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Base Camp Las Vegas. Deborah Wall
Читать онлайн.Название Base Camp Las Vegas
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isbn 9780997236989
Автор произведения Deborah Wall
Жанр Книги о Путешествиях
Серия Base Camp
Издательство Ingram
From the Willow Springs Picnic Area, which serves as the main parking area for this hike, walk up the rough, gravel Rocky Gap Road. This road was once called the old Pahrump Highway or the Potato Road, and was a major route to Pahrump for about fifty years starting in the early 1900s.
After one-half mile you will cross Red Rock Wash (usually dry, but a major drainage). After crossing the wash continue up the road about 130 yards and you will see the sign that marks the official La Madre Spring trailhead on your right.
From the signed trailhead head up the now-abandoned jeep road which will bring you high on the west bank of Red Rock Wash. You will be in a pinyon-juniper plant community which in this area includes scrub oak, Mormon tea, sagebrush, manzanita, Mojave yucca and prickly pear cactus.
About one-half mile after leaving Rocky Gap Road you will come to a signed junction. To the right is the White Rock Loop Trail that circles north around the White Rock Hills and back to the Willow Springs Picnic Area, about six miles in total. For the La Madre Spring hike, however, you continue straight ahead.
Travel about three-tenths miles farther and you will see an obvious and wide spur trail on the right. This fifty-yard side trip takes you to an old house foundation. I paced it out to be about fifty-five by thirty feet. There are still some remains of the old floor tile; very strong glue has held it in place through about four decades of desert heat and cold.
Off the main trail there is another short spur trail on the left where you can find another foundation about the same size.
Continuing up the main route about four-tenths miles you will arrive at the official end of the trail, marked by an interpretive sign. From here look down the embankment and you will see the pond and dam surrounded by Baltic rush, bulrush and other water-loving plants. La Madre Spring itself is located upstream.
A small dam creates a little pond, a haven for water loving plants. This area is frequented by mule deer and desert bighorn sheep in early mornings and evenings. La Madre Spring is upstream.
This is a lovely place to have lunch or just relax on the wide flat areas and listen for birds. Desert bighorn sheep and mule deer are often seen here in mornings and evenings.
Although this ends the official hike you can continue upstream on a well-worn, yet narrow path within a pretty canyon, and about one-half-mile farther will come to the remains of an old miner’s cabin. This area was privately owned until 1975 when the Bureau of Land Management acquired it.
Along the way you will have to do many stream crossings but need not get wet, for the stream is usually only a couple of feet wide. The most pleasant part of hiking upstream is the sound of the water as it flows through the constricted drainage under a thick, low canopy of vegetation.
La Madre Spring Trail At A Glance
Best season: October–April.
Length: 3.6 miles roundtrip from Willow Springs Picnic Area.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Elevation gain: 715 feet.
Trailhead elevation: 4,580 at Willow Springs Picnic Area or 4,804 at official trailhead.
Warning: Flash flood danger.
Jurisdiction: Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area.
Directions: From Red Rock Canyon’s main entrance, take the 13-mile Scenic Loop Drive for about 7.5 miles. Go right and drive 0.6 miles, parking on the right at Willow Springs Picnic Area. If you have a high-clearance, four-wheel-drive vehicle you can drive 0.6 miles farther to the official trailhead.
5 Children’s Discovery Trail and Lost Creek
This is a loop trail with the opportunity to take a short side trip to a seasonal waterfall in Lost Creek Canyon. Besides the waterfall, it accesses a creek, an agave-roasting pit, pictographs made by American Indians, and interesting plant life. With appealing elements for adults and children alike, it makes an ideal introductory hike.
The trip is easy but one must actually hike. Strollers and little ones’ legs don’t work well here because of uneven, rocky terrain, sandstone steps, stream crossings and slippery rocks near the water. Small children need to be in a child-carrier pack of some sort.
From the parking area, take the trail at the far right, well marked as the Children’s Discovery Trail. After less than five minutes you will cross the broad Red Rock Wash. This is usually a dry stream, but if you happen to find a good flow of water here, or even if it rains when you visit, save this hike for another day. This wash is a major drainage, so flash flooding is common, and it is possible to walk across the wash dry-footed, yet be unable to return safely just a few minutes later.
On the other side of the wash, the trail narrows and begins an easy ascent up rocky terrain interspersed with smooth sandstone steps, into a plant community of manzanita, shrub live oak, juniper, and pinyon pines.
For the next quarter-mile the area contains important cultural resources — fragile and non-renewable evidence of prehistoric occupation. This area is known to have provided a seasonal camp for American Indians.
Look for the sign indicating the location of an agave-roasting pit, sometimes called a prehistoric kitchen, near a large pinyon pine. The native people created such pits by burying the basketball-sized hearts of the agave plant, along with rocks heated in a fire, which cooked this favorite food slowly and thoroughly. Vanishing elsewhere, the pits are still common around Red Rock Canyon.
You will find a signed spur trail on the right, to Willow Springs Picnic Area; the side trip is less than a mile one way. Continuing on the main loop, on your right you will notice sandstone cliffs that have many overhangs. Keep an eye out above and around these because sometimes you can see desert bighorn sheep, especially in the early morning.
There also are a few pictographs in this area. They are very faint so it might take you a while to spot them. But they’re worth looking for, as pictographs are not common in our area. Unlike petroglyphs, the more common but equally irreplaceable form of rock writing, pictographs are painted. Pictographs tend to weather away, and both kinds are easily damaged by the touch of human hands, boots, etc.
About one half-mile from the trailhead take the unmarked spur trail on your right, towards narrow Lost Creek Canyon. You will need to make a couple of minor crossings over the creek. The trail also passes by a ponderosa tree, an unusual sight at this relatively low elevation. Because of the water and cooler temperature, a handful of ponderosas grow not only here but also in nearby Pine Creek Canyon. If you are unsure which of the large pines are ponderosas, smell the bark; its scent resembles that of vanilla.
Continue up the sandstone steps, which will bring you under the wedge where two giant boulders have fallen against each other, forming a roof over the trail for a few feet. The trail ends about fifteen yards from here inside a box canyon, highlighted by Lost Creek Falls. About fifty feet high, the falls are seasonal; the best time to see them is usually January through March.
On your return from Lost Creek Falls side trail, continue down the Discovery Trail and you will come to a wooden boardwalk. This walkway and deck serve a higher purpose than merely keeping your feet dry. This is a riparian restoration area, and the boardwalk protects all sorts of plants from getting trampled, including wild grapes, horsetails, watercress, grasses and rushes. It also protects critical habitat for the southeastern Nevada springsnail.
From the viewing deck you can see Lost Creek as it flows under the willows, which form a broad canopy over the creek. Benches are built into the walkway, making this a good place to stop for a while and listen to the gentle sounds of the creek and the local birds, who like this spot as much as we do.