It
was a cold day with a 30% chance of snow and only 5 hikers turned out
for a 12 January 2013 hike on Woods Canyon Trail. We all met at the
Cottonwood Safeway parking lot, drove north on Hwy 89A, turned right
on Cornville road (CR 30), drove through Cornville and turned left on
Beaverhead Flat Road (CR 78), turned left on Hwy 179 and drove 1.7
miles to the Red Rock Ranger District Center. Just after turning
onto the road to the complex, we came to a sign at a bend in the road
telling us that the Visitors Center was further along around the
bend. We instead turned right onto a side road that runs below and
parallel to the road to the visitors center. Immediately after
turning, a driveway led downhill to some sort of service building.
We passed that by and turned instead at the next driveway which led
into the parking lot for an office building. We parked at the
extreme southwest corner of the lot and found that Woods Canyon Trail
(above, right) started
immediately in front of our car.
The
trail which leads down into and across a wetland area, is well-marked
along this section with signs posted every few yards. This area also
contains two stream crossings with stepping stones. Mindful of the
below-freezing temperature, we used extreme care to avoid getting our
feet wet. On the other side of the exclosure, about 0.2 miles from
the trailhead, we came to a pedestrian gate (above, left) designed to exclude motorized traffic.
Looking back as we passed through the gate, we saw a sign identifying
the area as Jacks Canyon Exclosure for Riparian and Wildlife Habitat
(below). The exclosure had not been identified as such at the point where we entered.
Sign at entry to Jack' Canyon Exclosure |
About
two miles ahead we would intersect with the Hot Loop Trail and the
Forest Service, anticipating that hikers might be heading for that
trail, took great pains to point out that Hot Loop Trail is not in
fact a loop (see photograph at left).
However, in conjunction with Jacks Canyon trail and a short
connector between that trail and Hot Loop, it does in fact form a
loop.
At
this point we were in the wide mouth of Woods Canyon at its
conjunction with Jacks Canyon. Looking to the north we had a clear
view past the Village of Oak Creek to the red rock formations beyond.
In the below photograph you can see the top of Cathedral Rock
(left), Bell Rock (right of center) and Courthouse Butte.
Looking north from the Woods Canyon conjunction with Jacks Canyon
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The
trail followed along the remains of an old wagon road and although we
had seen only one trail sign since leaving the Jacks Canyon
Exclosure, the path was clear and easy to follow. About 1.1 miles
from the trailhead we came to a sign-in box (right).
Despite all markings having recently been removed from the box and
the sign below it, the meaning was clear and we found an up-to-date
sheet inside.
After
signing in we continued on our way, coming soon to a full-size wire
gate across the old road that the trail still followed.
Second gate on Woods Canyon Trail, 2.1 miles from the trailhead
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Some
60 yards beyond the gate we came to the junction with Hot Loop Trail.
At this junction, Woods Canyon Trail continued straight up the
canyon while Hot Loop turned left and headed through a pass before
making its way up Horse Mesa which lies between Woods Canyon and
Jacks Canyon. A sign making this clear was posted at the trail junction and just a few
yards along the trail towards Horse Mesa the Hot Loop Trailhead sign
was visible.
Directional sign
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Hot Loop Trailhead sign
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We
had, meanwhile, climbed higher and had emerged out of the shadow of
the canyon wall into warm sunlight. Until this point we had been
hiking steadily and, for us at least, at a fairly rapid pace in order
to stay warm. The sun now provided some welcome added warmth and we
decided to pause for a group photograph.
Left to right: Bob Wakefield, Dolly Yapp, Jim Manning and Daisy Williams
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Having
left the old wagon road at the Hot Loop junction, our trail, still
well-tended and easy to follow, proceeded along the north wall of
Woods Canyon and entered into the Munds Wilderness area (sign at left) about 160 yards ahead.
The
trail rose and fell, but never so steeply as to become very
difficult, as it wound its way along the canyon wall. In the
photograph below two hikers can be seen at climbing one of the
steepest sections while the ever-present, ghostly-white sycamores
cover the rocky bed of the canyon floor to the right.
Hikers climbing a short steep section of trail in Woods Canyon
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Around
3.2 miles from the trailhead we reached the mouth of Rattlesnake
Canyon. From this point, should one wish to go that way, it would
be about 2.6 miles up that canyon to the gaging station where we plan
to descend on a hike planned for next month; it would be five miles
if one were to follow it all the way to I-17 near the Stoneman Lake
Road intersection.
At
the confluence of the two canyons, water rushing into Woods Canyon
from Rattlesnake Canyon had worn away the north wall, forming a steep
cliff. To pass this point the trail descended to the canyon floor
and wound its way along a series of rock ledges at the foot of the
cliff. The below photograph, looking across Woods Canyon into
Rattlesnake Canyon, was taken from that ledge. Note the beautifully
deformed old sycamore, bent in the direction of stream flow, shown in
the foreground.
Looking across the canyon floor and into the mouth of Rattlesnake Canyon.
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Once
we passed the cliff at the confluence, the trail again climbed up the
sloping north canyon wall and continued its undulating up and down
course along the wall, now occasionally dipping again to the floor of
the canyon to follow closely alongside the rocky Dry Beaver Creek
streambed. This upper section of the trail was less well-maintained
and we had to exercise care to avoid losing it. Of course losing the
trail would always be only a temporary problem along here as there
was nowhere to go but on up the canyon.
We
stopped for lunch at noon, approximately a half mile from the end of
the trail, and three of us decided to push on to the end before
turning back. We thus ate quickly and continued on our way. Just
before we reached the end of the trail we came to an ancient bent and
twisted, but still sturdily defiant, Emory oak tree and stopped for a
photograph.
Jim Manning leaning on an ancient Emory oak tree
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I
had loaded a track showing the trail and its end into my GPS and was
hoping to find some official marker, perhaps an end-of-trail sign,
showing that we had indeed arrived. Alas, when we did finally reach
the spot, 5.4 miles from the trailhead, all we found was a cairn
(below) erected on top
of a large rock in the streambed.
The end of Woods Canyon Trail
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We
paused for a few minutes to look around at the scenery and then
headed back to join the rest of the group.
Cliff walls to the north from the end of Woods Canyon Trail
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The GPS track for this
hike is shown in red on the included map (below).
Note that the markers for the wire gate (Gate 2), the junction with
Hot Loop Trail and the wilderness boundary are all grouped close
together and cannot clearly be distinguished because of the map
scale.
As measured from the
GPS track, the total round trip hike distance was 10.8 miles, the
maximum elevation was 4351 feet and the total ascent was 902 feet.
We were on the trail for 7.5 hours.
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