Showing posts with label Cucamonga Wilderness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cucamonga Wilderness. Show all posts

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Falling Rock Canyon

Lower Falling Rock Canyon
Falling Rock Canyon is one of those places that I felt the entire local hiking community had visited except me. I had looked at it on maps and glanced at it numerous times on my way up Icehouse Canyon, but I had never ventured into its rugged and shady depths. Some other peak or destination always took precedence. So last weekend I decided to fill that embarrassing gap in my San Gabriel Mountains experience. There's a ton of good route descriptions on-line so I'll dispense with that. To paraphrase Cracker, what the world needs now is another route description, like I need a hole in my head.

I rolled into the parking lot at Icehouse late to find it packed to the gills as usual. To my great fortune, however, there was an open spot right of front which I dutifully snagged. A good omen. Out of the car and up the trail that was heavy with weekend warriors like myself, I broke ranks with the herd just beyond the first switch-back and dropped into the stream-bed. There I was compelled to pause for a moment to absorb the colorful foliage and listen to the water music from Icehouse Creek. Leaf litter littered the ground and obscured the faint path forward, so I just aimed for the obvious gash in the side of the canyon whose entrance was choked with fallen rocks. Yeah, this had to be the way.

Icehouse Canyon

Sunburst in the Forest

Entrance to Falling Rock Canyon
Once in the confines of the canyon, I quickly encountered the first and second dry waterfalls. After a false start that left me more exposed than I was comfortable with, I gingerly backtracked a bit, tacked left, and then ascended some scree before rejoining the canyon above the second falls. Here, the narrow canyon climbs steadily up before moderating some in its higher reaches. This is a really an enjoyable stretch, one of the nicer places I've been in the San Gabriels, so I slowed my pace here as I picked my way through the rocks. I was only going as far as Sugarloaf so there was really no need to rush things.

The route descriptions I had read told me that I would ultimately exit Falling Rock Canyon on the right at the first scree field. Cairns marked the spot I was told. In short order, I came upon a cairn at the base of a steep slope coming in from the right that I told myself could be characterized as a scree field. Looking at the hillside, it was evident that folks had either been up or had come down here so I surmised this was the exit point. Thus, I began to climb but with some uncertainty.

The sledding here was tough. The angle was very steep. The rock was loose and crumbly. And every two steps forward resulted in one step back. I soldered on for about 20 minutes and then stopped to take stock of the situation. This didn't feel right. Either everyone else is more capable than me (which I admit is a distinct possibility), or I had taken a wrong turn. So I slowly made my way back into the canyon bottom resigned to the possibility that I might not make it to Sugarloaf.

But the day was still relatively young, and I was already here, so I figured there was no harm in continuing up the canyon just to see what was there. After rock-hopping for a bit in the slowly narrowing canyon, a bigger and more defined scree field spilled in from the right. There was no cairn to mark the location, but looking up it appeared to top out at a saddle. With nothing to lose, and a new belief that this must be the place, I began picking my way up the rock pile.

As it turned out, this in fact was the place. After a relatively short but steep rock slog, I topped out at a saddle between Ontario Peak and Sugarloaf. Here, a distinct use trail veered northwest toward Sugarloaf and the southern ridge route to Ontario was in view. I stopped to take in water and peer into the deep recesses of Cherry Canyon.

Lower Falling Rock Canyon

Looking Down Falling Rock Canyon

The Correct Scree Field

Use Trail to Sugarloaf

The North Side of Ontario Peak

Mt. Baldy from the Saddle

View South Into Cherry Canyon
From the saddle, it was just a short hop, skip, and jump over a false bump or two to Sugarloaf. On the flat, rocky summit I found a well-maintained register which I dutifully signed. Flipping through the pages I saw several names I recognized. Hikerhodi was in there several times. Dima Kogan had logged in after scaling Ontario Peak from Cascade Canyon. Feeling inferior, I put the register back in its canister home and enjoyed the fine scenery that Sugarloaf affords. To the northeast, the 3 Ts were plainly in site. Telegraph Peak loomed particularly large. To the northwest across Icehouse Canyon, Mt. San Antonio dominated the skyline. And to the south, was a unique look at Ontario Peak.

