Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2015 9:20 AM
To: cordellandersen@hotmail.com
Subject: Trail Conditions
|
A Deep Dive Into The Uintah Wilderness
|
Click here for previous reports & YouTube video on
Click for ACCESSIBILITY UPDATES ON THE HIGH UINTAS
or scroll down
JUST OFF THE PRESS
GET OUR BACKPACKS READY, as it won’t be long!
NOW OPEN
Hades Canyon and the Grandview Trailhead Road,
“The Gateway to the Grandaddies”
Just receivcd a report that the road to the Grandview Trailhead is now OPEN!
But there is still a lot of snow above 9,500 ft.
NOTE: Someone from the Forest Service tried to get to the Grandaddies via the Rock Creek Trailhead, and reported streams running high, and at around 9,500 ft. they ran into 2.5 ft. of snow, and gave up. As far as the Forest Service knows, NO ONE HAS GOT TO THE GRANDADDIES YET!
JUNE 11 UPDATE: Just advised that Wilderness Rangers are working on the trail to the Grandaddies and it is passable.
NORTH SLOPE TRAIL CONDITIONS –
UPDATE JUNE 5th
The Forest Service informed me today that roads to most of the trailheads are open, but still too much snow up in the high country….so trails are quite difficult above 9,500 ft..but with the warm weather, it won’t be long!
Some friends right now are going in to RedCastle using snowshoes!
I’ll keep you informed until June 6th when I will head for Bald Mt. Pass to acclimatize myself for my first backpack.
Click for: SOUTH SLOPE TRAIL CONDITIONS – May 26, 2015
For Grandaddy, Rock Creek, Yellowstone Creek, Uinta River Trails.
JUNE 6th, nothing new except that the further east you go there is less snow. Will keep watching and report until I’m gone into the high country.
ACCESSIBILITY UPDATES:
Click Here:
FOR May 21st PHOTO REPORT ON THE TRIP TO BALD MT. PASS
OR SCROLL WAY DOWN AFTER THE 1st REPORT
Thursday, June11, 2015 — 4:00 PM
ADVISORIES – FLASH FLOOD WATCH
Maximum temperature on Wolf Creek Pass today was 48 degrees, with snow depth at 0.00”
NOTE: Warming trend…but no nightime freezing…Forecast below.
Snow depth 37″ on April 26th…….and down as low as 23.5″ but since up.
BALD MOUNTAIN PASS
Snow depth 18 days ago was 44.5″ but,
today, June11th at 04:00 PM at 0.10″ temperature today is 48 degrees & not freezing at night.
Snow melt is normally 1.5 inches/day but days warming and thaw will increase……
…….updated here daily so we’ll know when we can get our backpacks ready.
“GLOBAL WARMING”
……is upon us…finally… so we can start backpacking soon!
***********************************April 6, 2015
NOW BACK TO THE May 21st, 2015 TRIP
THE BEGINNING IN UTAH VALLEY
In 1847, when the pioneers led by Brigham Young came into the Wasatch Front, there was some consideration given to settle in Utah Valley. The area had been visited in 1776 by Fathers Escalante and Domingues who had established in their short visit a good relationship with the Timpanogos-Ute Indians. The Utes of Colorado called them, “THE FISH EATERS,” due to much of their diet coming from the abundant fish (“speckled trout,” and suckers) from the clear waters of the streams flowing from the mountains, and the then clear water of Utah Lake.
These Catholic explorers named the valley,
“The Valley of Our Lady of Mercy of Timpanogos,”
and in a letter to the King of Spain, said, it was….
“….the most pleasing, beautiful, and fertile site in New Spain.”
The
“….population was growing so rapidly and the need for timber for building was so great that many of the relatively accessible trees in the canyons would soon be cut down. Large stands of coniferous trees near the tops of the mountains and high up on the north facing slopes of the canyons beckoned. In order to harvest these trees, lumbermen built timber slides on which they could expeditiously whisk logs to roads in the bottoms of the canyons where men could load them onto wagons…”. (page 133)Thus was born the subject, “PIONEER TIMBER SLIDES” and I became determined to find evidence of them, hopefully find remnants, artifacts, and make a photographic record to share as I felt it would be of interest to many, and inspiring to all of us.
