Arizona Trail Backpacking: Passage 40, Kaibab Plateau South
AZT Day 7
Trans-Arizona/Utah Day 14
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
Another cold morning. There are icicles in my water and some food has frozen. I’m on the trail around 7:30, in the vicinity of the highest point on the entire Arizona Trail. Setting out and hiking southward, the trail winds through meadows and past more aspen groves mixed with spruce/fir forest before crossing the unmarked highpoint of both the Kaibab and trail just before reaching the Grand Canyon National Park boundary.
This entire stretch falls within the boreal forest, between 8200-9200 ft in elevation. Accumulating 26 inches of precipitation per year, including an average of 10-12 feet of snow, and dominated by aspen and conifers such as Engelmann spruce & Douglas fir, the boreal forest on the North Rim has cool temperatures even in high summer, is the subject of extreme storms, and is named for Boreas, the North Wind.
Logistics and ecological details follow today’s photos.
Passage Logistics & Ecology
Passage 40 (Kaibab Plateau South) | |
AZTA Passage Overview | Passage 40 (Kaibab Plateau South) |
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) |
Water Source Reports | FarOut or AZT Water Reports |
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 |
Great Basin Subalpine 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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