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19 triplogs
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Dec 20 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
SoMo - Goodman Canyon with petros, AZ 
SoMo - Goodman Canyon with petros, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Dec 20 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking5.08 Miles 1,358 AEG
Hiking5.08 Miles   2 Hrs   12 Mns   2.31 mph
1,358 ft AEG5 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Headed up Goodman Canyon for the 2nd time. Stayed high on the east ridge last time through, this time went up through the belly and made some nice finds (also a fair amount of graffiti and an entire trashed campsite).
After reaching the top, went to look for the Sun God petro for the 4th time and still couldn't find it. Continued on to 4 Pillars, had enough time to find 1 of the other nearby spots but know there's still 2 over there to find as well.
Pictures are in descending order of coolness, not chronological
  2 archives
Nov 08 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
South Mountain - canyon petros, AZ 
South Mountain - canyon petros, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Nov 08 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking3.40 Miles 988 AEG
Hiking3.40 Miles   1 Hour   37 Mns   2.10 mph
988 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Parked at Mormon trailhead. Second attempt finding Goodman Canyon, I think I had the right one this time. Found a handful of petroglyphs but expected to find a lot more. However, I did wind up following game trails high up the east canyon wall. Will need a few trips back to fully explore this canyon. Hugging the high wall did pay off with one nice panel that I know I've seen in Landscape of the Spirits.
At one point high up this isolated canyon I heard what sounded like something heavy skidding down some dirt, I thought no way there would be another person way out here... I stayed silent for a minute and then spotted a javelina coming up the wash way down below me.
Not as much garbage in this canyon as the one I checked out last week - I hauled out TWO yard signs(??) halfway up the other canyon. Ironically one was an ad for junk removal. It still had the metal stakes attached. Worst part is I was going uphill and had to lug them the rest of the way
Anyways I linked back up with Mormon loop at the top and took Mormon trail back to the lot.
 
Oct 28 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Aravaipa CanyonGlobe, AZ
Globe, AZ
Hiking avatar Oct 28 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking21.58 Miles 1,050 AEG
Hiking21.58 Miles1 Day   2 Hrs   48 Mns   
1,050 ft AEG38 LBS Pack
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
My fifth trip to Aravaipa Canyon and my friend's first. We took the east trailhead though which was a first for me, and my first backpacking trip. After a LOT of driving we met up in Pima. It's at this time I'd also like to thank the good people of Pima and their plumbing facilities as I found an open gas station in the dawn hours and relieved some backpacking anxiety. I dropped my sedan at the Latter Day Saints church parking lot for safekeeping and crossed my fingers, and we hopped in the truck.
Just before reaching the East trailhead, we were briefly blocked by a flock of about 20 turkeys. Then we also passed a few small javelina families with little babies running around. They didn't seemed phased by the vehicle at all. We parked near the Turkey Creek trailhead and set off into Aravaipa.
We were shooting for Horse Camp but were eyeing any campsite we came across along the way. Marked a few really awesome ones to use in the future. One in particular was nestled into a rocky alcove and was very photogenic.
We dropped our packs at Deer Creek/Hellhole Canyon. I had made it out here from the west side once and knew it was worth revisiting. We spent around 3.5 hours going in and back.
Not far from Vergus canyon we found a great campsite and decided not to push farther to Horse Camp. We had only seen 1 other person the entire day so the site was likely open, but it was getting late and we were tired.
I walked away from the campfire a number of times to enjoy the 12% moonlight. Down in the canyon I couldn't even see my hand in front of my face. It reminded me of being in a cave.
We had dinner and I was fading in and out of sleep sitting by the fire by 8pm. One of the few times I closed my eyes for a minute and reopened them... I couldn't tell what was real anymore but there was a walking stick suddenly sitting on my knee. I prodded my friend to get a pic.
A tiny sprinkle for 5 minutes around 5am got us going, so we packed up and headed back to the trailhead. On the way back we spotted a big cave and scrambled our way up to it for some cool pictures.
Back at the trailhead, we took a quick detour and drove to the Turkey Creek ruin to explore, then headed home.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Salado Habitation
  1 archive
Sep 27 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Upper Pima Wash petros, AZ 
Upper Pima Wash petros, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar Sep 27 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Run/Jog4.40 Miles 492 AEG
Run/Jog4.40 Miles   1 Hour   15 Mns   3.52 mph
492 ft AEG10 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Slept in this morning so I hit Pima Canyon around 330pm, surprisingly 7 or 8 cars there for 110 degrees. Headed across National to the CCC structure, then up to the big panel at the Javelina junction. Only 10 feet or so from the panel I found someone's drone on the ground and packed it out. Up the northern branch of Pima Wash for the first time and found a couple good petroglyph sites. Lots of rocky outcroppings up all the hills, tempting to just keep climbing and checking them all out. But decided to save that for another day and come down from the top. Sun was dropping and the temps weren't bad in the shade in the wash, no critters appeared though.
 
