to the Flatiron actually was (no more than 15mins in either direction).

By the time I was back at 5024 (~16:30), the shadows were beginning to get long, so I wasted little time in returning back to "Greenbeard" and starting the long and scrambly descent to Massacre Falls. Having never before hiked the area in Fall, I had not counted on the vegetation having grown as much as it did since March. This made for a comparatively uncomfortable bushwack in the beginning, especially in the upper reaches of Massacre Canyon, where some scrambling was involved. Eventually, however, I made it past that segment, and was pleased to see that the hike down was more or less as I had remembered, even as the amount of cairns and of spots where a social trail had begun to develop exceeded what I remembered. The sun set on me and dusk began during this segment of the trip.

Once I was just above Massacre Falls, I decided, foolishly, to attempt to descend the final scramble portion through the "window" via which I had many times ascended (but never previously descended). The effect of this was that I attempted to climb down to the Falls much farther east than was feasible, and it was only after a lot of confusing scrambling and being repeatedly forced west by cliff-outs in the blurry, rapidly-fading light (using the rope I had packed to plumb their depth and see whether they could be safely scrambled) that I finally found my way to the Falls. In the moment I was sure that I had taken an unnecessarily west-detoured downclimb to reach them; it was only when I consulted my GPS track in hindsight did I see that the route I had taken down was essentially that which I had ascended those many months ago.

From Massacre Falls, the walk to Jacob's Crosscut trailhead was mostly straightforward, following the Massacre Falls trail, although I did manage to misplace the trail on a few occasions, traversing the desert to rejoin it.

Overall, it was a fun trip despite some jolting hiccups, and I'm glad that I finally managed to complete the route I had initially envisioned including the points of interest that I had initially excluded when first hiking it in March. I don't know when I'll return to Superstition Mountain, but if the weather is favorable, then I'll certainly consider repeating it once more.
  4 archives
May 20 2023
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 Routes 5
 Photos 159
 Triplogs 5

24 male
 Joined Jul 09 2022
 NYC, New York
South Newman South Ascent, AZ 
South Newman South Ascent, AZ
 
Hiking avatar May 20 2023
thesnakefromthelemTriplogs 5
Hiking7.53 Miles 2,873 AEG
Hiking7.53 Miles   7 Hrs   2 Mns   1.31 mph
2,873 ft AEG   1 Hour   17 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Linked   linked  
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Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
The motivation for this hike, which I have yet to fulfill, was to complete a "Picacho ridgeline" in the spirit of the Superstition Ridgeline. Given that temps hovered near 35°C for pretty much the entirety of the outing, with full sun exposure, I decided to complete as much of the planned route as I could without fatiguing myself or exhausting my water supplies. Ultimately, I ended up ascending to South Newman Peak (4209) from the south and then bailing via the wash that continues west from the saddle just north of it, a trip which somehow took 7 hours (at least 1 of which was spent cooling off in the shade of convenient boulders). By the time I returned to my vehicle, I had drunk 6 of the 7 liters that I had brought with me.

Embarrassingly, the indentation by which I accessed the "ridgeline" was not the intended one that I had scoped out earlier on the topo, but rather just south of it; I only realized this when reviewing the GPS track the next day. I'll have to go back and check next time I'm there, but the intended route is, based on what I could see from above, likely at most a class 3 boulder field traverse, whereas the actual route I followed involved a couple minutes of what I imagine is class 4 (but nothing too crazy). After that, however, the route was straightforward, arcing predictably to the summit where I was able to enjoy clear views of the surrounding desert and read and sign the summit register. I'll have to come back for the actual highpoint of the Picachos another time.

P.s.: Getting to the bridge across the CAP was itself a challenge, and I echo the sentiment that it's best attempted in a 4WD with ample clearance.
  1 archive
Mar 17 2023
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 Routes 5
 Photos 159
 Triplogs 5

24 male
 Joined Jul 09 2022
 NYC, New York
Canyon-Avoidant Superstition Ridgeline, AZ 
Canyon-Avoidant Superstition Ridgeline, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Mar 17 2023
thesnakefromthelemTriplogs 5
Hiking18.90 Miles 5,412 AEG
Hiking18.90 Miles   10 Hrs   11 Mns   2.04 mph
5,412 ft AEG      55 Mns Break
 
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
The goal of this hike, as the title suggests, was to traverse the Superstition Ridgeline without having to pass through any of the three main canyons by which it's usually accessed. (I'm just not a fan of Siphon Draw, Carney, or Hieroglyphic Canyon!)

Aside from the grave error of rolling out of bed at 08:00 and consequently having to circle the Hiero TH parking lot for over half an hour before finding parking, the trip, which I've divided into eight segments below, went smoothly. I hope to repeat it with minor modifications in the near future.

The first segment of the route was the usual walk from the Hieroglyphic TH to Hieroglyphic Falls on the Hieroglyphic Trail; nothing unusual, though at 09:30, I began much later than I would have liked.

The second segment was approximately the "Balanced Rock/South Ascent" route from the Falls to Superstition Peak 5057. To keep things interesting, I took a couple detours from the standard/cairned route. These involved some fun but short segments of class 3. In particular, I deviated southwest of the standard route when attacking the first major cliff band, hiking directly toward one of the "horns" visible from Hiero Falls instead of bypassing it via the balanced rock. Subsequently, I deviated northwest of the usual bypass of the second major cliff band, ignoring the large white spraypainted arrow directing ascending hikers rightward. Finally, upon having made it through the third and last big cliff band on the standard route and coming level with the summit block of 5057, I continued straight toward the peak instead of keeping east to meet the spur from the Ridgeline Trail.

The third and fourth segments involved traveling southeast along the spur and Ridgeline Trails from 5057 to the Three Sisters and then northwest along the Ridgeline Trail from the Three Sisters to the shallow saddle between 5057 and topo marker 4790 respectively. I was able to access the latter via a class 3+/4 indentation in the wall to its south.

The fifth segment was just continuing northwest along the Ridgeline Trail, from topo marker 4790 to just past topo marker 4562; the sixth segment was deviating north from the Ridgeline Trail to approach Supserstition Peak 5024 from the east, reaching the peak just as the sun was getting low in the horizon.

The trip's seventh segment was effectively a downward "reverse flatiron", descending northeast to the falls from the prominence just above it. Toward its end, the sun had set and twilight had begun, making for some great views of the hills to the north and of the Four Peaks off in the distance, but there was still sufficient light to navigate without a flashlight.

The eighth and final segment of the hike was a flashlight-aided walk to Jacob's Crosscut TH from the Falls via the Massacre Falls trail. (At which point I continued down the NF road and SR 88 to the Lost Dutchman parking lot, where I was picked up by a family member.)

Overall, this was a really enjoyable trip, though more challenging than my previous hikes in the area. Temps were in the 10-20°C range for the most part, and I ended up drinking about 5 of the 7 liters of water I brought with me, so I'll probably have to wait for the summer heat to wear off before I can attempt a repeat.
  1 archive
average hiking speed 1.72 mph

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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