Saturday, February 12, 2011

Camp Verde Cliff Dwellings


We had trouble determining just what to call this hike. Some of us had done it before; the hike leader then had referred to it variously as Clear Creek Mesa or Clear Creek Caves. After some searching, I managed to find a map that lists the Indian Ruins we were to visit as “Camp Verde Cliff Dwellings” and decided to use that name for the report. Just be aware that you may find records of previous Skyliner hikes to the area that refer to it by other names.

Fifteen of us (Jim Manning, Debbie Dobson, Colleen Maktenieks, Kwi Johnson, Connie Woolard, Gordon Bice, Miriam Sterling, Bill Woolard, Daisy Williams, Marvin Alt, Jan PreFontaine, Donna Goodman, the author and two others) left Cottonwood, drove through Camp Verde on Hwy 260 and parked on the left side of the road at mile marker 225.4. The trail leaves the road through a small, permanently closed iron gate, constructed so as to permit easy access for hikers. There is ample parking for five or six cars.

Although well defined, the trail is apparently not official, and the attendant at the Ranger Station in Camp Verde had no information about it. From Hwy 260 the trail quickly starts a sharp 300-foot climb to the first of the Indian ruins, built into an overhang in the cliff, about 0.4 miles along the trail from Hwy 260.

Camp Verde Cliff Dwellings – 300 ft above Hwy 260 on the unnamed 
but well-defined trail.
Camp Verde Cliff Dwellings – 300 ft above Hwy 260 on the unnamed 
but well-defined trail.
The photograph below was taken while standing just in front of the cliff dwellings shown in the two preceding photographs. Note, in the above photographs, the still-solid stone and mortar walls constructed to enclose the area under the overhang for dwellings.

Hikers struggling up the slope just below the cliff dwellings shown above
From here making our way on up to the top of the mesa was just a matter of finding the most convenient way to ascend another 100 feet. When we did so we found ourselves at a narrow rock connector that separates the mesa above into two parts of unequal size. We turned to the southwest onto the smaller part of the mesa and immediately found ourselves surrounded by ancient ruins. This entire area is literally covered with ruins.

Old Indian Ruins above Camp Verde Cliff Dwellings 
Old Indian Ruins above Camp Verde Cliff Dwellings
A snack amidst the ruins – Miriam, Donna and Jim
Looking across the stone connecting bridge from the ruins to the 
larger section of the mesa
We spent some time wandering around amid the ruins, pausing for a snack and looking across the rock connector to the larger section of the mesa. In the photograph above right the connector is just out of sight to the right. This larger northeast part of the mesa visible here is about 70 feet higher than the smaller portion that contains all the Indian Ruins.

We decided to cross over to the other section of mesa and walk around its rim before climbing to the topmost point for lunch.

Meanwhile some among our party wondered how the Indians ever managed to get the water necessary to mix mortar for all the construction we had seen. Being a foolhardy person, I ventured the opinion that the answer was, “Squaw power.” One of our female hikers pointed out that there were loose rocks, just the right size for throwing, scattered all about. Not being a complete idiot, I quickly led the group across the connecting bridge to the larger section of the mesa, taking care to stay farther than a stone’s throw ahead.

Other than the spectacular 360-degree view, we didn’t find much to interest us on our exploration of this section of the mesa. I was a bit disappointed because I thought I remembered finding a nice cave just under the rim on the northwest side of the mesa. Although I climbed down to look at a couple of interesting spots this time, I was not able to find it again. In retrospect it must have been located just below the ruins we looked at on the smaller section of the mesa. In any case, I took a photograph from near the cave on that previous hike (November 2006) that I like very much. It is included below.

Photograph taken atop the mesa above Camp Verde Cliff Dwellings
– November 25, 2006
We ate lunch at the highest point on the mesa, about 3630 feet.

After lunch we made our way back down to the cars by two different routes. We all descended about 200 feet to the top of but about 300 yards northeast of, the cliff containing the dwellings shown on the first page of this report. A few of us then climbed down the steep cliff face to visit a couple of small peaks visible below while the rest of the group continued northeast along the top of the cliff in search of a less precipitate descent.

The photograph below shows the two small peaks visible from the mesa; one shows vegetation and one is completely bare. I saw no indication of anything, such as a rock layer, that would have caused the peaks to form naturally, and there was no sign of a road that might have been used by heavy equipment. I have no idea what produced them.

Taken from about half way back down on our return - this is a magnified 
view of two small, interesting peaks, one with vegetation, 
the other looking as though it had been scalped.
A somewhat closer look at the “scalped” peak is shown in the following photograph with Gordon, Connie and Donna posed on top.

Gordon, Connie and Donna posed on top of the scalped peak
By the time we had climbed and descended from the two small peaks on our way back, the rest of the party had appeared below. We all arrived back at the parking area at essentially the same time. The hike was only two miles long with a little less than a 700-foot elevation change. However, the initial climb was pretty steep and the trip back down, at least the way we returned, required some care to avoid falls.