Aug 25 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Ma Ha Tauk yo-yo, AZ 
Ma Ha Tauk yo-yo, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar Aug 25 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Run/Jog11.20 Miles 3,698 AEG
Run/Jog11.20 Miles   4 Hrs   21 Mns   2.57 mph
3,698 ft AEG15 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Started on the west end, up and over the peak, down and around TBone, back up and over the peak, and home. Had seen a pic from someone else recently who signed a trail register at the peak and spotted a couple well known HAZ names. Couldn't find the register though. Had to scramble back on trail at one bad spot and got a bit scraped up but otherwise unscathed. We also used a drop car at TBone trailhead to help resupply
  3 archives
Aug 04 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Shaw & NoMo & petros, AZ 
Shaw & NoMo & petros, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar Aug 04 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Run/Jog
Run/Jog   1 Hour   34 Mns   0.00 mph
5 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Doing a club "scavenger hunt" of sorts this summer. Earned 5 pts for my team with a double summit of Shaw + North Mountain. Intended to check out the petroglyphs but went right by them. Came back after completing the loop. That back side of North Mountain gets pretty steep. Going up isn't so much a problem, but my planned route called for coming back down the same side. Decided to just add a mile or two and take the paved path down.
  4 archives
Jul 12 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Pima Wash west petroglyphs, AZ 
Pima Wash west petroglyphs, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jul 12 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking4.30 Miles 896 AEG
Hiking4.30 Miles   1 Hour   18 Mns   3.31 mph
896 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Came from DC to National and up to the old Buena Vista CCC structure. Headed west into the wash this time to uncharted territory. There was an old trail along the wash. I could see from satellite I would be in for some scrambling. It was pretty manageable until 1 point I was fairly high up, the rock is quite slick, and it just didn't seem smart anymore so I turned around. I had seen that exact spot on satellite and assumed it would be the crux and turned out to be right. Coming back down it was nice to have sandy landing areas everywhere, one spot I just jumped down 6 or 7 feet. No sooner had I gotten back down from the worst of the scrambling when, in the middle of nowhere out there, I heard a guy coming down from the top. Greeted him and praised his cojones. He was busy managing the section I turned around on.

Reached some dramatic boulder clearings but unfortunately tons of graffiti. Found some from 1905 which is the oldest I've seen yet. It appears to be right over some snake petroglyphs. The most recent dated graffiti was 2016 which is unfortunate...
Found a couple nice petroglyphs. Need more time to explore the countless boulders up the wash. Found some pottery but the pieces were large, and glazed... So I don't think it's historic, any thoughts?
  3 archives
Jul 11 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Pima Canyon exploring and petroglyphs, AZ 
Pima Canyon exploring and petroglyphs, AZ
 
Hiking avatar Jul 11 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking4.50 Miles 1,148 AEG
Hiking4.50 Miles   1 Hour   13 Mns   3.70 mph
1,148 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Filling in a few spots on south mountain around the Pima Canyon area (the canyon, not the parking lot). Forgot to start my watch so I missed the first mile. Explored some promising spots, found 1 outcropping with quite a few glyphs but most were very badly faded. I assume there used to be a lot more glyphs on the same rock that just aren't visible anymore. On my way back I happened across the 3 shape glyph, square, triangle, cross. I didn't find mention of it specifically in Landscape Of The Spirits but I'm sure I've seen it somewhere before... It looks to me like the circle may align with 4 peaks in the distance and with the summer solstice sunrise, we're a few weeks out now so a little hard to tell.
  1 archive
Jul 10 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
South Mtn - Ntl to JC petroglyphs, AZ 
South Mtn - Ntl to JC petroglyphs, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar Jul 10 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Run/Jog6.10 Miles 942 AEG
Run/Jog6.10 Miles   1 Hour   22 Mns   4.46 mph
942 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Took my phone back out to some areas I had come across petroglyphs recently. National out to Javelina Canyon, and back via Pima Wash. Skipped reposting the Pima Wash petroglyphs which I just triplogged with a photoset last week.
Meant to head north and loop around Javelina Canyon trail back to the lot but went the wrong way so it became an out and back. Spotted lots of promising areas to explore soon for more art.
 
