Results 1 to 5 of 5

Thread: San Rafael Reef between LWH and Chute

  1. #1

    San Rafael Reef between LWH and Chute

    Almost two weeks ago I hiked in the San Rafael Reef between Little Wild Horse Canyon and Chute Canyon. I chose the location largely because the fins/cracks in the Reef east of LWHC intrigued me. I also liked that there was a semi-major drainage between LWH and Chute for which there was no information on the web. It was perfect for my kind of exploration, but any lesser drainage in the Reef would have been fine. I parked the car on the shoulder of the paved Little Wild Horse Road and started hiking by 10:15AM. The weather forecast called for partly cloudy and a 20% chance of rain, though the clouds were light and high and fast-moving, with plenty of blue sky between. I hiked cross-country and encountered a pronghorn who seemed disturbed by my presence. He made a strange noise--sort of a mix between a snort and a raven's caw. He kept getting closer to me until I lost sight of him behind a hill and never saw him again.


    Parked just off the Little Wild Horse road



    The start of the hike. The first mile was flat and uninteresting.



    This pronghorn seemed pissed at me. He was making some strange sound and kept coming closer to me.



    View of the Henry Mountains through Wild Horse Canyon



    The first mile-ish wasn't very interesting--just a simple walk through a sandy/gravely wash. As the San Rafael Reef rose ahead of me and the canyon narrowed up, the canyon bottom became rough with typical Carmel Formation rocks. That section quickly passed behind me and I encountered the top of the Navajo Sandstone. There, potholes had formed and Torrey was able to get a drink. I came to a fork in the canyon and took the left fork, which I'd already decided upon based on my research in Google Earth. The right fork looked more interesting, but I was saving that for the return hike. The canyon was your standard Reef canyon--sandy bottom mixed with slickrock, with occasional dryfalls and potholes--except that my upstream progress ended in a box canyon with a jumble of rocks instead of a dryfall.


    View up the wash I hiked in



    San Rafael Reef



    Wildflowers



    Here the canyon begins to deepen



    Potholes



    Potholes near a junction in the canyon. I went left here and later returned down the fork visible in this photo.



    In the left fork



    A view over the canyon toward Wild Horse Butte



    In the left fork



    Caterpillars



    Tiny flowers on a bush



    The drainage abruptly ended here



    I climbed up a small gap in the canyon wall to my right (northeast) into another small valley. I knew that from there I'd need to navigate some cracks and fins to get farther northeast into the upper right fork that I'd passed up earlier. I immediately saw a fin that looked like it could be ascended to get me into the next valley, but I explored the current valley up- and downstream looking for an easier route. Finding none (but trying a joint between fins that narrowed down to nothing), I returned to the fin and started the climb. A couple of spots that looked sketchy from below turned out to be quite easy. I found out just how easy because, before I could get a close look, Torrey would ascend and disappear over each spot with little effort.


    The scramble into the next drainage over



    View into the next drainage



    A joint between the fins that I'd hoped would lead me into the next drainage, but it got too skinny



    View up the fins that I climbed over



    View down the fin into the drainage from which I came



    The topography on the other side of the fin was crazy. I descended into the next valley easily enough, but once I reached the bottom of the drainage I immediately ran into a pothole that, once I entered it, I probably couldn't climb back out of on the up-canyon side. Since I couldn't see far beyond the pothole I decided not to drop into it. I climbed out of the canyon and did some thinking. I wasn't confident that the terrain would be easy enough to return to the car down this drainage in a reasonable amount of time. I also didn't want to return the way I'd come. I decided to give myself 30 minutes to try descending this part of the canyon and, if it didn't look promising by then, I would turn around and retrace my entry route.


