I'm not sure you'd be happy with a slow poke like me, but I've had such a trip in the back of my mind for some years now. Do read on.tekewin wrote:I'd be up for a trip to very end of the public land in San Mateo after it cools off in the fall.
I've been a bit past the junction with the W Clark Trail, but that's it. So, most of the following is based on map scouting and satellite photos. By the way, I was quite surprised to see signs of frequent use on the W Clark Trail, mt. bike tracks as well as a pair of trimming shears hung on a tree.
Background.
- About a mile and a quarter downstream of the junction with the W. Clark Trail, in satellite photos, I can see what looks like some pretty rough terrain, boulders, an all-rock creek bed, potentially falls and rapids, and a large wall-to-wall permanent pool of about 300' x 75' in size. I think this stretch, about 1/4 to 1/2 mile long, is the crux of the route -- although there is another wall-to-wall pool of about 190' x 40' further down.
- About 1/2 mile upstream of the rough terrain is an oak grove. Just downstream of the oak grove are some flat, open areas that look suitable for camping.
- It's about 10 miles from the Fishermans Camp Trailhead to the Camp Pendleton boundary.
- Annotated Caltopo map: https://caltopo.com/m/SD9A
- Day 1 would be about 7 to 8 miles in length. I would hike in to the vicinity of the oak grove with an overnight backpack and set up a camp somewhere upstream of the previously noted rough terrain.
- Day 2 would be with just a day pack and would cover the remaining 2 to 3 miles down to the boundary and return, then staying at the same camp as the first night. All over night gear would have been left in place.
- Day 3 would be 7 to 8 miles to hike back out.
I've been down canyon recently, and it's really not that hard to get to the W Clarke Trail junction. The additional 1/2 to 1 mile travel to find a suitable camp site shouldn't be inordinately difficult, so I'm confident that Day 1 and Day 3 are quite doable. It's the middle day, Day 2, that is the unknown.
There, in a nutshell, is my plan of attack for getting down to the boundary and back. The earliest I would consider doing it is maybe late October, 2022, when things start cooling down. We frequently get a day or two of 100F highs in early October. I think the ideal time to do it would be mid-March to mid-April because you'd have relatively long days in terms of hours of daylight -- but temperatures would still be moderate. Late fall could work too, but the days start getting really short. Winter, when it gets dark at 5:00 PM, might be pushing it, but, then again, this approach breaks things up so that all of the days of the trip should be pretty doable even on days where there are relatively few hours of daylight.
HJ