Skyliner Hike Schedule

Trekabout Walks

Monday, March 30, 2015

Sombert Lane to Little Horse Trailhead at Hwy 179


On 28 March 2015, seventeen Skyliners hiked from Margs Draw Spur A Trailhead on Sombart Lane to Little Horse Trailhead on Hwy 179. This hike included the following trails: Spur A, about half of Margs Draw, Broken Arrow and Little Horse. Along the way, we visited the Devils Dining Room, lunched at Submarine Rock (making a slight detour to do so) and paused briefly for the view at Chicken Point.

Having completely forgotten the ritual on last week's hike, we gathered for a group photograph today before leaving the parking lot.

Left to right: The author, Frank Lombardo, Jim Manning, Daisy Williams, Karl Sink, Lila Wright, Beverly Sass, Joyce Arregui, Ellen McGinnis, Dolly Yapp (front), James McGinnis, George Everman, Gilliam Ashworth, Betty Wolters, John Ashworth and Collene Maktenieks – photograph by Name Withheld

Passing by a Forest Service trail information Kiosk at the east side of the parking area, we immediately entered the Munds Mountain Wilderness area, climbed a steep, but mercifully short, section of trail and encountered our first flower of the hike, a bladderpod mustard (right). 

George was assigned as tailgater, to make sure we didn't lose anyone and I stayed with him so that he could identify the flowers we saw along the way. The warm days were working their wonders and, as we passed through a forest of juniper, manzanita, ceanothus and other high desert plants, we found a variety of flowers along the trail. One, called fineleaf woolywhite, was particularly intriguing. It first appears as a feathery looking clump of grass (left), but then unexpectedly shoots up a tall stalk and displays yellow blooms at the top (right) as though to announce its arrival to the world.

The distance on Spur A Trail from the parking lot to the intersection with Margs Draw Trail was 0.6 miles and we continued to find flowers such as the Indian root shown here (left) along the way.

Spur A had led us east, but when we reached Margs Draw Trail we followed it south for 1.1 miles to Morgan Road where a large parking area is provided. At this point Margs Draw Trail ends and Broken Arrow Trail continues south. Meanwhile, Morgan Road turns south and becomes Forest Road 179F, leading to such tourist attractions as the Devils Dining Room, Submarine Rock and Chicken Point.

As we approached Morgan Road from the north, we were faced with a large butte or mesa directly ahead, between us and Twin Buttes. I think the formation must be Battlement Mesa. Although I have been unable to find it on any map, Battlement is mentioned often in hiking and cycling reports and is generally placed north of Twin Buttes. From this angle it looks more like a butte than a mesa. But the top appears more table like when viewed from the Twin Buttes area.

Battlement Mesa

The area is shown in the map insert (right); the junction of Margs Draw and Broken Arrow Trails is shown at top right and I have placed a marker on what I believe to be Battlement Mesa.

We left Munds Mountain Wilderness area at Morgan Road, but we were never far from its boundary. At any point during the hike along Broken Arrow Trail we had only to look east across the valley floor to see Munds Mountain itself looming in the distance. The wilderness boundary runs down the valley floor to the west of Munds Mountain to Chicken Point, continues along the valley floor west of Lee Mountain and then swings west to encompass Courthouse Butte and Bell Rock near The Village of Oak Creek.

Although some flowering plants stand out boldly as though to say, “stop and admire me,” others are more modest, seeming to hide themselves like a shy child hiding his face in his mother's skirt. We almost missed the small yellow blossoms of the Wrights deer vetch (left) so well was it hidden

Since starting south on Broken Arrow we had seen a constant stream of pink jeeps ferrying tourists to and from the sights along the way. But our first intersection with the road they followed was not until we reached the Devils Dining Room.

Devils Dining Room

This site is not very interesting and I have a great amount of difficulty understanding why is is considered a tourist attraction at all. To me it just looks like a hole in the ground that only a geologist would love.

It was only 0.5 miles from Morgan Road to the Devils Dining Room and another 0.3 miles brought us to the turnoff to Submarine Rock, so named because it bears some resemblance to a submarine. It is about 0.6 miles to the top of the rock from the turnoff. The deviation we made from Broken Arrow Trail to visit Submarine Rock and then return to the trail was 1.2 miles and is shown below.

