Tag Archives: Upper Hell Hole Trail

upper Hell Hole Trail 2024-10

Yes, I did one last mountain backpack of the season in October, and no, I didn’t get around to posting until today.

photo of creek dogwood, Cornus sericea
Cornus sericia

I went up on the Amtrak bus, because I’d missed the California Zephyr, TART to Tahoe City, and then walked to Kaspian Campground (TART west shore ends earlier in the day) and slept there (closed after Labor Day). I missed the Zephyr because I was looking over possible trans-Sierra routes that might have been used by a horseback break-off from the Stephens-Townsend-Murphy party in 1844. A person named Bob Crowley is investigating, and it captured my attention. Apparently they ended up on the Middle Fork American on the west side, which reduces likely routes.

Up Blackwood Canyon the cottonwoods were a brilliant yellow. I think Blackwood might be named for these black cottonwoods (Populus trichocarpa). The aspens were beginning to turn, but not bright, and I suspect this will be a mild color year for aspens. Creek dogwoods (Cornus sericea) were pale red to bright red. Forest thinning has been going on all summer and still in Blackwood Canyon, and the buzz of chain saws is constant.

Most creeks are still flowing. I’ve noticed that if a creek makes it through the end of the summer, it will continue, whereas if it does not, it will not recover in the fall. Shorter and cooler days, and lessened evapotranspiration free more water to the creeks.

I crossed Barker Pass and walked to the Powderhorn trailhead, then down Powderhorn to Diamond Crossing. There are some new trees down on Powderhorn since my last trailwork September, and more debris. This will be a constant for years. There was a light dusting of snow in shady areas, from a storm a few days before.

I camped at my common spot along Five Lakes Creek below Diamond Crossing.

I intended to walk the whole Hell Hole Trail to the bottom, but short days and a late start meant that I only did the upper trail, a bit beyond Steamboat Creek. The creek is dry, as it almost always is in the fall; it is an early season creek only in most years. Both forks of Buckskin Creek were flowing, though low. The trail has a lot of debris, which surprised me until I remembered that it had been four years since I’d done work including debris clearing on this trail. There are a few new trees down, and a lot of leaners and spars, which I can take care of next year with a folding saw. It will take at least two trips to clear debris again and the small cutting. Though not as bad as the red fir forest, this forest will continue to need maintenance. There is relatively little brush on this trail, compared to many. As with most trails in the Granite Chief, there is more maintenance by bears and deer than by people.

The black oaks (Quercus kelloggii) fall colors were mostly yellow, but with spots of red and orange. A wonderful time of year at this elevation (1800 m, 5900 feet).

GaiaGPS Gaia Topo layer shows two trails descending to the Rubicon, neither of which are on the alignment of the trail I’ve been maintaining. They may or may not exist, I’ll check on a future trip. Also shown is a road from the current end at Grayhorse Creek all the way around the head of Hell Hole Reservoir. I doubt that it exists, or ever existed, but again, will check it out. All of the ‘trails’ in the Hell Hole area a old non-maintained trails or use routes, except for the trail along the south side of the reservoir to the campground, which has been constructed though not much maintained. Most people access the campground by boat, not trail.

The next day I hike out, same route as in, up Powderhorn, over Barker Pass, down Blackwood Canyon, out to Kaspian Campground. The forecast was for a very cold night that night, particularly in Truckee which is often colder than Tahoe City, so I caught the TART bus and took Greyhound home. The Greyhound is the last bus of the day westbound, after the Amtrak buses.

That’s it for this year! I’ll be back to the Granite Chief in June or July, depending on snow melt.