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Grand Canyon Backpack Trip
October 10-14, 1998
Day I (Saturday 10/10): Six Motorola Hiking Club
members--Dawn Lavigne, Paul Chiavacci, Machell Short, Bill Short, Russell
Kuhn, and Chuck Parsons--arrived at Mather Campground on the South Rim
of the Grand Canyon on a beautiful Saturday afternoon for the start of
a five-day adventure trip into Arizona's crown jewel and one of the Seven
Natural Wonders of the World, the magnificent Grand Canyon. After a bit
of preliminary sight-seeing, dinner, and for a couple of us a great preview
of the Canyon via a remarkable IMAX presentation at Tusayan just south
of the Canyon, we were all ready to settle in for a good night's rest before
the start of tomorrow's trek into the Canyon.
The temperature was dropping fast as Russ and I were trying to get some
shut-eye in the reclining bucket seats of his Nissan pick-up. Just
as I was about to nod off, a thunderous, window-rattling roar that sounded
vaguely like a cross between a mating Bull Moose and an enraged hippo jolted
me awake. Glancing around, I was somewhat relieved to find that we were
not under attack after all by some alien force--it was only a certain un-named
individual sawing logs big time. Giving up on any thoughts of sleeping
in the warm truck cab, I reluctantly dragged my sleeping bag into the cold,
quiet solitude of the open truck bed, eventually drifting off beneath the
fantastic night sky of the South Rim, with its dazzling array of sparkling
jewels lighting up the heavens above.
Day II (Sunday 10/11): Dawn broke cold and clear
(+28 F) early Sunday morning, with a sharp bite of Fall in the air as the
six of us, comfortably cocooned in our vehicles for the night, eagerly
awaited the Sun's warming rays to loosen cold, stiff muscles and joints
for the day's hike that lay ahead. After a quick breakfast and last
minute gear check, we caught the shuttle to Yaki Point to begin our descent
into the Canyon. At precisely 8:50 a.m. we started down the first
of 7.3 long steep miles of twisting, tortuous, knee-busting, muscle-tearing
trail known as the South Kaibab. Our destination was the mighty Colorado
River and Bright Angel Campground, almost a full vertical mile below us
and unseen from the Rim in the infinite vastness of this Canyon.
The River! Near Skeleton Point we caught our first glimpse of
the Colorado River, a slender silver thread coursing its way through the
Canyon far below us, yet close enough that one could just hear the muffled
roar of its distant rapids and realize that, despite man's attempts to
tame and dam it at several places along its journey to the sea, this is
still one powerful river that demands--and receives--respect from all but
the most foolhardy. This would be only the first of many great views
of this awesome river, which would grow progressively larger as we made
our way down the South Kaibab to our ultimate destiny of meeting it head-on
at the Canyon floor.
At about 11:00 a.m. we limped into a convenient rest stop known as the
Tipoff for a well-deserved lunch break, where we shared lunch with a couple
of young women from England and Australia who just happened to be trekking
their way around the world, and encountered a couple of pesky squirrels
who were bound and determined to dine with us. One begins to wonder
if this area is called the Tipoff because at this point your body may just
be tipping you off to make a decision to continue on, or do the sane thing
and turn back. Apparently we were all insane, as we ignored our aches and
pains and blisters and proceeded onward and downward and downward and downward
into the very bowels of the Canyon, more accurately known as the Inner
Gorge.
By
this time the Sun was beating down pretty intensely, and it was getting
warmer and warmer as we dropped in elevation and got closer to the Canyon
floor--we had set our course and there was no turning back now. Weak-kneed
and wobbly and now sweating bullets, I was about a half-mile short of the
Colorado River crossing at the Kaibab Suspension Bridge when I was shocked
back into reality by the sound of Russ's voice crackling over the Motorola
TalkAbout, announcing his arrival at the Bright Angel campsite. How
had I fallen so far behind the rest of the group--must be the heat; yes
I will blame it on this blasted heat and the nasty blister on my right
heel that I somehow managed to pick up back at the Tipoff. Eventually
I round a bend in the trail and see the black steel suspension bridge crossing
the long-awaited River. What a welcome sight this is! A short
walk through a cool, dark tunnel, and you are walking across the bridge
looking directly down on the cold, swirling waters of the mighty Colorado--the
River of Legends! Navigating the Colorado was certainly never this
easy in years past.