    View into the next drainage over



    Gilson Butte, Molly's Castle, and the Flat Tops



    Strange place for a man-made cairn



    In the canyon



    This section stopped me from proceeding down the canyon



    I went high above the canyon rim to where the terrain leveled out a bit and followed the rim downstream. Barely 20 minutes later I was back in the bottom of the canyon, and the going had been easier than it appeared from farther up. There were some deep, water-filled potholes ahead of me but they looked easy to bypass, so I sat down on a ledge and took a rest/snack break. The pothole section was followed by a slot section filled with some water. I dropped back into the canyon just below the slot then hiked up it a short distance to have a look. This canyon would definitely be fun to fully descend with the proper equipment.


    Finding my way down-canyon



    Four-shot pano of the upper drainage



    Slot below the potholes



    Potholes



    The rest of the canyon back to the fork was easy. It was mostly a flat, sandy bottom with one easily bypassable dryfall. I wasn't at all surprised to find a broken arrowhead before reaching the fork--I'd been keeping my eye out for them the entire hike. I explored a small side canyon before the fork and found a nice pictograph panel near an alcove. Part of the alcove had collapsed and it had a tiny seep of water coming from the back wall. I'm sure it would have made a decent shelter a few hundred years ago. The pictographs were a little unusual, but many of the details were typical of San Rafael Reef rock art (such as designs scratched over the top of the pigment). The main figure was large, perhaps 18" tall, and the other designs were unclear or possibly unfinished. Seeing both an arrowhead and rock art on this trip served to make it nearly perfect. Maybe a bighorn sheep or rattlesnake sighting would have completed it. :) I got back to the car about 5.5 hours after starting the hike and I covered 6.6 miles. Yes, you can tell I dawdle quite a bit, but that's precisely why I venture out there.


    View down the canyon



    Torrey



    Wide, sandy section of canyon



    Arrowhead



    I avoided the dryfall by scrambling down the rocky terrain just right of center



    Yucca about to bloom



    More pools, almost back to the canyon junction to join my previous route



    An alcove with some fairly recent rockfall in front of it



    Torrey in the alcove



    View out of the alcove



    Pictographs



    Pictographs





    Full photo gallery:
    https://picasaweb.google.com/Dennis....eenLWHAndChute


    GPS tracklog and photo waypoints:
    Viewing on a mobile device? Click this link to open the map: https://maps.google.com/maps?q=http:%2F%2Fudink.org%2Fgeo%2FSanRafaelReefBetweenLWHandChute.kmz&hl=en&sll=39.499761,-111.547028&sspn=4.907901,10.821533&t=h&z=14

    http://udink.org/geo/SanRafaelReefBe...WHandChute.kmz
    Blog | FB

  2. # ADS
    Circuit advertisement
    Join Date
    Always
    Location
    Advertising world
    Posts
    Many
     

  3. #2
    Awesome. Thanks for sharing, cool pics.

  4. #3
    Another great report!

  5. #4
    Nice little day hike there, eh? Covered some ground!
    The end of the world for some...
    The foundation of paradise for others.

  6. #5
    Love the pix. Have to try that one sometime.

    When you do Ramp and Cistern, you have to traverse a couple miles of open desert between the two canyons, to the south. Looks very similar.

    I always wanted to go back and see what else was there.

Similar Threads

  1. [Trip Report] San Rafael Reef above Spring Canyon
    By Udink in forum Hiking, Scrambling & Peak Bagging
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 05-30-2012, 12:48 PM
  2. [Trip Report] San Rafael Reef Rock Art
    By Udink in forum Rock Art & Ruins
    Replies: 15
    Last Post: 04-05-2012, 07:33 AM
  3. [Trip Report] Old Woman Wash, San Rafael Reef
    By Udink in forum Rock Art & Ruins
    Replies: 13
    Last Post: 02-25-2012, 12:22 PM
  4. [Trip Report] Ernie Benchmark - San Rafael Reef
    By Udink in forum Hiking, Scrambling & Peak Bagging
    Replies: 14
    Last Post: 01-12-2012, 07:34 AM
  5. [Trip Report] Day of the San Rafael Reef
    By coinslab in forum Rock Art & Ruins
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 10-20-2009, 06:05 PM

Visitors found this page by searching for:

Outdoor Forum

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •