The route:
The plan was to follow trail 109 (Reavis Valley Trail) to the ranch site and camp. This involved descending 400 feet, then climbing 800 feet across Reavis Saddle, then gradually descending 400 feet again to the ranch site (leaving us at about the same elevation as the trailhead - 4800'). Day two would be a trip to a Sin Agua ruin called Circlestone, at the top of a 6000' hill next to Mound Mountain, then camp near the saddle. Day three was a return to the trailhead and civilization.
Temperatures were forecast to be a little cool, but not too bad - with adjustments for elevation (High/Low):
Sat 66/40
Sun 74/44
Mon 78/46
Day 1 - March 12
We started from the church the troop meets at, and drove to the Rogers Trough Trailhead. This involved ~15 miles of dirt-road in increasingly poor condition, including the last mile marked by the forest service as 'High clearance required, 4WD strongly recommended'. Only one spot this time that was loose enough to need 4WD, but if the road was wet at all there would be more places that would be hard to climb without it. High clearance was definitely needed in several places.
Rogers Trough Trailhead |
Rogers Canyon |
White Mountain |
Reavis Canyon from Reavis Saddle |
Hills by the saddle |
Total hiking - 7.5 miles
Reavis Creek |
Remains of Reavis Ranch house |
Day 2 - March 13
For the last part of the night, sleeping on my left side was good, on my back was a little chilly and on my right side presented a really cold breeze right into what of my face was exposed. I held out in the sleeping bag until I could finally see sunlight on the hill near us, then jumped out, put on my windshell and boots and started working to warm up. I was a bit surprised to see (a) that my water bottle was mostly frozen and (b) my thermometer shows a temperature around 26 degrees. I had not expected below-freezing temps, and was glad for the liner in my sleeping bag. I was using my 30 degree bag, and the liner claims to add 10 degrees to the comfort level - something I was glad for, since I was only uncomfortable and not worse. All of the scouts and leaders made it through OK, though everybody was cold during the night. One nice thing about packet meals is that once you add hot water, tucking the pouch inside a jacket is a nice way to warm up a little. The scouts also found goofing off in the sunlight to be helpful. We didn't get camp broken until 11AM, a bit later than we'd hoped, but it was a lot colder than we hoped also.
We had camped 1/4 mile from the trail towards Circlestone, so we hiked to that intersection and stashed the packs off the trail, bringing just lunch and water along on the 3 miles to the ruins. The hike along the Fireline trail was nice, never climbing too steeply, with some nice views of the mountains. At the top, the ruins were, indeed ruins, with a really nice view of several valleys and ridges, and a great view of 4Peaks to the north. We could even see another set of ruins in Rogers Canyon (near Angel Basin). We descended, returned to the packs, filtered water at the creek, and we hiked the 3 miles to a campsite about 1/2 mile below the saddle. This was a little tighter, but was the last easy place to camp and get water before the saddle, and we didn't really want to camp exposed to the wind as we would be on the saddle. For this campsite there weren't great trees to hang from, and I wanted better protection from the wind anyway, so rigged up the tarp as a shelter and slept on the ground. This night was much warmer, with no wind that bothered me, so everybody was much more comfortable. Morning low was 40 degrees, so whatever little cold spot we were in the first night had passed by. There was some moderate wind during the night, heard in the tree tops, but barely noticed down at our level.
Hiking on day 2 - 9.1 miles
Four Peaks from Circlestone |
Circlestone |
Mound Mountain |
Day 3 - Monday March 14
Woke up to 40 degrees, everybody broke camp more quickly and we were on our way up the saddle by 9:30. Climbing back up from Rogers Canyon to the trailhead was slower and harder than some of the scouts may have thought, so we got to the trailhead again about noon, and had lunch before starting back to town.
Day 3 hiking : 4.0 miles
Total : 20.6 miles over three days
Reavis Canyon on the descent from the Saddle |
Looking back on the road to Rogers Trough TH |
My gear:
backpack - Osprey Atmos 50AG - no problems with the pack, the suspension is great and it felt a lot lighter than the 39+ pounds that it weighed with all my gear. Everything I needed fit into the pack - though I would have been hard pressed to get much more if I needed to.
Sleeping Bag - Sierra Designs 30 degree + Thermolite liner. This really isn't a backpacking bag, and it occupied more than 1/3 of my pack volume - definitely something to change for a longer duration trip.
Sleeping Pad - Klymit Inertia O-Zone - lightweight backpacking air pad, with cutouts in a variety of places to reduce weight and avoid compressing the sleeping bag insulation. Worked well on the ground, no so well in the hammock. I was plenty warm on the ground, even if it looks like its full of holes. Packs down to a pop-can sized cylinder.
Hammock - Eagle Nest Outfitters Double Nest + Atlas straps. I used a Hex-a-tarp over the hammock for this trip, will prefer a longer and wider tarp next time to better keep out of the wind. I used the footprint from my backpacking tent (that Kyle used) as a ground cloth when I slept on the ground.
Water filter - Katadyn Hiker. A little heavy, but the people who brought pumps found them much appreciated. One leader had a Sawyer mini, and found that dipping into an almost-freezing creek to fill a pouch was less than comfortable...
Stove - MSR Whisperlite Universal - I appreciated this stove, since others were finding on the cold morning that the butane gas stoves (Jetboil, MSR Pocket Rocket) weren't working as well due to the temperature. With the Whisperlite I could turn the butane cylinder over and burn liquid butane which worked much better for boiling water.
GPS - Garmin Etrex 20 - one set of batteries made it through all three days. I had pre-loaded the routes (from HikeArizona.com), so we knew we were following the right trails (especially Circlestone which isn't all on maintained trails).
Map - National Geographic Trails Illustrated "Superstition & Four Peaks Wilderness Areas" #851
Meals - Kyle and I ate home-made and dehydrated meals, which really worked out well and were a lot cheaper. A combination of things that we made specifically to be dried, and leftovers that we dried out.
Lunches were always sausage, cheese and Wasa (most of my food weight and volume...)
Sat dinner - Vegetarian chili
Sunday bkfst - oatmeal (regular oatmeal, premixed with brown suger, cocoa and raisins)
Sunday dinner - Shrimp Etoufee - from the book 'Scouts Best Backpacking Meals'
Monday bkfst - dried scrambled eggs - the only let down. I dried these myself, and they really didn't re-hydrate after 30 minutes, they were still a bit rubbery. Might just need more time, might need to rehydrate overnight...
Snacks - home dried apple chips, Clif bars, nuts
This was a good trip - got me excited to go out and do some more trips in the Supers. Lots of trails, and lots of 2 day loops that can be done on a weekend.
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