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Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Another Memorable Holiday Mountain Hike

 

Starting out in the car on Sunday looked like this! Dogs make us laugh!

My neighbor and hiking partner and I seem to have made a tradition of holiday hiking this year. That is, we go out ordinarily on just about every morning with our dogs, but we made several special expeditions, more than one on a holiday. There was, to begin with, Christmas vacation: On Christmas Eve Therese and I went to Whitewater Draw without the dogs but then, two days later, hiked farther up one of our usual washes with Sunny than we’d ever gone on foot – up into the oak tree zone! By New Year’s Eve, Therese had a new puppy, and Yogi came along for the climb up Town Hill in Dos Cabezas, while Sunny stayed home. I even had a no-dogs hike on part of the Echo Canyon Loop in Chiricahua National Monument on Good Friday with David's cousin Jim and wife Carol, visiting from the Phoenix area. 


At the Monument with Jim and Carol on Friday --

Therese and I were eager to get back to hiking with two dogs, though. My birthday is not an official holiday, but that day we were three women and two dogs, and it was a fabulous sort of holiday for me in the Chiricahuas. Which brings us to Easter Sunday and the most recent adventure, exploration of another small canyon in the Dos Cabezas Mountains, again with both dogs, Sunny and Yogi, which unfolds below. 


Rocks tower over "navigable" road.

We drove up the road past our recent trailhead, parked, and continued walking uphill. The rocks towering over the road were awe-inspiring, but my friend was just as excited by what she called out (every time she saw some) as “organized rocks,” i.e., a man-made wall structure, perhaps to contain flowing water at one time. We kept seeing different bits of the "organized rocks" as our road continued to parallel a rocky dry wash. Also, in the second image below, note the red rocks above the spring-greening tree. Delightful!


"Organized" rock



When the road and wash intersected, we left the road. That is, we left behind a road that is still used regularly by property owners in the mountains and hiked on an old, overgrown mining road, a “usetabe” road, that paralleled the wash, which was increasingly farther below our path as the old, overgrown road climbed higher. We kept looking down, hoping to see the glint of sunlight on water. 


We branch off onto a usetabe road. (Get it?)



We also paid constant attention to the fascinating rocks we passed, speculating about their origins, but Yogi, as you see below, cared nothing for our conversation on material topics and insisted on exploring higher ground. 



This, I thought, would be a good camping place. Obviously, the cows liked it. The shade was delightful. Oh, but then that old mineshaft – that could house wilder creatures than cows….

Cows rested here, about 6030 ft. above sea level


Old mine entrance


Should we go on?

A nice, diagonal cowpath descended from the cows' resting place to the wash, and we decided to do the same. Still dry. Very rocky. But curiosity about what might be around the next bend led us on....


Water!

Flowing water!

Tiny, green, growing things!


On sunlit rock with spring water seeping through....

Did the dogs love the water? Is the pope Catholic? Does a bear…?


Yogi and Sunny

Another wonderful day in the mountains! No bears, lions, or snakes! Flowing water! Happy dogs! Life was very good on Sunday morning!


Lucky Sunny Juliet!

I’m lucky, too. Have you ever heard of forest bathing? That’s just one of the many fascinating topics in The Nature Fix, by Florence Williams. I’m reading the book now and taking a few notes so I can tell you more about it soon, but I completely agree that getting out under blue sky, around green growing things and, if possible, flowing water is some of the best medicine on earth for our souls.




Monday, April 3, 2023

Still Keeping Up at the Three-Quarters Mark

 

This first image is not where we began our hike on Saturday (my 75th birthday), and it was far, far below where Therese and I had begun last April (on her birthday). It wasn’t even last year’s beginning spot. No, this “beginning” is where three of us branched off on Saturday in a direction new to Kathy, Sunny, Yogi, and me, after we'd climbed already considerably.... But let’s backtrack a little.



You’re not seeing the 25-mile drive from Dos Cabezas to the Chiricahua Monument, nor the more than seven miles of very rutted road to the place we left our cars. Therese and I had parked higher up last year, but this year, with two cars, we decided to do more of the climb on foot – which turned out to be a fortuitous choice in more ways than one, as our last year’s “parking place” was flooded, providing our first encounter on foot that day with flowing water, which the dogs loved as much as the humans. (We had no idea then how many more watery thrills awaited us.) But I anticipate again, because before we got to that first flowing water, we had a long uphill climb, mostly in sun, along a boulder-lined – and sometimes boulder-strewn – road.


