On
25 May 2014 the Skyliners visited the old Alvarez Ranch on the Verde
River. The long-abandoned ranch, located on the north side of the
river between Sycamore Creek and Railroad Wash, is owned by the
National Forest Service but is not accessible by any official trail
or road. We crossed the river at location N34 52.109 W112 06.124 and
entered the site at the old ranchhouse. Below are shown the hikers
in our group and the ranchhouse as viewed from the river.
Left to right: Chris Jensen, James Quin, Donna Goodman, the author,
Lila Wright, Gary Jacobson and David Beach |
Old Alvarez Ranchhouse
|
Lila
provided a 28 February 2012 article written by Jim Hutchison and
published in the Camp Verde Bugle Newspaper that supplies information
about Spanish Immigrant Rosendo Alvarez, his family and descendants
(see footnote below)1.
One of Rosendo's children, Emilia Alvarez Carillo, now living in
Clarkdale, recently celebrated her 97th birthday.
Located
just a few yards from the old ranchhouse are a well and, a bit
farther away, an outdoor privy.
Well |
Privy |
There are also several
other structures still standing at the ranch site. Some of these are
of wood construction, but were fairly well-preserved. Shown below
are a shedlike structure and a frame building that might have once
been a chicken house. At least it reminded me of those I was
familiar with in my youth.
Shed and frame building constructed of wood
|
Stone structure of unknown use |
We retreated to the river until we thought we had bypassed the private property. Looking at a map I later located, it appears that the parcel of private property located along the road we followed from the Alvarez Ranch extends to both sides of the river at one point.
It
appears that the best way to entirely avoid private property on the
way to Alvarez Ranch is to Park at the Sycamore Canyon Trailhead,
take Parsons Trail down to Sycamore Creek, follow Packard Trail
across the creek and then bushwhack for about 0.8 miles to bypass the
section of private property. After reviewing the “bushwhack”
area in Google Earth, I believe that about 0.3 miles of that 0.8 mile
section would be across flat, relatively open terrain.” On the
below map, I have labeled this the north bypass. I have also shown a
possible south bypass. To take that route, one should drive on past
the Sycamore Trailhead, park at a locked gate (see
“Park – south bypass”) and follow approximately
the route shown in blue. There is a road that runs down the hill
beyond the locked gate, crosses Sycamore Creek and continues on to
the dwellings located on the private property.
Detail map of the area around the Sycamore Creek junction with the Verde River
|
The
possible routes to the Valdez Ranch are shown on the included map
(below). The yellow line
outlines the private property, the green track is Packard Trail, the
red track includes the north bypass route and the blue track includes
the south bypass route.
The
total round-trip distance by the north bypass is 5.0 miles. The
maximum elevation is 3750 feet and the difference is 150 feet.
1http://cvbugle.com/main.asp?SectionID=74&SubSectionID=702&ArticleID=33804
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