Jul 03 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Pima Wash - South MountainPhoenix, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
 Run/Jog avatar Jul 03 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
 Run/Jog4.50 Miles 940 AEG
 Run/Jog4.50 Miles      58 Mns   4.66 mph
940 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Been through before but either in the dark or staring too much at my feet and missed all the petroglyphs. Lovely morning (if hot and sticky) to go photo them. More in the area I need to go back and find. Quite a bit of historical graffiti, years before the big crews of CCC workers would have been camped there during the 1930s. Oldest I found was 1912, 12 years before it even became a park.. Would have been a pretty remote desolate area to get to back then.
  1 archive
Jun 30 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Mormon to Geronimo loop, AZ 
Mormon to Geronimo loop, AZ
 
Run/Jog avatar Jun 30 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Run/Jog10.40 Miles 2,448 AEG
Run/Jog10.40 Miles   2 Hrs   50 Mns   3.67 mph
2,448 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Main plan to fill in the Geronimo trail which I haven't done yet. Also somehow managed to never hit fat man's pass while out in the area so I checked that off too. Was hoping to find more petroglyphs along Geronimo. Explored a few outcroppings, and noted some promising washes and areas to come back and check. At the Geronimo fork, I poked my head around the signage area and that's when a light green speckled rattlesnake about 2 feet long flopped out on the trail only a couple feet directly in front of me. I was lightly jogging and due to momentum and proximity had no choice but to jump over it. While I changed my underpants it coiled and rattled and scurried off a moment later. I decided that was an omen that I should continue back on the route.
I came across what I am pretty sure are metates, I've never seen any at south mountain before (granted I'm not very observant). They are vertically oriented though. Considering 2 of them appear.to be "broken", it looks to me like the rocks used to be higher up and were damaged in a rockfall, or perhaps tossed down there during trail work long ago. Thoughts on whether you see 3 metates in that picture?
I can upload the gpx route, but have no idea how to attach it to this triplog.
  3 archives
May 25 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
South Mountain petro panel, AZ 
South Mountain petro panel, AZ
 
Hiking avatar May 25 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking7.80 Miles 1,644 AEG
Hiking7.80 Miles   2 Hrs   13 Mns   3.52 mph
1,644 ft AEG
 
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Knew where I wanted to go and saw a slightly more direct route parallel to a trail I frequent, which looked clear enough on map and on satellite. Sure enough I got there and it appeared.to be an old road and old trail... Until it got real and the canyon descent began. I considered turning around but decided to manage it. Had to chuck my water bottle downhill ahead of me in a few spots to manage the scramble with both hands. A 48 minute mile later and I was down but on the other side of the mountain so I came back over the familiar way
 
