Cottonwood Canyon Trail
On The Arizona Trail South Of Roosevelt Lake
November 13, 1999
At 9:45 AM on a bright, sunny Saturday morning with a brilliant cobalt blue
Arizona sky and a temperature of 70 degrees, three Motorola Hiking Club
members – Kay Fitting, Dave Self, and Chuck Parsons – arrived at
the Frazier Trailhead off State Highway 88 south of Roosevelt Lake for the
start of a six-mile journey into Cottonwood Canyon. Our destination was
Cottonwood Spring, a mini-oasis of cottonwoods, sycamores, willows, and
grapevines in a lush riparian habitat surrounded by the comparatively
harsh Sonoran Desert environment of Tonto National Forest.
The Cottonwood Canyon Trail is part of the 750-mile
long Arizona Trail, which traverses the state from Mexico to Utah.
Originating at the Coronado National Memorial on the Mexican border below
Sierra Vista, the trail heads north through the lower Sonoran Desert of
Southeastern Arizona, crosses the Santa Catalinas northeast of Tucson and
then the Mazatzals near Payson, before winding through the San Francisco
Peaks north of Flagstaff, then across the immense chasm of the Grand
Canyon and the Colorado River, and finally crossing the Kaibab Plateau
north of the canyon before terminating at the Utah border.
The first half-mile of the Cottonwood Canyon Trail
gently ascends a low ridgeline alongside a desert wash parallel with
Roosevelt Lake, offering spectacular views of the lake as we slowly gain
elevation. For the next half-mile we are hiking in the more lush and green
riparian area of Thompson Spring, now reduced to a mere trickle and a few
nearly stagnant pools in this dry and abnormally warm late autumn season.
After one mile of relatively easy and pleasant hiking,
the trail now connects with Forest Road 341, which would serve as our path
for the next two miles as it clawed and chewed its way up a steep
ridgeline parallel to Cottonwood Canyon. The easy part was behind us, and
we were now faced with a challenging two-mile climb over this very rough
and rocky terrain that passes for a forest road, but in reality is little
more than an unmaintained four-wheel drive jeep trail that would be a
challenge in some places for most jeeps. We knew it was going to be even
more of a challenge coming back down on this treacherous loose rock.
By now the sun was getting higher, and it was getting
warmer by the minute. Our starting temperature of 70 degrees, pleasant as
it was, was actually about the average daytime high at this time of year
for this area, and we would soon see over 90 degrees in the sun along this
completely exposed jeep trail. Can this really be the middle of November?
Except for some fall colors we would see later in the hike, it seems more
like the middle of April or May. One can only wonder what we would have
collectively anted up for a jeep ride at this point. The price was quickly
increasing with each 100 feet of elevation gain.
The magnificent views, however, did offer ample reward
and compensation for our efforts, as we steadily climbed higher and higher
on this ridgeline alongside Cottonwood Canyon. There were outstanding
views of Roosevelt Lake, now well over one thousand feet below us and
sparkling like a jewel in the distant setting of the Sonoran Desert.
Towering, weathered copper-colored cliffs stand as sentinels overlooking
the canyon, and rough, jagged walls of weathered granite and conglomerate
plunge deeply into the unseen depths of this mysterious and beckoning
canyon that is our ultimate destination.
At long last we finally reach the end of this rock and
boulder filled jeep trail and link up with the lower end of Trail 120 at
the north end of Cottonwood Canyon. Tired and overheated, we pass by a
large metal water tank next to an empty corral. Filled to the brim with
icy cold spring water, it beckons enticingly for us to jump in for a
refreshing cool dip, but after a short break we decide to push on into the
depths of the canyon, eager to reach our final destination of Cottonwood
Spring, some three miles in the distance.
Ancient and towering cottonwoods, sycamores, and
willows line the length of this canyon and provide welcome shade from the
hot sun high overhead. It seems as if we have just entered a different
world, but a quick glance toward the surrounding foothills covered in
forests of stately Saguaros quickly reminds us that we are not really very
far from the desert after all. These riparian areas of the Sonoran Desert
are truly unique and special places, offering safe refuge and a cool
retreat to an amazing variety of plant and animal species that could not
survive in the relatively harsh and unforgiving desert environment only a
short distance away on either side of the protected streambed meandering
through this cool and shady canyon.
