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Oriflame to Cottonwood Canyon 3 day BP Messages in this topic - RSS

tommy750
tommy750
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4/25/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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As a very sketchy Plan B to a cancelled Santa Rosas backpack trip three weeks ago, Gary and I, the last hikers standing after cancellations, decided to head out to Oriflame Canyon. The canyon, an entry to the Lagunas for centuries, was first traveled by a European in 1772 (San Diego Military Commander Pedro Fages chasing deserters) and later by postmen, miners and ranchers. We started at the old CCC Camp Hark where workers carved out the Mason Truck Trail in the 1930s.

Steps from an abandoned Camp Hark structure.

Stairway to Oriflame by tomteske, on Flickr

Heading up Oriflame Creek. Still nice and green with lots of flowing water.

Oriflame Creek by tomteske, on Flickr

Really spent only minutes looking at GE and a topo map to plan the hike and only had a few points on the GPS. We were to head upstream till we got past BM Roost and then head left up to a "plateau" behind Oriflame Mt. where we would explore old mining and ranching sites. Gary was pretty skeptical but brought the wrong topo map so was stuck with me leading the way. Finally bush whacked our way 1,000 ft up to the base of BM Roost aided by brush clearing from prior fires.

BM Roost on the right and Whale in the background.

Boundary by tomteske, on Flickr

Lots of old troughs and feeder pipes leading mainly to tanks from the old ranching days.

Tank by tomteske, on Flickr

Made our way toward some mines high in Oriflame Canyon passing by beautiful magenta purple colored bushes I don't know the name of.

Magenta by tomteske, on Flickr

Magenta Bush by tomteske, on Flickr

Spent the night above a gurgling Oriflame Creek.

Camp 1 by tomteske, on Flickr

Never grow tired of this sound. Click to listen.

P1020525 by tomteske, on Flickr

The next day, headed nearby to explore some old mining ruins.

The remains of an old mining shack destroyed by one of recent fires.

Cabin Remnants by tomteske, on Flickr

Bed by tomteske, on FlickrOr

Nearby shafts.

Mine Shaft by tomteske, on Flickr

Shaft by tomteske, on Flickr

Lots of bush whacking on old mining roads choked with brush and fallen trees. Gary heading through a nice meadow.

Gary Grass by tomteske, on Flickr

Made it to a old ranching site with an abandoned car.

Wreck by tomteske, on Flickr

Door Handle by tomteske, on Flickr

Wandered a few feet away and stumbled onto lots of pottery and flakes and this nice green Desert Side Notch, abandoned before completion.

Green Point by tomteske, on Flickr

Unfinished by tomteske, on Flickr

My smugness didn't last long when a little bit up the trail, Gary found an amazing Paleoindian Lanceolate point.

Paleo by tomteske, on Flickr

Really weathered. Showed this pic to Jeff Sahagun, BLM Archaeologist, and he was quite impressed with Gary's find.

Paleo Point by tomteske, on Flickr

Finally made it to the top of Cottonwood Canyon. The old ranching road and now Cottonwood Hiking Trail would take us 2,000 ft to the canyon floor and our next camp next to the flowing Salt Creek.

Cottonwood Canyon by tomteske, on Flickr

Tommy750 by tomteske, on Flickr

Gary heading down.

Lone Hiker2 by tomteske, on Flickr

Camping next the the flowing Salt Creek and serenaded by frogs all night.

Salt Creek by tomteske, on Flickr

On the final day, visited a rock art site Daren said was nearby. Interesting cupules with four vertical grooves.

Pit and Groove by tomteske, on Flickr

Lots of old ranching and mining ruins on the valley floor. An old rock cabin partially hewn into the surrounding granite.

Rock House by tomteske, on Flickr

Chimney by tomteske, on Flickr

Carved by tomteske, on Flickr

View2 by tomteske, on Flickr

Looking west up Cottonwood Canyon.

Cottonwood Canyon 2 by tomteske, on Flickr

The trip ended up being about 19 miles, 4K G/L. Multiple streams crossed and lots of green for a change.

Gary holding the cold beers he hid in Oriflame Creek for our return. Enjoy. Tom

Three Cold Ones by tomteske, on Flickr
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dsefcik
dsefcik
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4/25/2017
dsefcik
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Nice trip Tom, wish I could have gone with you.

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ziphius
ziphius
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4/25/2017
ziphius
ziphius
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Trip reports like that make this forum great. smile Thanks. Gary and the beer storage, would have never thought of that....

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ziphius
ziphius
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4/25/2017
ziphius
ziphius
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Great point finds too. Was this an out-an-back trip or a counter-clockwise loop going through Mason Valley eventually?

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tommy750
tommy750
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4/25/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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dsefcik wrote:
Nice trip Tom, wish I could have gone with you.


Yep, you would have enjoyed yourself. Didn't realize how big Cottonwood Canyon really is looking at GE. That alone would be a nice three day trip.
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tommy750
tommy750
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4/25/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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ziphius wrote:
Great point finds too. Was this an out-an-back trip or a counter-clockwise loop going through Mason Valley eventually?



