The
author and thirteen other hikers left Cottonwood at 0800 on 26 March
2016 to hike on Long Canyon Trail. We planned to hike to Long Canyon
Tank, about three miles from the trailhead at Forest Road 618H, and
return. To reach the trailhead, we drove east on SR 260 to I-17 and
turned north. We exited I-17 at the SR 179 exit and turned right to
follow FR 618 across Wet Beaver Creek to the junction with FR 618H.
The road is paved all the way to the FR 618H turnoff which is,
itself, a well-maintained dirt road. About 0.7 miles after turning
onto FR 618H, we came to the Long Canyon Trailhead. Parking is on
the left side of the road and a chain is stretched across the road
limiting access beyond this point to those with business at Southwest
Academy. A gate (right), providing
access to the trail, is located on the right.
The
trail runs up to the mesa, now looming high above us, that lies
between Deadwood Draw and the Canyon that carries Wet Beaver Creek
and we knew that we had a steep climb ahead. A trailhead sign (left)
posted a few yards from the gate warned us that the trail would be
difficult to follow after the first two miles. Lettering on the sign
that said “Bell Trail #13 – 10 miles” was confusing and I never
determined the meaning. If intended to provide the length of Bell
Trail, it is incorrect. Bell Trail, according to the Forest Service
description1,
is 11 miles long, ending at Forest Road 214 about a mile east of
Cedar Flat Tank. However, all other sources I found, including the
Coconino National Forest Motor Vehicle Usage Map2
and Garmin's
Topo U.S. 24K Southwest
map3
show it ending at Roundup Basin Tank which would make
it around 7.6 miles long. It also couldn't mean that it was 10 miles
by way of Long Canyon Trail to Bell Trail because, although both
trails, on most maps, do end at Roundup Basin Tank, that is only
about 7.8 miles.
As
we continued along the trail, we found ourselves climbing steeply
along a rough, rocky trail. It was a much more difficult hike than
we had expected and two of our hikers turned back before we reached
the top of the mesa. The rest of us continued on our way, going
quite slowly and resting often. Flowers were a good excuse to stop
and we paused frequently to admire those found along the way. Just a
short distance up the trail we noted a bunch of blackfoot daisies
(below left)
followed closely by a somewhat scraggly globemallow (below
right).
As
implied by the trailhead sign, the trail was easy to follow as we
made our way toward the rim of the mesa. Behind us we had an
ever-changing view, at first of the Wet Beaver Creek and the area
around the Beaver Creek Ranger Station, then, as we climbed higher,
of Capitol Butte, on the other side of Sedona, as it gradually became
visible above White Mesa. The photograph (below)
shows this view.
Looking back from the shelf below the rim of the mesa
|
Map insert showing two sharp climbs to reach the rim of the mesa
|
Southwestern
Academy is a nonprofit,
coeducational college preparatory school for grades 6-12, with two
campuses—one in San Marino, California, and the other in Rimrock,
Arizona, USA. The school is accredited by WASC. The school offers
boarding and day enrollment for 145 students for grades 6-12 in San
Marino and 40 students for grades 9-12 at the Rimrock campus. A year
of postgraduate studies is offered at both campuses. Students can
transfer between the two campuses. The school was founded in 1924 by
Maurice Veronda, father of the current headmaster, Kenneth Veronda.4
The
school was founded, as noted above, in 1924 in San Marino,
California. The Arizona campus, at the old Beaver Creek Ranch, was
added in 1963. The ranch was homesteaded in the 1880s by the Casner
family; the Broken A-4 brand was registered for the ranch in 1889.
The present stone buildings were constructed after the ranch became a
private hunting lodge in 1929. Southwestern Academy opened at the
site in 19635.
The
sign at the trailhead had warned that the trail became indistinct
after 2 miles and at 1.7 miles we found another sign (right)
indicating that we had arrived at that spot.
I
set the scale on my GPS to 120 feet to make sure we didn't
inadvertently deviate too far from the downloaded track we were
following. As it turned out, however, we really didn't need the GPS
track which, in any case, turned out to vary as much as 0.2 miles
from the actual trail. We just followed the well-traveled cattle
trail. We assumed that the cows knew the most direct path to the
tank we were aiming for. They did, however, tend to wander a bit,
shifting the trail so that it passed under low-lying tree branches
(below left)
to brush off flies. But the general direction never varied; they
were headed to the watering hole. Verifying our decision to follow
the cattle trail instead of the GPS track, we found ancient
wire-bound cairns (below right)
at intervals all along the way.
Trail detours to pass under limbs Old wire-bound cairns
|
From
the top of the mesa as we neared Long Canyon Tank we had an excellent
view to the north, across the canyon that carries Wet Beaver Creek
and on to the San Francisco Peaks in the far distance.
Looking north from Long Canyon Trail on the mesa near Long Canyon Tank
|
Long Canyon Tank – a dreary-looking place but it did have water
|
Trail 63 Marker Hikers starting the descent |
My
pack had become unbalanced when we stopped just before we began the
last steep descent. I had removed a filled thermos and apparently
restowed it improperly causing it to list to the right. Being too
pig-headed to stop and correct the problem, thus descending with an
unbalanced load, I found that I had some very sore muscles and was
walking with a decided list to starboard when I got back to the
trailhead.
The
total hike distance was 6.6 miles, the highest elevation was 5126
feet and the total ascent was 1296 feet.
Our
GPS Track is shown in red on the included map (following).
The cyan track at the top is Bell Trail and the dark magenta track
continuing east from Long Canyon Tank is the continuation of Long
Canyon Trail as it makes its way to Roundup Basin Tank.
1http://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/coconino/recreation/hiking/recarea/?recid=55234&actid=50
2
http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprd3834451.pdf
3
http://www.amazon.com/Garmin-MapSource-Southwest-Topographic-Coverage/dp/B001RYK0JE
4
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southwestern_Academy
5
http://www.southwesternacademy.edu/pdfs/StudHdbk%202015-16.pdf