Backpacking AZT Passage 40: Kaibab Plateau South
AZT Day 6, Part 2
Trans-Arizona/Utah Day 13, Part 2
Welcome back to Aspen’s Tracks, thruhiking the Arizona Trail from Utah to Mexico. Today, we’re continuing hiking along Passage 40, from East Rim Overlook to about MM 61.2. Starting with the best view of the eastern Grand Canyon visible from the trail north of the park boundary, backpacking southward, the AZT soon begins climbing toward its highest point, flanked by aspens.
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
Arizona Trail: East Rim Overlook to Crystal Spring
Hiking south, the Arizona Trail reaches the East Rim Overlook – a beautiful spot with a bench and picnic table overlooking a portion of the eastern Grand Canyon, with additional trails leading out to further views – and I find I do indeed have service. I spread my solar panel out and hook up my batteries to charge given the open sky view here and charging opportunity, and make the call to the park for the interview.
After doing my interview and taking care of some other business, I’m backpacking south again. Continuing south, the trail passes through more aspen groves, rice meadows, and mixed conifer forest, the latter increasingly spruce-fir as the rolling Kaibab slowly rises in elevation. Each displays the forest in a different stage – the rice meadows, areas most recently disturbed by something, be it a fire, severe wind, etc; the aspens, one of the pioneer trees to move in thereafter; and the spruce-fir/mixed conifer forest, the least recently disturbed.
Crystal Spring to Meadows Edge/North Rim Country Store Detour
It’s been a rough last few days with the wind and overnight temps, so upon reaching Crystal Spring I take a detour to Meadows Edge and the North Rim Country Store through some USFS roads and more aspen groves that continue to shine, meeting Roger and another thruhiking friend and discuss strategy and escape from the wind for a period.
Arizona Trail: Crystal Spring to MM 61.2
I then return to the trail and put some more miles in. Another 18 or so mile day in total, although not as many of those were on the actual trail as I might like (a fair number were getting to and from the North Rim Country Store). Still, I’m fairly close to the border between the Kaibab National Forest and Grand Canyon National Park.
Regardless, I should be at the Grand Canyon North Rim tomorrow (about 15 miles away), Phantom Ranch Thursday, Grand Canyon South Rim on Friday, and on the trail to Flagstaff perhaps on Tuesday.
Arizona Trail: Passage 40 Logistics
Arizona Trail: Passage 40 Logistics
Passage 40 (Kaibab Plateau South) | |
AZTA Passage Info & Map | Arizona Trail, Passage 40 Passage 40 Map |
Trail Surface | Dirt trail |
Length (Mi) | 24.3 |
Season | Spring-fall. No vehicular access to this section December-mid May. Feet of snow in winter. |
Potential Water Sources | Crane Lake (mi 46.5 SOBO, 742.2 NOBO) Little Pleasant Valley Tank (mi 48.8 SOBO, 739.9 NOBO) Wildlife Drinker (mi 56.5 SOBO, 732.2 NOBO) Dog Lake (mi 56.6 SOBO, 732.1 NOBO) North Canyon Spring (mi 58.9 SOBO, 729.8 NOBO) Crystal Spring (mi 59.5 SOBO, 729.2 NOBO) Sourdough Well (mi 62.1 SOBO, 726.6 NOBO) Upper North Canyon Creek (mi 63.9 SOBO, 724.9 NOBO) Full AZTA Report: Arizona Trail Water Sources |
Trailheads | North: Telephone Hill South: Grand Canyon National Park boundary |
Trailhead Access | North: Vehicular access via FR 241 off AZ-67 South: Foot access only |
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 | North Rim Country Store & Meadow’s Edge Accessed via FR 216 at AZT MM 54.6 S/734.1 N |
ATA-Rated Difficulty | Easy |
Potential campsites (mileages S to N) | Various |
Ecosystems Traversed | Great Basin Subalpine Conifer Forest Rocky Mountain Montane Conifer Woodland |
Arizona Trail: Passage 40 Ecology
Rocky Mountain Montane Conifer Woodland | Great Basin Subalpine Conifer Forest | |
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 | * 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 | * 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 | * 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 | N/A | Prickly pear, occasionally |
Aquatics | N/A | * Bulrush * Buttercups * Rushes * Sedges * Water plantains |
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