Also of great interest to me in “my golden years” was to get some great exercise and keep my body alive and strong, to persist with the backpacking aspect of my HIGH UINTAS WILDERNESS PROJECT in the summer of 2015– in my 80th year.
So I began scanning the mountains east of Provo and Springville….and wouldn’t you know it, I quickly came up with some leads…..that led me into the mountains you see below.
Monday, Oct. 20, 2014
PIONEER TIMBER SLIDE LAUNCH SITE….DOWN TO PROVO FOOTHILL
Click for SPOT TRACKING
HOW DID IT GO?
Three cheers!….IT WAS HARD & BLOODY, but I MADE IT….following pathway all the way down to Provo
Photo/essay soon…I’ll let you know.
Upper portion of the Slide Mountain exploration
Click here for previous reports
Pioneer timber slides contribution…..
FROM FORT to VILLAGE to PROVO, UTAH
Color also all of a sudden appears out on Lake Timpanogos….let’s zoom in.
It must be some kind of algae that appears as the water warms.
On the right you can see where I got to….about half-way up the mountain. From there the slide came down from above through the ravine or NARROWS, and from that point down it was a relatively straight slide down, with the bottom portion perhaps a ditch as previously mentioned. From that high point I angled down across the opposite side-hill to the bottom so that I could look back and take shots of the slide path on the other side as seen in the following two pictures.
That pretty well is the report on the two slides down to the Provo foothills, but now we come to the fact that these two slides were not the first in the Provo area.
THE FIRST TIMBER SLIDE AUTHORIZED
I quote again information that comes from “The Utah County Court Minutes, from February through July 1853.”
“Early in 1853, Alfred Walton, Jerome Benson, and a Mr. Wilson received permission from the Utah County Court to build a timber slide down the canyon located between the two peaks rising south of Slate Canyon. This slide would be located conveniently between Provo and Springville. In order for the grant to be valid the company had to build the slide during the coming season. If the men constructed the slide, they could control it and have jurisdiction over the timber on the mountain above it..”
This permission was granted first, for the area known as Buckley Mountain that has two peaks, with a ravine separating the higher on the north from the lower on the south. So via Google Earth we fly south to Buckley Mountain.
Here we see south of Slate Canyon the two peaks of Buckley Mountain in the late Fall and Winter
Now let’s zoom in and see what we find.
Sure enough a pathway is visible in the right center, angling down to the foothills. Zooming in we see more clearly a pathway, similar to what we see in the lower portion of Slide Canyon.
Now back to Google Earth with the arrows pointing to the lower portion of the slide pathway coming down to the foothills. On the left is the gravel quarry between Springville and Provo
….and we proceed up the canyon between the two peaks.
The pathway continues about half way up the mountain ……..
.……and stops at the base of some cliffs. This must be the one referred to in the Utah County Court Minutes and quoted by Carter in his book.
FORT UTAH
THE FIRST SCHOOL & LDS MEETING HOUSE IN UTAH VALLEY
“The Valley of Our Lady of Mercy of Timpanogos,”
and in a letter to the King of Spain, Priest Dominguez said, it was …
“…the most pleasing, beautiful, and fertile site in New Spain.”
2014
With Guatemalan friend Miguel, at the BYU vs. Houston game, invited by son David
Friday, Sept. 26th….STUNNING UPDATE AT END OF THIS POST:.
So on Wednesday, September 24-25 I will take advantage of a couple of good weather days and once again be UP WHERE EAGLES DARE to finish my exploration of the pioneer timber slides that helped create Provo, Utah
This time I’ll take with Google Earth & SPOT Tracker print-outs, and my own photographs to see where I’ve been, and exactly where I have to go to do a better job exploring and then make a final report on this:
Fascinating and heroic pioneer endeavor–
TIMBER SLIDES DOWN SLIDE MT.
critical to the building of Provo.
This time I intend to camp-out Wednesday night right at the site where the timber slide down “Slide Mountain” began, and be able to check out nearby where the one started that went down “Slide Canyon.”
I hope to find actual artifacts, and other features besides just a “scar” and “pathways” on the mountain. Using my cell phone I’ll actually send a message from up there along with a photo or two..
Then from the top I’ll follow the pathway down to the foothills….and report.
