Arizona Trail Backpacking: Passage 41, Central Kaibab Plateau & 40, Kaibab Plateau South
Arizona Trail Day 5, Part 1
Trans-Arizona/Utah Day 12, Part 1
Welcome back to Aspen’s Tracks, thruhiking the Arizona Trail from Utah to Mexico. Today’s entry covers the stretch hiking from MM 39, in the Warm Fire burn scar from 2006, to Telephone Hill, including stretches of both Passage 41, the Central Kaibab Plateau, and Passage 40, the Southern Kaibab. Backpacking south, aspens continue to be the highlight thus far.
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
The North Rim tried to kill me last night. I woke up at 2:45 with a frozen left big toe, pulled my shell layer into my bag in an effort to stay warm and managed to do so. Getting up around six when the sun breaks over the trees, I headed south across the burn area, knowing that the best way to warm up will be to get moving as quickly as possible. The wind was brutal, continuing to blow me sideways on the trail in places. More magnificent aspen groves commenced amid the rolling plateau as the Arizona Trail heads southbound once again toward Telephone Hill.
This entire stretch was impacted by the Warm Fire in 2006, leaving little shelter but allowing for the widespread aspen growth, as aspens are one of the first trees to recolonize a disturbed area after a fire. The rolling terrain under the brilliant blue sky provides expansive views of the aspen groves, as well as some views toward Grand Canyon to the east as well.
Telephone Hill provides a great vantage point over AZ-67 reaching south through the hills and valleys of the southern Kaibab toward the North Rim of Grand Canyon. Its intact pine forest provides a welcome break from the wind that has been incessant since last night.
Arizona Trail Passage 40: Kaibab Plateau South
I eventually crest Telephone Hill and reenter the forest, getting a respite from the wind before continuing south on Passage 41, the Kaibab Plateau South. Below, AZ-67 curves among smaller hills and past small alpine ponds as it journeys southward toward our mutual goal: the North Rim. Next time, we’ll cover the leg from Telephone Hill to the day’s final stopping point, Little Round Valley.
Trail Logistics and Passages 40 & 41 Ecology
Passage 41 (Kaibab Plateau Central) | |
Trail Surface | Dirt trail |
Length (Mi) | 17.2 |
AZTA Official Passage Map | Passage 41 Trail Map |
Season | Spring-fall. No vehicular access to this section December-April. Feet of snow in winter. |
Potential Water Sources | Wildlife Tank (mi 36.9 SOBO, 751.8 NOBO) Cement Trough (mi 37.3 SOBO, 751.4 NOBO) Full status list via FarOut app or Arizona Trail Water Sources |
Trailheads | North: US-89A South: Telephone Hill |
Trailhead Access | Vehicular access |
Wilderness | No, but it can feel like it. Most hikers in the area stick to the national park. Or are passing through to reach routes in the national park. |
Possible resupply points | Jacob Lake |
ATA-Rated Difficulty | Easy |
Potential campsites (mileages S to N) | Various points throughout; terrain is not a limitation here |
Ecosystems Traversed | Great Basin Subalpine Conifer Forest Rocky Mountain Montane Conifer Woodland |
AZTA Passage Description | Passage 41 Description |
Weather | Current Weather |
Arizona Trail: Passage 41 Ecology
Great Basin Subalpine Conifer Forest/Rocky Mountain Montane Conifer Forest | |
Common Trees/Shrubs | * Corkbark fir * Gambel oak * Quaking aspen * White fir * Blue spruce * Engelmann spruce * Buckwheats * Currants * Dwarf juniper * Elderberry * Fendler’s ceanothus * Greenleaf Manzanita * New Mexican locust * Perry’s rabbitbrush * Raspberry * smooth sumac * Snowberry |
Common herbaceous plants | * Bracken Fern * Buckwheats * Cinquefoils * Columbines * Fleabane daisies * Geraniums * goldeneye * Goldenrods * Groundsels * Hairy golden aster * Indian paintbrush * Lotus * Lupines * Meadow-rue * Parry’s bellflower * Peavine * Penstemons * Puccoon * Pussytoes * Thistles * Western & white prairie asters * Wild strawberry * Wormwood * Yarrow * Yellow hawkweed |
Common succulents | Prickly pear, occasionally |
Aquatic | * Bulrush * Buttercups * Rushes * Sedges * Water plantains |
Great Basin Subalpine Conifer Forest/Rocky Mountain Montane Conifer Forest | |
Common Trees/Shrubs | * Corkbark fir * Gambel oak * Quaking aspen * White fir * Blue spruce * Engelmann spruce * Buckwheats * Currants * Dwarf juniper * Elderberry * Fendler’s ceanothus * Greenleaf Manzanita * New Mexican locust * Perry’s rabbitbrush * Raspberry * smooth sumac * Snowberry |
Common herbaceous plants | * Bracken Fern * Buckwheats * Cinquefoils * Columbines * Fleabane daisies * Geraniums * goldeneye * Goldenrods * Groundsels * Hairy golden aster * Indian paintbrush * Lotus * Lupines * Meadow-rue * Parry’s bellflower * Peavine * Penstemons * Puccoon * Pussytoes * Thistles * Western & white prairie asters * Wild strawberry * Wormwood * Yarrow * Yellow hawkweed |
Common succulents | Prickly pear, occasionally |
Aquatic | * Bulrush * Buttercups * Rushes * Sedges * Water plantains |
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