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Showing posts with label San Tan Trail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Tan Trail. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Dynamite Trail

DYNAMITE TRAIL

Dynamite Trail passes through a leafy desert wash

San Tan Mountain Regional Park in Queen Creek is a 10,198-acre mountain-bound property that anchors the far southeast reach of the 10 Maricopa County Regional Parks that circle the Valley.  The park’s 9 non-motorized trails plus a short interpretive loop, provide options for trail users of every level of experience. 

Big valley views on the Dynamite Trail saddle

Situated in a hilly expanse bolstered by Goldmine Mountain in the north and the Malpais Hills in the south, the park’s 20+ miles of trails wander among lush desert vegetation, scoured washes and scenic high points with excellent valley vistas. One moderate route to try uses parts of the Littleleaf, Goldmine and San Tan trails to connect with the park’s northwest classic—the Dynamite trail.

The route is part of the 315-mile Maricopa Trail

Fragrant creosote shrubs cluster around the trails

Ocotillos frame mountain views on the Dynamite Trail

All three trails are also part of the 315-mile, Valley circumnavigating Maricopa Trail.
Mountain vistas begin on the Littleleaf Trail

The 2.5-mile path may be accessed by way of connecting routes from either the main park trailhead or the Goldmine trailhead located at the park’s northwest end.  With extra amenities like real restrooms and a visitor center, the main park trailhead is a good place to start.
Mountains close in on the Dynamite Trail

Begin with an easy  0.7-mile walk on the Littleleaf trail. While it gains only 85 feet in elevation, it’s enough to serve up appetizer vistas of distant Tonto National Forest and Mazatzal Wilderness mountain peaks.  This warmup segment is followed by a 0.4-mile hike on the Goldmine trail which undulates through drainages and cholla forests before arriving at the junction with the San Tan Trail where Goldmine begins its strenuous uphill haul.  For this trip, head left on the San Tan trail and continue 0.4-mile to link up with the destination route—the Dynamite trail.  It’s along this segment where the mountainous nature of the park becomes headily apparent.  The Malpais Hills jut abruptly on the near horizon while the green valleys of the Gila River Indian Community peek out to the southwest.

Goldmine Mountain seen from the Littleleaf Trail

The Dynamite trail starts out by tracing the western foothills of Goldmine Mountain ducking through ironwood-cluttered washes, acres of creosote shrubs and many impressive stands of saguaros and cholla cacti.
Junctions are well signed in the park

At 2.4 miles from the trailhead, the route takes on a series of switchbacks that ease the climb to a mountain saddle.  On the breezy divide, a fresh set of views open up over sprawling east Valley suburbs that stretch into the Superstition Mountains and, on clear days, all the way to the New River Mountains to the far north. 
Dynamite Trail descends from the high saddle

Viewing benches placed at scenic overlooks throughout the route, including on the saddle, invite trail users to sit awhile and soak up the beauty.  From the saddle, the trail spirals downhill over long, lazy curves, passing by historic grave sites before reconnecting with the Goldmine trail near the Goldmine trailhead on Wagon Wheel Road.
The route crosses several sandy washes

Switchbacks ease the climb to the Dynamite saddle

Unless you parked a car-shuttle vehicle there, return the way you came. Or, for a more difficult return route, loop it up with the 2.5-mile Goldmine trail for a challenging climb to the park’s highest point and even more outstanding viewing opportunities.

LENGTH: 4.1 miles one-way or 8.2 miles round trip, as described here.

Use the Goldmine trailhead for a car shuttle hike

RATING: moderate

ELEVATION: 1,617 – 1,894 feet

GETTING THERE:

South: San Tan Mountain Regional Park main trailhead:

6533 W. Phillips Road, Queen Creek.

From U.S. 60 in Mesa, take the Ellsworth Road exit 191. Go south on Ellsworth to Hunt Highway and continue east to Thompson Road. Go south on Thompson Road to Phillips Road and follow the signs to the main park entrance. The park has restrooms, water, a visitor center, equestrian staging area and picnic tables.

North: Goldmine trailhead:

From Hunt Highway north of the main park entrance, go 1.2 miles west on Empire Blvd. to Wagon Wheel Road, turn south and follow the road 1.0 mile to the Goldmine trailhead.

If no attendant is on duty, pay the entry fee in cash to the “iron ranger” (metal kiosk with payment envelopes). Follow the Goldmine trail 0.2-mile to connect with the Dynamite trail.

There are portable restrooms at the trailhead but no other amenities.

FEE: $7 daily fee per vehicle or $2 per person walk-in/bike-in fee.

HOURS: the park is open for day use only from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.

INFO & MAPS:

San Tan Mountain Regional Park

https://www.maricopacountyparks.net/park-locator/san-tan-mountain-regional-park/

 


Saturday, December 8, 2012

Desert beaches and a “hang five” saguaro


SAN TAN TRAIL
San Tan Mountain Regional Park, Queen Creek
Rock Peak and the Malpais Hills

the "hang five" crested saguaro
Part of the fun of visiting this desert park on the southeastern fringe of Maricopa County is the drive down Ellsworth Road through Queen Creek.  It’s a 13-mile stretch of cow pastures, cotton farms and horse corrals tossed together with acres of stucco and strip malls.  At the base of this suburban-rural interface is San Tan Mountain Regional Park—10,200 acres of pristine Sonoran Desert with 20 miles of shared-used trails ranging in difficulty from easy to strenuous. All of the park's nine trails are well-signed and laid out so users can easily cobble custom treks, but when the park ranger told me there was a rare crested saguaro and a petroglyph site on the San Tan Trail (SA) , choosing a route was a no-brainer for me.  Using the park map available for free at the visitor center, I planned my hike around those two features.  Except for a few places where the trail follows sandy washes---which is similar to strolling on a beach---the route is a walk in the park.  One short, minor climb leads to the crest of a ridge with astonishing views the park's signature geological features---Rock Peak and the Malpais Hills.  From this breezy vantage point, you can do a visual walk through of the return leg of the hike.  The petroglyph site is located a quarter-mile downhill from the crest.  Look for a jumble of granite on the left.  The rock art here appears to be quite ancient and only one incised design stands out. To see the crested saguaro, continue past the Rock Peak Wash junction, turn right to stay on SA and hike a few yards to where the trail makes a sharp left swerve and heads up an embankment.  From here, you can catch a first glimpse the plant’s famous “hang five” (or "I Love You" in American Sign Language)  gesture about 0.1-mile down the path.   To complete the loop, continue hiking north and take any of these connector trails: Hedgehog, Moonlight or Goldmine-Littleleaf.
Sonoran Desert "beach"

LENGTH:  7.4-mile loop (6.4 on San Tan, 0.4 on Goldmine, 0.6 mile on Littleleaf)
RATING:  moderate-difficult
ELEVATION:  1,160’ – 1,800’
FEE: $6 daily fee per vehicle
FACILITIES: restrooms, water, visitor center, wildlife exhibit, tortoise habitat, ranger-led activities
HOURS: open 365 days a year, Sunday-Thursday: 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., Friday-Saturday: 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
PETS: leashed pets are allowed
GETTING THERE:
From Phoenix, travel east on US60 to Ellsworth Road exit 191.  Follow Ellsworth 13.6 miles south (Ellsworth turns into Hunt Highway after about 12 miles) to Thompson Road (traffic signal), turn south (right) and go 2.1 miles to Phillips Road, turn right again and continue 1 mile to the park entrance.
INFO: Maricopa County Parks & Recreation, 480-655-5554
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