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Showing posts with label Fort Tuthill Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fort Tuthill Park. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

ROGERS TRAIL

ROGERS TRAIL
Rogers Lake Natural Area
Southwest of Flagstaff, two recreation areas with divergent personalities are now linked.  The recently completed 5.4-mile Rogers Trail tethers the event-centric, party atmosphere of Fort Tuthill County Park with the subdued wilds of Rogers Lake Natural Area.
Switchbacks on Rogers Trail
The non-motorized, flowy trail that straddles the open space between the two Coconino County properties has several access points and many opportunities to create short day hikes, long loops or car shuttle excursions. 
A bee harvests nectar from Butter and Eggs
One convenient out-and-back circuit begins at a trailhead on Forest Road 532.  From the roomy dirt parking lot, pick up the Flagstaff Loop Trail heading west and follow it 0.9-mile to the beginning of Rogers Trail.  Roughly paralleling Woody Mountain Road, the meandering, single track holds steady at around 7100 feet, sweeping easily through wildflower meadows, and shady glens. 
The San Francisco Peaks seen from Rogers Trail
Watch for swarms of butterflies and bees drawing nectar from Butter and Eggs, New Mexican vervain and field bindweed blooms.  After passing by the Arboretum at Flagstaff, where there’s a short access path, the trail turns southwest heading toward the pine-smothered mound of 8045-foot Woody Mountain.  Near the four-mile point, a set of syrupy switchbacks take on the southeast flanks of the mountain. The smartly constructed trail eliminates much of the huff-and-puff of the 600-foot ascent. (I ran into several volunteer forest service workers who were improving drainages on this section.  It’s important that trail users don’t cut switchbacks because doing so will cause the path to degrade and create dangerous conditions.) 
Gambel oaks are common along the trail
The uphill segment winds through thick stands of Gambel oak, New Mexican Locust and Ponderosa pines.  Even with the dense tree cover, glimpses of the San Francisco Peaks can be seen through breaks in the foliage. Trailside basalt boulders, an understory of pine cones and clumpy grasses plus the rustlings of ravens, hawks and mountain blue birds in the canopies complement the trail’s pleasant, away-from-it-all feel.  The route levels out as it approaches its high point at the natural area border. 
New Mexican Vervain attracts pollinators
Continue hiking past the boundary to enjoy vistas of Rogers Lake rolling out 400 feet below.  The sprawling, high-elevation wetland is an important refuge for wildlife and native plant species and it’s common to sight pronghorn and elk skulking around the fringes and domestic cattle converging around puddles.
Acres of pinecones 
At the 6.1-mile point, a metal post marks the spot where Rogers Trail connects with the natural area system. Two Spot Trail heads off to the left while Gold Digger Trail takes the right fork.  For a satisfying 12-mile roundtrip day hike, turn around here.
View of Rogers Lake from the trail's high point
Otherwise, go either way at the junction for a two-mile downhill trek to viewing decks at the edge of the lake.
LENGTH: 5.4 miles one-way (6.1 miles one-way as described here)
RATING: moderate
ELEVATION:  7030 – 7680 feet
GETTING THERE:
EAST ACCESS (as described here):
From Flagstaff, go west on Historic Route 66 to Woody Mountain Road (Forest Road 231) on the left.  Go 1.8 miles south to Forest Road 532, turn left and go a few yards to the parking area on the right.  Follow the Loop Trail 0.9 mile to connect with Rogers Trail.
Woody Mountain Road is washboard-rough but passable by sedan.
Rogers Trail links Ft. Tuthill Park with the Natural Area
ALTERNATE MIDWAY ACCESS POINTS:
There’s a 0.3-mile spur path directly across from the entrance to Flagstaff Arboretum (3.7 miles south of Route 66 on Woody Mountain Road) and parking aprons where the trail crosses FR 390A and FR 9026 south of Woody Mountain Road.
WEST ACCESS at ROGERS LAKE:
Go 7.8 miles south on Woody Mountain Road to the Gold Digger trailhead.
The Two Spot trailhead is located another mile down the road.
INFO:
TRAIL MAP:

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

KACHINA WETLANDS via HIGHLANDS TRAIL


KACHINA WETLANDS via HIGHLANDS TRAIL
Flagstaff
Kachina Wetlands: April 2013

Hidden on a high Flagstaff mesa just about a mile off I17 is a walk able, 70-acre waterfowl wonderland.  The Kachina Wetlands is a collection of 8 shallow ponds constructed to manage treated effluent water. The project, which began in 1988 with the cooperation of various agencies including NAU, AZ Game & Fish and Coconino County, has auxiliary goals to improve wildlife habitat and foster native vegetation. Although some of the ponds are not operational right now, the site is still prime real estate for winged beasts.   Thick growths of cattails and other aquatic plants coupled with  mid-pond islands provide safe havens from marauding elk and hungry forest critters for the hundreds of species of birds and waterfowl that frequent the area.  The marshy pools are aflutter with grebes, mallards, coots, sandpipers, nighthawks, woodpeckers, swallows, chickadees, jays, warblers, blackbirds and soaring birds of prey.  Until recently, the only hiking opportunity here was the mile or so of circumference paths.  That all changed when the Highlands Trail-- which connects to Ft Tuthill Park-- was completed in 2009.  Woodsy but unremarkable, the easy, urban-class Highlands Trail stays close to civilization dodging public roads and private properties on its 3.7-mile track from the park to the wetlands. The trail wanders through a checkerboard of pine-oak woodlands (with occasional views of San Francisco Peaks and Mormon Mountain), skirts a few suburban backyards and crosses AZ89A before reaching the wetlands. 


LENGTH: 9.6 miles round trip
RATING: easy
ELEVATION:  6890' - 7040'
BEST SEASON: open year-round, but bird sightings are best spring-fall
DOGS: dogs MUST be on leash and stay out of the wetlands ponds
FACILITIES: restrooms, picnic tables, camping at the park
GETTING THERE:
Fort Tuthill County Park (as described here):
From Phoenix travel north on I17 to exit 337 for AZ89A and "county fairgrounds". At the end of the off ramp, continue straight into Ft. Tuthill Park and follow the main road to the Yavapai Ramada parking lot.
Kachina Wetlands (direct access):
From Phoenix take I17 north to exit 333 for Kachina Village.  Go left off the access road, drive under the freeway and take the first right on Tovar Trail. Follow this road 1.5 mile to the corner of Tovar Trail and Lohali Trail, park on the right and pass through the gate to the wetlands.
Yellow-headed blackbird

HIKE DIRECTIONS:
From the Ft Tuthill Yavapai parking lot, hike south on the road on the west side of the amphitheater to where Soldiers Trail (marked by green lathe-style signs) crosses.  Head west (go right) and follow Soldiers Trail roughly .30 mile to a signed, but un-named junction.  This is the access path for Highlands Trail.  Turn left here and within 0.2 mile you'll come to the north end of the loop portion of Highlands Trail.  Go either way and continue 1 or 1.3 mile to AZ89A.  Cross the road and continue 2.5 miles on Highlands to Kachina Wetlands.  There are several trails circling the ponds.  When done exploring, return the way you came or take the opposite leg of the Highlands loop back to the parking area. NOTE: Ft Tuthill Park has an "official" trailhead serving all its trails.  If you begin there, add another mile to the overall distance shown here.
Peaks view along Highlands Trail

INFO & MAP:
Fort Tuthill County Park, Coconino County Parks & Recreation: 928-679-8000

Kachina Wetlands:
NAU management plan:
Northern Arizona Audubon bird checklist:

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