I of course will use my SPOT Tracker, programmed so any interested can follow me, clicking on:
Find Me at SPOT
Fall is pretty well here as the Gray Rabbit Brush is in full bloom. Looking up at my objective…the top of Slide Mt. where I hoped to camp….But I noticed that there was still too much foliage…..a problem to be able to find what I’m looking for.
My intention was to take this double deal, with my ticket from the BYU vs Houston game, up the mountain and have like a picnic rather than “lightweight backpacking” food but I had to take a gallon and a half of water as I ran short on previous trips and the pack weight was just too much…..so it started being a bit tough!
At the 1st turn on the Y-Trail we look across at the timber slide pathway coming down Slide Canyon
There were a few hikers….all leaving me in their dust!
Of course I focused on the beautiful flowers as I struggled up to the 6th switchback.
NOTICE: “EATING CROW….AGAIN!”
My hike up the mountain today (Wednesday, Sept. 24th) will have to be considered a warm-up as I found that my month and a half layoff for the chemo treatment on my entire upper body–chest, back & upper arms, effected me more than expected and wisdom had me coming back down the mountain.. So……EATING A LITTLE “CROW”..again…..to continue to work on getting back in shape and do the exploration in a week ….hoping for two days of good weather next week and giving the leaves a little more time to drop to make finding remnants of the timber slide easier–All before elk hunting when I head for Mt. Nebo on October 3rd (Friday)…
UPDATE: The weather report has everything trending down, maybe this exploration will have to be done later after getting my elk…quickly (I’m being optimistic …of course) and before I head for Idaho & Wyoming mid-month, , or even until next Spring.
Hope you’re having a good laugh at this old geezer eating crow again.…but you can count on me not giving in easily.…but doing my darndest to achieve my goals…no matter what my age!
HOW SWEET IT WILL BE TO HOPEFULLY….GET THE LAST LAUGH!
I have a hard time getting used to being an old guy….and forced to work harder at getting and keeping in shape to be able to do this sort of thing….but it will be done …..just give me a little time and I WILL YET BE UP THERE WHERE EAGLES DARE!
Friday, Sept. 26th UPDATE:
So I’m back to training with 35 lb. pack on my back in the mountains near American Fork….the couple of following pictures taken during my workout on Thursday, Sept. 25th…...
.Then TODAY the 26th…..doubling my workout from yesterday, going up Grove Canyon until the trail swichbacks up high towards the front of the mountain as seen below..
High up center is the summit of Mt. Timpanogaos
GOOD WORKOUT...
..now two days of rest and hopefully ……. Monday & Tuesday back up on Slide Mountain.
The weather moving in this afternoon (Friday), by tomorrow with a 25 degree drop in temperature, rain, and snow above 8,000 ft., but hopefully Monday & Tuesday improved when I will attempt my last exploration on SLIDE MOUNTAIN…..if the weather works out…I’ll continue my SPOT Tracks from Switchback 6, then at the Y and up the mountain, but with lighter load: No .45 Colt Defender, no heavy professional photo equip…just point-and-shoot camera and cell, less water, light weight food, etc.
I’ll cross my fingers…and do my darndest!.
NOW..Sunday night…looks like maybe a day hike on Thursday, Oct. 2nd? Then elk hunting from Oct. 3rd on.
Find Me at SPOT
**************************************************************************
Remember a lot of OK Spots are alright as I often use the tracker to pinpoint certain areas critical in the exploration
************************************************************
I entitled this effort “DOWN WHERE Sparrow Hawks DARE,” since it would be down in lower terrain, but didn’t get a shot of a Sparrow Hawk, rather a Red Tailed Hawk.
We have progressed up the Eagle Pass area, and see here a Google Earth view I showed in the last part of my Attempt #1 photo/essay, that shows to the right the trail that comes up from Slide Canyon to Maple Flats. But the important part is a continuation of the pathway that leaves the ravine and climbs the mountain crossing right in the middle of this shot. See it enlarged below in dead center..
Below we see it faintly from the hiking trail, and you will notice that the flat looking picture above is in reality very steep rough country.
It goes, or comes down through, the pines up above. As I say, very steep, rough country. What I wouldn’t give to be able to actually see what was going on here 150-60 years ago.
