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Showing posts with label Woods Canyon Trail 93. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woods Canyon Trail 93. Show all posts

Monday, February 27, 2017

WOODS CANYON TRAIL #93

WOODS CANYON TRAIL #93

Sedona
The sandstone "beach"
Hiking during springtime snow melt season is one of Arizona’s most remarkable experiences. During this brief period, water rushes through desert washes and normally dry creek beds with an urgency tantamount to the panic hikers feel when trying to hit all the best water-themed trails before the cascades die out.  In Sedona, the well-known trails that wind around Oak Creek, Dry Creek and their watersheds are easy-access crowd favorites. But few venture into the isolated domain of Woods Canyon where the ordinarily parched groove of Dry Beaver Creek runs wild for several months each year. One of the best ways to enjoy the transient water works is to take a hike on the Wood Canyon Trail #93.
Dry Beaver Creek
This trek starts with a short walk through a lush, riparian exclosure with an easy creek crossing before emerging in an airy, savannah-like high desert. Yucca-embellished grasslands dominate the first two miles of the hike. The red-earth path climbs gently, morphing from a wide two-track to slim footpaths in the shadow of Horse Mesa. At the 2.3-mile point, the trail enters Munds Mountain Wilderness and begins its descent to the creek bed. Over the next 1.2 miles, canyon walls close in and the trail ducks in and out of oak-juniper woodlands with a couple more creek hops and a traverse of an edgy-ledgy shelf above the water. The highlight of the hike is a sandstone “beach” that appears at the 3.5-mile point. Mounds of water-scoured russet stone slouch into the creek like melted taffy.
Oak-juniper-cypress forest along the trail
This scenic, sycamore-cluttered spot at the juncture of Woods and Rattlesnake Canyons features rushing rapids, swirling eddies and still pools that reflect the rusty edifices and charcoal volcanic cap rock of the surrounding mesas. The trail is reasonably easy to follow for about another mile but you’ll need some high-end route-finding skills to make it all the way to where the trail dead-ends at 5.25 miles. 
Arizona sycamore thrive along the creek
LENGTH:  5.3 miles one-way (trail degrades after 4 miles)
RATING:  moderate
ELEVATION:  3890’ – 4310’
GETTING THERE:
From Phoenix, travel north on Interstate 17 to the Sedona-Oak Creek exit 298. Go left (west) on State Route 179 and continue 8.5 miles to the turn off for the Red Rock Ranger District Station on the right.  The trailhead is located within the ranger station complex in the south (lower) lot where a small metal sign indicates the start point.
High desert plants along Trail #93
INFO & MAPS:
Coconino National Forest


Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Happy New Year, hikers! Now, let's go hike.


WOODS CANYON TRAIL #93
Oak Creek, Munds Mountain Wilderness
Shortie inspects an icy pool

the red rock "beach"
What could be better than hiking in Red Rock Country on a crispy cool winter morning? Sedona’s backcountry is especially stunning under a layer of frost as we experienced on the Woods Canyon Trail this week. Following the gorge created by Dry Beaver Creek, this trail begins with a traipse through Jacks Canyon Riparian exclosure---a delightfully lush strip of cottonwoods and reeds where you’ll need to make a pair of easy creek crossings.  Beyond the crossings (which were frozen over on our hike) the trail encounters a cattle gate and its first of two junctions.  Just past the first gate, go right at the sign that warns of extreme conditions in the area.  Not to worry, trail #93 is pretty easy up to 4 miles making for an easy out-and-back day hike.  The first mile follows a two-track jeep road through a yucca-studded savanna prowled by resident cattle, but soon dissolves into a sandy-muddy footpath as it delves into the canyon.  At 2.1 miles, the junction for Horse Mesa/Hot Loop pops up on a sunny ridge. Here, be sure to turn around for some super sweet views of Mingus and Woodchute Mountains (snow covered on our trip). Veer right at this junction to continue on Wood Canyon Trail, which will enter the Munds Mountain Wilderness Area in another 0.1 mile.  Now, the really good stuff starts to show up.  The hike transitions from a flat stroll into a gentle ascent along the cliffs above Dry Beaver Creek.  Leafless, white barked sycamore trees clutter a creek bed full of gunmetal gray basalt boulders washing up against rusty sandstone escarpments.  The cool winter color palette here is a memorable sight. The skeletal trunks interspersed with junipers and ponderosa pines against a backdrop of red and gray is chilly and wild.  The highlight of the hike is “red rock beach”, a slab of brilliant russet sandstone jutting into a stream of boulders.  Beyond the beach, the trail gets sketchy and ledgey, which is why many hikes make it their turnaround point.
crossing in Jacks Canyon riparian area

LENGTH:  5.3 miles one-way (trail degrades after 4 miles)
RATING:  moderate
ELEVATION:  3890’ – 4310’
GETTING THERE:
From Phoenix, travel north on I17 to ext 298 for SR179, Sedona-Oak Creek, Go left (west) and continue 8.5 miles to the turn off for the Red Rock Ranger District Station on the right.  Trailhead is located within the ranger station complex in the south (lower) lot where a small metal sign indicates the start point.
early morning start on trail #93

INFO & MAP: Red Rock Ranger District, Coconino National Forest, 928-203-2900
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