Havasupai Reservation and Havasu Creek (Round I and II)

 

Hike Date: March 20-21, 2015 and April 9-11, 2015

Miles: Approx: 30 miles in 2 days for Round 1 and who knows how many for Round 2

Havasupai translates as the people of the Blue-Green Water, a name very fitting due to the amazing color of the Havasu Creek.  The water of the creek has large amounts of travertine which results in the color of the creek, and results in many of the waterfalls that exist along the creek as the travertine basically acts as mortar sticking rocks and logs and everything else together.

This post is going to be a bit long as it covers 5 days of backpacking spread across two trips… also you may be overcome by an intense want to go backpacking after reading this. You’ve been warned.

Continue reading Havasupai Reservation and Havasu Creek (Round I and II)

Pine Mountain

 

Hike Date: March 14, 2015

Miles: Approx: 12 miles

Hours: Approx 12.5

Pine Mountain sits slightly below and slightly to the North of Mount Baldy. The truck trail leading up to Guffy Campground is closed in the Winter, making it necessary to hike up the Acorn Trail from Wrightwood to the Pacific Crest Trail, eventually to the Pine Mountain trail.

We met at 5:45 AM, and carpooled up Wrightwood, where we had to squeeze into some very tight street parking on Acorn Drive.  Note that the drive changes from a public road to a private street.  From what I have read, if you park above the signs (and somehow miss the plethora of signs saying NO PUBLIC PARKING), you will probably get a ticket and towed. Parking is tight, but we managed to squeeze 4 vehicles onto the side of the road legally, and had no issues.

This was a pop up hike for the 52 Hike Challenge, so after I gave my standard introduction, Karla and Philip (creators of the 52 Hike Challenge) talked for a couple of minutes and introduced the excellent gentlemen from Sea to Summit Productions who ended up taking some picture and video of the hike.  We had a total of 11 people on this hike, which was a good number as larger groups tend to have more difficulty, especially on these harder hikes.

The hike started out a bit interesting, as we had to walk by a number of signs on Acorn Drive which indicated in no uncertain terms that the folks that own the homes on this drive do not welcome any strangers parking on this street.  The paved road drags on for a little while, but eventually you’ll come to a gate with an opening on the side for hikers.  Shortly after the gate you’ll see the first signage for the Acorn Trail. It starts out as more of a fireroad, and continues like that for less than a mile, before another signed junction tells you to take a left.  Shortly after this left the incline begins.

The Acorn Trail itself is apparently a pretty well-regarded hike within the community of Wrightwood, and with good reason.  Just to get to the Pacific Crest Trail, you have roughly 1500 feet of gain across 3 miles, which provides excellent views of the desert far below.

Once we got to the Pacific Crest Trail, the trail was considerably easier for a while, this was kind of the calm before the storm. We enjoyed trekking on the PCT for a bit, and then came the junction with the Pine Mountain trail, which was very steep down for about 800 feet, and then straight up along a ridge.  If you do this hike, keep an eye out, this junction is pretty easy to miss, as the signage is below the fire road which the PCT is above. It was in this portion of the hike that it earns its Class II rank, especially in the snow.

Class II climbing
Class II Climbing

 

As we ascended this ridge, it became very obvious that we weren’t going to have enough time to make our way over to Dawson Peak, as I had originally hoped, at least not if we wanted to beat the sun on the way down.

We basically just had to keep following the ridge up, and after a while, the summit finally came into view. Getting to the summit on Pine Mountain is no joke, but the views are more than worth it:

Mount Baldy from the North
Mount Baldy from the North

Benny Haddad from Sea to Summit Productions captured this awesome Gigapixel picture of Baldy, check it out here.

We all got to hang out at the summit and recover from the hike up for a bit. We all had a nice lunch, eventually got around to signing the summit register (thanks to Karla for finding it!).  For me personally this was neat as it was my first time seeing Mt. Baldy from the North side.  After I hike Iron Mountain, I’ll have seen Baldy from all four sides (now I just need to hike it from all four sides).

The hike back down was just as exciting as the hike back up, as the snow and loose rock was possibly even harder to keep traction on going down than it was on the way up. This meant we certainly weren’t moving very fast, but the views were still amazing.