Showing detour to visit Submarine Rock

Submarine Rock is much more interesting than is the Devils Dining Room. From the top of the rock one has a great view up and down the valley and to Munds Mountain to the east. On this hot day, we also had a nice cool breeze to cool us off.

As shown on the map insert (above), we returned to Broken Arrow Trail at a different point, about 0.2 miles from where we had left it. We did this by following the jeep road (FR 179F) up a short but very steep hill until it intersected the trail. We cut about 0.2 miles off the length of the hike by doing this, but we would have expended much less effort by returning the way we had come.

                                     Desert hyacinth

Continuing on to Chicken Point, we found several more interesting flowers.

Spring parsley
We paused only briefly at Chicken Point before continuing on our way, now on 
                              Indigo bush
Mountain sunflowers 
Little Horse Trail, to the trailhead at Hwy 179, still 1.8 miles away.  

George called my attention to one last flower along the way, a rattlesnake weed (below).

It had now become quite hot and we were reminded why we hiked at higher elevations during the hotter months of the year. By the time we reached the trailhead I, for one, was exhausted.

According to my GPS track we hiked 6.1 miles, the highest elevation was 4624 feet and the total ascent was 1054 feet.
Our track is shown in red on the included map (below).














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

Monday, March 16, 2015

Twin Buttes Loop


Seventeen Skyliners hiked the Twin Buttes Loop in Sedona on 14 March 2015. This hike, consisting of a combination of trails, can be performed in a clockwise direction, as we did, or in a counterclockwise direction. We parked alongside Chapel Road at the Mystic Trailhead and headed north on Mystic Trail. The hike consists of a series of bike trails or parts of trails (Mystic, Piglet, Hog Wash, High on the Hog, Hog Heaven, Broken Arrow, Little Horse and Chapel). This route is shown in red on the below excerpt from a Forest Service map posted at the trailhead.

The route we took is shown in red on the above map

From the hike described here, we made one significant deviation. We followed a social trail that climbs steeply up the butte behind the Chapel to a small cave (right). It is a steep, precarious climb along a faint trail that rises almost 200 feet in 0.1 miles. The cave (or perhaps tunnel, as it has an opening at either end) is only about 30 feet long and small enough that one can barely squeeze through with a pack on.

George is shown here (left) exiting the cave. Having assumed the role of tailgater for the hike, he was bringing up the rear. I do not recommend a climb to the cave as a part of this hike. It is a lot of effort for a climb through a short cave. Some of us climbed through the cave and returned to the trail by a different route; others just looked and returned the way they had come.

From our position high on the shoulder of the butte, we had an excellent view of Cathedral Rock across the valley.

View of Cathedral Rock

We returned to the trail and continued on our way around Twin Buttes.

The trails were well-marked and posted with signs (right). The signs warned bikers of the level of difficulty ahead. We had long since learned that a trail rated as difficult for bikers would require a great deal of care from hikers. On the other hand, the very fact that a trail is rated as navigable for bikers tends to put a certain limit on just how difficult it can be.


We wanted to make it to the saddle north of Twin Buttes for our midmorning snack and, as a result, delayed our snack a bit longer than we should have. By the time we reached the saddle, I was feeling quite ready for a rest. As a matter of fact, I even managed to get in a short nap.

A single cloud floated high in the sky above the distant mountains and, except for the occasional short, steep climb, hiking was easy. The views, meanwhile, were such as to cause one to pay too much attention to the scenery and too little to footing.

Panoramic view visible from the north slope of Twin Buttes

From the saddle where we stopped to snack we could look down on Submarine Rock and, although we couldn't pick it out, the location of Devil's Dining Room. A steady stream of jeeps were to be seen carrying tourists along the jeep trail that runs from Morgan Road to Devils dining Room, Submarine Rock and on to Chicken Point. While at the saddle we also saw other hikers and bikers for the first time on this hike. Traffic then picked up steadily for the rest of the hike but never became heavy enough to be a real problem.