May 10 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Ridgeline Trail - South MountainPhoenix, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
Hiking avatar May 10 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking5.40 Miles 1,496 AEG
Hiking5.40 Miles   1 Hour   13 Mns   4.44 mph
1,496 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Came across these petroglyphs on the Ridgeline trail a few weeks ago and came back with the phone/camera. Logged hundreds of miles on south mountain in the last 2 years and just starting finding the petroglyphs recently, only my 3rd site here. There's hundreds of them across south mountain
  1 archive
Mar 27 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Squaw Creek RuinsCamp Verde, AZ
Camp Verde, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 27 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking15.40 Miles 866 AEG
Hiking15.40 Miles   6 Hrs   31 Mns   2.36 mph
866 ft AEG10 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners partners
LoMein
Bloody Basin road was soft and muddy awhile after entering the mesa, until we reached a puddle large enough and muddy enough that we reassessed our options. We decided to park 3.5 miles from Brooklyn Basin and hike it. Not long after starting, 2 jeeps came through the puddle just behind us but got no further before bailing for something else, but we marched on. Travel was easier off the road so we spent most of the day in soft, prairie-like grassland, with only the occasional cactus to sidestep. Ran across a decent amount of trash and packed some of it out, particularly shotgun shells which I found 5 or 6.
Our plan was to hike south on top of the mesa down to Squaw Creek, then drop down to the ravine and come back north, hitting Brooklyn Basin on the way out. Nice scenery and pleasant hiking, uneventful other than a tree holding a large nest 3-4 feet across. Many of the ruins sites in the area have multiple buildings, and the size is impressive. An aerial view would be best since the ruins are all sprawling with many many rooms, but the walls are unfortunately mostly low rubble. We began to see metates and occasional petroglyphs as we approached Squaw. There were also countless pottery sherds everywhere, all around.
It seems any ruin in the area almost certainly has incredible petroglyphs just over the edge of the cliff its on. I forgot to look for the red deer though I had marked the location, and got caught up in all the awesome petroglyphs we were finding on the east cliff side. Minimal scrambling involved, but some unfortunate cactus locations and bushes with terrible thorns. You could spend all day finding petroglyphs along the canyon wall. I eventually stopped taking pictures of every single one because there were just so many, particularly deer. Most interesting finds were one panel of LOTS of deer, a panel with what appeared to be a duck and a lot of pecked dots, and some of the anthromorphs. Also one that looks X-rated but could be natural rock coloring...
We could see Squaw Creek down below running pretty heavy, coupled with the time we decided to forego dropping down into the canyon and headed back the way we came. We had only a little time upon reaching Brooklyn Basin, one of us explored the ruins and the other poked around the cliffside to find some last petroglyphs. I also made it up the hill near Brooklyn Basin with white rocks on top, but didn't have the necessary time to explore it properly and just found a few glyphs and continued on.
Very successful day except I forgot the sunscreen in the truck and got burned a little
 
Mar 22 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Cave Creek Indian Ruins at Chalk CanyonPhoenix, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
Hiking avatar Mar 22 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking10.40 Miles 1,083 AEG
Hiking10.40 Miles   2 Hrs   47 Mns   3.74 mph
1,083 ft AEG10 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Took the Metate trail in, missed the petroglyph panel somewhere near the beginning will need to go back sometime. Got one nice pic of a metate and kept moving. A bit tight for time so I jogged as much as I could. The trails are in great shape, not terribly rocky, easy to follow. The cacti out in that area are absolutely enormous, 40+ feet tall. The water level was low so the foot bridges weren't necessary but I still had fun with the various plank boards, a log, and stone stepping. I cleaned up the GPS to remove long turns, etc so my distance went over.
There was relatively little off-trail for this one. It was a warm day but the grass was quite low so I wasn't too nervous. Then I heard something in a nearby bush at one point and stopped, made some noise and stomped a bit and waited and listened... bang! I was hit around my Achilles! I jumped out my skin and watched a large cactus chunk fling forward from my leg. Never so happy to be stabbed by a cactus.
I arrived a little north of the ruins and found just a bunch of big rocks and was pretty disappointed. But making my way south a little found well worn foot paths and then the real ruins which were pretty sprawling. A couple rooms had better remaining walls and weren't totally overgrown. There was 1 sherd laid out on a rock. I didn't have enough time to explore as much as I wanted to. I think I read there are other petroglyphs up on top, south of the ruins? Maybe someone can confirm.
I deviated from the official triplog that hurtles directly down the hillside. The topos had shown a gentler slope to the north that I planned to follow west to the ravine for only a small added distance. I was extra delighted to quickly run into a path as I headed north. Not sure if it was meant for people or just made by the cattle but it was as good as any trail I had taken this far and headed exactly where I wanted to go. The cattle smell was prevalent, but I pretended it was just good cheese. I accidentally spooked 1 cow up ahead as I ran downhill. The path made it super easy to get down to the ravine.
I came back south until I was below the ruins and there were obvious well-worn footpaths on the east side cutting up to where the big petroglyphs are. The main panel is really big and impressive, probably 4-5 feet across. The large stick man is maybe 1.5 feet tall alone. Again I would have liked to poke around the surrounding area a bit longer to see if there were other glyphs but had no time. I missed the metates and sherds in the area as well.
On the way out I felt a good sudden stab in the ball of my foot but only once. 50 yards later I get stabbed again. Took my shoe off, took off the laces, took out the insole, clearly a sharp thorn pierced up through the bottom and was now a spike in the corner of my shoe. I had forgotten to bring tweezers and it was wedged in there pretty good, but managed to get it out with my fingers.
  1 archive
Mar 13 2024
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Cline Creek RuinsPhoenix, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
Run/Jog avatar Mar 13 2024
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Run/Jog11.73 Miles 2,129 AEG
Run/Jog11.73 Miles   4 Hrs   54 Mns   2.39 mph
2,129 ft AEG10 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Parked at one of the 2 dirt spaces at the end of 12th street, easily reachable by any vehicle. Planned to do a CCW loop, aiming to arrive at the east ruins for sunrise first. Included the route since this one is well documented enough already. Followed a primitive road for 3 or 4 miles east to the southeast base of the crescent shaped mountain. Here there was a well trodden and clear path heading up to the mountain, and it was easy to follow most of the way. In spots where I lost it briefly, it was easy enough to tell the general direction to ascend, eventually getting funneled into a chute that was the steepest part and reminded me of doing Camelback. A couple small false summits appear with the objective visible out on the ridge. The ruins were nice, well defined low walls all around, and in back a higher section of wall around 6 feet tall. There were a few pieces of pottery gathered in 1 spot but they didn't look very old to me, the color and shape, but what do I know, maybe someone else can chime in. Took a lot of time exploring and taking pictures.
Coming back down I finally took on an infamous cholla ball which had to be dislodged with a hair comb. Got some smaller needles that required stripping off past the sock and tweezing out. Highly recommend a comb and tweezers. At another point, felt my big toe getting scraped and took off my shoe and sock but couldn't find anything. Then discovered 2 giant cactus needles that had pierced through the sole of my shoe from underneath.
Reaching the base, I added a quick and easy diversion to the small hill just to the south. There was a nice petroglyph field there with lots of them scattered around
To complete the loop required going off trail for about a mile on the northeast section. This was the worst part. Very thorny brush and cacti everywhere. Also high grass made me nervous, I wouldn't personally want to try it in any warmer weather than it already was. Circling around eventually picked up a large open wash that I followed for about another mile or two on the north side, here I found a bone that looked like maybe the base of a spine. Then I found lots of trash, bottles, plastic caps, straws, blown up golf balls in the wash on the north, took what I could and packed it out.
Picked up the primitive road again and followed it to the west ruins. The road pretty much goes straight up to them. It's not a lot of elevation gain but it's VERY steep, quite a leg workout. Zigzagging will help. The west ruins were not quite as impressive as the east, which I expected, but I was still quite happy with them. Particularly one wall with a divider that remained in a "T" shape.
 
