On
26 March 2011, sixteen Skyliners hiked to the mushroom formation in
Boynton Canyon. From Cottonwood we drove north on Hwy 89A to Sedona
and turned left onto Dry Creek
Road.
From there we followed the signs, turning left on Boynton Pass Road
and then right on Boynton Canyon Road, to the trailhead parking lot
located on the right just before the road ends at the entrance to
Enchantment resort.
The
trail crosses a wash and leads up the canyon skirting the resort.
About 1.7 miles from the trailhead we took an unmarked but fairly
well defined trail to the right. An alligator juniper with two main
trunks marks the turnoff, which is located just a few yards short of
the tree.
Alligator juniper with two main trunks
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The
trail crosses a wash and leads, at first gently, up the slope of the
canyon wall. Shortly, however, it starts to climb rather steeply.
Before we reached our goal we had climbed around 800 feet from the
bottom of the wash. Along the way, we encountered some really steep
climbs (requiring the use of both hands and feet, sometimes knees) as
we navigated our way up over three major ledges. The trail ascends
to a ledge and then follows along it to reach an access point to
climb to the next ledge. There were two of these climbs to higher
ledges, each reached by a really steep climb, before we made our last
steep climb to reach the ledge at which Mushroom is located. The
Mushroom actually is separated from a larger ledge by a narrow crack
that one can easily step across to stand on top of the formation.
On
the way up we noted a unique formation that looks like a bear eating
from a honey tree. Shown in the following photographs are shots of
this “bear eating honey” formation, hikers emerging on top of the first of the three ledges, hikers ascending the
second ledge and a view across Boynton Canyon from the second ledge.
Bear eating honey
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Hikers ascending first of three ledges
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Hikers ascending the second ledge
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When
we reached the top of the second ledge, we paused for a few minutes
to catch our breath and enjoy the grand view out across Boynton
Canyon.
Looking back across Boynton Canyon
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But
our goal was the mushroom formation, so we shortly pushed on,
traveling about two-tenths of a mile along the ledge to the northeast
before reaching a point from which we could climb to the top of the
third ledge and the Mushroom.
As
we approached the beginning of this third (and final) steep climb, we
caught our first sight of Mushroom (below),
framed by sky, trees and the cliff face. Encouraged by the sight of
our goal, we wasted little time in starting the final push to the
top.
Our first glimpse of Mushroom from the second ledge
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The final climb to Mushroom
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David Beach doing the victory dance on top of Mushroom. Note the bush
growing out of a crack in the foreground. That crack separates Mushroom
from the ledge from which this picture was taken.
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On
the way back down we noted a strange leaning rock formation that we
had missed coming up. It seems almost to defy gravity and I wouldn’t
want to be below it during an earthquake.
The gravity defying leaning rock
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The
round trip hike was about 6.4 miles. The elevation change was around
960 feet, 800 of that in the 1.3 mile climb from the wash to the top
of Mushroom. Note that the total hike distance given here includes
about 0.4 miles that I hiked along the ledge from Mushroom.
The
GPS track for this hike is shown on the included map (below).