I had a day open up unexpectedly, so decided to head to Magic Mountain (4864'). I made a bike attempt from the east last year, but a key gate was closed and I didn't have time to complete the longer distance. his time, I started from Bear Divide and a western approach. I parked just before Bear Divide where the Santa Clara Truck Trail (forest route 3N17) crosses Sand Canyon. This was a road hike all the way. Would have been faster on a bike, but I would have had a push quite a bit of uphill.
After a half mile, I came to a huge washout. I had seen photos of the washout, but it was from years ago and I didn't know if the road had been repaired. Turns out no. Other than rockfall scattered across the road in places, this was the only major damage to the road. Mendenhall Peak and the Pinnacle were in constant view on a parallel ridge. The road went about 0.4 miles past the summit where it intersected the Magic Mountain Truck Trail. From there, it was less than a half mile to the top.
Magic Mountain from the MM Truck Trail junction
One of two Nike silos
There were also two water towers and three radio towers. The summit was fenced. I walked along the perimeter of the fence and stumbled on an LA County Engineering benchmark on the west side, just outside the fence. It was named "Little Tujunga" and placed in 1964. If there was a USGS mark, I didn't find it, or maybe it was inside the fence. Didn't find a register. After hanging around on top a while, I headed back. When I got the junction with the Dagger Flat Trail, it looked a little overgrown. I decided to continue up the road a bit. I spotted a better section of the Dagger Flat Trail and left the road to grab it. From there, it was about 0.3 miles to Garfield. I left the trail to climb the ridge to Garfield, stepping slowly through waist high grass and soft plants. I kept stabbing where I could not see the ground with my pole to check for snakes. No surprises. Garfield had an intact benchmark in a small cinder block. No register. Garfield rose about 150' above the road. Next, I decided to descend the west ridge instead of going back. I was going to have to wade through tall grass and minor bushwhacking either way. There was enough of an animal trail on the west side that I got down without much fuss. The diversion probably cost about 30 minutes. I was amazed to have waded through so much grass with no ticks.
LA Engr Benchmark
Approaching Garfield
Looking back at Magic from Garfield
Descending the west ridge
Washout from above
14.2 miles, 2700' gain
Magic Mountain and Garfield Benchmark
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Looks Great! I haven't been up there in a while. I think I remember before and after that washout, unless it's a newer wash out (in the last ~2-3 years). I recall seeing some construction being done so perhaps that washout is more recent unless they didn't finish. Was it about a mile or so up the road?
- Tom Kenney
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Yeah, I thought that, too, when I saw the pic. It's the same spot. They spent a lot, did a lot of work, and it's broken again. Last time it was so bad, the only feasible bypass was to hoof it directly up-slope and meet the road above.
FYI, those are not Nike silos on Magic Mountain. The mountain site was an IFC (Integrated Fire Control) for the LA-98 battery. The underground magazines and (Lang) launch facility was located just to the north, south of Lang Station Road. Nikes didn’t launch from silos.
Robert Black left a similar comment on my blog:Elwood wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 11:22 pm FYI, those are not Nike silos on Magic Mountain. The mountain site was an IFC (Integrated Fire Control) for the LA-98 battery. The underground magazines and (Lang) launch facility was located just to the north, south of Lang Station Road. Nikes didn’t launch from silos.
It's true that the peak was originally part of a Nike missile battery, but then it was converted into a test facility for the Apollo lunar module's maneuvering thrusters. The thrusters would be mounted over the holes, and water would come down from the tanks and out onto the mountainside to keep it from catching fire. Nike missile pads are cool, but the lunar module is cooler.
Wow, no wonder they stopped trying to fix it. I didn't have to go up to the road, plenty of room to walk/bike around. I wouldn't trust a vehicle to drive around it.Tom Kenney wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 8:16 pm Yeah, I thought that, too, when I saw the pic. It's the same spot. They spent a lot, did a lot of work, and it's broken again. Last time it was so bad, the only feasible bypass was to hoof it directly up-slope and meet the road above.
Fascinating about the lunar module, I didn't know about that.
So I was on the Santa Clara Divide road in December of 2021 bagging 3657, and the road was freshly (and expensively) rebuilt through that area. Honestly not sure why that much money was spent on repairing it, unless of course magic mountain is STILL used for some SUPER top secret government project.
Then I returned again in February of 2023 to bag 3270, and this is what I almost walked off the edge of in that very same spot that was freshly rebuilt:
And now it looks like it has become much worse since then!!! Gotta love the Gabes....humans keep lining 'em up, and the Gabes keep knockin' em down.
So I was on the Santa Clara Divide road in December of 2021 bagging 3657, and the road was freshly (and expensively) rebuilt through that area. Honestly not sure why that much money was spent on repairing it, unless of course magic mountain is STILL used for some SUPER top secret government project.
Then I returned again in February of 2023 to bag 3270, and this is what I almost walked off the edge of in that very same spot that was freshly rebuilt:
And now it looks like it has become much worse since then!!! Gotta love the Gabes....humans keep lining 'em up, and the Gabes keep knockin' em down.