Monday, August 18, 2014

Crook Trail from Kehl Spring to Forest Road 95


On 16 August 2014 eight hikers joined me for a hike on the General Crook National Trail along the Mogollon Rim. We drove to Kehl Spring Campground on Forest Road 300 (Rim Road) and left six hikers there to wait while the remaining three continued on to FR 95 about a mile past General Springs and parked one vehicle. We then returned to Kehl Spring to start the hike.

The below group photograph was taken at Kehl Spring Campground by a camper volunteer using Jeff's smartphone.


  Left to right: Daisy Williams, Lila Wright, Kwi Johnson, David Beach, Jeff
Brumbaugh, Ruth Frazier, the author, Gordon Bice and Jim Manning
Traffic was light on FR 300 and the campground was deserted when we arrived. By the time we returned from leaving a vehicle at FR 95, a few campers had arrived, and when we returned after completing our hike, it was still only about half full. We were surprised that it was not more heavily used on this sunny August weekend during. On the other hand, traffic on FR 300 was quite heavy by this time, having increased steadily during the day. The road, although unpaved, is well-maintained and the traffic was composed of everything from sedans, campers and pickup trucks to dune buggies.

But back to our hike. We were attempting to follow a GPS track I had downloaded to my Garmin 76csx. I no longer remember the source of the track, but it turned out to be fairly accurate. We deviated a bit immediately after leaving the campground when I started looking at flowers along a wash instead of my instrument.
 
Spiderwort
Coneflowers
When I next checked my GPS after going astray to look at the flowers, we had wandered from our planned track. This deviation is displayed below (right). Our track is shown in red, the planned track in dark blue and Rim Road in yellow. After correcting our error by returning to the planned track, we searched in vain for some trace of the original Crook Trail. We did find a couple of old road beds, but they all ran in the wrong direction. We found none of the chevrons (or letter Vs) normally used to mark this trail. Perhaps they were there and we would have seen them had we but stayed on the correct track from the beginning.

!n any case, we eventually got back on track and the trail coincided with Rim Road for about 0.25 miles before veering off to the south to follow parallel to the road about 100 feet away. However, we had now reached the area burned by the Dude fire in 1990 and the actual General Crook Trail is still littered by fallen trees and overgrown by low-lying shrubs and briers. The hiker is well-advised to avoid trying to find the actual trail for the next 2.7 miles or so, measured along Rim Road, until the road and the trail veer away from the rim. Trying to follow the trail is simply not worth the effort. We did try a couple of times, but always returned to the road. Trail markers are generally missing in the burn area and, in the very few places where the actual trail could be identified, the fallen trees and undergrowth are a real problem. Of course it is sometimes possible to swing a bit farther north to avoid the burn area, which never extends far north of the rim. However, you would no longer be on the Crook Trail. My advice is to just follow Rim Road through this section, hiking it early in the morning to avoid most of the traffic.

The burn area has an attractiveness all its own. The view looking out over the rim is fantastic.


Looking southeast across the Mogollon Rim from Rim Road
Among the plants taking advantage of the absence of an overshadowing forest was a striking clump of Indian paintbrush nestled against a rotting tree trunk . A little farther along someone had added a bit of color by tucking a doll into the broken top of a dead tree trunk.

Doll nestled high in a dead tree
Indian paintbrush
About 4.2 miles into our hike we stopped for lunch at the head of Mail Creek Canyon where the road and trail both swing away from the rim. We were now out of the burn area and there were numerous trail markers, usually chevrons nailed to trees but sometimes a blaze on a tree, to mark the way. The old road bed was also quite discernible.


Walking along the original Crook Trail
After following the old trail for about a mile from where we stopped for lunch, we came to Forest Road 123 which runs up Battleground Ridge to the site of the Battle of Big Dry Wash, the last battle fought between the Apaches and army regulars.1 From this junction Rim Road continues east toward General Springs while FR 123 runs up the ridge between General Springs Canyon and Crackerbox Canyon. The hiking was very easy along here. We were following a well-maintained dirt road and very visible trail markers all along the way. I also saw several colorful mushrooms in this area.

FR 123 running up Battleground Ridge
Mushroom
The trail markers we were following led us 0.15 miles further north on FR 123 than the track I had downloaded indicated. I suspect that the downloaded track might have followed one iteration of General Crook Trail and the one we followed another. After all, wagon roads were rather informal things, tending to change frequently. Rather than repair a rutted section of road, it was often more convenient to simple go around it. In this case, we continued on with confidence as we were never really out of sight of the next trail marker. When the trail did turn off Battleground Ridge Road, we found ourselves following along an ancient roadbed, now overgrown in places with young trees, but still easy to follow. If there were some doubt, we just looked for the next chevron.

The old road led us down into General Springs Canyon. Near the bottom, we encountered the aqueduct, at this point an aboveground pipe, that carries water from Blueridge Reservoir to the East Verde River. The following is quoted from a 3 August 2013 hike report:

Blue Ridge Reservoir, constructed by Phelps-Dodge, was completed in 1965 at a cost of 7.2 million dollars. It was constructed as part of an agreement between the company and Salt River Project to allow Phelps Dodge to use water from the Black River at its Morenci facility. A 187-foot-tall concrete dam was erected to create a 15000 acre-foot reservoir in the East Clear Creek Canyon. East Clear Creek is a part of the Little Colorado River watershed, outside the SRP's service area. Water from this reservoir would then be supplied to SRP to compensate for the water taken by Phelps dodge from the Black River. The water was routed through a tunnel and then pumped up a 435-foot shaft to a pipeline which carried it 10 or 11 miles to the East Verde River. A hydroelectric generating station was installed at the lower end of the pipeline to generate power to drive the electric motors which lifted the water from the reservoir.

In 2005, pursuant to a clause in the agreement that allowed SRP to purchase the reservoir should Phelps Dodge decided to sell it, SRP purchased it to add to their system's resources. The reservoir was also renamed C.C Cragin Reservoir in honor of an early 20th century SRP general superintendent. However, it is still generally known as Blue Ridge Reservoir.2



Under a separate agreement, SRP will provide Payson with a 3000 acre-foot annual allocation of water from the reservoir. To make use of this water allocation Payson is installing a 13.5 mile long, 18-inch diameter pipeline from the tailrace (discharge) of SRP's existing hydroelectric facility to a new 234 Kilowatt hydroelectric facility which will generate power to operate a new water treatment plant. This project is scheduled to be completed in late 2016.

From there we followed the road along the aqueduct on down to the cabin at General Springs. Again this seemed to be a deviation from the GPS track I had downloaded, although a minor one, and at the cabin I looked back the way we had come and saw one of the Crook Trail markers nailed to a tree. The road was numbered 9030S. The chevron trail marker is visible on the large tree trunk upper right.


Looking back the way we came from General Cabin
According to information posted at the site, the small spring located here was named after General George Crook who used it while traveling the old Fort Apache-Camp Verde Military Road. Also according to the Forest Service, the cabin (see next page) was built between 1914 and 1915 by Louis Fisher and used by the Forest Service until sometime in the 1960s. It was rehabilitated in 1989. The spring is located across the meadow, partly visible in the photograph.

General Springs Cabin
We had separated at the junction of Rim Road and FR 123, with two of our party continuing on to General Springs by way of Rim Road while the rest of us were following Crook Trail. They rejoined us here.

Railroad Tunnel Trail runs down the rim for about three-quarters of a mile from the General Springs area and we had discussed hiking it while we were in the area. However, after checking the time, we decided to leave that for another day and continue on along Crook Trail to our parked vehicle at Forest road 95, just over another mile as it turned out.

The total one way hike distance was 8.3 miles, the maximum elevation was 7627 feet, the total ascent was 1499 feet and the total descent was 1099 feet.

Our GPS track is shown in red on the included map (next page). The GPS track I downloaded to use as a guide is shown in dark blue and Rim Road is shown in yellow.



No comments:

Post a Comment