Saturday, June 29, 2019

Cavanal Mountain, OK

Hiked: 6/28/2019
Distance: Drive up
Summit Elevation: 2385'
Prominence: 1765'
Elevation Gain: 0'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 0
Round trip time: N/A
Recommended water: 0 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on County Road D1340
Difficulty: Easy

I passed through Poteau, OK on the way to visit family in Fayetteville, AR. I attended grades 8-12 here and made many trips by car to the top of Cavanal. A paved road goes all the way the top (Witteville, then County Road D1340) with custom homes built along the lower half. The broad, flat summit area is crammed with radio towers and a lookout platform with picnic tables. Locally, it was called Cavanal Hill, the world's highest hill, but this was just folklore. A sign at the top erroneously lists the elevation as 1999', but the USGS named it Cavanal Mountain with an elevation of 2385'. Views are non-existent due to tree coverage, except for limited views from the lookout point. After the pavement ended, there were several dirt roads. I drove down one looking for the old fire lookout tower, but couldn't get too far in my low clearance rental sedan. I did see two deer. They had long, white tails, very different than the California mule deer I am used to seeing. Cavanal is Oklahoma's second most prominent peak -- a nice bonus.

Technically, Cavanal was my first "real" hike as an 11 mile round trip starting at my friend Darren's house a mile away from the base back in 1983. I was still in college and wanted to test myself by jogging to the top and back. I jogged the flat parts and maybe a half mile of uphill before walking the rest of the way. I can't remember exactly how long it took me, but my guess is between 4-5 hours. I remember being sore the next couple of days since jogging/hiking long distances was not a thing I did then. There are many more houses along the road now, and many more radio towers. It also seems smaller than it did to the 1983 version of myself. The whole experience was quite a nostalgic trip.


Cavanal from the elementary school



Local lore, actual elevation 2385'



View from the lookout platform

Thursday, June 27, 2019

Goat Peak

Hiked: 6/27/2019
Distance: 3 miles round trip on trail
Summit Elevation: 1728'
Elevation Gain: 1167'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 1.0
Round trip time: 2 hours
Recommended water: 24 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Quiet Valley Lane
Difficulty: Easy

I drove to Poway for a short hike to Goat Peak, one of the small mountains on the opposite side of highway 67 from Woodson and Iron Mountain in San Diego County. I parked east of Goat Peak in a cul-de-sac at the end of Quiet Valley Lane. A trail took off from there, following Poway Creek. There were several dry crossings and it was easy to follow even though vegetation was intruding slightly into the trail. The bottom part of the trail is shared with horses who left ample evidence of their passing. I climbed steeply out of the creek toward a small plateau. As I neared the plateau, I spotted what I thought was a fresh pile of horse scat, but as I got closer saw was a large red diamond rattlesnake. Red diamonds are my favorite brand of rattlesnake and although this one was more brownish than red in color, it was beautiful. This was the first red diamond I'd seen in the wild. It was coiled and resting on the edge of the 2' wide trail, facing the trail. There was thick brush on both sides so I tapped my hiking pole on the ground but could not get it to move. After a few minutes, I gave in, bushwhacking uphill behind and around it, getting back to the trail about 25' beyond. I marked a waypoint on my GPS so I wouldn't stumble on it on the way back.


Start






Red diamond rattlesnake in the trail




Close up, what a fine looking snake!


Goat Peak ahead

From the plateau, it was a short hike to the base of the summit rocks, then a short class 2 scramble to the top. There was a small register in a glass jar. I signed in an ate the peanut butter and honey sandwich I brought. Goat had nice views of the more popular Poway mountains and hazy views of larger mountains to the south. The June gloom burned off into a sunny morning. I had to get back to pack for a trip to visit family, so I started down. I slowed to a crawl as I neared the mark where I left the snake. It was harder to see from this side, but I found it exactly where I left it. I decided to persuade it to move by rolling small rocks on the ground at it. The first one bounced off it with no reaction, the second one missed. The third one turned it into an anger ball. It flipped into striking position, ignited the rattle, and slowly backed down the trail, loudly hissing at the same time. The display was very impressive and the combination of the rattle and hissing was visceral. This was a proud and fierce representative of the species. I tried to get a video, but bungled my camera from adrenaline. Still kicking myself over that. It retreated into the brush on the right, but continued to rattle and hiss. I couldn't tell where it was so I ended up bushwhacking on the other side to give it plenty of room. All I had accomplished was pissing it off and moving it from a comfy spot. That was a poor outcome for both of us. The rest of the way out was uneventful. Goat was a fun little peak, with or without the red diamond friend.


Summit




Woodson and North Iron Mountain


Iron Mountain


Looking back down the creek


Saturday, June 8, 2019

Iron Spring Mountain and Beauty Peak

Hiked: 6/7/2019
Distance: 9.9 miles round trip on trail and use trail
Summit Elevation: 5755' (Iron Spring), 5548' (Beauty)
Prominence: 1075' (Iron Spring), 388' (Beauty)
Elevation Gain: 2843'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 2.2
Round trip time: 6 hours 40 minutes
Recommended water: 120 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Tule Peak Road
Difficulty: Moderate

Iron Spring and Beauty are in north San Diego County. Like Rabbit, these were on my want-to-do list for a while and finally made it to the gonna-do-today list. Both are HPS summits not far above the 5000' minimum. I drove in on Tule Peak Road and found it very rough and rutted. Only after the hike did I check the Sierra Club driving directions that avoid the poor section of road. A sedan can make it to the starting point.

I started up the overgrown trail looking for the major gully. The grass was knee high in places and the path was not clear. Once I found the gully, a better use trail appeared that went up the left side. After that, it followed the drainage up to a large clearing and intersection with Iron Spring Trail. On the way to the clearing, I brushed off 10 ticks. I was on pace for a record setting tick day. Iron Spring Trail was wide and clear. I continued south toward Beauty and casually walked right past the use trail junction. I reversed course and marked a waypoint at the junction to help find my way out later. The use trail was clipped most of the way and there were frequent cairns, but it was still fairly difficult to follow. Navigation was non-trivial and it slowed me down. It was narrow and overgrown in many places. After going over a couple of bumps, I got to the base of Beauty. The final ascent was quite steep and ended with a class 2 scramble. There was a benchmark and reference mark on top and a few HPS registers. I signed in and took my first break, clearing foxtails from my shoes and socks. Views were nicer than expected. Then I headed back toward Iron Spring Mountain.


Start


The gully




Approaching Beauty


Class 2 finish




Looking through the glare at Iron Spring


At the clearing, I took the Iron Spring Trail the other direction a short distance before reaching the Iron Spring use trail on the left. This use trail was easier to follow than the one to Beauty, but still had narrow overgrown places. By this time, I had attracted a swarm of bothersome bugs coming back from Beauty. I broke down and put on the bug net. The bug net was the best $3 I've ever spent. I kept it on all the way to the Iron Spring summit. The steepest part of this trail was the climb up and over Peak 5725. Then, it was just another quarter mile of relatively flat terrain to Iron Spring with its thousand feet of prominence. The use trail got poor at the very end with tall grass refilling my shoes and socks with foxtails. I didn't find any benchmarks on the Iron Spring summit, but I flipped through the register and noted the 25th and final signature from Mars Bonfire. I took my second break and rested up for the return. I only picked up three more ticks on the way down for a total of 13, not coming close to my 21-tick record. I wasn't sure I had brushed all of them off until I got home in the shower. No bites today. The GPS was useful on this trip for the trickiest spots.



Approaching Iron Spring




Looking across to Beauty Peak





Back down the gully



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