With the rest of the group safely at the campsite by now, I bravely
march on through the now intense heat, nearly blinded by the sweat dripping
into my eyes, when I see the strangest mirage ahead of me--Machell and
Bill Short, feet dangling in the cool, clear waters of Bright Angel Creek,
reeling in a fat trout! Must really be losing it now. Heat
exhaustion? Finally arrived at camp to be cheerfully greeted by Dawn,
Paul, and Russ with the news that Machell and Bill are down at the creek
catching trout by the bucket-full. Unbelievable! After awhile,
Bill and Machell return from the creek with six nice fat trout and offer
to share them with the rest of us for dinner. Nah--think I'll just
stick with my freeze-dried rice and chicken dinner in a bag. Really, thanks
to both of you; we all appreciate it. Nothing like fresh-caught trout
after a hard day's hike, or anytime for that matter.
What a great campsite this is, with a sheer cliff on one side and the
swiftly flowing Bright Angel Creek on the other side, all surrounded by
a lush canopy of trees and shrubs providing much-welcomed shade. Actually,
we are situated so deeply in this Canyon, surrounded by sheer walls stretching
endlessly toward that amazing azure Arizona sky, that the Sun never really
seems to reach our campsite. After a great dinner and then an interesting
lecture by one of the park rangers on the topic "Creatures of the Night",
we retire to our tents for the night to enjoy pleasant dreams of deadly
poisonous Bark Scorpions and blood-sucking Vampire Bats. Hey!--What
was that scratching on my tent?
Day III (Monday 10/12): The Intrepid Six splits up with
Dawn, Paul, Machell, and Bill (the youngsters of the group) departing for
a twelve-mile round trip jaunt to Ribbon Falls (see following report),
while Russ and I (the oldsters of the group) settle for a more mellow and
shorter River Walk and Phantom Ranch Overlook hike. Apparently the
South Kaibab to Hell trail just wasn't punishment enough for some people,
because at this point leg muscles are really behaving strangely. Hiking
uphill is not too bad, but downhill is another story altogether, with calf
muscles begging for mercy with each downhill step. Boulder hopping
downhill is a definite no-no, with muscles twitching spasmodically and
threatening to put you horizontal to the ground at any moment. The
two-mile River Walk Trail sits high atop a bluff at the River’s edge and
provides spectacular views along its full length.
I wave goodbye to Russ as he bravely makes his way up the final steep,
boulder filled approach to Phantom Ranch Overlook, which by now bears a
remarkably striking resemblance to the Matterhorn. I wait around
admiring the view, looking at my watch from time to time, wondering if
he is ever coming back. After about an hour passes, I begin to seriously
think about contacting one of the rangers at Phantom Ranch to send in a
search and rescue chopper to pull poor Russ off some cliff face, where
he is no doubt hanging over an abyss holding on for dear life. Just
as I am about to hobble to the ranch to report this ominous situation,
I catch sight of Russ gingerly picking his way down the hillside.
I would ordinarily have run up to shake his hand, but I could no longer
run anywhere and hobbling up just didn't seem to fit the bill.
We all report back to our creek-side campsite to share our adventures
of the day and rest up a bit before dinner. Bill and Machell had
fished along the creek on the way to Ribbon Falls but did not find any
more nice fat dinner trout. Apparently word had spread among the
creek's trout population that six of their brethren were reported as Missing-in-Action
from yesterday. This will definitely put an end to fishing for some
time, as I can attest from personal experience. At least it makes
for an interesting excuse for coming up empty-handed. Dawn and Paul did
have two trout left from yesterday's catch, which they graciously shared
with me for dinner. (Correction: Bill and Machell did indeed catch
four trout, but returned them to appease the creek's remaining population.)
After dinner we head out once again for the evening ranger presentation,
this time on a less night-marish theme--"Geology of the Grand Canyon".
A thumbnail Geology 101 version of the Canyon's formation goes something
like this: The seas came in and the seas receded, leaving billions
and billions of tons of sediment behind. The land uplifted.
The Rocky Mountains were born, giving birth in turn to the Colorado River.
The land uplifted again and the river slowly started cutting its way down
through the Colorado Plateau to its present-day level. Time and erosion
did the rest, and the Grandest Canyon of all was formed. And you
thought Geology was tough!
Day IV (Tuesday 10/13): After a leisurely breakfast,
we break up camp and bid a fond farewell to our home of the past two days
and nights at Bright Angel Campground and slowly begin our two-day journey
back to the Rim via the Bright Angel Trail. Our destination:
Indian Garden--4.7 miles and 1400 vertical feet above us. Legs, muscles,
joints, heart--all systems are reporting ‘good to go’. Let’s do it!
Things go pretty smoothly until we reach a devilish series of rather steep
switchbacks appropriately named the Devil's Corkscrew. (Little did we know
what lay in store for us tomorrow). Finally coming out of the corkscrew,
the trail eventually begins to thread its way through the Tapeats Narrows
alongside Garden Creek before finally reaching the lush, green oasis known
as Indian Garden.