The trees along the way included junipers, Arizona cypress, manzanita, ceanothus and crucifixion thorn. Because of the recent rains and the arrival of spring growth, the plants were arrayed in various shades of green ranging from the feathery, delicate hues of new growth to the darker shades of maturity. The various shades of green stood in stark contrast to the surrounding red rocks, but together they were quite pleasing to the eye.

Few flowers were to be seen along the trail on this hike, a fact that made a single ceanothus (left) in full bloom a striking sight.

We arrived at Chicken Point to find it a very busy place. There were several groups of individuals who had driven their own vehicles in and were just basking in the sun on the bare rock surface, eating lunch or simply enjoying the view. I found a sunny spot on the rock, ate my lunch and settled in for a nap. George and Akemi had previously climbed along a narrow white line (hardly wide enough to be called a ledge) in the cliff above (right) and George decided to climb back to it while I napped.

When George had returned from his adventure and I had awakened from my nap, we all gathered for a group photograph.

Left to right: James McGinnis, Ellen Mcginnis, Joyce Arregui, the author, Akemi Tomioka (front), Anita Jackson, George Everman (front), Connie Woolard, Donna Goodman, Daisy Williams, Karl Sink, Collene Maktenieks, Frank Lombardo, Jim Manning, Tim Wolters and Betty Wolters – photograph by Name Withheld
As we left Chicken Point we had a view of the terrain ahead from Courthouse Butte on the left to Cathedral Rock on the right.

Courthouse Butte, Bell Rock, Unnamed Mountain and Cathedral Rock

From Chicken Point it is just 0.4 miles along Little Horse Trail to Chapel Trail and then another 0.7 miles to the end of the trail at the chapel parking lot. From the end of Chapel Trail back to our starting point at Mystic Trail is only another 0.4 miles, this along a paved road.

At the end of Chapel Trail we encountered an automatically-closing gate (left). That is a very handy arrangement as one doesn't have to fumble around closing and latching the gate after passing through. Just push it open, pass through and let it go.

On the other side of the gate was posted a very puzzling sign (right). Since this very obviously is a trailhead, being one end of the Chapel Trail and with two signs posted just beyond the gate to identify it as such, one is left to wonder what the sign really means.

My GPS track shows a hiking distance of 4.2 miles for the loop with a maximum elevation of 4629 feet and a total ascent of 1016 feet. We hiked an additional 0.2 miles and climbed an additional 185 feet to visit the cave.  The GPS track for the loop hike is shown in red on the attached map (below).

For those who might be interested, an interactive Bike Trail Map of the area is available at: http://www.trailforks.com/map/?lat=34.831287579117884&lon=-111.7570010023071&z=15&m=roadmap



Sunday, March 8, 2015

Riverfront Park to Tuzigoot and Jail Trail


This hike was first proposed as a hike on Jail Trail. However, after investigating the idea, we determined that the Jail Trail, running from the old jail building on Main Street in Cottonwood to the Bridge to Dead Horse, was only 0.5 miles in length. We obviously would need to add something else to the hike, so Lila proposed that we start at Riverfront Park and hike far enough up the river to make to make it a good hike. We scouted the trail on 7 January, hiking all the way to Tuzigoot Road and back, but not bothering to hike the short section, about 0.1 mile, of Jail Trail that runs from Main Street down to connect with the Riverfront Trail. In January, the trail was partly covered by snow and a little muddy in spots. The only difficult section was about the last 0.1 miles below Tuzigoot Bridge where the trail just disappeared and we had to pick our was through thick growth.

On 7 March 2015, a beautiful, sunny but slightly chilly morning, eighteen Skyliners gathered for a regular hike that would essentially repeat January's scouting hike. We parked at Riverfront Park and walked along the sidewalk past a service building, a sand-covered play area and a swing set to connect with the main trail that runs up and down the river. We were skirting the Frisbee (Disk) Golf course and signs were posted along the trail warning of flying objects. There are side trails all along the way. However, the main trail is easily discerned all the way to Dead Horse Bridge. At the bridge, a side trail runs down from the road and connects, through a stile, with the main trail which turns sharply to the right toward the river and then passes under the bridge along the river bank. A sign (right) announcing the start of Jail Trail is posted Just before the trail turns back north to cross under the bridge.

