Backpacking the Arizona Trail: Passage 29 (Happy Jack)
AZT Thruhike, Day 35
Trans-Arizona/Utah Hike, Day 42
In the land of Arizona
Through desert heat or snow
Winds a trail for folks to follow
From Utah to Old Mexico
It’s the Arizona Trail
A pathway through the great Southwest
A diverse track through wood and stone
Your spirit it will test
Oh, sure you’ll sweat and blister
You’ll feel the miles every day
You’ll shiver at the loneliness
Your feet and seat will pay
But you’ll see moonlight on the borderlands
You’ll see stars on the Mogollon
You’ll feel the warmth of winter sun
And be thrilled straight through to bone
The aches and pains will fade away
You’ll feel renewed and whole
You’ll never be the same again
With Arizona in your soul
Along the Arizona Trail
A reverence and peace you’ll know
Through deserts, canyons, and mountains
From Utah to Old Mexico
-“The Arizona Trail,” Dale R. Shewalter
It is brutally cold this morning, making it hard to even move much before 11. I believe it was around 20 at 9:00. (It will be even colder tomorrow). Packing is a slow process in these temperatures. But, I pick up a few things that might make future packings faster in these temperatures, like doing most of it inside the tent at first and having a solid plan in advance to minimize time spent debating with oneself in the cold. Once packed, I head east along the forest road until coming to a trail crossing.
There is a problem; the trail crosses on both sides.
Clearly I missed a turnoff in the twilight yesterday evening. In both my purist nature and out of curiosity to see just where I made a wrong turn, I take the trail to the right, and it winds through the ponderosas back to Shuff Tank. It is clearly new, so this must be part of the new reroute, which has gone around the road stretch that I walked to get to the junction earlier. Instead of following the road on the north side of the tank, the trail now follows a singletrack around the west and south sides of the tank, then crosses the road on the east.
I retrace my steps along the trail back to the road crossing, and continue following the trail on the east side of the road. The trail continues to wind east crossing rolling terrain on the Mogollon Plateau, through more pine forest, slightly thicker in places than that seen around, say, Gooseberry Springs, for example. I pause for the night east of a crossing of FR-135D. Game 7 of the World Series is tonight, might take the opportunity to watch if I have enough of a connection and can get settled into camp in time.
Trail Passage Logistics & Ecology
Passage 28 (Happy Jack) | |
Map & AZTA Info | Passage 28 |
Trail Surface | Dirt singletrack |
Length (Mi) | 29.4 |
Season | Spring-Fall |
Potential Water Sources | Maxie Tank (mi 265.2 SOBO/540.9 NOBO) Shuff Tank/FR 135D (mi 266.7 SOBO/539.8 NOBO) Bargaman Park Tank (mi 270.7 SOBO/538.1 NOBO) Pine Spring (mi 271.5 SOBO/536.4 NOBO), off trail Wild Horse Tank (mi 274.2 SOBO/533.7 NOBO) Dave’s Tank (mi 277.3 SOBO/533.7 NOBO), off trail Gonzalez Tank (mi 279.3 SOBO/531.1 NOBO), off trail Foot in Tree Tank (mi 281.5 SOBO/527.4 NOBO) Homestead Tank (mi 284.3 SOBO/526.7 NOBO) Sheepherders Tank (mi 285.2 SOBO/526.7 NOBO), off trail Wochner Tank (mi 285.5 SOBO/526.7 NOBO) Hay Meadow Tank (mi 291.5 SOBO/526.7 NOBO) Blue Ridge Ranger Station, Forest Service (mi 292 SOBO/526.7 NOBO), off trail |
Trailheads | North: Gooseberry Springs Trailhead (mi 262.6 SOBO/526.1 NOBO) South: Blue Ridge Trailhead (mi 292.1 SOBO, 496.7 NOBO) |
Trailhead Access | North: Graded dirt road South: |
Wilderness | No |
Possible resupply points | None |
Difficulty | Moderate |
Potential campsites (mileages S to N) | Various LNT-compatible locations throughout |
Threats | Heat – wear a cotton shirt so you can soak it. Synthetics aren’t great in the desert. Hypothermia – nights are generally about 30°F cooler than days in Arizona regardless of the time of year. Consider this in packing gear. Mornings can be cool year-round. Hyponatremia – “drunk on water.” To avoid, ensure adequate salt & electrolyte intake and ensure you eat as well as drink water. Symptoms are almost identical to dehydration, but drinking more makes it worse. Prevention is by far the best solution. Dehydration Lightning |
Permits Required? | No |
Cell service? | Limited |
Ecosystems traversed | Rocky Mountain Montane Conifer Forest |
Highlights | Largest ponderosa forest in world |
Rocky Mountain Montane Conifer Woodland | |
Common Trees/Shrubs | * Ponderosa Pine * Southwestern white pine * Subalpine fir * White fir * Rocky Mountain maple * Bigtooth maple * Grey alder * Red birch * Red osier dogwood * Cliffbush * Mallow ninebark * New Mexican locust * huckleberry * bilberries |
Common herbaceous plants | * fringed brome * Geyer’s sedge/elk sedge * Ross’ sedge * Bronze sedge/dry land sedge/hillside sedge/hay sedge/Fernald’s hay sedge * screwleaf muhly * bluebunch wheatgrass * Spruce-fir fleabane * wild strawberry/Virginia strawberry * Small-flowered woodrush * mountain sweet Cicely * bittercress ragwort * western meadow-rue * Fendler’s meadow-rue |