Our campsite sits under a massive, looming canyon wall that seems to
stretch to infinity in all directions. After lunch and a well-deserved
rest break, we begin to plan our last hike of the day, an easy 1.5 mile
trek to Plateau Point with its great view of the Inner Gorge and the Colorado
River, some 1400 feet below. Dawn and Paul head out to the point
early to enjoy a cozy dinner and sunset over the Gorge. The rest
of us arrive later to share the beautiful sunset over the Inner Gorge of
the Canyon, no doubt one of the greatest of all sunset locations.
Day V (Wednesday 10/14): After a quick breakfast,
we again break up camp (didn’t we just do this?) and bid farewell to Indian
Garden to start the final leg of our ascent back to the Rim--4.6 miles,
but this time with an elevation gain of 3100 feet. This is going
to be a challenging climb to say the least. As we slowly struggle
(at least some of us anyway) back to the top, mastering one series of switchbacks
after another, we discover a startling new law of physics. As actual
pack weight decreases, due to prior consumption of most foods and a gradual
depletion of water reserves, phantom pack weight actually increases as
the journey wears on (more so if it is uphill), to the point where a 50
pound pack becomes a 100 pound pack near the top. Absolutely amazing!
Just when you think you have seen the worst that Bright Angel can possibly
throw your way, a horribly fiendish torture device called Jacobs Ladder
looms ahead in the distance, a steep, tight series of switchbacks that
goes on forever and ever. Were it not for the fact that we were obviously
ascending, one would swear this must be the Pathway to Hell.
Three and one-half hours into this final leg of our five-day journey,
Bill and Machell cheerfully announce to the rest of us still-struggling
poor souls that they have reached the summit. Behold--they have seen
the light! Dawn's voice comes over the TalkAbout and it sounds something
like "I hate you!", although I'm not really too sure of anything at this
point. But it isn't too long before she, Paul, and Russ are all standing
on top of the Rim wondering "What in the world is taking Chuck so long,
is he taking the rest of the day to get up here?"
I continue to struggle on, cursing Jacob and his blasted Ladder all
the way--just who in the world came up with this idea anyway? Whatever
you do, don't look up to the Rim under any circumstances. The more
you stare at it, and the closer you think you must be getting to it, the
further it recedes into the distance! It's almost as if we are on
some kind of strange backward-running escalator--one step forward takes
you two steps back. Or it may also be that I am just hallucinating
at this point. Finally, by High Noon I too am standing on top of
the Rim, looking smugly down on the rest of the poor shmucks struggling
up Jacobs Ladder--that is, after I finally catch my breath and my heart
settles back into its normal place, having jumped ship earlier somewhere
along the trail.
Somewhere along Jacobs Ladder you may swear that you never want to see
this Canyon again--at least you never want to even think about hiking it
again. But when it's all over, and you regain your composure and
realize the magnitude of what you have just accomplished--what a hike,
what an absolutely incredible experience this has been! To backpack
into the Grand Canyon all the way down to the Colorado River and back up
to the Rim is without question one of the most rewarding and gratifying
experiences in the world of hiking and backpacking. This up-close-and-personal
type of exposure to the full scope and grandeur, to the sheer size and
breath-taking beauty, to everything this Canyon has to offer--what mere
words and pictures cannot even begin to adequately describe--is surely
for most of us an almost religious experience if nothing else. We
are all the wiser for this experience, all the richer for this opportunity.
If you have never taken on this challenge before, give it some careful
consideration and make sure that you are physically and mentally up to
the task, for this really is one of the greatest experiences that this
life has to offer--and it's all right here in this very special little
corner of the world called Arizona.
Paul Chiavacci wrote:
One of the things that I remember fondly, was catching and eating trout
fresh out of Bright Angel Creek. They were delicious and most memorable.
I have never camped and eaten what one could catch or hunt. Most memorable.
On the hike to Ribbon Falls, right after the first set (2) of bridges,
there was a canyon off to the left -south of Bright Angel-that I would
like to explore the next time I am in the Canyon. It would be an interesting
place to bushwack. One never knows what one may find. You might add it
to your interesting places to explore while in the Canyon.
Russell Kuhn wrote:
Had a really great time on this trip. Enjoyed the hike,
the scenery, the Canyon, and the company, although at this point I’m not
sure when I will be hiking the Grand Canyon again. I think I would
like to hike on fairly level terrain for awhile before tackling the Canyon
again.
