The Kachina Trail Hike
The Kachina Peaks Wilderness Area Of Northern Arizona
October 9, 1999
On a beautiful, clear-blue Arizona Saturday morning, with a nice touch of
Fall in the air and a very pleasant temperature of 70 degrees, two Motorola
Hiking Club members, Chuck Parsons and Laurie Jacobson (with her faithful and
eager four-legged companion, Spackles), arrived at the Kachina Trail Trailhead
to get in a few miles of hiking, as well as view the annual Fall extravaganza of
colors produced by the vast stands of aspen along the slopes of the towering San
Francisco Peaks, north of the Flagstaff area.
There were also quite a few others with the same intentions, as evidenced by
the large number of vehicles in the parking lot and the many fellow hikers (two
and four-legged) that we encountered along the trail. This was just about
as crowded as we have ever seen this trail, although it certainly wasn’t
crowded with Motorola Hiking Club hikers. This is no doubt the peak season
for sightseeing in this area, since it is one of the best locations in Arizona
to view the colorful Fall aspens.
The Kachina Trail, lying entirely within the 18,200 acre Kachina Peaks
Wilderness Area, starts at an elevation of 9,300 feet and traverses west to east
across the southern flank of the San Francisco Peaks for six miles, gradually
dropping to 8,800 feet at its junction with the Weatherford Trail. The first few
miles of this trail pass through a mixed forest of pine, Douglas fir, a few
spruce, and our main objective, the golden aspen that blanket these peaks in a
breathtaking rich golden mantle for a couple of weeks every Fall, drawing
visitors from around the state.
At about the 1.5-mile mark along the trail we began to encounter a large burn
area of untold number of acres in size, the faint but distinctly acrid smell of
charred wood and smoke still lingering in the air over this blackened area of
the forest. The charred remains of hundreds of forest giants stand starkly
against the deep blue sky as silent testimony to the raging inferno that swept
through this area probably only a few years ago--a depressing sight but,
nevertheless, part of the normal cycle of life for the forest.
Fall is a time of major transition for the forest. Its arrival signals
the end of the long siege of summer’s heat, but it is also a precursor to the
long, icy grip of Old Man Winter. The once lush green forest ferns of
summer, many waist high, along much of the length of this trail’s passage
through the forest are now mostly brown, dry, and dead, victims of the now
frosty nights on these mountain slopes. It is now only a matter of weeks
before they will be buried under the deep snows of winter. By spring they will
be decaying and returning their nutrients to the earth, to emerge once again as
lush green new plants, completing the perpetual cycle of life in these
enchanting forests. Just a few Blue Lupines and purple Daisies still
manage to maintain their fragile hold on life, as the nights grow longer and
colder in these mountain forests.
The many aspen trees along this trail were also in a state of transition.
Some were still fully green, some just starting to turn, some about half turned,
and some by now completely bare of leaves. Quite a few of the aspen,
however, were now sporting their full splendor of Fall finery, wearing a
beautiful golden yellow crown of leaves. On several occasions along our
journey through the forest Laurie and I would witness the slightest breeze
sending a deluge of golden leaves showering down from the canopy high overhead,
carpeting the forest floor and our trail in a colorful blanket of yellow.
These too would soon become nutrients for the forest soil and help renew the
cycle of life, as the aspen awaken from their long winter sleep next spring and
draw their life-giving energy from the soil and the sun, enabling them to put on
another crown of lush green for the summer months that lay ahead.
The aspen, the signature tree that defines these peaks of Northern Arizona,
is actually the most widely distributed tree in all of North America, ranging
from Alaska to Newfoundland to the Sky Islands of Southern Arizona. It is
frequently the first tree to start the process of renewal in a burn area of the
forest. Every single stand of aspen, however large in size, propagated
from a single tree sending out root sprouts in all directions just beneath the
surface of the soil. The largest single organism on Earth is not a large
fungus colony or a large bacteria culture or even the largest of the Giant
Sequoias, but instead a stand of 41,000 aspens in the Wasatch Range of Northern
Utah, all propagated from one single aspen. Quite a unique tree.
At about the four-mile mark of our journey along the Kachina Trail we stopped to
enjoy lunch on a shady slope below Freidlin Prairie, with a spectacular view of
the Flagstaff area far below us. Laurie, the compassionate lover of all
living things great and small, rescued a rather frail looking baby Horny Toad
from a certain and untimely demise on the busy trail and gently placed it upon a
small rock pile, where it seemed to enjoy sunning itself on the warm rocks and
posing for a few pictures.
We left the little toad on his rock pile, soaking up the late afternoon rays
of the Fall sun, as we started back on our return trip to the trailhead,
wondering how and if he would be able to survive the long, icy grip of winter on
these mountain slopes. We hoped this little Horny Toad would be able to
put on just a little more weight and find sufficient shelter for itself to
hibernate through the long winter months that lay ahead and then emerge, along
with all the other many life forms of the forest, next spring to assume its role
in the great cycle of life in these enchanted forests and mountains of Northern
Arizona.
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. |