On
Saturday, 4 February 2012, the Skyliners hiked from Hwy 89A at Page
Springs Road to the Echo Canyon Winery and on to the old dam at
Cornville Ditch. We met at the Cottonwood Safeway parking lot, drove
about 7.5 miles north on 89A to Page Springs Road. Turning on Page
springs Road, we proceeded about 0.28 miles to a parking area on the
right. After parking we crossed Page Springs Road, hiked up Hidden
Valley Road for about 0.32 miles and turned right onto Echo Canyon
Road. We found ourselves to be high above Oak Creek, looking down at
a stretch of the creek leading on to the settlement at the bend.
Oak Creek seen from Echo Canyon Road – photograph by Virginia Driscoll
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For
this hike we had permission to pass through private property owned by
a friend of Mary’s, so were able to travel along Oak Creek to the
old dam site; we thus continued on Echo Canyon Road past the winery
and then cut across the private property to reach the creek. On our
way, we actually walked through a covered patio attached to the
landowner’s house and then were joined in the back yard by his cat
for our morning snack. George, the cat’s favorite hiker, was
having milk and cereal.
George sharing his snack with the cat – photograph by Virginia Driscoll
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Upon
reaching the creek we traveled along the bank to the old dam site.
From there, rather than take the suggested route (the yellow track
shown on the Google Earth map included on page xx13) back to the
road, we chose to continue on along the creek bank and travel up a
wash near Old Schoolhouse Road to return to Echo Canyon Road
somewhere near the intersection with Hidden Canyon Road. George and
I, lagging behind the main group, passed on by the wash, following an
enticing cow path straight ahead, and wound up in the back yard of a
private home. The house was located on Old Schoolhouse Road and,
managing to avoid detection by the landowner, we passed quickly
through the yard, took Old Schoolhouse a short distance to connect
with Page Springs Road. We then contacted our hike leader by
cellphone to let her know our status and returned to the parking lot
by way of Page Springs Road.
Meanwhile,
the main group of hikers had left the wash and climbed the slope on
the other side; we could see them making their way along the ridge
toward Echo Canyon Road as we hiked along Page springs Road.
We
paused for a group photograph, taken by George using my camera and
his small tripod, upon our return to the parking lot.
After
returning home and uploading my GPS track to the computer, I found
that we had crossed private property on the way down the creek to the
wash and that the wash itself crosses a section of private property.
The
easiest way to hike to the dam at Cornville ditch is to take Echo
Canyon Road (red) to the green 4-wheel drive connector and use it to
connect with the yellow path. The section of the yellow track that
runs parallel to Echo Canyon Road is not really a trail; it is just
the way we bushwhacked our way back on the April 2008 hike. However,
this bushwhack route, following along the top of the ridge, offers
great views of the area. The road may be easier, but the ridge is
certainly worth the extra effort. Finally, I have included a small
track (magenta on the map) that shows the route to an excellent
viewpoint overlooking Hidden Valley.
The
total distance for this hike was about 5 miles. That includes the
side trip out to the Hidden Valley overlook. The total elevation
change is approximately 550 feet.
The
only information I found about what might be called “Cornville
Ditch” by doing a quick online search was the following extract
from a Wikipedia article:
The first settlers
in the Lower Oak Creek area were Captain Andrew Jackson, a retired
Confederate officer from Virginia, and his wife, Margaret, who
arrived in the spring of 1876. Several other families including the
Dickinsons, Munds, Copples, Pages, Mullhollands and Tiptons had
followed by the autumn of that year or the spring of 1877. The
settlers quickly built an irrigation ditch serving farms on the west
side of Oak Creek.1
I
was given the name Cornville Ditch by the, now deceased, leader of a
6 April 2008 hike to this site. Based on what she told me, I have
since referred to the site as Cornville Ditch Dam. This hike was
accordingly publicized as “Hwy 89A to Cornville Ditch.” However,
while editing this book for me, Lila Wright, who grew up in the area,
informed me that Cornville Ditch was located farther downstream in
Cornville. She had no name for the ditch associated with the dam we
visited, but did point out that it runs no farther than Dancing
Apache (or D A) Ranch (east of the stream) and might be called “D A
Ranch Ditch” or “Page Springs Ditch.”
I
never really liked the name Cornville Ditch and neither Page Springs
nor D A Ranch sound any better, so I shall henceforth refer to it as
Dancing Apache Ditch. That will at the very least give it a more
specific location.
Thus
this becomes the hike from Hwy 89A to Dancing Apache Ditch.
The
included map (below) included in
this report shows the entire track (red line on the map) that I
followed for this (4 February 2012) hike, including the part that
crossed private property). I have also put together an alternative
track that does not cross private property. This alternative route
is composed of part of an April 2008 hike (yellow on the map), along
with a small interpolation (green) along a 4-wheel drive road between
Echo Canyon Road and the yellow track.
1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornville,_Arizona
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