Woodwardia falls, upper Dark Canyon
Posted: Fri Jan 26, 2024 3:47 pm
During the scouting mission two weeks ago I ran down the ACH past the Woodwardia canyon bridge. I saw a nice waterfall below, and today I came back to check it out. From the bridge:
I was hoping to traverse the whole canyon from ACH up to the fire road above, but was half-expecting to have to turn back due to the rough terrain. I walked the road from above, past the bridge
and dropped in to the left, a bit below. It's a steep area, and it took a little while to find a usable line. The river is working. There's lots and lots of trash here, coming down from the highway: pieces of cars, old road signs, discarded furniture, etc. Gross. This canyon is not meant for hiking
I walked up to the falls. They're nice!
And the bridge above looks cool
This is in a narrow, rocky gorge made up of shit rock. So I decided I didn't need to work hard to solve this problem, and I climbed back out to try a different canyon.
I walked around the bend to the next canyon above. The topos label this as the upper section of Dark Canyon. Unlike Woodwardia, this looks chill at the highway, and there's even a little use trail to drop into it:
There's no bridge here per se, just a concrete tunnel below the roadway
I walked upstream. After a little while it steepens, gets a good flow, and becomes much more interesting. Here're the first set of falls
And the next
There's a fixed rope on the left. And the next
There's a rope here too. It keeps going like that, but with no more ropes. Eventually I came up on a drop I didn't want to have to descend. I climbed a minor ridge on the side. This quickly cliffed out, and revealed multiple falls ahead:
These also looked like something I wouldn't want to have to descend, at the very least. So I called it a day, and walked back the way I came. This is a cool canyon:
So yeah. I was out for 2 hours, and this was just barely up into the mountains. What a nice quarter-day activity!
I think I really need to start carrying a short bit of rope with me, to be able to protect small drops. That would make much of what I did (and didn't do) today much easier. Next time.
Given what I saw I thought that surely these canyons appear in Christopher Brennan's book, but they do not. Perhaps it's just a rocky area, and waterfalls are a dime a dozen over there.
I was hoping to traverse the whole canyon from ACH up to the fire road above, but was half-expecting to have to turn back due to the rough terrain. I walked the road from above, past the bridge
and dropped in to the left, a bit below. It's a steep area, and it took a little while to find a usable line. The river is working. There's lots and lots of trash here, coming down from the highway: pieces of cars, old road signs, discarded furniture, etc. Gross. This canyon is not meant for hiking
I walked up to the falls. They're nice!
And the bridge above looks cool
This is in a narrow, rocky gorge made up of shit rock. So I decided I didn't need to work hard to solve this problem, and I climbed back out to try a different canyon.
I walked around the bend to the next canyon above. The topos label this as the upper section of Dark Canyon. Unlike Woodwardia, this looks chill at the highway, and there's even a little use trail to drop into it:
There's no bridge here per se, just a concrete tunnel below the roadway
I walked upstream. After a little while it steepens, gets a good flow, and becomes much more interesting. Here're the first set of falls
And the next
There's a fixed rope on the left. And the next
There's a rope here too. It keeps going like that, but with no more ropes. Eventually I came up on a drop I didn't want to have to descend. I climbed a minor ridge on the side. This quickly cliffed out, and revealed multiple falls ahead:
These also looked like something I wouldn't want to have to descend, at the very least. So I called it a day, and walked back the way I came. This is a cool canyon:
So yeah. I was out for 2 hours, and this was just barely up into the mountains. What a nice quarter-day activity!
I think I really need to start carrying a short bit of rope with me, to be able to protect small drops. That would make much of what I did (and didn't do) today much easier. Next time.
Given what I saw I thought that surely these canyons appear in Christopher Brennan's book, but they do not. Perhaps it's just a rocky area, and waterfalls are a dime a dozen over there.