Saturday, October 29, 2016

Barbershop Trail Hike


On October 29, 2016, nine Skyliners started out from our usual car- pooling point at the Cottonwood Safeway parking lot. The tenth hiker met us on FR 300. The ten hikers were as shown below:

Left to right: Jim McGinnis, Karl Sink, Jim Gibson, Chris Jensen, Lila Wright, Daisy Williams, Ellen McGinnis, Frank Lombardo, Betty Wolters and Dave Beach – photograph by Ellen McGinnis
We had reached FR 300 (also known as Rim Road) by going 2.5 miles on Highway 87 after taking Highway 260 to its intersection with Highway 87. We traveled east on the Rim Road for 17 miles to Forest Road 139 to leave one vehicle at the end of the hike. The remaining vehicles continued on to FR 137 for the beginning of the hike. Before reaching FR137 everyone in the lead vehicle got treated to the sight of a black bear running across the road directly in front of our vehicle. The bear was about 4 to 5 feet long, maybe 3 feet high at the shoulder and must have weighed around 200 pounds. This bear was really traveling fast and no one had a chance to capture a photo; nevertheless,everyone's spirits were lifted by the bear sighting. What were the chances of having something like this happen?

This bear was actually brown, but black bears can be light brown, blonde, or reddish brown as well as the more usual black. This information, along with the fact that they can run at speeds up to 25 miles per hour, was taken from the "Critters of Arizona Pocket Guide1." Barbershop Trail #91 is a part of the Cabin Loop Trail System. That trail system was the subject of an Arizona Highways magazine Hike of the Month in the August issue in 1993 written by William Hafford. Cabin Loop Trail links three cabins: General Springs Cabin, Pinchot Cabin., and Buck Springs Cabin.

According to Hafford, these cabins were built by the Forest Service during the early 1900s and have been used as fire-guard stations. Hafford also stated that these three cabins and the ragged east-west line of the Rim enclose a rough circle with a diameter of about eight miles. A part of Barbershop Trail goes across FR 137and downhill to Buck Springs Cabin. We began our hike by looking at Buck Springs Cabin. There is an information sign beside the trail above the cabin. sign, shown in the photograph below, explains that there are two cabins here at Buck Springs Fire Guard Station.

Sign posted at Buck Springs Fire Guard tower
Both the older cabin (below left) and the larger, newer cabin (below right) are shown here.

                             Cabin built in 1923                  Cabin built in 1946

We climbed back up to FR 137, crossed the road and continued on the trail down the slope of Buck Springs Ridge on the other side where several switchbacks led us into Yeager Canyon. On this hike there are many canyons and drainages to go down into. For this report, I used a description of the hike by Bruce Grubbs.2 Grubbs says that the trail crosses several roads, generally on the broad ridgetops, where it is important to follow the blazed route carefully. And he says that where the trail follows other roads for short distances you need to follow the blazes carefully. One tree had a sign for Cabin Loop Trail (below left). Much further along the trail I took a photo of a tree blaze that was different than the other blazes that I had seen (below right).

                              Cabin Loop Trail sign              A different blaze

Early on in our hike we came to a tricky crossing where there was some water. (below left) This must have been in Yeager Canyon because it came before we reached a sign which said that we were .5 mile from Buck Springs Cabin and that the junction with Houston Brothers Trail was still 4 miles away (below right).
A tricky spot                                Trail sign                            
Also before reaching that sign I had taken a photo of a tree scorched by lightening but still partly green and we wondered if it could possibly survive. (below left). Before long we came to the first of several unusual trees that we were to see on this hike. This tree had three trunks. (below right).

Lightening-damaged tree       Tree with three trunks       
And shortly thereafter we saw a tree with two trunks that had trapped the branches of a tree of another type of tree between those two trunks (right). Or had this other tree wrapped its branches around the taller two-trunked tree?

We came next to a meadow (below left) which might be the same meadow in Ellis's scouting report that he described as a “long, narrow meadow formed by a wash leading north into Bill McClintock Draw.3 After leaving the meadow we came to another unusual tree, one that I would describe as a double-decker Christmas tree. There were other trees in an area close to this one which had similar narrowing of the mid-sections; however, they did not look like two Christmas trees stacked one above the other as in the following photo (below right). Lila gave the explanation that these narrowed mid-sections were often caused by elk using those trees to rub the velvet off of their antlers.

Long narrow meadow            Stacked Christmas trees    
It was obvious that elk were in the area of this hike because in many places along the trail, actually right in the trail, there were elk droppings. Some were quite fresh looking.

We ate lunch at the location of the tree that had been shattered into many pieces by a lightening strike (left). This view of that tree looks very much like the photo in Ellis's scouting report which he had taken of this same tree.

I had taken several shots trying to get more of the widely scattered pieces of that tree into my photos. While eating their lunches the hikers sat on various pieces of that shattered tree.

When I had finished my lunch I noticed a blackened area (right) on the other end of the piece that I had been sitting on while eating. If this image is magnified then little shiny specks within the black area can be seen beneath the bent splinter of wood. Maybe they are crystallized bits of tree sap?

After lunch and after passing by the sign in Dane Canyon and going even further along Barbershop Trail I took another photo that is very much like a photo in Ellis's scouting report (below left). Ellis labeled his photo, "view looking north down Barbershop Canyon". I took another photo that gives a closer view of the big rock in the photo just mentioned. In the closer view there are trees near the rock that are now leafless which must have had beautiful Fall colored leaves not long ago (below right).

                         Looking down Barbershop       Large rock in Barbershop                           
                         Canyon                                         Canyon
 Almost to FR 139 we passed through a gateway of metal poles on either side of the trail. At the road we waited a short time while 2 hikers went on a few hundred yards to the official end of the Barbershop trail in order to have it on the GPS. Then we all loaded into our vehicle, some of us riding in the pickup bed so that no one had to walk the 1.9 miles back to the Rim Road where Jim and Ellen had left their vehicle.

The drivers continued on back to the beginning of the trail to retrieve the remaining vehicles while the rest waited at the intersection. While Karl, Betty, Jim Gibson, Frank and myself waited we had time to venture out to the edge of the Mogollon Rim to take in the view down off the rim and out to the way beyond (left).

Also take a look at the photo of Karl looking out from the rim (right).

None of us who saw that bear run out in front of Dave's van before we began the hike will ever forget that sometimes life gives us some really surprising views.

The hike is shown in red on the attached map (below).

According to the cleaned-up track recorded by the Skyliner GPS, the Barbershop Trail is 5.2 miles in length. The raw GPS track for the hike gave a reading of 7.1 miles. Approximately 0.8 miles of this difference is because the hikers parked on forest roads apart from the trailheads at each end. The remainder is due to GPS error and side trips from the trail. The highest elevation was shown as 7707 feet and the total ascent as 1097 feet.

Report author: Daisy Williams
edited by Lila Wright
modified for online use by Ellis Price




1McCarthy, Ann E., David A. Frederick, and Jonathan Norberg. Critters of Arizona Pocket Guide. Cambridge, MN: Adventure Publications, 2002.
2Grubbs, B. Hiking Northern Arizona: A Guide to Northern Arizona's Greatest Hiking Adventures, 2nd edition, pps 266-267. Guilford, Conn,: Falcon, 2001.

3http://ellisfprice.blogspot.com/2016/09/barbershop-trail.html

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