Mount Lowe Loop from Eaton Saddle 10/12/2013
Yesterday, I did the Mount Lowe Loop from Eaton Saddle
The first section, the road from Eaton Saddle to Markham Saddle, I covered in my Mueller Tunnel update.
The trail portion takes of from Markham Saddle and heads SW.
The trail is in decent shape, but there's a lot of the Brutal Poodle (poodle dog bush, Turricula Parryii, which gives one a really unpleasant rash).
We went first to the summit of Mt. Lowe. To get there, we headed up to the junction high on the east side of Mt. Lowe, which is at point "D" on the above linked map.
Note that the topo map is wrong. The topo map places the junction far lower. Nope. Switch to satellite view, and you can see the junction clearly. The topo map also labels the trail on the east side of the mountain as "MT LOWE WEST TRAIL." Um, no. Oddly enough, the west trail is on the west side of the mountain. Sorry, USGS. Fail.
From the summit, we had some great views, including snow capped Mt. Baldy.
In case you weren't sure which peak is Mt. Baldy, no worries; there's a view tube singling it out.
The old bench is still present on the summit. Talk about built to last!
From the summit (point "F"), we went to the summit junction (point "G") where we picked up the Mt Lowe West Trail. The topo map is wrong about which trail is "west" and which trails is "east," but the sign at the junction is correct.
Descending the Mt Lowe West Trail, we came to this lone view tube. It wasn't labeled that I could see.
But what's it pointing at? Darned if I know, but here's a photo taken looking right down the tube. Anybody know what that is?
There's some kind of antenna on it. Here's little clearer shot (with no sidewalls of the tube):
Lots more view tubes en route, including some that can just barely be read like this one "Locating Catalina Is."
One encounters 2N501 again at about point "G".
Crossing the road, we took the short trail down to Mt. Lowe Trail Camp.
The sign is a little brushy, but...
... the camp itself is fine.
We got a little water from the tank. The tank is nearly dry, and the water tunnel itself was dry according to the backpacker who was staying there. With the water, we made some nice noodles for lunch.
After lunch, we headed up the short side trail back to the road. En route, we passed some of the foundations of the old housekeeping cabins that used to dot the trail.
Reaching the road, we turned right, and took the Mt. Lowe East Trail for our return leg.
After perhaps a quarter of a mile, we came to a junction with a short cut trail to Inspiration Point
From the junction, we could see the shelter at Inspiration Point quite clearly.
From here, our trail swings out to the east to get around the shoulder of Mt. Lowe (Pt. "J") and then links up with the trail coming up from Markham Saddle at point "D". From the junction at point "D", we retraced our steps back to our car.
I very fun outing on a very fine day. My four year old daughter did about 90% of the hike under her own power. On last week's hike in the San Jacinto Mountains, she did 100% of the hike under her own power. Pretty cool progress she's making these days!
HJ
The first section, the road from Eaton Saddle to Markham Saddle, I covered in my Mueller Tunnel update.
The trail portion takes of from Markham Saddle and heads SW.
The trail is in decent shape, but there's a lot of the Brutal Poodle (poodle dog bush, Turricula Parryii, which gives one a really unpleasant rash).
We went first to the summit of Mt. Lowe. To get there, we headed up to the junction high on the east side of Mt. Lowe, which is at point "D" on the above linked map.
Note that the topo map is wrong. The topo map places the junction far lower. Nope. Switch to satellite view, and you can see the junction clearly. The topo map also labels the trail on the east side of the mountain as "MT LOWE WEST TRAIL." Um, no. Oddly enough, the west trail is on the west side of the mountain. Sorry, USGS. Fail.
From the summit, we had some great views, including snow capped Mt. Baldy.
In case you weren't sure which peak is Mt. Baldy, no worries; there's a view tube singling it out.
The old bench is still present on the summit. Talk about built to last!
From the summit (point "F"), we went to the summit junction (point "G") where we picked up the Mt Lowe West Trail. The topo map is wrong about which trail is "west" and which trails is "east," but the sign at the junction is correct.
