Find A Trail. Start Your Search Here:

Showing posts with label Dirtyneck Canyon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dirtyneck Canyon. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Secluded canyon on the Mogollon Rim


DIRTYNECK CANYON
Near Clint's Well

At some point in history, somebody must have emerged from this canyon with a dirty neck.  Whether it was a shepherd or a reclusive homesteader, a case of ring-around-the-collar would have been a small price to pay to live and work in this paradise on the Mogollon Rim. Although it's shown on forest maps, there's no official hiking trail through the shallow canyon.  The route briefly follows a two-track road that merges with footpaths and game trails before being swallowed up in organic mass leaving trekkers to rely on creative bushwhacking to get through.  The landscape diversity here is a wonder.  As the canyon winds north from FR 613 to the Beeline Highway just south of Clint's Well, it cuts through moist fern gullies fed by the trickling waters of Windfall Spring and elegantly swaying thickets of oaks and locusts.  Limestone boulders strewn across a tree-barren, yawning gorge share emerald meadows speckled with blooming wild geraniums, yarrows and clovers where decades of snowfalls and summer rains have soothed the scars of the wildfire that consumed the trees.  Here, the canyon comes to a fork---head right into an unscathed pine forest and the beginning of the muddy boots portion of the hike. Spring water and monsoon runoff settles in ribbony rivulets and tiny reflecting pools at the base of the canyon forming a nourishing foundation for plant and animal survival.  Each footstep releases pungent musty-earthy aromas sometimes spiked with head-clearing jolts of wild mint.  Surrounded by shoulder-high sunflowers a canopy of whispering aspens and life giving waters underfoot, you'll want to breath deep and become absorbed in the moment.
After roughly 1.2 miles of hiking, the first of several natural barriers appears.  This one is a quagmire of logs and brambles choking the creek where the canyon hits a short pinched segment.  Here, you'll need to scramble around on steep banks, which is why long pants and sleeves are recommended for this hike.  As Dirtyneck Canyon's little-known corridor approaches AZ87, the sounds of whizzing motors occult natural woodland murmurs.  A stock tank, bovine grazing field and a flimsy span of barbed wire separating paradise from the asphalt speedway mark the turnaround point.

LENGTH: 2.89 miles one-way
RATING: moderate, off trail, some bushwhacking
ELEVATION:  7300' - 6850'


GETTING THERE:
From Phoenix, travel north on AZ87 to the AZ87/260 junction in Payson.  Continue north on AZ87 to FR 613 between mileposts 282 and 283 on the right.  Drive on FR 613 veering left at the Fortynine Canyon sign and past the first Dirtyneck Canyon sign you will see on the left---this is for Dirtyneck Road.  At the 1-mile point you will see road signs for 9384Q and 6023 with a corral hidden among oak trees about 50 years off to the left.  This is the trailhead. Park in the pullouts and begin hiking on 9384Q.
MORE PHOTOS:

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Wander down Dirtyneck Road


DIRTYNECK ROAD
Near Clints Well
Ferns galore

While attempting a less-than-successful exploratory hike on the Mogollon Rim this past week, we stumbled upon this easy dirt road hike on the western lip of Dirtyneck Canyon (see separate blog entry for the canyon hike).  Because it's situated in an area that gets lots of moisture runoff and lingering snow, the route is smothered in healthy oaks and oceans of whispering ferns.  A stock tank roughly halfway in is the pub of choice for local forest beasts that leave their impressions along its muddy fringes.  Look for signatures of elk, raccoon, possum, skunk, rabbit, squirrel, deer, and the meandering scribbles of traveling caterpillars on the "critter dance floor". Beyond the tank, the road dips downhill to emerge in the impossibly green meadows of Fortynine Canyon---it’s an unsigned junction where FR6089 goes right.  This is easy to miss---look for a 4x4 road going up a steep embankment on the left, the route heads right (northeast) directly across and continues for just under a mile to AZ87.  However, if you want an extra treat, head left into Fortynine Canyon.  Here, the road follows a moist drainage leading to a spring and a group of old cabins resembling a tiny pioneer hamlet.  If you go this way, the road bends north near the cabins and ends at AZ87.
Stock tank 

LENGTH: 6 miles roundtrip
RATING:  easy
ELEVATION:  7385' - 6923'
DISTANCE FROM PHOENIX: 90 miles 1-way (from Shea Blvd. & AZ87)
GETTING THERE:
From Phoenix, go north on AZ87 (Beeline Hwy) to Payson.  Continue north on AZ87 past Pine-Strawberry to the junction with AZ260.  Set your odometer.  From here,  north on AZ87 to FR 613 on the right--this is roughly 2.5 miles north of FR300 Rim Road and between mileposts 282 and 283.  Turn right and follow FR 613   0.8 mile (veer left at the Fortyfour Canyon sign)  to where there are signs for "Dirtyneck Canyon" and FR6089 on the left. Park in the pullout and hike north on FR 6089.
MORE PHOTOS:
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.4170806247190.1073741854.1795269672&type=1&l=c94d2d5bed