I need to find some old pioneer journals, letters, records that describe what was going, and the specifics of how they undertook such a gigantic task.
In this shot we can see the pathway cutting across the upper right corner, but also the path continues up Slide Canyon as we see in the lower left portion of the picture.
Then ZOOM into view a live VISION OF NATURE and we forget for a few minutes pioneers and slides and think of humming birds.
With a series of the best shots I got of these hard to photographs tiny VISIONS of beauty.
Maybe these mountain varieties are not so colorful as some, but……
…..nonetheless magnificent little natural engireering marvels.
I should have had my flash on, but it all happened so quickly.
Then we come to the 1st meadow where years ago I was nearly stomped on by a herd of deer….and hit the SPOT Tracker OK button while resting a bit.
I still even had a bit of ice in the nearly two gallons of water I carried….16 lbs……just in case I didn’t find the water good in the spring that is a bit over half-way up that slope towards Maple Flats.
I’ll admit my first attempt failing to find the trail, and with water gone had to head down the mountain. But not this time. Just after you get to the meadow you’ll see to the left a shady spot where I have rested several times. Directly in front, or to the south a short trail takes you to this campfire area. Straight through it a trail heads for the pines and I took the bait the first time, and ended in a maze of game trails that led nowhere.
But, look to the right of that rock, and you will barely see a trail taking off….THAT IS THE TRAIL TO MAPLE FLATS.
I should have put a larger pile of rock markers, but I did mark it, and hope they survive to guide hikers.
Up the trail we go.
The only major obstacle on the steep trail, sometimes almost hid by vegetation, is this downed tree. No Trail Crews to make it easy going.
This beautiful plant, if it was in Guatemala, would be the poisonous “AMCHE,” or “Palo Brujo,” similar in affects to Poison Oak I have talked about in my autobiography, “The Checkered Journey….”
Half way to Maple Flats we look north and see the twin summits of Y Mountain
The vegetation becomes lush as we angle down into the gulley.
We find the spring that my brother, Marlo, says he found dry a couple of years ago. I hit the SPOT Tracker to pin point the exact location.
We see that it is a very weak, but steady stream coming out of the pipe
.
Filtering through a slimy, but likely clean, growth of moss.
Like Monks Hood that you might remember from my High Uinta programs.
The trail often is unseen, tunneling under the jungle-like vegetation.
Oh, and did I mention STINGING NETTLE?
I did in my last photo/essay, but didn’t really show it very well. Well, here it is, and it was everywhere….and I HAD SHORT PANTS! Talk about dumb! This became a very serious problem, to say the least.
We are coming to Maple Flats, with Maple Mountain rising above it.
I found a spot in the meadow and with a stout stick cleared it of stinging nettle and set up my camp. It was near here, bivouacked on a mattress of straw protecting me from the snow, when I got my very large male coyote on a deer hunt as reported in my last photo/essay.
I hit my SPOT Tracker OK button to pinpoint my camp site and to let everyone know I was doing great.
In the morning, at about 6:22 AM I made my phone report to KSL Outdoors Radio. It was nice being able to listen clearly on my transistor radio and have a good cell phone signal. Sometimes radio reception is difficult in the High Uintas.
After the program I was up to see what I’d be able to accomplish.
This was going to make it difficult, if not impossible to find any features of the Pioneer Timber Slide
This would make it painful…and even impossible to do the exploring I had come to do.
Another of the problems was that after having my breakfast, that I had put to soak the night before, I only had a bit less than 1 quart of water. I would have to be very careful, and likely be forced to go back by the spring and see if I could get enough water to get me down the mountain.
I got a good stick (I needed a machete) and began beating my way up through the stinging nettle and over a little rise that took me to the big meadow, now on the dry, southern portion of the Flats.
I haven’t been identifying hardly anything, but I have to mention this one, which I was surprised to find up here, as it is commonly a lower elevation plant.
This is a sort of stunted example, but it is
“BUTTER & EGGS”
I walked down to the lower edge of the meadow and hit the OK button. The forest was like a jungle. I decided I would wait for the late Fall with vegetation gone, and leaves off the trees, would have long pants, and a machete….and lots of water as for sure the spring would be dry then.
This is looking up at Maple Mountain above the flats. I was too far south for anything of my interest and so headed back where I had come from on the north side of the Flats.