Descending the Mt Lowe West Trail, we came to this lone view tube. It wasn't labeled that I could see.
But what's it pointing at? Darned if I know, but here's a photo taken looking right down the tube. Anybody know what that is?
There's some kind of antenna on it. Here's little clearer shot (with no sidewalls of the tube):
Lots more view tubes en route, including some that can just barely be read like this one "Locating Catalina Is."
One encounters 2N501 again at about point "G".
Crossing the road, we took the short trail down to Mt. Lowe Trail Camp.
The sign is a little brushy, but...
... the camp itself is fine.
We got a little water from the tank. The tank is nearly dry, and the water tunnel itself was dry according to the backpacker who was staying there. With the water, we made some nice noodles for lunch.
After lunch, we headed up the short side trail back to the road. En route, we passed some of the foundations of the old housekeeping cabins that used to dot the trail.
Reaching the road, we turned right, and took the Mt. Lowe East Trail for our return leg.
After perhaps a quarter of a mile, we came to a junction with a short cut trail to Inspiration Point
From the junction, we could see the shelter at Inspiration Point quite clearly.
From here, our trail swings out to the east to get around the shoulder of Mt. Lowe (Pt. "J") and then links up with the trail coming up from Markham Saddle at point "D". From the junction at point "D", we retraced our steps back to our car.
I very fun outing on a very fine day. My four year old daughter did about 90% of the hike under her own power. On last week's hike in the San Jacinto Mountains, she did 100% of the hike under her own power. Pretty cool progress she's making these days!
HJ
I can also see antennae on Josephine in the satellite view. Seems like there's a consensus that it's Josephine.
Guess I'll have to re-visit ol' Jo one of these days. I'm not real big on fire road hikes, but it might be a good one to do with my daughter.
HJ
Guess I'll have to re-visit ol' Jo one of these days. I'm not real big on fire road hikes, but it might be a good one to do with my daughter.
HJ
Great trip report Jim...
Mt. Lowe is a special place for me -- just over ten years ago I asked my wife to marry me there.
I've always been puzzled by that!Hikin_Jim wrote: ↑ Note that the topo map is wrong. The topo map places the junction far lower. Nope. Switch to satellite view, and you can see the junction clearly. The topo map also labels the trail on the east side of the mountain as "MT LOWE WEST TRAIL." Um, no. Oddly enough, the west trail is on the west side of the mountain. Sorry, USGS. Fail.
Mt. Lowe is a special place for me -- just over ten years ago I asked my wife to marry me there.
Hey! Congratulations!Mt. Lowe is a special place for me -- just over ten years ago I asked my wife to marry me there.
Yeah, it's pretty clear when you're climbing it that "something is wrong here" vis a vis the map. If you toggle to "satellite view" on Acme Mapper, you can pretty clearly see that the junctions are where I placed the lettered points -- no where near where the topo map says they are.I've always been puzzled by that!Hikin_Jim wrote: ↑ Note that the topo map is wrong. The topo map places the junction far lower. Nope. Switch to satellite view, and you can see the junction clearly. The topo map also labels the trail on the east side of the mountain as "MT LOWE WEST TRAIL." Um, no. Oddly enough, the west trail is on the west side of the mountain. Sorry, USGS. Fail.
It does look like there's some trace of something over where the USGS says there's a trail. Not sure what it is.
HJ
Yeah, Open Cycle's map looks pretty good. They even have the use trail that people have worn in that leads to the top from the summit junction although I don't know why people go that way.
I notice that Open Cycle does not show the trail down to the Trail Camp from the road.
Again, though, there is something further north. I've seen it before and remarked on it in passing. Not sure what it is. Guess I'll just have to check it out some time.
HJ
I notice that Open Cycle does not show the trail down to the Trail Camp from the road.
Again, though, there is something further north. I've seen it before and remarked on it in passing. Not sure what it is. Guess I'll just have to check it out some time.
