Trail
511, running across the Black Hills Mountain Range from Joe Best
Spring on Forest Road 68D to Salt Mine Road at the Verde River, is
about 10.5 miles long (10.7 miles if one visits Box T Tank on the
way). On 2 March 2016 we did a scouting hike on the 7.7-mile section
of the trail between Box T Spring on the southwest side of the
mountain range and the trails end near Ryal Canyon at Salt Mine Road
on the northeast side of the range. That section of trail rose from
5025 feet at Box T Spring to 5867 feet at the crest of the mountain
and then descended to 3284 feet at Salt Mine Road. As well as being
very steep, the trail was also quite rocky, so we decided it was not
a suitable candidate for a Skyliner hike.
We
later scouted the rest of Trail 511, the 3.3-mile section between Joe
Best Spring and Box T Spring and found it to be suitable for a
Skyliner hike if combined with Forest Road 9602G, a short road 2.3
mile road that connects Box T Spring to FR 732 just east of Bald
Hills Ranch, 2.9 miles from I-17. We would park one vehicle there
and then drive on the trailhead at Joe Best Spring to start our hike.
Leaving
Cottonwood at 0700, we drove on SR 260 to Camp Verde, turned south on
I-17 and drove to the SR 169 Exit. There, instead of turning west
toward Dewey-Humboldt, we turned east onto Forest Road 732 and drove
2.9 miles to park at the junction with FR 9602G. This section of
road was described in my report of the 2 March 2016 scouting hike as
follows:
Forest
Road 732 (also shown on some maps as FR 68D or even as SR 169),
although dirt, was in first class condition for the first 2.5 miles.
At that point it crossed a cattleguard and turned down a short, steep
hill, becoming a lot rougher as it descended. It was still usable by
a regular passenger vehicle.1
At
the bottom of the hill, the road passes the entrance to Bald Hill
Ranch and then continues through a community of several houses,
scattered along Cienega Creek, before reaching the intersection of FR
732 and FR 9602G. About a hundred yards beyond the junction, water
springs forth from the otherwise dry creekbed at the foot of an
ancient sycamore tree.
Water emerging from the dry bed of Cienega Creek
|
Some
delicate blue flowers grew on the bank (below
left) while a larger, bright bright
yellow clump grew at the very edge of the water (below
right).
Maiden blue eyed Mary Monkey flower
|
Before
sinking again into the dry bed of Cienega Creek, the running water
created a small but lovely oasis-like area.
A small oasis in the dry desert |
There
is a wide grassy area alongside the road above the creek and plenty
of room to stop for an impromptu picnic. We parked our shuttle
vehicle here and stopped to photograph the trail, actually a
little-used forest road (left) from
which we would emerge at the end of our hike. We then piled into the
remaining two vehicles and continued on to the trailhead at Joe Best
Spring, about another 3.2 miles.
About
1.1 miles from where we had parked the shuttle vehicle we left the
course of Cienega Creek, angled away from the creek and passed
between two small hills. Another 0.7 miles brought us to Wire Gold
Tank and the inevitable question, “Where did the tank get its
name”?. Eventually, I found that Google Earth, with the National
Geographic overlay installed, shows a “mines” location about 0.9
miles southeast of the tank and that Mindat.org provides the names
Escondido
Mine
and Moon
Anchor Mine.
It is listed as a wire gold “mine
with underground workings2”;
no other information is provided.
A
short distance after passing Wire Gold Tank we came to a fork in the
road. FR 732 turned sharply to the left while the road straight
ahead became FR 68D; a sign was posted indicating it would lead to
Dugas. We continued straight ahead on FR 68D for another 0.8 miles
to the 511 Trailhead at Joe Best Spring. We donned our packs and
posed for a group photograph before starting the hike.
For the first 0.7 miles, the trail led us down the wash, past the mapped location of the spring. The wash was bone dry and we saw no indication of water as we passed close by. Meanwhile, a brisk, quite chilly wind was blowing up the wash and we were happy to still be wearing our jackets. The wash ended at Cienega Creek where we had crossed the creek on our way to the trailhead and then continued northeast, climbing the hillside at a gentle slope.
We
were hiking through an area covered with junipers and pinon pines
along with a large number of cliffrose shrubs, some manzanita and an
occasional squaw bush. The trail was a little rocky in places but
easy to follow and we now began to see more flowers along the trail.
For instance the claret cup cactus (below
left)
and the delicate filaree (below
right),
found near Box T Spring.
Claret cup cactus Filaree |
Cattleguard for ATV and hiker passage |
We could find no open
spring at the site. It appears that the spring has been filled in
and the water piped to a lower point down the hillside where it
emerges into the bottom of a tank. The tank then overflows and the
water runs on downstream for a short distance before being reabsorbed
by the thirsty soil. My report of our 2 March 2016 hike to the
spring describes it as follows:
...no
spring was visible, just a large rectangular metal tank setting in an
open grassy area. However, a closer look disclosed that the tank
actually formed part of the spring. There are no above-ground pipes
feeding water to the tank; it has apparently been fitted over the
mouth of the spring so that the water flows into the bottom of the
tank and fills it up before overflowing from the top...3.
We
left Trail 511 at the spring and followed FR 9602G back to the
shuttle vehicle at FR 732. We found numerous flowers along this road
and George and I again lagged behind examining and photographing
them. Shortly after leaving the spring we came to an area that was
literally covered with a carpet of delicate blue flax (below
left). A close up photograph
(below right)
is also shown.
Area carpeted with blue flax Close up of blue flax |
Groundsels Deer vetch |
Cliffrose, Indian Paintbrush and a single groundsel |
Squawbush (oak-leaved Utah serviceberry sumac) |
Single aster blossom Dandelion head
|
I
have never been very enthralled by fleabane and usually don't bother
to photograph it. However, the very attractive clump shown in the
photograph (below left)
drew my attention and I decided, after all, to include it in my
report. I also finally found some decent Easter daisies (below
right) near the end of the hike and
decided to delete the Easter daisy photographs I had already taken in
favor of this single example.
Fleabane Easter daisies
|
Unknown Fine leaf wooly white
|
We
were back at the shuttle vehicle just after noon, so we chose to eat
there, in that oasis-like spot, before retrieving the vehicles parked
at Joe Best Spring.
Our hike is shown by
the red track on the the included map (below).
The blue track shows part of our drive along Forest Roads 732 and
68D to the trailhead at Joe Best Spring.
The
hike was 5.6 miles in length, the highest elevation was 5113 feet,
the total ascent was 650 feet and the total descent was 857 feet.
1FR
9602G and Trail 511 from FR 732 to Salt Mine Road, dated 2 March
2016, available at
http://ellisfprice.blogspot.com/2016/03/from-squaw-peak-road-to-salt-mine-road.html
2
http://www.mindat.org/loc-144691.html
3
FR 9602G and Trail 511 from FR 732 to Salt Mine Road, dated 2 March
2016, available at
http://ellisfprice.blogspot.com/2016/03/from-squaw-peak-road-to-salt-mine-road.html
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