Thursday, March 26, 2015

Azurite Peak to Yavapai College


The name used to describe this 21 March 2015 hike may require some explanation. It starts at the foot of a small peak located near a hairpin turn in Forest Road 493 just below Iron King Mine. The peak itself, rising to a height of 5600 feet, is about 300 feet lower than Allen Spring Road at this point. At the very top of the peak is what appears to be the remains of an old mine. Azurite and Malachite appear in the mine tailings, giving the small but distinctive peak the unofficial name of Azurite Peak. Azurite is a deep blue in color, but over time tends to weather into malachite which is green. Both can be found at this site.

The site location, about 0.5 miles at a bearing of 30 true from Iron King Mine, is shown below. The blue track, made on an earlier hike, leads steeply up the mountain to the top of the peak and then follows an old road to reconnect with the trail we followed today which is shown in red. The ascent to the peak was very steep, overgrown and quite rocky. It would have required much less effort, though perhaps a bit more time, to just continue along the path we were on and return along the old road to the peak.

Map insert showing the location of Azurite Peak

Our group numbered 17 hikers today and we were careful to make sure we kept track of everyone. Along the old mining road we followed for the first part of the hike that was relatively easy. There were few places where it was possible to take a wrong turn and we just stopped at those places until everyone was accounted for.

It was a sunny day and the views, looking across the Verde Valley and the red rocks along the Mogollon Rim to the San Francisco Mountain peaks beyond were, as we had hoped, spectacular. Closer in we found a few splendid early spring flowers on this second day of the season. Most intriguing was a large patch of yellow California poppies with a few mutant white poppies mixed in. There was some discussion as to whether these were California or Mexican poppies. I later learned that the California variety has yellow flower petals that shade to a gold center while the entire petal of the Mexican poppy is gold1.

California poppies with white blooms mixed in – photograph by Akemi Tomioka

Looking at the hillsides as we passed along the mountain slope, we could see evidence of past mining activity all around us. Two mines were located close alongside the road. The first of these was the Hooker-Ewing mine owned by Jerome Copper Company Group. It is on the uphill side of the old road we were following and so close that one could step into the open vertical shaft were it not for a fence placed to prevent such an occurrence. The mine is mentioned in Western Mining History2 and listed in Mindat.org3. However, I could not locate a listing for it in the Arizona Geological Survey Mining Data4 site. The Mindat.org entry indicated that the workings included “1,025 feet of tunnel & 1,800 feet of crosscuts & drifts”. Otherwise the sources referenced above provided just ownership, location, type of operation (underground) and land ownership (National Forest). We tossed a rock into the open shaft and waited several seconds to hear the sound of it hitting bottom, but made no serious attempt to estimate the depth.

Leaving Hooker-Ewing behind, we proceeded along the old road, passing an agave plant that had apparently served as a snack for a bear. The tender young stalk growing from the center of the plant had been ripped off at the base. Jim Manning provided a photograph (right) of the devastated plant. We noted no other bear sign on this hike, but have seen bears in this area in the past.

Other than the poppies shown of the previous page, there were few flowers to be seen, except for a veritable sea of white blooming, heavily scented ceanothus that surrounded us for most of the hike.
Approximately 0.5 miles north of the Hooker-Ewing Mine we came to the old Decatur Copper Shaft. This unfenced mine site, located just a few yards below the road, is listed by Mindat.org and Western Mining History as an “underground Cu prospect”. Some amount of work must have gone into this prospecting effort as the shaft seemed quite deep and there was a large quantity of tailings on the lower side of the mountain. Tossing a rock into the shaft resulted in a wait of several seconds and was followed by a splash, indicating water. The National Forest is listed as owner of the land.

We paused for a snack on the flat surface of the culm dump located at the mouth of the shaft.

Six of our hikers enjoying the sun along with a midmorning snack atop the culm dump at Decatur Copper Shaft– photograph by Jim Manning

The old mine road we were following continued for another 0.8 miles before ending on a ridge overlooking a gap that leads down into Mescal Gulch.

When we reached the end of our old road we would start descending and would lose our far-away views, so while avoiding the gradually encroaching growth that was doing its best to choke off the road, we took our last look at Jerome, seemingly within spitting distance but actually well on the other side of Mescal Gulch, and the San Francisco Peaks, themselves some fifty or so miles away.

The town of Jerome across Mescal Gulch – photograph by Jim Manning


Looking toward the San Francisco Peaks – photograph by Jim Manning

The 0.2 mile section of mountain slope between the end of the road and the gap was very thickly overgrown with manzanita, scrub oak, ceanothus and other assorted plants. There was no trail at all along this short section and we just had to force our way down the slope through the thick growth. This was the third time I had traversed this section, the first being in company with George Everman. On that trip, we had taken turns covering our faces and throwing ourselves down the slope to break through the growth. I still remember peering very carefully ahead to make sure I didn't throw myself off a hidden cliff on the other side of some particularly thick growth. This time I was quite content to let Jim Manning lead the way; it was a lot easier following someone else.

From the gap leading down into Mescal Gulch, the trail (left, photograph by Jim Manning) follows the path of an old road. It is a bit rocky but otherwise in good condition. Our lunch spot, the culm dump formed by the tailings from Verde Combination Mine is represented by the slightly raised flat area in the upper left of the photograph.

According to Mindat.org, the Verde Combination Mine (right, photograph by Daisy Williams) had “a 1,300 foot deep shaft and older shafts at the South end at 640 feet and 500 feet deep” and provided the following minerals: “'Chlorite Group', Muscovite (var: Sericite), Pyrite.” Western Mining History lists the National Forest as owner of the land.
After lunch and, for me, a very nice nap we left our sunny spot on the culm dump and completed our descent to the bottom of Mescal Gulch. To be sure, I think most of our hikers had long since abandoned the sun in favor of the shade of small trees growing nearby. The day was now quite warm, but I do like a nap in the sun.

In the photograph below, hikers are shown following the path of an old road that once provided access to the mine. The road descended to the bottom of Mescal Gulch and then ascended along the other side (see the faint, diagonal trace running diagonally up the side of the mountain at the bottom right quadrant of the photograph). After climbing out of the gulch, the road connects with Allen Spring Road and continues on to Jerome. This would have been the route the ore trucks took to the smelter.

Looking down into Mescal Gulch from Verde combination Mine

In the small, flat meadow at the bottom of the gulch we found a small herd of cattle. This was not an unusual event in itself, but one of the cows had just given birth and Akemi Tomioka managed to get a shot of the still-bloody calf (left). Meanwhile the mother cow, her work done for now, headed down the gulch with the rest of the herd.

Some of the hikers were concerned that by following the herd down the narrow gulch we would cause the mother cow to abandon her newborn calf. Having grown up with cows, I knew that the herd was heading downstream as part of their daily migration and that the mother would return for relief when her udder became uncomfortably full. In my experience, it is not at all unusual for a cow to leave a newborn calf, often hidden in some secluded spot, to return to the barn (or other feeding area) at the end of the day. Unless we heard dogs prowling in the area or just were in a hurry to see what the new calf looked like, we never bothered to go looking for it.

Following a cow trail down the gulch we did finally see a few more flowers, essentially the first since we stopped to admire the poppies at the start of the hike. Akemi provided a photograph of a gorgeous claret cup cactus (right) and Daisy contributed a brilliant Indian paintbrush (left).

We shortly came to a second small meadow where we bypassed the cattle we had been following down the gulch. We then continued without the danger of stepping in fresh cow manure. There were deposits left from the daily pilgrimage up the gulch that morning, but these were now pretty well dried out.

A little over half way down Mescal Gulch to where we were parked alongside Haskell Spring Road we came to a circular ring of rocks that I think must be some sort of shrine. I have passed this way a number of times and have noticed different objects (possibly offerings to some deity) tied in the tree above the circular area, but there were none today. I didn't get a photograph today, so am recycling one taken in January 2011.

Circular shrine (?) in Mescal Gulch – photograph from a January 2011 hike

The shrine is located only 1.2 miles from where we were parked, so we were soon enough at the end of our hike.

As with the beginning of the hike, the end point, Yavapai College, given in the title requires some explanation. Although we ended about 0.6 miles short of the college, it is the closest generally recognizable landmark.

My GPS track shows a total hiking distance of 6.9 miles with a maximum elevation of 5387 feet and a total descent of 1862 feet. We hiked an additional 0.2 miles and climbed an additional 185 feet to visit the cave. The GPS track for the entire loop is shown in red on the included map (below). The map also shows, in blue, the track that will take one to the top of Azurite Peak; We did not visit the peak on this hike.

Finally, having failed to take a photograph to identify the 17 participants in this hike, I will list them here:

Lila Wright
Jim Manning, hike leader
Dave Beach
Daisy Williams
Mark Purcell
Gary Jacobson
John McGinnis
Ellen McGinnis
Dolly Yapp
Joyce Arregui
Anita Jackson
Betty Wolters
Akemi Tomioka
John Ashworth
Gilliam Ashworth
George Everman
and the author


1 http://delange.org/WhiteCalPoppy/WhiteCalPoppy.htm
2 http://westernmininghistory.com/mine_detail/10113170
3 http://www.mindat.org/loc-50711.html
4 http://minedata.azgs.az.gov/content/mining-collections

No comments:

Post a Comment