Rim Trail ( FT 105 ) Southern Trailhead to West Side Road ( FR 90 ) - Lincoln National Forest
I lost the actual trail early on in this hike, and unbeknownst to the ol' Pathfinder ( yours truly) was walking on the very faint remnants of an old road instead. Writing this blog in my mind as I traversed on this road (aptly called 90 Z) on maps for the middle portion of the out hike, phrases like " uncharacteristically un-maintained with abundant uncleared downfall, " hard to follow with no blazes," and " mercifully almost- level unlike most of the southern stretch of the Rim Trail." Why I wasn't clued in right there I don't know. Adding to my lack of awareness was the fact that the road brought me right back to the real trail perhaps a half mile from my turnaround point at the West Side Road.


The real trail had a very clear tread( excepting a couple places where I lost it briefly) and was blazed. Most of the downfall had been sawed and cleared. It was also more typically steeply up and down as it tried to stay close to the rim and its natural undulations. It was also far more shady which was a mercy to my hot, black Scotties who overworked themselves in the very first steep climb through the shade-less burnt country, that is slowly recovering with a lush, but low still, growth of gambel oak and locust.


Needless to say the back leg of the walk consumed about a half hour less time, even with lunch and even more frequent resting included.
Highlight were the views from the rim ( of course ), but also a nice little hollow with many maple trees down in Bridge Canyon, which I now have plans to revisit come October.

I have now completed my section hike of the Rim Trail. I started hiking it many years ago, but I really only came up with the notion of seeing the whole thing in the last 4 or 5 years. Doing it this way with out and back hikes amounts to doing twice and seeing it from both directions which has some benefits. One might be better off just doing two or three shuttle hikes. Backpacking would be little hard because there is virtually no water along any of the route unless there is still snow on the ground.
Labels: backpacking, fall colors, fossils, hiking
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home