San Gorgonio to the Left, San Jacinto to the Right, and San Antonio (Baldy) right behind me
San Gorgonio to the Left, San Jacinto to the Right, and San Antonio (Baldy) right behind me

After hiking back down to the truck trail, we decided to just take the road instead of hiking back up to the PCT. Either route is about the same length, but by staying on the road, you don’t have to scramble back up to the trail, and at the Acorn junction everything is at the same elevation.

So happy to see this sign
So happy to see this sign

The hike back down the Acorn Trail was pretty uneventful, other than that everyone was getting pretty tired. We made it back to the cars just before sundown, which was fantastic as we didn’t all bring proper cold weather gear (which was a bad idea).

After we made it to the cars, we all went to a nice little Mexican place in Wrightwood and had a very well deserved meal.

I wasn’t able to capture a trace of this hike, however a map approximating our hike is available here.

Thanks to everyone who joined me on this adventure! It was an awesome trail, and I am already looking forward to doing it again, except this time bagging Baldy instead of just looking at it.

San Gorgonio

 

Hike Date: March 7, 2015

Miles: Approx: 16 miles

Hours: Approx 12.5

Went for a hike up San Gorgonio a few days ago, and it was quite the hike.  I had hoped that a few more people would have come through the trail and blazed everything for us, but apparently most people were turning around at High Creek Camp.

We met and caravaned up to the trailhead at the Big Falls trailhead and Picnic Area, the Vivian Creek trail is just upstream across from the stream bed. We were on the trail around 6:30 AM, which worked well as that gave us sunlight from the very beginning.

The day was incredibly warm, so most people were delayering by the time we made it to Vivian Creek camp, which is about 2 miles in from the cars. The trail was beautiful, and snow-covered almost everything.

As we started up the switchbacks towards Halfway Camp, the amount of snow on the trail started dropping quite a bit, and was only spotty from Halfway Camp to High Creek camp. The real fun began after we crossed High Creek and started what are normally the big switchbacks leading up one of the final ridges.  Since no one had brought snowshoes, I made the (foolish) decision of following some other steps at a diagonal across the ridge.  This ended up costing us a lot of time, and wasted an incredible amount of energy, as once we crested the ridge, we still had a good distance to go in order to get to where the trail normally crested the ridge. The better option would have been to proceed directly up the chute, but I’m not 100% sure that would have worked either due to our lack of snowshoes.

Once we made it to the point on the ridge where the trail normally leads, it was time to start heading down, saving the summit for another day (it was already 2:30 PM, and I didn’t relish the idea of being on the trails after things started getting really icy).

We made it back down to the cars around 6:30 PM, as things had gotten quite a bit more slippery farther down the trail than they were on the way up.

Overall, it was a great hike, and really proved that you can’t guess exactly what the mountain is going to give you on any given day.

Mount Islip

Hike Date: February 22 2015

Miles: Approx 7.5

Hours: Approx. 5 total

A quick trip up Mount Islip in front of a storm system moving in, which made for some great pictures of the clouds as we came towards the summit.  This hike was planned at the absolute last-minute (even more last-minute than last week’s hike).  Unfortunately my phone was acting up again on this hike, so I didn’t get a good GPS track (or very many pictures).
Continue reading Mount Islip

Bridge to Nowhere

Hike Date: February 14 2015

Miles: Approx. 10

Hours: Approx 8 (including rests)

Hiking 4 the Homeless had a Valentine’s Day hike I decided to participate in. Basically a bunch of crazies dressed up in pink and brought refreshments and lunch to a nice break place underneath the bridge where we could watch bungee-jumpers and (for the really crazy ones) get in the water.  Continue reading Bridge to Nowhere

Cucamonga Peak

Hike Date: February 15 2015

Miles: Approx 11.4

Hours: Approx. 9 total

A few brave folks met me at the Vons on Baseline Road in Claremont, CA at 6 AM in order to head up to Ice House Canyon to hike to the saddle and then to Cucamonga Peak.  Most of these folks were already sore as we had hiked 10 miles the previous day to Bridge to Nowhere. Continue reading Cucamonga Peak