Saturday, January 8, 2011

Hike to Verde Combination Shaft Mine


This report describes a January 8, 2011 hike by the Skyliners up Mescal Gulch from Yavapai College to Verde Combination Copper Company’s Verde Combination Shaft Mine.

We parked just off Black Hills Drive at the eastern entrance to the Yavapai College campus. We then hiked east on W Black Hills Drive until the road makes a sharp turn to the left and becomes Haskell Springs Road. We continued on Haskell Springs Road, going first south and then north for about one half (1/2) mile before turning right onto Abbey Road S. After jogging right for a few yards, Abbey Road S leads generally northeast, first with a paved road and then becoming a privately maintained gravel road for about one half (1/2) mile to an Architect’s office. (NOTE: The structure housing the Architect’s office also appears to house a massage business and to be utilized as a private dwelling). Going on past the Architect’s office for a few yards one comes to a driveway leading off to the left and providing access to utilities (water tank, scrap storage, etc). The driveway ends just short of a fence with a ladder stile1 installed for pedestrian use.

Just as one approaches the Architect’s office, there is a small wire gate in the fence to allow pedestrian access and we took this route on our way in. That turned out to be a mistake, because we crossed a corner of private property and then had to cross another fence to get back to public property.

About seventy yards straight ahead from the stile lies a well-trodden cow path that leads to the northeast, straight up Mescal Gulch. The photograph here (right) shows hikers crossing the stile on our way back. The end of the driveway into the utility/scrap area is shown just ahead of the hiker in front; a bit of the water tank is visible in the left edge of the photograph.

By the time we had all navigated the two fence crossings that we did on the way in, some hikers needed a potty break and headed off in differing directions looking for suitable spots. After that it proved difficult to get our sixteen hikers all sorted out and make sure they all headed in the same direction. Lila was bringing up the rear and we were trying to make sure that we knew how many hikers were ahead and that no one had headed up the wrong gulch. Finally, Jim went back as far as the fence to make sure no one was left along the way and Lila and I spaced ourselves out, keeping in sight to make sure we had accounted for everyone. We have found that the trick is not to try and keep everyone together, but to just know where they are at any one time. This time, that effort was proving to be quite difficult.

We did, however, finally manage to assure ourselves that we were all headed up Mescal Gulch.

Hikers heading up Mescal Gulch
After following the cow path up Mescal Gulch for about one-third of a mile from the stile, we came upon what appeared to be a shrine of some sort. It is a carefully built circular edifice with stone walls about two feet high. The floor is formed of stones laid out in a circular pattern. There are two openings in the circular wall, about 70 degrees apart, with an indentation in the wall, possible meant for an Alter, between them. Trees overhang the area and a variety of objects (feathers, a plastic sphere, etc) were hanging from the branches at the time of this visit.

Shrine (?) located in Mescal Gulch about a third of a mile above the 
end of Abbey Road S
The trip up the gulch is a matter of following existing cow trails on either side of the wash and sometimes rock hopping along the bottom of the wash itself. Most of the way, at least one side of the wash will present a relatively flat area along which cows have made trails. However, such good luck often comes to an end when a sheer canyon wall ahead blocks the way. Then one descends into the wash and looks for the next open space ahead. During this hike, we often found ourselves trudging through snowdrifts still lingering in shaded areas. We made no attempt to keep the group close together, just making sure that we did not inadvertently leave anyone behind.

I was the only member of the group who had hiked this way before and my memory proved to be somewhat spotty. One place I particularly wanted to show the rest of the group was Little Ranch Spring and I never did find the exact location this time. When I came this way before, it was in the middle of a dry summer and the fresh water springing forth and cascading down the dry canyon bed for a distance was hard to miss. This time, on the other hand, just after a particularly wet month, water was flowing from numerous wet-weather sources in the canyon above Little Ranch Spring. I could only approximate the location.

To make matters even worse, I did not at first recognize the area when we arrived at the road leading to Verde Combination Shaft. However, arrive we did, and just in time for lunch. A few hardy souls traveled on up the Gulch for a short distance and admired a waterfall.
After eating, twelve of the group decided to take an old road up the south side of the Gulch to look at Verde Combination Shaft Mine.

We knew little about this site, only that it is a big, deep, dangerous hole in the ground that should have been closed long ago. I did a quick online search and discovered that, according to mindat.org, the site had “a 1,300 foot deep shaft and older shafts at the South end at 640 feet and 500 feet deep” and the minerals list included “'Chlorite Group', Muscovite (var: Sericite), Pyrite.”2

Unprotected open shaft at Verde Combination Shaft Mine in Mescal Gulch
After exploring the old mine, we gathered back where we had eaten lunch for a group photograph. The dog shown in the photograph does not mean that we are now taking dogs on hikes. This particular mutt is from Candlewood Retreat Bed and Breakfast, located across the wash behind the Architect’s office at the end of Abbey Road S. Apparently deciding that it was his duty to insure our safety, he volunteered to lead us on our hike, and would not be dissuaded. As a matter of fact he seemed to think we needed to be escorted all the way back to our cars and was cheerfully leading the way down Abbey Road S when his owners arrived to retrieve him.

Left to right - (back row): Daisy Williams, Marvin Alt, Colleen Maktenieks, 
Lila Wright, Connie Woolard, Anita Jackson, Name Withheld, Gordon Bice, 
Unable to contact, Donna Goodman, Miriam Sterling, Jim Manning; (front 
row): Dolly Yapp, Unable to contact, Jan Prefontaine. The four-legged hiker 
in front of the group was our volunteer trail guide – Photograph by the 
author
You may note on the attached map a loop in the track near the beginning/end of our hike. That is because some of us including the GPS carrier returned by a slightly different route. From the bend in Haskell Springs Road, we continued straight ahead along an old roadway and came out behind the vineyard at the college. This route is actually no longer than the way we hiked in using Black Hills Drive.

My GPS file shows that we hiked eight miles and that the elevation change was just under 1100 feet. The track is shown on the included map (below).



1 From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stile

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