As we passed under the bridge, George and I were lagging behind while I adjusted my GPS and, by the time we looked ahead again, the rest of the group were lost to sight. This was not really a problem because for, although there are a number of trails winding their way along the river, we just had to continue north and we would be sure to rejoin the group sooner or later. As it turned out, the main group had taken a trail that forked right when they passed under the bridge while George and I took the left fork. These forks can be seen in the photograph below which was taken on the return hike.



As it turned out the fork to the right led into a low-lying area which, although it was approximately the way we hiked in January, was now very muddy due to recent heavy rains. Two of the hikers, deciding that they were not properly attired for hiking in the mud chose to turn back here. Meanwhile George and I were hiking along a nice dry trail. I could tell by referring to my GPS that we were not on the track I had hiked before, but we were traveling parallel to it and would eventually intersect with the Jail Trail which we could follow back to the main trail. In the below map insert, Jail Trail is shown in green and the dry path followed by George and I, along with parts of the main trail hiked in January, is shown in red. The section of green track from Dead Horse Bridge to Jail Trail Jct-1 is also part of the path we followed through this area on the January scouting hike. The muddy path (not shown) followed by the main group of hikers today was near the green line but reconnected with the main trail farther upstream than the Jail Trail junction.

Insert showing Jail Trail and the way we hiked

The path that George and I took is probably the best way to hike this trail, certainly following any heavy rainfall. However, on a hot summer day it would be more exposed to the sun. As can be seen on the map insert, we connected with Jail Trail about 100 yards south of Jain Trail Jct-1. We then followed the trail back to the main track and continued along the same path we had hiked in January.

Communicating with the hike leader, Lila Wright, by cellphone, we found that we were ahead of the main group and set a point farther up the trail, where it passed very close to several houses, at which we would wait for them. As we approached the area of the houses we noted a line of rock and cement structures, about three feet tall, placed four to five feet apart and strung together by a wire cable of about 1.5 inches diameter. Lila tells me that these structures were part of a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) project. This would place its construction in the 1930s. We could see no evidence that the spaces between the separate rock and cement structures had ever been filled with earth. On the other hand, any remaining signs could well have been washed away during the last 80 years or so.

The houses near which the two groups were to meet were nestled at the edge of the flood plain close against a steep hill. We wondered why in the world anyone would build in such a flood-prone spot. A couple of the structures were protected by a concrete wall, but others were not.

When we passed this way last January a very boisterous rooster crowed at us, starting as soon as we arrived at the edge of the small meadow and continuing until we were well past it. This time we heard nothing from him and wondered whether a hungry coyote might have feasted on him. Or, perhaps the owner ate him.

The main party soon arrived and we all continued upstream together, passing through only one more really muddy area, the wash that drains Mescal Gulch if I am correct. Otherwise the trail was relatively dry and very easy walking, even widening into a little-used but still quite passable dirt road as we crossed Horseshoe Bend heading to the diversion dam that is pinched in between the cliffs at the foot of Tuzigoot. Approaching the dam,we came first to the sluice gate that provided water to Cottonwood Ditch. When we were there in January, the only way across the ditch was to hold onto the valve wheel for support and walk across on a plank atop the gate.

Now, two months later, we found that dirt had been dumped into the ditch filling an area wide enough to drive equipment across. Since the dirt completely filled the ditch, blocking all water flow, it was obvious that it must be temporary unless the ditch were permanently removed from service. When we looked at the dam itself, we found an answer. A large section had been washed away during last weeks heavy rains and the temporary fill in the ditch must be to bring equipment across to rebuild it. The below photograph on the left shows the dam as it looked in January; the one on the right shows its present condition. All of the dirt fill has been washed away, leaving only the base of large boulders upon which the dam was constructed.
  Remains of the dam on 7 March 2015

Diversion dam on 7 January 2015

We paused on the bank overlooking the ruins of the dam for a snack in the warm sun and to enjoy the view. The Ruins of Tuzigoot (below left) were clearly visible on top of the cliff directly across the river.

Two more of our hikers, having made arrangements for a train ride on the Verde Railroad, left us at the dam.

Although the floodplain had largely disappeared and the river was pinched between cliffs on either side at Tuzigoot, we had a panoramic view looking up the river that included Mingus Mountain on the left to the Tuzigoot ruins on the right.