Dec 29 2023
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Boynton Canyon Trail #47Sedona, AZ
Sedona, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 29 2023
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking22.40 Miles 3,590 AEG
Hiking22.40 Miles   6 Hrs   42 Mns   3.34 mph
3,590 ft AEG15 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Drove up from Tempe at 4am on 3 hours of sleep with plans for a big day. Wound up doing Boynton, Fay, and Long Canyons all in one day before driving back home. Combined triplog here.

Boynton - full trail plus Subway - 7.89mi, 1296ft AEG, 2:10 elapsed
Reached Boynton trailhead at 7am about 30 min before sunrise. There were around a dozen cars there already, the lot about half full.
The beginning of the trail by the resort is quite "urban" :( In the interest of time I planned to jog as much of the day as possible where the trails allowed (first ultra is in 1 month!), and managed to overtake everyone else on the trail and reach the subway first so I had it to myself briefly. The turnoff to the subway is almost impossible to miss with how much traffic goes there, but I did encounter a few people later in the full trail who had missed it.
The subway ramp was steeper than I expected. I shimmied up the right-most side. Coming back down I took a far easier path that you would find to the left of the ramp, through a branched archway, that takes you right up to the ruins alcove. I would recommend using that unless you want the challenge of the ramp. Coming back to the main trail, it was easy to take a wrong turn a couple times.
I knew there were other ruins in Boyntonn but ran out of time trying to internet sleuth all my destinations before driving up, and hoped they would be a little more obvious in Boynton. Unfortunately I didn't manage to spot the others, so I plan to go back eventually.
The rest of the trail was pleasant forest trail but not particularly dramatic. The strong smell of pine was wonderful. Upon reaching the end, I once again hoped to spy some ruins from the vantage point but had no luck. Upon returning to the trailhead it was a total zoo. I would guess 200 cars up and down the street spilling out of the lot, people getting dropped at the trailhead, etc. I didn't know yet that you could park along the street, and didn't want to risk getting shut out of Fay parking and losing any spot at all, so I left my car at Boynton and after a pit stop jogged down to Fay with just my tripod in hand.

Fay Canyon - 5.42mi, 909ft AEG, 2:08 elapsed
Fay began with wide, gentle dirt paths. The turnoff to the arch is again quite obvious. I worked my way up beneath the arch for some photo ops. The arch is separated from the cliff, but the gap is narrow so it's difficult to see that from most angles. For that reason I found the pictures better from underneath the arch than on top of it. To get to the top you'll aim to ascend the slope to the right/south of the arch. I followed a well defined path going up and to the right, but it had quite a lot of prickly pear, and a spot or two that narrowed and required some attention to footing. Coming down I tried an alternate path down a rock fall. It had no exposure and no cacti, just lots of large rocks which made a little slower going, so I'd rate the paths about equal. When I reached the bottom a stranger asked if I drove a particular car. They had been at Boynton and saw me go to my car and were hoping to get my spot when they saw me jog off, so they gave up and went to Fay instead. They were good sports about it.
I returned to the main trail and headed up to the fork. I knew ruins would be on the right fork, but didn't know exactly where. I went up the wash and some areas that looked fairly well traveled, and saw plenty of footprints. I went a ways up and down the right fork twice and still found nothing, but the foliage was dense and made it hard to see much. Skipping between rocks in the wash, I managed to roll my ankle fairly hard, but fortunately it didn't catch up with me until the drive home stiffened me up. Gave up looking for the Fay ruins, but at the next canyon received a tip from a traveler about where to find them when I go back.

Long Canyon - 9.12mi, 1385ft AEG, 3:24 elapsed
The whole area was crawling with people by this point, so I parked at the Mescal trailhead and didn't bother going down to check Long Canyon trailhead. Mescal was full, but I was lucky to get a spot from someone leaving. I jogged to the large nexus intersection and briefly took a wrong turn left which I believe heads to the Birthing Cave which I didn't really have interest in.
I reached "butt rock" a couple miles in, and continued up Long trail for now according to plan. After another mile or two, I reached my first point of interest. At a rocky wash with a large pine, there was a small but fairly clear path leading off to the left and switchbacking uphill. Here the path became quite steep, but the section is short. After just a few moments you should see the ladder come into view. Reaching a fork, I headed left first, to a nice Hohokam dwelling. This one may be have been restored at some point, but it was cool nonetheless. I worked my way back to the fork and up the other direction toward the ladder and another small ruin next to it. I shimmied into a small cave behind the ladder for some photo ops.
I did not intend to go further up Long trail, so I headed back to "butt rock" and turned east this time, following a well traveled path. I was glad to encounter a couple other travelers for this stretch which involved a couple small rocky scrambles. The goal is the opening between the ice cream cone rock on the left, and the 3 sisters formation to the right. The ruins were neat, I found it difficult to get a photo angle that showed them off well, they look better in person :) Heading back down solo, I did have to search a few minutes to find the right spot back down over the long ledge.

I changed into clothes that didn't smell bad for the drive home and enjoyed the most overpriced but delicious quarter pounder with cheese in as long as I can remember.
  2 archives
Dec 21 2023
avatar

 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Skull Mesa RuinsPhoenix, AZ
Phoenix, AZ
Hiking avatar Dec 21 2023
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking18.70 Miles 4,252 AEG
Hiking18.70 Miles   7 Hrs   30 Mns   2.49 mph
4,252 ft AEG20 LBS Pack
 no routes
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
In my nascent adventuring career I've been measuring hikes and trail runs as successful depending
on whether I bled or not. Making a small exception for this one, as I don't believe it's humanly possible
to traverse the mesa without a little DNA impeding your LNT.
Drove in an ordinary 10 year old sedan - only the final 1-2 miles are unpaved but quite good condition.
Arrived at 6am, Spur Cross has a $3 fee but nobody was there to take it. Step over a low passage through
the right side of the gate, leave your $3 in an envelope at the station, detach the tab and carry it
with you.
I followed the "standard" trail route up 48 and across 247, but there is clearly a shorter trail on the map that cuts directly NE mentioned on other triplogs that would reduce mileage.
Upon reaching the top, once you start your way north you will encounter another small rocky ridge. I scrambled up it on the way out, but on the return found an easy path back down marked with cairns. The path is nice if you can find it, but I wouldn't waste too much time if you can just find a decent scrambling spot.
Past this you are completely on your own bushwhacking, save for game trails that occasionally mat down the grass slightly. The mesa had far more and denser vegetation than I expected, 3-4 miles each way of knee to waist high snake habitat, and larger bushes and cacti impeding visibility. Hidden between the thick bush are countless cacti, traversing the mesa was a bit of a slog as you had to plan every step. Even in December, it was warm enough in the middle of the day that I was a bit nervous of snakes. I would not attempt this outside of the winter months for that reason. I did not encounter any snakes, but did run across 3 whitetail deer in the middle of the top of Skull Mesa as a treat.
The petroglyphs were much more difficult to find than I expected, I eventually cheated and looked up the GPS marker. Even then, I was only able to find 1 rock, though it was spectacular. In Ruins Seldom Seen, the author mentions the petroglyphs are spread over a wide area. I searched for about half an hour but unfortunately didn't find any of the others.
Upon reaching the northern ridgeline, the 3 peaks and 2 saddles will be clearly visible. The third/farthest peak is the ultimate target, though it still looks quite far away. The first peak is rocky/bouldery, but up and over is not difficult, on par with Camelback terrain. At first I attempted another up and over of the second peak, but the descent side looked too steep and sketchy. From the top, I spotted a much better path and scrambled down to connect with it - skip the ascent completely, instead head low and down to the right and you can traverse a flat path around this peak.
The lower ruins will now appear, beginning with the long wall on the right, but there are numerous other rooms scattered about, and you can also find a number of pottery sherds gathered together on a rock by someone previously. The final peak is steeper than the previous 2 but well worth it, as the ruins at the top are spectacular, and being on a mountain top, the backdrops are stunning.
I went in late December, starting in the cold dark at 6am. It still became quite warm in the mid day sun. I took roughly a gallon of water which was just about right for me, over 7.5 hours. I did 18.6 miles but you should be able to do it in 15 or so if you cut the most direct routes possible.
 Culture
 Culture [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Trash Hauled Out
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Skull Mesa
 
Jun 02 2023
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 Routes 7
 Photos 240
 Triplogs 19

male
 Joined Nov 24 2023
 Tempe, AZ
Aravaipa CanyonGlobe, AZ
Globe, AZ
Hiking avatar Jun 02 2023
overthehillsfarawaTriplogs 19
Hiking23.10 Miles 200 AEG
Hiking23.10 Miles   7 Hrs   58 Mns   2.90 mph
200 ft AEG20 LBS Pack
 no routes
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Drove an ordinary 9 year old sedan to the West entrance trailhead - road is paved until the final few miles, and then only a few spots require some extra caution. After setting off on foot, turn at the sign along the path or you'll dead end at a fenced in area.
Original thought was to traverse the whole canyon trailhead to trailhead out and back in my single day permit. I saw a better opportunity however by cutting off the last couple miles to the eastern trailhead (most of the canyon is pretty much the same up to that point) and instead diverting up Hellhole/Deer Creek side canyon was not disappointed! More on that later.
There is mostly some kind of path or trail on either or both sides of the creek for much of the way, and I recommend seeking it out to make travel much faster, however in some spots it may be quicker to just trod upstream so take your pick. On my first very brief trip to Aravaipa, I encountered 2 wild turkeys in the creek.
After a few miles of wooded creek, I reached the canyon proper. Shortly after, Hell's Half Acre side canyon appeared on the right/south bank. This is a very short and particularly dramatic and photogenic area worth exploring. On this trip I did not attempt exploring any other side canyons between until reaching Hellhole/Deer Creek near the East trailhead. That side canyon was also well worth the trip. There are dramatic sheer walls (pictured in the photoset) and dramatic rock formations as well as a couple rock windows I believe is the right term (back out on the main creek and heading back West, it should be easy to spot at least 1 more similar rock window high on the north bank). Hellhole canyon also has a few hanging garden spots, pictured. I encountered some other people here for the first time since leaving the West trailhead, who guided me to 2 owls in one of the cracks splitting off from Hellhole canyon. They pointed straight at them and I still couldn't find them for awhile because they were so well camouflaged (pictured).
I lightly jogged to make pace back to the west trailhead for a full day. On this trip I brought a water filter but never used it, and packed about a gallon of water which provided a healthy buffer.
 
average hiking speed 2.45 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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