Always nice to find some artifacts especially since we were preceded by a zillion collectors and cattle hooves. We did a loop.

I'm thinking Gary's done the hide the beer in a stream thing before smile Great idea.
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rockhopper
rockhopper
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4/26/2017
rockhopper
rockhopper
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Tommy and Gary,
Great adventure! Nice to see running water. That's a great place to find "cooler " temps when our desert heats up. Did you guys have to go thru a lot of poison oak? I am a magnet for that stuff down near the creeks. The Oriflame / Rodriguez loop is a neat one too. Nice arrow points you guys found! Gary's looks very unusual and old!!!! Material made of ?? Your green point is neat too. Obviously these ancient peoples were using what ever they could find to manufacture arrow/spear points when the ancient Lake Cahuilla covered the best local obsidian source. btw I found a green point near the coast years back. I think they used rhyolite??? or other semi chipping material.
edited by rockhopper on 4/26/2017
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tommy750
tommy750
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4/26/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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rockhopper wrote:
Tommy and Gary,
Great adventure! Nice to see running water. That's a great place to find "cooler " temps when our desert heats up. Did you guys have to go thru a lot of poison oak? I am a magnet for that stuff down near the creeks. The Oriflame / Rodriguez loop is a neat one too. Nice arrow points you guys found! Gary's looks very unusual and old!!!! Material made of ?? Your green point is neat too. Obviously these ancient peoples were using what ever they could find to manufacture arrow/spear points when the ancient Lake Cahuilla covered the best local obsidian source. btw I found a green point near the coast years back. I think they used rhyolite??? or other semi chipping material.
edited by rockhopper on 4/26/2017


Very nice to see so much water. We carried 4L down into Cottonwood since we were skeptical we'd find water but ended up crossing streams multiple times and camping next to one. All those frogs going to make it through the hot summer?? We encountered some poison ivy while bushwhacking but Gary thought it was too early in the season to cause much reaction. Didn't have any problems fortunately. Gary's point was pretty neat and had to be in the thousands of years old and looked the part. Not really sure what it was made of but doesn't really look like stuff from around here.
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Andy
Andy
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4/27/2017
Andy
Andy
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What a great trip with the bonus of water. Does anyone know if a hike down Cottonwood Canyon from the PCT/ Sunrise HWY is feasible?
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tommy750
tommy750
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4/27/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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Andy wrote:
What a great trip with the bonus of water. Does anyone know if a hike down Cottonwood Canyon from the PCT/ Sunrise HWY is feasible?



Very feasible. The "trail" is a dirt road starting at Sunrise Hwy you can follow all the way down. Somewhere in the middle of your descent, there's going to be an area where the road is heavily channelized but you can just walk on either side. Should be about 3K elevation loss if you go all the way out to S2.

I think Schad mentions a hike down Cottonwood Canyon and is referring to a cross country route to the south down what the topo map labels as "Cottonwood Canyon."
edited by tommy750 on 4/27/2017
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dsefcik
dsefcik
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4/27/2017
dsefcik
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The Butterfield store even has a register book for people to sign that hike that area, it's out front of the store.

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ziphius
ziphius
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4/27/2017
ziphius
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Tommy, your magenta trees are Western Redbud! Very cool.

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tommy750
tommy750
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4/27/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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ziphius wrote:
Tommy, your magenta trees are Western Redbud! Very cool.



Awesome! Knew one of you would know what this was. Was a lovely color splash only along the banks of upper Oriflame Creek. Thanks, Ziphius!
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Britain
Britain
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5/2/2017
Britain
Britain
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Did you stay in Oriflame all the way to Cottonwood? I've over nighted near the top of Oriflame but never went into Conttonwood. Really nice pack!

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tommy750
tommy750
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5/2/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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Britain wrote:
Did you stay in Oriflame all the way to Cottonwood? I've over nighted near the top of Oriflame but never went into Conttonwood. Really nice pack!



We climbed out of Oriflame Canyon and ended up near BM Roost but then later rejoined Oriflame till we got to the road into Cottonwood. Looks like there would be a great view from the top of Oriflame Mt.

The pack is a Zpack Arc Zip and I really like it. The cuben fiber is a bit delicate for the desert but is still holding up fairly well.

http://www.zpacks.com/backpacks/arc_zip.shtml
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Britain
Britain
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5/2/2017
Britain
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Can you post tracks or a map? In 1980"s I hiked up with the kids. It was really over grown and difficult along the creek. I would like to give it a try in the future but don't want to end up being in a jungle. Almost like starting at the top of the Mason trail and going down. Haha in 2006 I lost a spare tire on my jeep on the Mason trail, the carrier broke loose and the tire went all the way down to the creek. Was a task getting the tire back.

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tommy750
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5/2/2017
tommy750
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Britain wrote:
Can you post tracks or a map? In 1980"s I hiked up with the kids. It was really over grown and difficult along the creek. I would like to give it a try in the future but don't want to end up being in a jungle. Almost like starting at the top of the Mason trail and going down. Haha in 2006 I lost a spare tire on my jeep on the Mason trail, the carrier broke loose and the tire went all the way down to the creek. Was a task getting the tire back.