After lazing about for awhile, I picked myself up and made my way back to the saddle. Then it was a quick scree-ski into the shade of Falling Rock Canyon and a rock-hop back to Icehouse. In the car and out of San Antonio Canyon, I realized the Claremont Craft Ales was conveniently and dangerously nearby. So of course I made a visit to sample their Grapefruit IPA before calling it a day. For you beer aficionados, Claremont's Grapefruit IPA is decent, but I'd personally use a lighter hand on the grapefruit if I was brewing. I did sample their Mosaic Dry IPA which I found to be exceptional. I'll probably order that on my next visit. Cheers!

Upper San Antonio Canyon
The 3 T's - Thunder, Telegraph, and Timber

Ontario's Peak's North Side

Mt. San Antonio, Up Close and Personal

Telegraph Peak 

Grapefruit IPA at Claremont Craft Ales

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Etiwanda Peak: Jack Webb Edition

West Baldy, Baldy, Harwood, Telegraph, Pine, and Timber
You youngsters may not remember Jack Webb. He played Sergeant Joe Friday (and Harry Morgan played his side-kick, Bill Gannon) on the late 1960s television series "Dragnet." In that series, Sergeant Joe Friday was a fictional LA police detective whose mis-attributed signature catchphrase was "Just the facts, Ma'am."

Well, because I've not felt particularly creative, motivated, or inspired of late to pound out flowery and verbose trip reports, I'm opting here for something a bit more truncated than normal. So, in a nod to Joe Friday, here are "just the facts" about a recent trip to Etiwanda Peak by way of Icehouse Canyon and the Cucamonga Peak trail.

I arrived at Icehouse Canyon around 9:00 a.m. on a Sunday morning to find the parking lot predictably and completely packed. There was no room at the Inn so me and a bunch of other late-sleeping losers had to park 1/4 mile up Mt. Baldy Road.

Like the parking lot, the trail was busy. Water was flowing in the lower stretches of the canyon but it quickly disappeared from the creek-bed by the time I passed the last cabin. Further up the canyon, reliable Columbine Spring was still flowing. As usual, the trail to the saddle was in good shape.

Water Flowing in Lower Icehouse Canyon

Am I in SEKI?


Columbine Spring
Looking Back Down Icehouse Canyon

Mt. Baldy from Upper Icehouse Canyon
At the saddle, I took a quick breather to hydrate and have a snack. There were folks there, but not as many as expected given the situation in the parking lot below. The mountains have a curious way hiding a great number of people in their innumerable slots, nooks, crannies, and folds.

Timber Peak from Cucamonga Peak Trail

Looking Into Upper Cucamonga Canyon

View Into Middle Fork Lytle Creek Drainage

Ascending the Cucamonga Peak Trail - Big Horn, Timber, and Telegraph
Beyond the saddle, the hordes of hikers thinned, but there were still a bunch of folks making their way out to Cucamonga Peak. I was sucking gas as I labored up the switch-backs on the north side of Cucamonga and was feeling disgusted about the state of my conditioning until I passed several groups of youngsters 30 years my junior struggling even more than me. After that, I only felt embarrassed about the pathetic attempts to finish off the never-ending switch-backs.

The Trail Less Traveled

Ridgeline View Before Etiwanda

Looking East Toward Gorgonio and San Jacinto from Etiwanda

View South from Eitwanda Peak

East Face of Cucamonga Peak from Etiwanda

Looking to Joe Elliot Campground and San Sevaine Road
Beyond the junction with the use trail to Cucamonga Peak, other hikers disappeared entirely and for the next 1.25 miles, I had the run of the place. Atop Etiwanda (which has the best views of any peak in the range), I found the summit register and logged in. The most recent entry was five days earlier which confirmed that Etiwanda doesn't see much traffic.

On the way down, I splashed in the creek in lower Icehouse Canyon as other hikers looked on in bemusement at the crazy old guy joyously playing in the water like a child. But I couldn't help myself. In my hot and dusty condition, the icy cold stream was too much of an attractive nuisance to ignore.

The app on my mobile device reports total mileage for this trip at about 14.5 with around 5,100 feet of total elevation gain. The Sierra Club Hundred Peaks Section has the total mileage at 17, but that seems excessive to me (and to Tom Harrison). I'm going with Tom Harrison.