The total hike distance was 1.9 miles, the maximum elevation was 3634 feet and the total ascent was 977 feet.

Referring to the map provided with this report (below), the part of the trail marked in red is pretty well defined. The part marked in green is not a trail at all, rather just the path I took while wandering around and descending.



Saturday, February 5, 2011

Dry Beaver Creek Hike


Nineteen Skyliners (Lila Wright, Daisy Williams, John MacInerney, Linda Tovar, Miriam Sterling, Anita Jackson, Dolly Yapp, Kwi Johnson, Connie Woolard, Marvin Alt, George Everman, Bill Woolard, Colleen Maktenieks, Donna Goodman, Jim Manning, the author and three others) hiked near Dry Beaver Creek on 05 February 2011. Leaving the assembly area at the Cottonwood Safeway, we drove north on Hwy 89A, turned right on Cornville Road, proceeded through Cornville and turned left at the borrow pit just 2.3 miles past the Beaverhead Flat Road intersection. We had some discussion about the meaning of the term “borrow pit” and I looked it up:

A borrow pit, also known as a sand box, is a term used in construction and civil engineering. It describes an area where material (usually soil, gravel or sand) has been dug for use at another location. Borrow pits can be found close to many major construction projects. For example, soil might be excavated to fill an embankment for a highway, clay might be excavated for use in brick-making, gravel to be used for making concrete, etc.1

Parking our car at the pit, we struck out on FR 9203T, a road that runs along Dry Beaver Creek. About eighty yards ahead we crossed a dry wash that appeared to also serve as a road. Looking at a map later, it appears that it indeed does serve as a road and that we could have turned up the wash and reconnected with the road we were following after about three tenths of a mile. After another two tenths of a mile (about a half mile from the parking area) we came to a fork in the road and continued straight ahead to cross Dry Beaver Creek and hike up the other side. Ignoring other possible turnoffs from the road we were on, we continued straight ahead and reached the dry creek bed after another two tenths of a mile (around seven tenths of a mile from our starting point).

Uncaring people have created a mini-dump alongside the creek where we were to cross over. We found several discarded monitors and other assorted trash that irresponsible persons had abandoned and then apparently used for target practice.

As we crossed the otherwise dry creek, we did see a shimmering pool of water several yards upstream, indicating that water had been flowing in the recent past. And then further upstream, we came to a larger pool of water near a bend in the streambed. Upstream from there, water was flowing; downstream the creek was dry.

Glimmering pool of water at a creek bend – below here the streambed is dry
We were now heading north on the east side of the creek, which at this point flows almost directly south, but soon turns so that we would be traveling upstream in an easterly direction. After traveling about three-tenths of a mile along the east bank of the mostly dry streambed we came to an almost ninety degree bend, so that the upstream direction was now to the east. From the bend as far as we went upstream there was water in the stream. We crossed over here to continue upstream along the north side of the generally west flowing stream.

As we continued in a generally east (slightly north) direction, the creek, now at times some two tenths of a mile to the south of our track, turned again so that it was now flowing from the north for a short distance, and we crossed it again about 1.1 miles from the bend where we had first crossed at the bend.

Below the bend – the streambed is dry
Water covers the bed upstream
After crossing the creek again we traveled generally north parallel to the creek and then climbed sharply to the top of a hill. From there we could see that Dry Beaver Creek curved back around the promontory we were standing on and once again was flowing from east to west. We followed the spine of the ridge diverging slightly from the path of the stream and climbed higher until we were almost two hundred feet above the point where we had last crossed the creek.

Our track from the borrow point to this point is shown on the attached map in red. Since we returned by a slightly different path, I have shown the return in yellow. The view from the ridge was quite good; we could see the Red Rock Country to the north, House Mountain to the northwest and Mingus Mountain almost directly west.

Looking toward Red Rock Country to the north
House Mountain to the northwest
Mingus Mountain in the distance to the west
On our way to the top of the ridge we had noted a trail snaking up the slope of the next hill south of us, and then saw a group of riders following it. This trail appeared to lead back toward our last crossing of the creek and we decided to take it back to there. It turned out to be an excellent trail, a much easier route back down to the creek. We stopped for lunch at the crossing before continuing our journey

After lunch we continued back down the creek, retracing the route we had followed on the way up until we arrived at the bend where the creek turned to flow directly south and where we had taken the group picture. From that point we followed a road paralleling the creek on the west side of the creek rather than crossing back over to go back down the east side.

Somewhere along the way Colleen had collected a piece of driftwood and stuck it in her pack for the trip home. Seeing a great opportunity one of the other hikers sneaked up behind her and suspended a beer can from her prize.

Colleen brought an extra ration of beer in case of extreme thirst 
- see it hanging on her left antler.
The total distance of the hike was 5.5 miles, according to my GPS track, and the difference in elevation was around 365 feet.

This was a most pleasant hike with very little climbing, good trails, great views and no bushwhacking; such as we experienced on our recent Mingus slope hike.

The GPS track of this hike is shown on the included map (below).