We had the benefit of a previous fire that appeared to have been about 5-10 years ago but not sure which one. Initially walking on game trails by Oriflame Creek was working okay but it started to get pretty dense and we drifted up the south side of the canyon. This is a rough outline of our trip.

Oriflame Cottonwood by tomteske, on Flickr

Really nice pack!


Was a tad presumptuous thinking you were referring to MY pack. Gary's pack is probably from the Civil War smile
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Britain
Britain
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5/3/2017
Britain
Britain
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I think the fire was in 2006 or 7. I hiked the area on top of Mason once the brush was taken out by the fire. I had for a long time a pack with the aluminum frame for piling stuff on. Was about 60 lbs when loaded. Made hike the Sierras a task back in the day. Always interested in other packs.

Yes looks like the south side is the way to go. Almost looks like you kissed the PCT and then went south.

Thanks for the info. I may go up Mason and do some photos of that area before I do it.

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tommy750
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5/3/2017
tommy750
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Britain wrote:
I think the fire was in 2006 or 7. I hiked the area on top of Mason once the brush was taken out by the fire.



As best I can figure from the internet, the Oriflame area was burned out by the 2002 Pines Fire. A little of the descent into Cottonwood got hit by the 2013 Chariot Fire. Cause of the Pines Fire is kinda interesting: http://www.fire.ca.gov/cdf/incidents/Pines%20Fire_73/news_files/34_Causerelease.pdf Think it was some sort of drug interdiction mission looking for pot farms.
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dsefcik
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5/3/2017
dsefcik
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And we all remember the Chariot fire was during the annual BHS Count...
As seen from our Rattlesnake Spring count site with my 500mm lens



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Britain
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5/4/2017
Britain
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Your probably right on the year. The brush was fairly cleared off in 2006

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Britain
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5/4/2017
Britain
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There's was another fire in the area more north. Burned up Granite mountain in 2012. In 2014 on a hike trying to peak I found a firemans radio on the ridgeline near the top. It was pretty much burned up.

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Britain
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5/4/2017
Britain
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Questions:
Is there any private property you need to be aware of? From satellite photo is that a truck trail leading down to cottonwood? I will probably pull out of Oraflame where it curves south and go up the southside to the semi level area. Would I be missing anything worth snooping at by doing this?

I'm so looking forward in doing this next year.

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tommy750
tommy750
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5/4/2017
tommy750
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Britain wrote:
Your probably right on the year. The brush was fairly cleared off in 2006



Daren pointed me to caltopo.com some years ago and they have a nice fire history overlay that is a lot easier to use than searching calfire's site (fire.ca.gov). Took me a while to figure out the Pines fire since it was so large a burn you have to zoom out to see the name.

caltopo by tomteske, on Flickr

Regarding private property boundaries, the whole north end of Cottonwood is pretty much private property. Caltopo has an overlay for that as well but it didn't correlate exactly with what Gary and I saw on the ground. Use your best judgment I guess.

Nice radio find. Tom
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sddarkman619
sddarkman619
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5/20/2017
sddarkman619
sddarkman619
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what shelter is that? a Tarptent? Looking for a shelter.
where did you park vehicles so they weren't messed with?
Nice writeup thanks for sharing!
edited by sddarkman619 on 5/20/2017
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tommy750
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5/20/2017
tommy750
tommy750
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sddarkman619 wrote:
what shelter is that? a Tarptent? Looking for a shelter.
where did you park vehicles so they weren't messed with?
Nice writeup thanks for sharing!
edited by sddarkman619 on 5/20/2017


Got an altaplex tent from zpacks.com last year and really like it. It weighs in at 18 oz making it lighter than a lot of bivy sacks. If you're not too tall, their solplex is less than a pound. I like tents because they keep bugs away but obviously there's pros and cons.

We left our vehicles at the Camp Hark ruins. Never have had any problems leaving a vehicle at local sites but not sure about others' experiences.
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sddarkman619
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5/20/2017
sddarkman619
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So that shelter in the photos is the altaplex? Yeah I like tents too because they keep the bugs and snakes out. but just thinking lighter and adventurous. smile
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Rocko1
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1/2/2018
Rocko1
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tommy750 wrote:
sddarkman619 wrote:
what shelter is that? a Tarptent? Looking for a shelter.
where did you park vehicles so they weren't messed with?
Nice writeup thanks for sharing!
edited by sddarkman619 on 5/20/2017


Got an altaplex tent from zpacks.com last year and really like it. It weighs in at 18 oz making it lighter than a lot of bivy sacks. If you're not too tall, their solplex is less than a pound. I like tents because they keep bugs away but obviously there's pros and cons.

We left our vehicles at the Camp Hark ruins. Never have had any problems leaving a vehicle at local sites but not sure about others' experiences.



Those are very nice tents. I just can't bring myself to spend that kind of coin on a shelter.
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dsefcik
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10/21/2019
dsefcik
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dsefcik wrote:
The Butterfield store even has a register book for people to sign that hike that area, it's out front of the store.


No more register, new owners and it is gone.

Enjoyed re-reading this TR, great work Tom.

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