Some
days are just made for being outdoors and 24 October 2015 was one of
them. When we gathered at the Safeway parking lot in Cottonwood at
0700, it was chilly enough that our coats were quite comfortable. We
drove east on Hwy 260, joined with Hwy 87 and continued through
Strawberry to about mile marker 270 (position 34.40613,
-111.48235) and parked on the left side of the road. (highways 260
(E-W) and 87 (N-S) run together along this stretch and the mile
markers are for Hwy 87.). We
arrived at the trailhead at 0815 and doffed our coats before starting
the hike.
There
were nine of us on this hike and, after donning our packs, we all
gathered for a group photograph (below)
before heading up the trail.
Left to right: Joyce Arregui, Gary Jacobson, Daisy Williams, Karl Sink, Jim Manning (hike leader), Frank Lombardo, Andy Lombardo (Frank's son) and Donna Goodman – the author is not shown |
We
looked briefly at the Bear Foot Trail sign, wondering how long it
might be and where it might lead, then set off up the old road on
Rock Wall Trail. There are a jumble of old roads at this point, one
running alongside the highway, one leading up the wash toward Fuller
Spring and one (below left) turning
right and climbing sharply up the mountain to pass above and east of
Fuller Spring. We turned right and again encountered Bear Foot Trail
as it crossed Rock Wall at a cairn (below right)
and, as we later learned, headed east to Pine Trail.
The trail (below) was fairly steep and washed out with a lot of loose rock underfoot For a short distance as it climbed the slope above Fuller Spring.
Climbing the slope above Fuller Spring |
The
upper road bank was often composed of chiseled cliffs where the road
had been carved into the mountain. We never saw any signs of drill
holes as are often seen where roadways are formed by blasting paths
into mountainsides. The rocks here were relatively soft sandstone
and we decided that the road must have constructed manually, perhaps
using just hammers, chisels and crowbars.
The trail leads at
first to the northeast along the south wall of Fuller Canyon. It
then crosses the main drainage and runs northwest to the Mogollon
Rim. Altogether I counted five drainage areas, and one long stretch
around a mountain shoulder, where dry-stacked stone retaining walls
had been built to support the road.
The dry-stacked
retaining walls were not the only expert stonework seen along this
trail. The old road had been provided with numerous culverts.
These, obviously built before metal culverts were readily available,
were constructed all of stone. The drainage channels had been
constructed by lining the bottom with flat sections of sandstone,
using blocks of the same stone for both sides of the waterway (below
left) and then placing even larger, closely-fitted
slabs of stone across the top (below right).
The whole was then covered with several inches of gravel and dirt.
Most of the vegetation
appeared to have been deliberately removed at the lower end of the
trail, but a little farther up we found ourselves traveling through a
mixed forest of manzanita, oak and juniper along with an occasional
ponderosa and a few firs (below).
Mixed forest above Fuller Canyon
|
Manzanita forest just below the Rim – still in Tonto National Forest
|
The hike description I
had found online described a hike that followed Forest Route 608 all
the way to its end at Hwy 87. However, the GPS track that
accompanied the report turned onto Forest Road 9367R about 2.9 miles
from the lower trailhead and followed it to Hwy 87. We chose to
follow FR 608 as the written report suggested, disregarding the rest
of the GPS track, and that is the route I have included in this
report. The distance along FR 608 from the FR 9367R junction to Hwy
87 was about 1.1 miles.
The point where we
ended our hike on Hwy 87/Hwy 260 (below)
is just 1.4 miles south of the Hwy 260/Hwy 87 junction, so we had
passed the upper trailhead on our way to Strawberry. It would be
very easy to do this trail as a one-way hike by parking cars at both
ends.
Upper Rock Wall Trailhead – Junction of FR 806 with Hwy 87/260
|
The return trip went
quickly. It was a gentle downhill slope except for the short
distance near the bottom. I paused to admire an especially
attractive manzanita (below left)
and we were delayed for awhile by a black rattlesnake (below
right) who had staked out a sunny spot in the very
center of the road and absolutely refused to move. There was a steep
bank above the road and a sharp drop below, with about eight feet on
either side of the snake. We tossed pine cones at him in an attempt
to encourage him to move. In return we got only fierce rattles and a
mean stare. Most of the group eventually passed him walking very
carefully along the very edge of the road. I am an absolute coward
when it comes to snakes, so, along with another hiker, I chose to
climb the steep bank and give the stubborn rattler a much wider
berth. We then continued on our way leaving the surly fellow on high
alert, ready to defend his chosen spot.
The total one-way
distance for this hike was measured by GPS as 4.1 miles. The
separate distances given between points along the way do not add up
to this total because of rounding errors.
The red track on the
included map shows the route we took, the
yellow track shows the paved road and the blue track shows an
alternate route along Forest Road 9367R that terminates at a
different point on Hwy 87/260. The round trip hike distance
was 8.2 miles, the maximum elevation was 7180 feet and the ascent was
1420 feet.
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