Panoramic view from Mingus to Tuzigoot.

From the dam, we would follow an old road that has been carved low in the cliff wall. But first we looked more closely at the Cottonwood Ditch and noted a flume across it, apparently carrying water to Hickey Ditch and on to Dead Horse Ranch on the other side of the river. A pipe, apparently buried under the old road, carries water from an intake somewhere further up river, feeds it through the flume across that crosses Cottonwood Ditch and on through an open ditch to another flume which carries it across the river to Dead Horse. Later, some of the group located this (Hickey Ditch) intake just a short distance downstream from where we stopped for lunch.

Traveling along the old road, we saw a lot of evidence of small rock slides and one recently fallen large boulder that completely closed the road to any vehicular traffic, other than perhaps narrow, off road vehicles.

Our goal for this hike was not really Tuzigoot but, rather, Tuzigoot Bridge which lies about a mile up river from the dam. The hiking was easy for the next 0.8 miles. We then reached a sunny, open area along the riverbank with several flat rocks. We had noted areas all along our hike where invasive trees (primarily tamarisk and paradise) have recently been removed, some chopped and stacked into neat plies, others chipped and left in anthill piles. Much of the area along the river beyond this open spot was apparently not infested with non-native species and had been left untouched. That made it rather difficult for part of the way and we had to crawl under some trees that had fallen and lodged in those around them. Fortunately, the rough going did not last long and we were soon back in an open area where a lot of trees had been removed.

Area where invasive species plants have been removed
We had left some of our group to wait at the open, sunny spot on the other side of the overgrown section of trail and we intended to return there to eat lunch, so we didn't linger for very long under Tuzigoot Bridge.

I had planned to stay long enough to climb up to the road, but found that I would need to wade a mudhole and changed my mind. The picture here (right) shows the underside of the bridge as seen last January from the road bank above.

Heading back to the open area for lunch, we found a slightly easier path than the one we had taken on the way to the bridge. But it still required a bit of crawling through the underbrush. After a leisurely lunch and my noon nap, we headed back down the trail, stopping along the way for a group photograph.

Left to right: Daisy Williams, Anita Jackson, Dolly Yapp, Joanne Hennings, George Everman (kneeling), Dave Healey, Akemi Tomioka, Loren Pritzel, Lila Wright, Joyce Arregui, Gary Jacobson, Collene Maktenieks (kneeling) and Beverly Sass

About 0.3 miles below the diversion dam, at just about the spot where the group photograph was taken, the trail (a dirt road at this point) crosses the Hickey Ditch. A side trail runs along the ditch to the flume that carries water across the river. Most of the group wanted to see that flume and Lila led them along that trail while a few of us dozed in the sun awaiting their return. That didn't take very long as the river was only about 200 yards away.

We then continued on past on down the trail, George and I again lingering behind, looking around for things we might have missed before. One of those missed objects turned out to be an old automobile chassis that George spotted. Closer investigation disclosed is a Dolphin branded car and that the chassis was still largely intact. I later looked to see what company had manufactured a car with that name. The closest thing I could find was a Dolphin built by Sipani, an Indian company, in the 1980's and 1990's.

Jail Trail Trailhead 
Old Jail
When we arrived back at the junction with Jail Trail, we turned toward Main Street on it and traveled about 100 yards to the junction with the trail George and I had followed to there from Dead Horse Bridge. While the rest of the group waited at the junction, I continued on to the old Jail to photograph the jail and the trailhead sign posted there. The brown building shown directly across the street looking past the old stone jail is Bocce Pizzaria.
I shortly rejoined the group and we continued on, soon arriving back at our cars. When we had parked at about 0815, we had the parking lot essentially to ourselves. Now at around 1330, it was jam-packed with cars and drivers were circling while waiting for a spot.

When I downloaded and measured the GPS track for this hike, I found it to to be 7.4 miles round trip. The highest elevation was 3364 feet and the total ascent was 618 feet.

The route we hiked is shown on the included map (below) in red except that the 100 yards we hiked on Jail Trail is in green and the 200 yard trip to the flume across the river and back is shown in blue. While working on the map, I identified the Hickey Ditch inlet. It is located, as shown on the map, just downstream from where we ate lunch.