The trail now starts to crisscross the meandering
Cottonwood Creek, normally flowing year-round. However, in this very dry
and warm late autumn season it disappears underground periodically, unable
to stay on the surface with its greatly reduced flow that sinks out of
sight into the sandy streambed from time to time. The cottonwoods and
sycamores are just starting to put on their fall colors of yellow and
orange, with some about half turned by now, despite the unseasonably warm
fall weather in this canyon country.
Although well marked in most places by giant three-foot
high rock cairns, the trail now seems to vanish mysteriously at times as
it crosses the creek. Occasionally, we are forced to hike through the dry
streambed for awhile before we can catch sight of the wayward trail
snaking its way through the brush in the distance. We soon find ourselves
bushwhacking through overgrown areas of this little-used trail (we would
not see another soul on this trail for the entire hike). The battle scars
that we all came away from this hike with are evidence of our many
encounters with Catclaw Acacia, also known as "cowboy’s
sorrow" because of their vicious curved thorns that leave their mark
on all passers-by unfortunate enough to cross their path.
Pushing ever deeper into Cottonwood Canyon, it isn’t
long before we startle and flush a large covey of quail, the distinctive
rapid drumbeat of their retreating wings vibrating the air around us as
they beat a hasty retreat. The fact that this experience would repeat
itself numerous times along this canyon trail was testimony to the rich
abundance of wildlife present in this canyon retreat. Another form of
not-so-welcome wildlife in abundance were the numerous and pesky wasps we
would encounter throughout the canyon. We have never seen so many wasps on
any previous hikes, and would all get buzzed from time to time by these
persistent little devils, who were determined to stay in our faces and
force us out of their territory.
Breaking for a well-deserved lunch around 12:15 PM in
a shady glen alongside the trickling Cottonwood Creek, it wasn’t long
before the angry horde was buzzing us again, forcing us to retreat from
this otherwise very pleasant area of the canyon. Continuing on our way up
the canyon for another half-hour, we were still about one and a half miles
short of reaching Cottonwood Spring at the upper end of the canyon, when
we made a decision to turn back at about 1:15 PM and start our 4.5 mile
return trip to Frazier Trailhead. We were tiring out a bit by now and felt
that we would really be pushing it to attempt to reach the end of the
canyon and make the six-mile return hike back to the trailhead before
darkness fell in this canyon country.
The hike back out the same route was relatively
uneventful, except for the tarantula we sighted along the trail, probably
frightened out of its hiding place by our passing footsteps. After taking
a couple of pictures, we left it to return to its burrow and do whatever
it is that tarantulas do. Back on the forest road, one last die-hard wasp
was determined to give me a final send off I would not soon forget by
launching a sneak attack, crawling under the sleeve of my T-shirt and
injecting my left arm--a clear warning not to return to its territory any
time soon without suffering the consequences. These guys weren’t
bluffing after all.
The hike back down the steeper portions of this road
was going to be a real challenge, requiring full concentration and very
careful footwork on the loose rock and rubble-filled areas to avoid a long
tumble down the hill. Luckily, we all made it down without major mishap,
although I did take an embarrassing spill somewhere along the upper half
of the road, losing my footing on one of the loose rock areas.
We finally arrived back at the trailhead by 4:00 PM,
with plenty of daylight to spare. After stowing away our gear and
massaging tired and aching feet and sore leg muscles, we decided to stop
at the general store near the new Roosevelt Visitor Center and take a
short break, while stoking up on ice-cold sodas, pretzels, and salty
peanuts before starting the long drive back to the valley. The
unseasonable heat, the long tough climb up Forest Road 341 (and the
equally challenging hike back down), the Catclaw Acacia encounters and
resulting scratches, and even the angry wasp hordes could not outweigh the
good and lasting memories of this wondrous and special place in this
equally wondrous and special state that we call Arizona.
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