East Fork San Gabriel river 9/24
Started too early since I didnt bring any light...and got to the bridge as the shade was disappearing and temps were ramping up in a hurry. Up to Airplane Flats where the sun met me. There was a cool breeze though.
I got to peak 4775 3 hours from the river. I was aiming to see the old way they traveled this ridge to pass peak 6327, but again I was short on supplies. If only it weren't so steep around here and so hot. The vegetation has picked up a bit since 2 years ago although the fire here still was apparent.
Coming back, I had a plan of heading east along a secondary ridge to peak 4327 and down to the confluence of Iron Fork and the San Gabriel river. Going down to the saddle between the 2 peaks was a very narrow ridge with bushwack. I have no idea how the old timers did it back in the day, but to be on a mule and have that exposure on both sides is something else.
Perhaps the heat got to me and the steepness back down looked too steep, but I started following some clearance down towards Iron Fork. That started two and half hours of bushwack nightmare. Geez, last time I did this from a higher elevation it was only one hour One of the hours I only lost 200ft in elevation and perhaps avoided being stuck.
It was now past noon in the Iron Fork. I was set to cruise, but that bushwack has sapped a lot of strength. There was more trash here from the same camper and that pretty much ruined it. Looks like I missed him as usual by about a month or two. It wouldnt be a pretty confrontation anyway. Past Ross Moss Falls still flowing.
Back at Iron Fork camp, things went from bad to worse as it goes downstream. Fairly crowded, and trashed up(abadonment) the wazoo. They got their camping experience(thats all that counts) and its apparently too far to carry anything back. As the sun was going down, it was time to start the fires. Couldnt get out of that rathole of a river fast enough. Sped past colorized 8) and I have a knife bridge at Laurel Gulch. Past Heaton Flats in the dark again thankfully.
Someone lost? No water around here.
Rattlesnake Peak,left, and the ridge to South Hawkins smoked
Copter Ridge through Ross Mountain
peak 6327
Ross
Pine Mountain ridge and Fish Fork
As seen from near peak 4329, Iron Mountain lower elevation and Airplane Flats
Semi freedom as the gully starts...Copter ridge and Ross
Looking back
I think this is part of an old trail here. It ends just upstream of the dayhike turn around point on the creek, well, it would if it wasnt landslided in at the end.
Iron
Bridge repair
I got to peak 4775 3 hours from the river. I was aiming to see the old way they traveled this ridge to pass peak 6327, but again I was short on supplies. If only it weren't so steep around here and so hot. The vegetation has picked up a bit since 2 years ago although the fire here still was apparent.
Coming back, I had a plan of heading east along a secondary ridge to peak 4327 and down to the confluence of Iron Fork and the San Gabriel river. Going down to the saddle between the 2 peaks was a very narrow ridge with bushwack. I have no idea how the old timers did it back in the day, but to be on a mule and have that exposure on both sides is something else.
Perhaps the heat got to me and the steepness back down looked too steep, but I started following some clearance down towards Iron Fork. That started two and half hours of bushwack nightmare. Geez, last time I did this from a higher elevation it was only one hour One of the hours I only lost 200ft in elevation and perhaps avoided being stuck.
It was now past noon in the Iron Fork. I was set to cruise, but that bushwack has sapped a lot of strength. There was more trash here from the same camper and that pretty much ruined it. Looks like I missed him as usual by about a month or two. It wouldnt be a pretty confrontation anyway. Past Ross Moss Falls still flowing.
Back at Iron Fork camp, things went from bad to worse as it goes downstream. Fairly crowded, and trashed up(abadonment) the wazoo. They got their camping experience(thats all that counts) and its apparently too far to carry anything back. As the sun was going down, it was time to start the fires. Couldnt get out of that rathole of a river fast enough. Sped past colorized 8) and I have a knife bridge at Laurel Gulch. Past Heaton Flats in the dark again thankfully.
Someone lost? No water around here.
Rattlesnake Peak,left, and the ridge to South Hawkins smoked
Copter Ridge through Ross Mountain
peak 6327
Ross
Pine Mountain ridge and Fish Fork
As seen from near peak 4329, Iron Mountain lower elevation and Airplane Flats
Semi freedom as the gully starts...Copter ridge and Ross
Looking back
I think this is part of an old trail here. It ends just upstream of the dayhike turn around point on the creek, well, it would if it wasnt landslided in at the end.
Iron
Bridge repair
Looks like some tough country with all that brush. I think I followed your route. I haven't been up as far as Iron Fork in quite some time. I need to get up that way again.
HJ
HJ
Nice pics, yeah you got into some serious hiking/bushwacking there. The ridge you pointed out Rattlesnake to South Hawkins has taken some major burns over the years as has much of the area, with the lack of tree cover it can get pretty hot hiking some of those areas.
Pretty much. I only went to elevation 4800 on the ridge though. Disclaimer on going down to Iron remains the same:'Turn Back!!!!' but the thing Im now wondering is if there any good options.Hikin_Jim wrote: ↑Looks like some tough country with all that brush. I think I followed your route. I haven't been up as far as Iron Fork in quite some time. I need to get up that way again.