HJ
Ha! Even Google Maps has a more accurate trace on the trails than the USGS.
2N50? Just "2N50?" The USGS map appears to append another digit after 2N50. It looks like 2N501, but I could be wrong. I know a four position designator is for the primary road, but subparts will be labeled with an additional digit, typically a letter. I can't be sure what it says on the USGS map because the scan quality is so bad. I would download a high res copy, but of course the website is closed due to the gov't shut down. Rolling Eyes
Yeah, maybe that trace is a part of the old Cliff Trail, although it goes to Markham Saddle which doesn't make sense for the Cliff Trail to do. Not sure. I'll have to explore it some time.
HJ
The road is/was signed 2N50 at both ends (Chaney Trail and Eaton Saddle gates). On the USGS topo, however, they call the (lower, paved) Sunset Ridge portion 2N50.2 and the (upper, unpaved) Mt. Lowe portion 2N50.1. I believe they use the decimals to designate portions of the same primary road. In cases with road forks/tributaries, letters are used instead.
http://caltopo.com/map.html#ll=34.22057 ... 9&z=16&b=f
2N50A (no decimal) goes from Mt. Lowe Camp south past Inspiration Point shelter to what some call Muir Peak but which the topo linked to above labels nothing! Seriously inconsistent.
You can see the decimal point on this map too...2N50.1 and 2N50.2.
2N50A (no decimal) goes from Mt. Lowe Camp south past Inspiration Point shelter to what some call Muir Peak but which the topo linked to above labels nothing! Seriously inconsistent.
You can see the decimal point on this map too...2N50.1 and 2N50.2.
Thanks, HikeUp. That's a super clear map. I can see the decimal points.
I get the pattern. Letters designate a spur. Decimal places designate portions. The upper portion of the road is 2N50.1. The lower portion is 2N50.2. The spur to Inspiration etc is 2N50A. Makes sense.
Even in its clarity, that map is still wrong. It lists the east trail as "west", and it shows the junction on the east side as much lower than it is as well as showing the northern portion of the trail as much lower than it is. It doesn't show the trail to the summit at all.
HJ
I get the pattern. Letters designate a spur. Decimal places designate portions. The upper portion of the road is 2N50.1. The lower portion is 2N50.2. The spur to Inspiration etc is 2N50A. Makes sense.
Even in its clarity, that map is still wrong. It lists the east trail as "west", and it shows the junction on the east side as much lower than it is as well as showing the northern portion of the trail as much lower than it is. It doesn't show the trail to the summit at all.
HJ
I understand that government employees must operate at a snail's pace to maintain "job security." But after a hundred years you would think somebody would get around to adding the summit trail to Mt. Lowe.
http://caltopo.com/map.html#ll=34.23004 ... =15&b=1900
http://caltopo.com/map.html#ll=34.23004 ... =15&b=1900
Topo maps used to have a statement printed on them that one should bring errors to the attention of the USGS and gave an address to write to. I don't recall seeing that on any of my current crop of maps, but I haven't looked lately.
HJ
- VermillionPearlGirl
- Posts: 239
- Joined: Wed Apr 06, 2011 9:57 am
This report was very encouraging. This used to be a regular hike of mine, in fact it was the hike I took friends and visitors on when they wanted to go on a hike because it's not too difficult and has a lot of fun history. But I've only been once since the station fire and found the poodle dog so oppressive I haven't been back! But if you've gotten through unscathed that's very encouraging.
Although all your impressive map talk is a little discouraging. I need to take a class or something on map reading I read a NOLS book once to get the basics but there's obviously always more to know!
Although all your impressive map talk is a little discouraging. I need to take a class or something on map reading I read a NOLS book once to get the basics but there's obviously always more to know!
That's an awful topo map. All the contour lines look the same, not easy to follow the major increments. No spot/peak elevations. No trails, but maps that have trails often have them in the wrong spot anyway. I think you'd be better off with no map than having that one
I think that's the so called "US Topo" of 2012. All the lines appear to be computer generated, perhaps from some digital storage (rather than image storage). A lot of smoothing appears to result which basically renders the map useless for terrain association (and it makes my eyes go screwy). TOTALLY USELESS.
They're building the map out in layers as I understand it. The trails layer will come later.
No print edition is planned. It seems that there's an assumption on the part of the USGS that everyone will be using laptops or at least GPS displays and that paper maps are obsolete. Well, that's great if you work in an air conditioned office, but paper maps are still the media of choice for field work (hikers, geologists, miners, hunters, canyoneers, off-roaders, etc.).
HJ
They're building the map out in layers as I understand it. The trails layer will come later.
No print edition is planned. It seems that there's an assumption on the part of the USGS that everyone will be using laptops or at least GPS displays and that paper maps are obsolete. Well, that's great if you work in an air conditioned office, but paper maps are still the media of choice for field work (hikers, geologists, miners, hunters, canyoneers, off-roaders, etc.).
HJ
Had to go back to the 1894 Los Angeles map to find that trail fragment on the north slope of Lowe. Looks like it was merely part of the original Lowe West Trail, which was rerouted later. Perhaps you NHPS members should go up and restore that fragment. Then you could circle Lowe without ever touching the summit.
There's still a lot of PDB, but it's pretty much avoidable. None of the three of us that went came down with any rashes. Note that we all wore long pants and long sleeves.VermillionPearlGirl wrote: ↑This report was very encouraging. This used to be a regular hike of mine, in fact it was the hike I took friends and visitors on when they wanted to go on a hike because it's not too difficult and has a lot of fun history. But I've only been once since the station fire and found the poodle dog so oppressive I haven't been back! But if you've gotten through unscathed that's very encouraging.
The once-a-year Wilderness Travel Course (WTC) is coming up in January. Their map and compass instruction is excellent. I went through the course in 2007 -- after I had already been through Boy Scouts, the US Army, and Sierra Club leadership training, and I still learned some things and got some practical tips. It covers a whole lot more than just map reading. They go into gear selection, first aid, trip planning, snow travel, non-technical (no ropes or anything) rock travel, etc. It's a really comprehensive A to Z course for people interested in year-round hiking, backpacking, and cross country/back country travel.VermillionPearlGirl wrote: ↑Although all your impressive map talk is a little discouraging. I need to take a class or something on map reading I read a NOLS book once to get the basics but there's obviously always more to know!
HJ
- VermillionPearlGirl
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I like courses HJ seems to be a on mission to craft my Christmas list for the year...
- Uncle Rico
- Posts: 1439
- Joined: Thu Mar 20, 2008 7:48 pm
Followed in HJ's steps today, circling Mt. Lowe by dropping down the west trail and ascending the east trail. Where the trail crosses over the ridge leading to Mt. Markham I stopped to get a couple of pics of the trail fragment (or whatever you want to call it) HJ talks about above. It clearly appears to be a remnant of an old trail, but I didn't follow it out that far because I was improperly attired. Here's a couple of pics.
From the trail heading to Mt. Lowe from Markham saddle, the trail remnant is clearly visible cutting across the north slope of Mt. Lowe.
Here's a closer view
At the ridge leading to Markham, you can clearly see a path leading west across the rocky north face of Mt. Lowe.
Here you can see the path cutting through the boulders.
From the trail fragment looking back to the ridge leading to Markham.
From the trail heading to Mt. Lowe from Markham saddle, the trail remnant is clearly visible cutting across the north slope of Mt. Lowe.
Here's a closer view
At the ridge leading to Markham, you can clearly see a path leading west across the rocky north face of Mt. Lowe.
Here you can see the path cutting through the boulders.
From the trail fragment looking back to the ridge leading to Markham.
Here's a view of the north side of Lowe...you can easily imagine the trail is there to get to the other side of the mountain and connect with the west mt. lowe trail without gain/loss. Or maybe there is gold.
Sorry for the huge photo bomb but tough...
Sorry for the huge photo bomb but tough...