Trails of the Angeles. John W. Robinson

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Trails of the Angeles - John W. Robinson страница 14

Trails of the Angeles - John W. Robinson

Скачать книгу

LENGTH: 7.5 miles round-trip; 2,100' elevation gain

      DIFFICULTY: Moderate

      SEASON: October–May

      TOPO MAP: Chilao Flat

      Features

      Note: Barley Flats was heavily impacted by the 2009 Station Fire and as of this writing, spring 2013, remains closed to entry. Check with the US Forest Service to verify the current status of this area before attempting this hike.

      Barley Flats is a prominent, forested ridge separating the watersheds of the Big Tujunga and West Fork. Not a true flats, it consists of a 2-mile-long rolling, forested plateau at an elevation of just over 5,000 feet.

      The area has an interesting and varied past. As far back as the 1850s it was a well-known hideout for cattle rustlers and horse thieves, and it later became a favorite haunt of sportsmen and hunters. With the completion of the Shortcut Trail in 1893 (see Hike 53), Barley Flats was largely forgotten and fell into disuse. In the 1950s big changes arrived in the form of a Nike-Ajax antiaircraft missile site, one of several designed to serve as a defensive ring protecting the Los Angeles area. The administration buildings and facilities, still in good condition today, have served a variety of uses, functioning as a probation camp, search and rescue facility, and radio relay station.

      You stand a good chance of having the trail to yourself; this Upper Big Tujunga–Alder Creek country is seldom traveled and is little known, having been largely bypassed by the Angeles Crest and Angeles Forest Highways. Don’t do it on a hot day; the first portion of the route is shadeless and steep.

      Description

      From La Cañada, drive up Angeles Crest Highway to Clear Creek Junction. Turn left onto Angeles Forest Highway and follow it north, passing the Big Tujunga Canyon Road, to the junction with the Upper Big Tujunga Canyon Road. Turn right and follow it 4 miles to a dirt parking area along the right (south) side of the road, opposite a sign that says simply ALDER CREEK. Park along the highway. An alternate approach, from Foothill Boulevard in Sunland, is to drive up Oro Vista Avenue, which becomes Big Tujunga Canyon Road, and follow it to its junction with Angeles Forest Highway, and then the Upper Big Tujunga Canyon Road. Be sure to display your Adventure Pass on your parked vehicle.

      Walk down toward the creek bed and look for a metal pole; at this point cross the creek (dangerous after a major storm) and pick up the trail, overgrown in spots but passable, as it heads away from the creek and begins contouring up the chaparral-blanketed slopes. You soon come out onto a ridge and the trail steepens. Stop to rest often and enjoy the spectacular views, north into the Alder Creek drainage; east toward the rolling, forested Charlton Flat country; and west toward Strawberry Peak. After more steep climbing, you enter the welcome shade of a live oak forest, and continue for another mile through shady firs, Jeffrey pines, and Coulter pines to the paved Barley Flats Road, and the flats themselves, 3.7 miles from the start.

      Return the way you came. With an 8-mile car shuttle between Alder Creek and Barley Flats, you can make it a one-way hike and halve the distance, starting at either end and hiking either uphill or downhill. The Barley Flats Road is located along Angeles Crest Highway, 4.9 miles past Red Box, just before the junction with the Upper Big Tujunga Canyon Road. Look for the trailhead near the end of the paved road, 2.7 miles from the Angeles Crest, and park along the side.

      HIKE 9

      BIG TUJUNGA TO TOM LUCAS TRAIL CAMP, BIG CIENAGA

      HIKE LENGTH: 8 miles round-trip; 2,000' elevation gain

      DIFFICULTY: Moderate

      SEASON: November–June

      TOPO MAPS: Sunland, Condor Peak

      Features

      Trail Canyon cuts a deep swath through the western front country of the San Gabriels. Steep, chaparral-blanketed ridges surround it on both sides, and the great arched head of Condor Peak looms high on the eastern skyline. The scenic highlight is Trail Canyon Falls, 2 miles up-canyon, a delicate ribbon of whitewater swishing 30 feet into a cool sanctuary of alders and ferns.

      It is appropriate that the campground be named after Tom Lucas, one of the real pioneers of the Big Tujunga. “Barefoot Tom,” as he was known to his mountain friends, was one of the first forest rangers in the old San Gabriel Timberland Reserve, a grizzly bear hunter, and in his later years a rancher at the old Ybarra Ranch in the Big Tujunga. He knew the mountain country as few others did.

      The canyon was once a lush and verdant oasis, until the 2009 Station Fire blackened the steep slopes and burned away much of the streamside greenery. It reopened to access in spring 2012 but is still undergoing repair. As of this writing in spring 2013, the trail is passable, but check with the US Forest Service to verify current conditions before attempting this hike. Note that Tom Lucas Trail Camp is closed pending repairs.

      Description

      From Foothill Boulevard in Sunland, drive 5 miles up Mount Gleason Avenue, which turns into Big Tujunga Canyon Road, to Upper Trail Canyon Road just prior to highway mileage marker 2.05. Turn left and drive up the winding dirt road to a junction, and then go right and down into Trail Canyon to a parking area beneath live oaks. Be sure to display your Adventure Pass on your parked vehicle.

      Walk past the locked gate and follow the dirt road, passing some private cabins and crossing the creek on some well-placed planks. The old road climbs the east slope, then drops steeply back into the canyon, and ends. Ford the creek and pick up the trail as it threads its way up the boulder-filled canyon, crossing and recrossing the creek in foot-wetting fords. In 1 mile you reach a large, open bench on the left (west) side of the creek. Here, your trail leaves the creek and switchbacks steeply up to the left, and then climbs steadily up the slope to get around Trail Canyon Falls. In another 0.5 mile you round a sharp turn and then another turn, where the falls come into view, impressive as they plunge into the canyon depths below you. Just beyond where the trail again turns north, you will notice a narrow side path through the brush on which hikers have descended to the falls—very steep and loose footing. Continuing on the main trail, you drop back into the canyon above the falls and ford the creek again. Over the next 2 miles you follow the creek up-canyon, fording the stream several times, making your way around and through boulder fields, and reaching the old Tom Lucas campsite, no longer maintained by the US Forest Service. A mile beyond, where the canyon bends northward, your trail switchbacks up the slope, reapproaches the creek, crosses it, and reaches the new Tom Lucas Trail Camp—closed as of this writing in spring 2013—with picnic tables and cleared camping areas amid alders and oaks, 4 miles from the start. This area at the head of Trail Canyon Creek is known as Big Cienaga.

      From the new Tom Lucas Trail Camp, the trail climbs, with several long switchbacks, to a branch of the Mendenhall Ridge fire road (see Hike 10), but you turn back at Big Cienaga.

      As always, as you stroll down-canyon on the return trip, new vistas open up and you get a different perspective of the country. Most impressive, as you get back into the lower canyon, is the great buttress of Mount Lukens, towering on the southern skyline. This front-range country may be tamed and overrun by man, but it retains its rugged appeal. If it’s late afternoon, chances are that a purplish haze will be adding a mystical quality to the mountain landscape. Mount Lukens may be a shadowy ghost in the distance.

      A scenic option, 14 miles altogether, is to follow the Trail Canyon Trail up to its end at the spur road southeast of Iron Mountain, follow the spur road

Скачать книгу