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Thread: Bluejohn Spring and Millard Canyon Trail

  1. #1

    Bluejohn Spring and Millard Canyon Trail

    After my long weekend in southern Utah, I took a relaxing break at home for a weekend and then set out for another three-day weekend and did some tough but rewarding hikes in the southern Horseshoe Canyon area. Day one consisted of two hikes: Bluejohn Spring and the Millard Canyon Trail, for a combined total of seven miles. Alan rode with me in the Jeep and we were joined by Mike and Layne in a Land Rover for the drive from Price. We met Wade close to the start of the hike. We parked on the side of the road on Robbers Roost Flats and hiked east to Bluejohn Spring, where we were fairly certain we'd find some old cowboy names etched into the sandstone. It was about a mile across flat desert to the spring, which is in Bluejohn Canyon just above the start of the famous slot canyon. The spring itself was pretty weak with just a tiny trickle that dried up after a short distance.


    Parked on Robber's Roost Flats for a hike to Bluejohn Spring



    Hiking to Bluejohn Spring



    My shadow along a horse/burro trail to Bluejohn Spring



    Pine poles and a small trough



    Bluejohn Spring



    A smaller seep below Bluejohn Spring



    Beautiful snow-capped Henry Mountains



    We did find some inscriptions, including Jim Warner 1917, E.D. Leavitt, Joe Biddlecome, and one that I couldn't make out from the late 1800s. There was also a lot of Indian sign around. Unfortunately there was no rock art, but there was some lithic scatter all over and one spot with a huge concentration of chert flakes. On top of a cliff above the spring I found a deep, circular hole that looked man-made, and right next to the spring was a mano (used for grinding grain).


    Worked piece of chert from a huge discard pile at Bluejohn Spring



    Above Bluejohn Spring



    Possibly man-made hole in the ledges above Bluejohn Spring



    Mano at Bluejohn Spring



    Jim Warner inscription from April 4, 1917



    Faded inscriptions, including one from Joe Biddlecome



    View down Bluejohn Canyon toward the start of the slot canyon



    We hiked back to the vehicles then drove to our camp spot on the east side of Twin Corral Flats, near the rim of French Spring Fork. Paul had a lot farther to drive, coming from northern Utah, and he met us at camp before we set out for an afternoon hike. Our goal was to use the Millard Canyon Trail (also called Outlaw Trail) to drop below the Orange Cliffs (also referred to as "Under the Ledge"). There are relatively few breaks in the Orange Cliffs and most of them were used to get livestock from the high plateaus into the valleys and canyons of what is now Canyonlands National Park and Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. The hike started out with a gentle descent until reaching a cliff band. Once below the cliff band our route turned south and followed a shelf between two very tall cliff bands. The shelf was narrow in places and wider in others, and we saw signs of a constructed stock trail in a few spots. Eventually we came to a spot where a steep, long, rocky talus slope penetrates the lower cliff band and leads down into Millard Canyon.


    Near the start of the Millard Canyon Trail (aka Outlaw Trail) hike, with Cleopatra's Chair on the right



    Part of a difficult-to-photograph Ned Chaffin inscription



    Traversing around a dryfall



    Above Millard Canyon



    A large boulder below that was our destination



    One of the easy parts of the trail



    Cliffs looming above



    Millard Canyon Trail



    View back along the Millard Canyon Trail



    Cleo's Chair



    Thousands of small concretions



    First glimpse of the steep, rocky descent into Millard Canyon



    Inscriptions from 1953 and 1954



    Constructed part of the trail below



    Millard Canyon Trail



    Millard Canyon



    The La Sal Mountains over Millard Canyon



    Upon seeing the talus slope, nobody except Wade wanted to venture lower into the canyon (I was saving my legs for the following day's hike). He'd read about a large boulder there with cowboy inscriptions on it, so he dropped his pack and scrambled down to check it out. Alan waited at the top of the slope for Wade while the rest of us made our way further along the shelf toward the southern exit point. I stopped a few times while climbing back up the ledges to look for Wade and saw him jogging down in the canyon. Paul and I hiked out together while Layne and Mike went ahead. We got back to the road and had to hike just over a mile back to the Jeep, and we met Layne and Mike as they were driving back toward camp. They offered us a ride to the Jeep but it was so close that we chose to keep walking. We hopped in the Jeep and drove back down the road, and only had to wait a few minutes before Wade and Alan appeared over the ridge leading up from Millard Canyon. From there we drove back to camp and hit the sack early so we could be rested for the next day's long hike.


    Constructed steps



    Natural arch



    View of a portion of the trail between cliff bands that we traversed



    Climb out of the south side of the Millard Canyon Trail



    Paul taking in the view after the climb out



    Millard Canyon



    Our camp on the east side of Twin Corral Flats and near the rim of French Spring Fork



    Wade's camp setup





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  3. #2
    Nice. As always a great trip report.

    Sent from my SGH-T989 using Tapatalk

  4. #3
    Heck of a nasty drive in, At least for me dragging a horse trailer.
    We rode in using the old outlaw trail and returned coming out the normal route up the Big Sand Slide.

    Preparing to drop in


    On our way down . This trail in saves about 6 miles of riding. Folks that have studied the outlaws, suggest they didn't like riding the extra 6 miles when a posse was chasing them


    This is the Big Sand Slide that most folks use to access Horseshoe Canyon and the Outlaw Camp


    Our horses did great with the ledges we had to cross


    On our way back over to Blue John

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