The
primary purpose of this trip was to verify road conditions between
the end of Ash Creek Trail at FR 531 and the beginning of Ash Canyon
Trail at FR 123. We are planning a hike down Ash Canyon to Ash Creek
and continuing down Ash Creek and Ash Creek Trail to its end at FR
531. We will then drive back to the Ash Canyon Trailhead to retrieve
the vehicles left there. Additionally, we are planning a hike on
Sheep Trail which starts at Crook Trail west of the Gray Wolf
Landfill and runs south to Cienega Creek and wanted to check access
to that trail from Hwy 169.
From
Cottonwood, we drove east on Hwy 260, took I-17 south to Hwy 169 and
continued on Hwy 169 for about 5.4 miles to the intersection with
West Cherry Road. There, instead of turning right toward Cherry, we
turned left onto S Old Cherry Road and drove 0.4 miles to the Crook
Trail crossing. Ample parking is available in the area. As we were
turning to head back to Hwy 169, a friendly gentleman of mature years
who was camped alongside the road hurried over to provide assistance
to the “obviously confused” travelers. We learned that he had
stayed overnight in his camper and was now about to sight in a new
scope on his rifle. Thankful that we were not hiking in the area
today, expressed our appreciation for his offer of assistance and
continued on our way.
We
returned to Hwy 169, continued west for another 4.9 miles, turned
right onto Old Cherry Road (also FR 323) and drove for another 1.9
miles to the intersection with FR 531. From this intersection it is
about 2.5 miles up Ash Canyon on FR 531 to the Ash Creek Trailhead.
However, having recently driven that road several times, we did not
need to verify its condition, so we continued east on FR 323. We
found the road from this point on to the intersection with West
Cherry Road to be rough but quite passable for high-clearance
vehicles. The distance was 3.5 miles. One could avoid this section
of rough road by returning to Hwy 169 and driving east to West Cherry
Road and turning north. The distance that way is 7.9 miles but is a
much easier drive and would probably even be faster.
From the junction of FR
323 with West Cherry Road we drove north for 3.2 miles and turned
left into Powell Spring Campground. The purpose of the visit to the
campground was to do a scouting hike on Powell Spring Trail, a
long-abandoned trail that apparently was once numbered 9027 by the
Forest Service. I found one online reference to the trail that gave
the trail number and a GPS track. The track was quite obviously
estimated rather than being recorded with an instrument. But we
could use it as guide.
Powell
Spring Campground, built by the Civilian Conservation Corps during
the Great Depression, has aged gracefully. Toilet facilities are
provided and, like the rest of the facility, were clean and
well-kept. A sign was posted precluding the operation of ATVs on the
campsite premises. On the other hand an ATV trail appeared to run
just across the fence that marked the outer perimeter of the
facility. I wondered how that would work; would campers be subjected
to the constant roar of ATVs operating just across the fence?
Powell Spring Campground – note the depression era stonework of the table and bench supports
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There
was only one occupant when we arrived, a gentleman apparently
traveling by himself, who “helpfully” provided us with completely
erroneous information about how to access the trail. We had parked
in Space #1 and had made our way about half way through the
campground when he appeared to impart his wisdom. According to him,
we needed to return to the information sign near where we had parked
and pass between a pair of posts adjacent to the sign. We would then
be on the trail. He seemed to know the surroundings well enough,
even giving us some additional information about the spring located
nearby, so we did as he suggested. Unfortunately, when we had passed
between the posts, there was no sign of a trail. Undaunted, we
clambered up a small rise, slipped through a barbed wire fence and
joined an ATV trail that runs most of the way around the campsite
perimeter. We then followed that until we came to a stile in the
perimeter fence, the place where we would have emerged without our
helpful friend.
The
correct route would have taken us past a locked vehicle barrier and
on to the stile.
Blocked road at left; trail passage at right
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A
stile at the upper (west) end of the campground, just to the right of
the ancient alligator juniper shown below permits easy passage for
hikers. This stile is built like a kissing gate but, rather than
swinging, the center piece is stationary. It depends on the
narrowness of the passage and a 180 degree turn to prevent cattle
from passing.
Ancient alligator juniper with a stile shown to its right
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Once
through the stile, the trail turns left, crosses a wash and then
follows a cattle track a short distance up the opposite bank before
dipping into and following along its sandy bed. That set the pattern
for the entire hike. Except when we deviated to explore what we
thought might be a better way (it never was), we kept mostly to the
bed of the washes we followed, occasionally emerging to follow a
cattle trail along the bank before returning to the bed of the wash.
Once we left the main wash to explore a corral we could see on the
mountain slope above. That too was an error, the hiking was more
difficult than in the wash and the detour was out of our way.
We
climbed gently for about 1.4 miles to a mountain pass located about
0.8 miles south of Medlar Spring. The pass was marked by the remains
of a huge dead tree (right).
As
we continued westward from the pass the wash sloped gently downhill
and its sandy bottom was replaced in some areas with rocks. For a
short distance below Walnut Spring, water was flowing and the bottom
was muddy in areas. However, despite a few rocks and a little mud,
the hiking was never very difficult. As we approached Ash Creek,
following a well-worn and easy-to-hike-on cattle trail, we noted that
we had deviated significantly from the GPS track. It appeared that
we would need to turn rather sharply to the right and climb a hill to
reach the end of the trail as indicated on the track. At about the
same time we noted what appeared to be an old road running along the
slope above, so turned to
intercept it. The old road ended after a
very short distance, but I climbed on to the crest of the hill and
was able to see where the trail would end. In the photograph (left)
the buildings are the headquarters of Bottle Ranch. The trail
crosses Ash Creek and ends at FR 531 just to the left of the ranch
not far below the end of the row of bare cottonwood trees shown above
the ranch buildings.
From
my vantage point, it was now obvious that we should have continued
along the well-worn cattle trail which would logically have ended at
or near the Ash Creek crossing. I later traced the most likely route
on to our trails end at FR 531 and found it to be an additional 0.5
miles.
My
track to the crest of the hill where I photographed Bottle Ranch is
shown in blue on the map excerpt (right).
The darker track from the end of the deviation (blue track) on to
the junction of the trail with FR 531, a 0.5 mile section, is an
estimated track drawn by the author. The light green is the
estimated GPS track we used as a guide for the hike. The bright red
track is part of our recorded GPS track.
The
below photograph shows Collene Maktenieks (left)
and Lila Wright (right) returning
along the short section of old road that we unwisely left the
well-worn cattle trail to follow. They are almost lost in the
surrounding expanse of chaparral.
Collene and Lila following an old road along a chaparral-covered hillside
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It
was now after 1200 and we decided that, if we were to return home by
way of FR 132 so as to complete our goal of verifying road conditions
between the end of Ash Creek Trail at FR 531 and the beginning of
Ash Canyon Trail at FR 123, we needed to start back now. I would
just have to estimate the remaining 0.5 miles of Powell Spring Trail.
Hence the dark red line on the map insert shown on the previous
page.
Because
we now had a better grasp of the terrain and could avoid some of the
errors we made on the hike from Powell Spring Campground, our trip
back was a lot faster. We spent some time on this return hike
looking for evidence of past trail-making activities. We did find a
few old blazes and some branches that had been trimmed long ago.
Otherwise there was little to indicate that the trail had ever
existed.
Evidence of long ago trail maintenance |
Ancient blazes showing the way |
The
wash on this side of the pass was sometimes fairly wide and grassy as
opposed to the mostly sandy floor enclosed on both sides by
close-growing chaparral found on the eastern slope.
Loren Pritzel looking up the wash just below Walnut Spring
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On
the way up the eastern slope we had seen what we thought might have
been an old road (or trail) running along the hillside south of the
wash we were following. Then shortly after we started down the wash
on the western side of the pass, we had noted what might have been
some sort of trail running up a side wash toward the same area. Not
wanting to overlook the possibility that the old trail had actually
been located above the wash, I insisted that on the return trip we
follow the side wash up the hill to investigate. Unfortunately, the
old road turned out to have been a mirage. We found only thick
chaparral on the hillside where we had imagined an old road.
I
corrected sections of track where we deviated from the best route by
replacing them with more accurate sections recorded while hiking in
the opposite direction. So, for instance, the track recorded on our
detour to the corral was replaced by the route recorded on the return
trip. Likewise, the detour on the way back to look for an old road
was replaced by the track recorded while hiking in the opposite
direction.
Although,
due to the additional distance added by detours and side trips, we
actually hiked about 6.7 miles, the round trip trail distance when
cleaned up is only 6.0 miles. The cleaned up GPS track for our hike
is shown in red on the included map (next page).
As
planned, we returned home by way of FR 132, FR 413 FR 104 and Hwy 89A
through Jerome. The road between Powell Spring Campground and Ash
Canyon Trailhead on FR 132 was in good condition, suitable for any
high-clearance vehicle.
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