by Rob » Mon Apr 03, 2023 9:43 am
Date Hiked: April 2, 2023
General Condition: Passable (some brush and/or deadfalls, tread evident)
I hiked from South Coast Ridge Road (by way of Three Peaks), down to the Spruce Creek Trail junction. No idea what things are like below there. The last time I hiked this trail was in May 2017, just for reference.
The upper section in the chaparral was very pleasant, and seemed to be holding up nicely. Some sections were a bit loose, probably due to erosion.
There were a few small blowdowns as I descended to Estrella, and there was the same section of steep, loose scree where you have to kick steps and/or be careful. Estrella seemed to be very pleasant, and with some judicious routefinding I did not have to use my water shoes to cross.
I went to go look at the waterfall below Estrella, and it was going full blast, very nice. The slopes were still a bit moist, so that might have helped with footing.
There were an assortment of blowdowns on the way down to Spruce Camp, and a washout with some downed trees where it looks like folks have been (very) carefully descending below the trail. There was one section that was washed out, but with some downed trees. One of the trees had a fresh flag labelled "killer tree" (or so it looked). Also some steep, narrow parts, but that is nothing new.
The crossing just before Spruce Camp looked a bit spicy in boots if I wanted to keep them dry, so I crossed in water shoes. Spruce Camp looked dark, wet, and not particularly inviting.
A switchback above Spruce Camp appeared to have washed out. There was a flag and what looked like a fresh detour (steep). Not much else to report on the way to the junction.
[b]Date Hiked:[/b] April 2, 2023
[b]General Condition:[/b] Passable (some brush and/or deadfalls, tread evident)
I hiked from South Coast Ridge Road (by way of Three Peaks), down to the Spruce Creek Trail junction. No idea what things are like below there. The last time I hiked this trail was in May 2017, just for reference.
The upper section in the chaparral was very pleasant, and seemed to be holding up nicely. Some sections were a bit loose, probably due to erosion.
There were a few small blowdowns as I descended to Estrella, and there was the same section of steep, loose scree where you have to kick steps and/or be careful. Estrella seemed to be very pleasant, and with some judicious routefinding I did not have to use my water shoes to cross.
I went to go look at the waterfall below Estrella, and it was going full blast, very nice. The slopes were still a bit moist, so that might have helped with footing.
There were an assortment of blowdowns on the way down to Spruce Camp, and a washout with some downed trees where it looks like folks have been (very) carefully descending below the trail. There was one section that was washed out, but with some downed trees. One of the trees had a fresh flag labelled "killer tree" (or so it looked). Also some steep, narrow parts, but that is nothing new.
The crossing just before Spruce Camp looked a bit spicy in boots if I wanted to keep them dry, so I crossed in water shoes. Spruce Camp looked dark, wet, and not particularly inviting.
A switchback above Spruce Camp appeared to have washed out. There was a flag and what looked like a fresh detour (steep). Not much else to report on the way to the junction.