HJ
"I need to get up that way again."
Thinking of the Stanley-Miller mine?:D I still dont know exactly where this is LOL.
I've been to the Stanley-Miller. Once. And that was in the 80's right after I got out of the Army and could really hike. Now, I'm slower than molasses in January. Sigh.
It was difficult. I went up what is known as the "really stupid way" straight up from the river. It worked, and I found the mine, but it wasn't fun, even back then when as I say I was really in shape.
HJ
It was difficult. I went up what is known as the "really stupid way" straight up from the river. It worked, and I found the mine, but it wasn't fun, even back then when as I say I was really in shape.
HJ
- Millennium
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Mon Oct 15, 2012 4:12 pm
I'm not trying to suck up to anyone but...
If you remember the last time you were at Iron Fork, you probably noticed a bunch of broken sandals, a cut up 5 gallon bucket, hundreds of burnt cans, and two discarded torn up tents.
I love that campsite, I like to consider it my home away from home whenever I'm looking for solitude.
Longstory short I'm proud to say I got two five gallon buckets out of my stash and filled them full of trash back to the heaton flats dumpster to make the place a little nicer, managed to fit that disgusting yellow/purple tent too! There's still a few cans left north of the firepit and the blue tent south of the fallen log but those are on my list for next time.
I love exploring the area, i've tried the Wetwater trail from within the narrows but that shit gets airy and scary real fast and i'll be honest im not the best with heights. I've tried the trail you're talking about AW, or at least i think i know which one your talking about, but it got to be bushwhacking real fast. The one i'm talking about starts at Iron Fork right behind the Large Fallen Tree by the rock table, and then heads up the ridge west. I'm thinking that's the one because when i went up there two weeks ago for the view i noticed some fresh footprints and broken brush this time around.
blah blah blah i'm rambling, oh and also, hello everyone, i'm new to the forum!
If you remember the last time you were at Iron Fork, you probably noticed a bunch of broken sandals, a cut up 5 gallon bucket, hundreds of burnt cans, and two discarded torn up tents.
I love that campsite, I like to consider it my home away from home whenever I'm looking for solitude.
Longstory short I'm proud to say I got two five gallon buckets out of my stash and filled them full of trash back to the heaton flats dumpster to make the place a little nicer, managed to fit that disgusting yellow/purple tent too! There's still a few cans left north of the firepit and the blue tent south of the fallen log but those are on my list for next time.
I love exploring the area, i've tried the Wetwater trail from within the narrows but that shit gets airy and scary real fast and i'll be honest im not the best with heights. I've tried the trail you're talking about AW, or at least i think i know which one your talking about, but it got to be bushwhacking real fast. The one i'm talking about starts at Iron Fork right behind the Large Fallen Tree by the rock table, and then heads up the ridge west. I'm thinking that's the one because when i went up there two weeks ago for the view i noticed some fresh footprints and broken brush this time around.
blah blah blah i'm rambling, oh and also, hello everyone, i'm new to the forum!
- cougarmagic
- Posts: 1409
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2008 5:21 pm
Welcome to the forum and THANK YOU!
Millennium wrote: ↑I got two five gallon buckets out of my stash and filled them full of trash back to the heaton flats dumpster to make the place a little nicer, managed to fit that disgusting yellow/purple tent too!
- davantalus
- Posts: 203
- Joined: Mon Jun 08, 2009 9:09 am
Whoah. A tidy little trip.
I'm curious what you wore, and what condition it returned home in.
Ever use gaiters? Poles? Machete? Katana? Front-end loader?
Millennium: You rock.
I'm curious what you wore, and what condition it returned home in.
Ever use gaiters? Poles? Machete? Katana? Front-end loader?
Millennium: You rock.
Really? Feels like you've been here 1,000 years.Millennium wrote: ↑ i'm new to the forum!
Ditto on the big thank you for doing some clean up in the back country. Some spots out there are just plain NASTY.
HJ
- David Stillman
- Posts: 42
- Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2012 5:33 pm
People suck. Last spring I ran across a campsite with two tents and miscellaneous gear abandoned, apparently storm related. I later found out that the people responsible for leaving all that gear had called the local USFS demanding their gear back. You need a license to go fishing but just about anybody can reproduce. Thanks for the TR and to the guy hauling out the trash-Stillman
My backpack(PVC) took almost all of the force, and remained unharmed. I didnt have any gloves or specialized clothes like the previous time. My shoes got out from Iron Fork in critical condition, although I think they were already suspect from Kings canyon granite.Plenty of short non-deep scratches on my hands too from not having gloves. Even though it wouldnt make the top 10 SG hellish list, its still misery. That side of Iron fork has a bit of all the confounding dense vegetation....buckthorn, deadwood thickets, poison oak vines, stinging nettle vines. Safe to say I wont be back.davantalus wrote: ↑Whoah. A tidy little trip.
I'm curious what you wore, and what condition it returned home in.
Ever use gaiters? Poles? Machete? Katana? Front-end loader?
Millennium: You rock.