RIBBON FALLS REPORT (according
to Dawn Lavigne)
Having "visited" the Bright Angel Campground twice already and both
times deciding NOT to take the 13 mile round trip hike to Ribbon Falls
on our "rest" day there (I had lots of excuses.....all valid....ie. sore
feet, sore legs, sore back, tired, need a break, want to relax, don't have
enough ibuprofen, need a beer, etc., etc.), I had made up my mind that
this time I was going.....for sure! And I did. I even dragged
Paul along, and later he dragged me back. While Paul and I hiked,
Machelle and her hubby, Bill fished their way to Ribbon Falls. Unfortunately
for us, they didn't want to carry all those beautiful trout there and back.
Wonder why?
The hike there was superb. We traveled for a long time through
box canyons and over four separate bridges over the Bright Angel Creek.
I was surprised to feel that I was traveling uphill the whole time. All
together we did climb about 1,600 feet over the six plus miles to the falls.
There were some wet sections of the trail, where rock hopping was in order,
tall grassy sections (even taller than Paul) to push through and then it
was across the creek to the falls. We were lucky with weather and
shade. On the way there, the box canyon protected us from the hot
sun, yet the sun was out and bright for the last mile and during our one
hour at the falls. Then, for our return journey we had some light
cloud cover, which kept us out of the hot afternoon sun.
Machelle and Bill left before we did, fishing rods slung over their
shoulders. Paul and I had hiked a few miles before we saw them at
the creek's edge. They reported on their fishing skills and then
we continued on. The trail is well marked and easy to follow and
we meet up with some people along the way who were more than happy to tell
us that the falls were just around the next bend......RIGHT! We reached
the beautiful Ribbon Falls at around noon. First, we took off our
boots and got our feet wet. Then we settled on a piece of shade and
ate lunch. I climbed up the side of the falls and Paul took the shot
that you see here in the report. It was slippery up there.
Yes, I was being foolish being there.
Apparently there is a Upper Ribbon Falls and an Upper, Upper Ribbon
Falls (that is if you are up to the climbing), we weren't at that time.
Although the bit of Ribbon Falls we saw was spectacular, it concluded on
rocks and formed a shallow creek, hardly somewhere one could bathe.
But, I'm told, there is pool at the first Upper Ribbon Falls, which is
perfect for bathing. Also, we were told about the mostly undisturbed
Anastazi ruins that one can investigate in the upper falls area.
Personally, we were content to rest our weary feet and bodies, catch a
little sun, eat a little food and generally watch the scenery!
Machelle and Bill arrived just as Paul and I were putting our boots
back on to head out. We soaked our clothes and hats to protect us
from the hot sun, said good-bye to Machelle and Bill and our new friends
from Norway and headed out. The hike back was all downhill and felt
shorter than the hike to the falls. We arrived back at the campground
and found our comrades asleep in their tents. It seems that we weren't
the only ones to get more than our fair share of exercise that day.
The question of whether this hike was too much for the "rest day" has
come up. My response to that is that the Ribbon Falls hike was a
challenging day hike on it's own. We survived, but there are many
nice hikes close to the campground which I have equally enjoyed.
Also, we found a side canyon that has a creek, which feeds into the Bright
Angel Creek, which definitely needs investigating (but, bring the radios.....because
you'll be bushwhacking). Whatever anyone decides to do, my only advice
is to do it within your personal limitations, whether those are physical
("Hey, I'm a jock" sorts) or mental ("I'd rather have a beer at Phantom
Ranch" sorts). The object is to enjoy the Grand Canyon and have your
personal "moment", whatever that may be.
The above listed trip reports--documenting day
hikes, backpacking trips, and car camping trips organized and arranged by the
Arizona Trailblazers Hiking Club, Inc.--are meant to be more of a record of the
various events performed by the hiking club and are not meant to be the only
guide for anyone else wishing to do the same hike or backpacking trip. Instead,
they should only be used as a supplemental to an official guidebook that
addresses that specific hike or backpacking trip. Natural changes (floods,
fires, windstorms, etc.) can occur and change and alter the landscape. The
Forest Service sometimes changes the routing of a trail. Trail junction signs
can be removed or altered. For these reasons, the hiking club's trip reports and
even the official guidebooks may no longer be totally accurate in describing the
trail and its layout. There is always the possibility, however remote, of a
hiker sustaining harm or injury while on any hike, no matter how safe it may
initially seem. The Arizona Trailblazer's Hiking Club, Inc., as well as any of
its officers, directors, representatives, and designated hike leaders, disclaims
any liability or responsibility for accidents, injuries, damages, or losses
whatsoever that may occur to anyone using the trip reports that are available on
our website. The responsibility for good health and safety while hiking,
backpacking, or camping, ultimately rests with the individual. |