I tried to work myself into the forest that covered a hill I had to climb to get to the other side and hopefully find what I was after….but it was hopeless, and my leg protectors didn’t last and I was out of tape. Even a day later I still have a few spots of stinging on arms and legs..
. From where I had got to I headed cross country hoping to find the spring, but it was thicker than any jungle I had ever seen in Guatemala, and taking the course of least resistance I got too low, missed the spring, wore myself out, and had the tender skin on my arms bleeding scratches all over….but eventually found the trail and headed down without getting any more water. I would have to be careful and make do what remained…maybe half a quart at most.
The forest was in one way very impressive. I couldn’t see any sign of the Pine borer beetle that is devastating some areas of the High Uintas.
While resting down the trail…..I sensed I was being watched, and….wouldn’t you know it I was being spied on!
Itr was a rock squirrel and I waited him out hoping to get a shot of his beautiful bushy tail, but no luck.
But did sneak up on him some…..
More wonderful VISIONS OF NATURE……..
another rare flower I didn’t get a shot of on previous trips….but with this one…..
I had zoom in to show you I’m not crazy…and that it really is a wildflower. Next time I’ll put the closeup lens on and blow up just one of the gorgeous little flowers.
Soon I was down past the Y seeing the beautiful parade of hikers coming up our wonderful mountain.
By then my water was long gone…and zooming in on the Seven Peaks Water Park…had me picking up the pace and getting quickly to my car and what would be warm, but wet water…..and soon an ICE COLD MOUNTAIN DEW!
I didn’t hit the SPOT Ok button until getting to American Fork completing the SPOT Tracking. This is what you would have seen if you had gone to my website and got the link to the SPOT website. I’ve added the titles.
This is the topographical view from the National Geographic CD/Rom, showing I had done a bit over 9 miles, with around 3,000 ft. of elevation gain in the approximate 30 hour hike.
I will be doing research on the Pioneer Timber Slide in the next couple of months, and explore the lower portions of the pathways I’ve shown you and see what I can come up with, and hopefully in the Fall be back up there in hopes of finally having a clear picture of what had to be a very hard and difficult pioneer effort to have the lumber they needed to create Provo, Utah.
Again, just try and imagine a V shaped slide, like the Hilliard Flume I have reported on from the Uintas. The flume carried wood products 30 miles into Wyoming, the water carrying the ties and logs at 15 miles per hour. This timber slide or slides, several miles long with 3,000 ft. drop in elevation, worked how? Could they just have turned logs lose to make the wild dash to the bottom? Incredible speeds and power would have been achieved.
Any help to understand this history will be appreciated, and how
about some old photographs, or sketches?
NOTE: See at the end of this post, Who Google Search categorizes me with?
I first attempted what was supposed to be an overnight backpack leaving on July 23rd and intending to be exploring for remnants of the little known “Pioneer timber slide” above Provo, Utah on PIONEER DAY.
There were a few on the trail….very few….this mom and her overheated daughter sliding down the trail…without a smile on their sweaty faces….
As I turned to admire what the pioneers had done to Utah Valley, I began feeling a bit light headed…..spotting mirages down in Provo….and as I proceeded up the trail began to feel like I didn’t weigh anything….my body struggling up the trail and my spirit continually separating a bit floating behind!
Two days later, July 25th I awoke at 6:00 AM and by 8:00 was on the trail in the SHADE.
My Smart phone told me it was 61 degrees in Provo….43 degrees cooler!
A few were on the top of the Y enjoying the awesome view.
….one big brother helping little sister…
…and all having a great time seeing what the pioneers had started…and what the Brigham Young Academy in I 1875 was developing into!
Now looking up the 3rd after which we eventually come to the first meadow.
And of course there just had to be a GOLDEN EAGLE!
Next morning I continued up the trail and then traversed back around the mountain seen in the previous photos. There was a thick crust on the snow and I was making all kinds of racket….but rather than scare off a buck, it got him curious and all of a sudden I noticed 20 yards ahead of me a buck sort of squatting down with his front legs flared out to look under branches to see what was making so much noise. I dropped to my knee and with one shot dropped him right on the spot….another long drag proceeded and again we ate that winter….healthy “grass fed” venison!
