Punchbowl Pallett Williamson South Fork Loop
With Southland temperatures headed for the nineties, I thought the eastern end of Pleasant View Ridge would offer some relief, or at least a breeze. No such luck. A great day of hiking was had nonetheless. Mine was the only car in the Punchbowl County Park lot at 0600. Incidentally, this is the wrong hike to try and break-in a new pair of half-size-too-small Asolos on. Before the descent to Cruther's Creek I heard rustling up-slope; this was my closest encounter to date with an adult Ursus Americanus. Damn those bears are big. I made Burkhart Saddle by a leisurely 0930 and was on top of Pallett at 1035. At 1230 I was relaxing on Williamson summit, treating my bleeding feet and chatting on the radio (via repeater) with a gentleman in Huntington Beach. The east PCT descent to Islip Saddle was a welcome downhill stroll. The South Fork Trail is as gorgeous as ever, despite rockfalls and slides in spots where falling would be perilous at best. There were people frolicking in Big Rock Creek, which made me very squeamish about drawing needed water, but that's what sterilization protocols are for, I guess. After my usual, unnecessary brush bash back to the Devils Chair trail, the hike was uneventful though seemingly endless. The pitch-roofed cistern near the Burkhart trailhead was a welcome landmark. I was back on the road home just before 1900.
Devils Punchbowl in the beautiful High Desert morning light.
The brown blob in the center is sadly the best shot I got of this bear.
Looking west on Pallett Mountain summit
The final climb up to Mt. Williamson summit
Looking north towards Pinyon Ridge (?) from the South Fork Trail
A welcome Punchbowl view from the High Desert NRT
Track of the day's hike
Devils Punchbowl in the beautiful High Desert morning light.
The brown blob in the center is sadly the best shot I got of this bear.
Looking west on Pallett Mountain summit
The final climb up to Mt. Williamson summit
Looking north towards Pinyon Ridge (?) from the South Fork Trail
A welcome Punchbowl view from the High Desert NRT
Track of the day's hike
- cougarmagic
- Posts: 1409
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2008 5:21 pm
That photo of the punchbowl is really cool - seeing the big white band of rock like that, and knowing it's the San Andreas Fault!
Great bear sighting!!
Great bear sighting!!
What you are seeing are two transitions. First is the transition between the sandstone "Punchbowl formation" (light colored rock) and the "San Francisquito Formation" (dark colored rock). The band of Sandstone visible to the rear of the image is the transition between the Punchbowl formation and the Pinyon ridge formation. The San Andreas fault is on the Northside of that red mountatin.cougarmagic wrote:That photo of the punchbowl is really cool - seeing the big white band of rock like that, and knowing it's the San Andreas Fault!
Great bear sighting!!
I studied the area for an Earthcache I created, called San Francisquito Formation (Big Rock Creek Area).
Elwood,
What were your total trip stats? I have good eyes, but can't read your map. Did you see and water in any of the valleys as you approached Burkhart saddle (like Cruther's creek)?
If I recall correctly, the trip from the Punchbowl to Burkhart saddle is close to 4000 feet of elevation gain. Great photos, and you are the man!
What were your total trip stats? I have good eyes, but can't read your map. Did you see and water in any of the valleys as you approached Burkhart saddle (like Cruther's creek)?
If I recall correctly, the trip from the Punchbowl to Burkhart saddle is close to 4000 feet of elevation gain. Great photos, and you are the man!
Assuming reasonable accuracy on the part of my GPS, 26.3 miles and 13,762 ft. of cumulative climb. Max elevation recorded at 8,219 ft. (USGS puts Williamson Summit at 8,214, so I'll accept the 5 foot delta from consumer equipment). Minimum elevation was 4,514 ft.
There was definitely water running well in Cruther's Creek. I scared something off that was down for a drink, but couldn't see it. I was still about 4.5 litres heavy at that point and didn't need to fill up.
PDF of the track (filename date is wrong)
There was definitely water running well in Cruther's Creek. I scared something off that was down for a drink, but couldn't see it. I was still about 4.5 litres heavy at that point and didn't need to fill up.
PDF of the track (filename date is wrong)
GPX of the track
Thanks for the GPX.
Did you say you had to bushwack this route or was it along established trails?
Did you say you had to bushwack this route or was it along established trails?
Nunc est bibendum
There's a trail from the Punchbowl to Burkhart Saddle. From Burkhart Saddle, you trend east XC along the ridge. No brush problems that I can remember. From Mt. Willamson, you connect with the PCT, and then the S. Fork Trail. The S. Fork Trail was at one time an old mining road. I believe there is a trail to connect you back to the Punchbowl from the lower end of the S. Fork Trail, but I notice that Elwood mentions brush, so either it's overgrown or my memory is poor. It's been a while, but I have hiked from the vicinity of the lower end of the S. Fork Trail to the Devil's Chair where you meet the trail coming in from Devil's Punchbowl. Perhaps he took a shortcut?simonov wrote:Thanks for the GPX.
Did you say you had to bushwack this route or was it along established trails?
This trail is wide open from start to finish. I have twice managed through my own lameness to get too close to South Fork CG and briefly lose the trail back to the Devil's Chair segment. The climbers' trails up the west slopes of Pallett and Williamson are indistinct in spots, but hard to lose.
If you ever want to make that trip again, and add an added twist, go north over the face of Mt. Williamson, and visit the two plane wrecks. There is a C-119 Boxcar wreck, and a C-46A Commando crash that you were super close to.Elwood wrote:This trail is wide open from start to finish. I have twice managed through my own lameness to get too close to South Fork CG and briefly lose the trail back to the Devil's Chair segment. The climbers' trails up the west slopes of Pallett and Williamson are indistinct in spots, but hard to lose.
11HXE is the C-119 and GC10028 is the C-46 wreck.
Here are my photo albums for both wrecks.
http://s4.photobucket.com/albums/y144/sgbofav/C-46/
http://s4.photobucket.com/albums/y144/sgbofav/C-119/