Therese and Kathy look down over the steep edge.


Is this mudstone? Are these fossils of ancient trees?


For Sunny, it's simply -- Big rock!!!

As I say, the road climbed. The sun was hot. As we went around the mountain, however, we were met with a cool, refreshing breeze. Ah, that was more like it....


Dog buddies on the trail

Old formations from prehistoric volcano

Below you see the water that had flooded an open pace, crossed the road, and taken water’s general downhill habit. Observe the happy dogs. Note the cool shade. And only a little way farther up the rocky road, back in the sun, we spied a congregation of spiny lizards, which I found very exciting.


A confusing sign, but we got the message.








Is it a mountain spiny lizard? That would be Sceloporus jarrovi.

The Chiricahua Monument itself is the official “wonderland of rocks,” but for me the entire mountain range is a wonderland of awe-inspiring formations. Therese was particularly captivated by manzanita in bloom, and look at the size of this single plant! I had her stand in front of it to illustrate the scale. 




Gigantic manzanita!

And now, water again. It never gets old. The sight and sound of it, the way it makes the colors of rocks sing, the way it calls to us --



Yogi (left) flees after being surprised by a deep pool.


Sunny is crossing cautiously, so as not to drop a bone she found, while Yogi hopes the bone will drop.

Oh, the heavenly scent of pine trees! And the towering majesty of the Ponderosa pines! After our usual diet of dusty desert walks, the tree-shaded creek canyon -- with water, too! -- feels and smells like paradise.






Along this minimally maintained mountain road were many boulders, deep ruts, and at one point it was clear that someone had very recently cleared away a fallen tree. 


No speeding here!


And now, at probably our fourth or fifth encounter with the creek (not counting walking a road that roughly paralleled the creek below most of the way), we decided it was time for our picnic. And the perfect place, despite the noise of rushing water. 



Maybe if you zoom in on the image of the (yet another) big rock below, you’ll be able to see the patterns that drew my eye and set me to dreaming of its distant past. 



The far side of the creek. We did not go across here.

What has this tree been through?!

What forces twisted these rocks? But life finds room to cling.

And it isn’t only rocks and trees that have history. The road itself speaks mutely of what it used to be. 


Here almost half the road has crumbled into the creek.

Bedrock exposed on the road

Now we have climbed up away from the creek and back into the sun. This might be close to our highest elevation of the day, 6,365 feet above sea level. Or maybe it wasn’t. I didn’t really keep track, but bear in mind that our ghost town is somewhat less than a mile high. 


This is close to our highest elevation of the day.

But even this high, snowmelt has sent flowing water across our road, on its way downhill to reach the creek. 



Ah, shade!

What do you see here? What can you imagine or speculate?

We had left our ghost town at 9 a.m., and when I got back it was 3:30, so I’ll say we hiked for about five hours. And it was a glorious way to celebrate reaching my three-quarters-of-a-century mark, 75 years of age! Congenial company, vigorous exercise, exciting vistas, the thrill of flowing water, and the always amusing antics of our canine companions – I couldn’t have asked for more. And yet there was more, because another neighbor had us over for dinner that evening! Can you believe it? In short, I had another birthday, am halfway through my eighth decade of life, and despite losses along the way I am surviving. 

 

Of all the photographs in this post, which one is your favorite? Or how about top three? I know at least two that would make the cut for me, but I’ve not scrimped in presenting our adventure, because three images would not have been nearly enough. I’ll close with a funny one, though – at least, funny if I give you the story that goes with it. At 9 a.m., Sunny and I were in the car at the bottom of the driveway, down by the highway, waiting for Therese and Kathy to drive by so we could convoy to Pinery Canyon, Sunny with her most alert expression…. And then their car went by, and Sunny knew it was Therese, and she knew Yogi was in that car, so she sat forward, eyes fixed on that vehicle for over 30 miles, not about to lose sight of her friends and miss any fun! And of course, as you have seen, she certainly did not. Happy ending!


Always up for adventure!