There was an old logging road that traversed around the mountain that I used years ago, but it was so hidden by vegetation that there was no point in trying to photograph it, but here is the map of the area, showing my SPOT Track where after resting I headed back down as I was almost out of water.
There I hit the SPOT Tracker OK button….and soon it lit up sending the signal to the satellite to trigger 10 emails sent to my friends, saying:
Message:Trip #4 Fighting to keep in shape - exploring Pioneer Timber Slide from Maple Flats down to Provo foothills
A midst the vegetation is STINGING NETTLE, so watch out!
Back down to the meadows...and looking back we see the ridge that comes off the back of Y-Mountain. It was up there where my oldest son, David, got his first buck, in thick fog,with my Browning lever action .243 I loaned him. He dragged him down to the highest house on the Provo foothills and called me to give him a ride.
Looking up towards Maple Flats, I began looking for the trail. I had to find water soon, or head back. I just couldn’t remember where the trail took off and failed finding it. In my youth I would have just went bushwhacking and got there, but…..the mountain had grown bigger in 30-35 years.
The spring was up there somewhere, I since learned from my brother, Marlo, who had been up here in recent years, that on his last trip the spring was dry. I had brought a gallon of water, but was almost out, so headed back to civilization.
Since, I did a Google Earth and Topographical map study with images that follow showing what I'm still determined to find and explore....IN A COUPLE OF DAYS.
On my last hunt up there I got to Maple Flats that had spotty snow, and set up a bivouac camp. There was abundant straw from the tall grass and I made a thick mat of it and laid down my sleeping bag under the stars.
At around 11:00 PM I was shocked to a sitting position by reverberating echos off Maple Mountain of a howling pack of coyotes that seemed to surround me! There was a good moon, so I just laid my .243 Browning across my waist and laid back down.. The trail was just 10 yards below me. Soon I heard them coming by, sat up and squeezed off a shot at a big shadow that trailed last. There was a yelp….and then I heard him struggling, circling around me…and he stopped.
Soon the howling returned echoing off the mountains, but a much subdued, quieter, and sort of lorn-full chorus. Apparently there would be an opportunity for another male to take over the pack.
In the morning I found him 30 yards from my camp, and in the process of skinning him out, David showed up to see how I had done. The mounted coyote was with me down in Guatemala for nearly 20 years. Now, no room for him in my tiny Cabin A trailer, so he's on my son Nephi's wall.
Had great memories on my hike!
What is ahead of me this week?
In a couple of days I'll leave even earlier and head back up there with more water, and tough energy supplements and see if I can't get the task accomplished. Following are Google Earth views showing what I'm looking for.
Below in shadows it's hard or impossible to see...just a little top right.
It begins to appear faintly as we proceed down the mountain.
It becomes very distinct again.
Further down it disappears again on Google Earth.
This view taken in the Fall of 2012 it is seen quite distinctly near the foot of the mountain approximately in the vicinity seen below on Google Earth..
It ends in this vicinity along Provo’s foothills.
Below is an enlargement of the beginning up near Maple Flats of the slide pathway area.
It shows some roadways, or ditch-like structures that need to be explored.
Likewise there is another pathway coming out of large trees to the northwest of the end of the Maple Flats trail as seen below in dead center.These would be descending into the steep ravine.
They are seen in the middle top of this image
and enlarged below.
They go down the ravine, disappear in shadows and rough areas, and then reappear in the lower section as seen below.
I’m likely biting off much more than I can chew….and hope some young archaeologist will take up the interest. It would be a fascinating study for someone–in the meantime I’ll be considered the expert on Google Search…see what I mean below.
I headed back towards the valley with less than 20 oz. of water left. Between the Y and the Trailhead, some hikers first congratulated me for being a good backpacker, but apparently I looked pretty bad so they offered me some needed water and kindly gave me 3 slurps from their water bottle. On arriving at the car I didn't have intentions of trying it again.....but after a couple of days I'm determined to give it one more try.
I'll post the SPOT Tracker link and when that attempt will be, on Thursday, July 31st .
*********************************
GOOGLE SEARCH "I'm #1,"
&
But what am I associated with?
So, my activities place me squarely in the
CHILDREN’S WORLD OF PLAY!