CDT Segment 86 August 2024

I return to my adopted segment of the CDT, south of Pie Town at the northern tip of the Gila National Forest. I arrive at the southern terminus of the segment Thursday after dark in a downpour, and car camp. The next day I first work my way to Rincon Well, now dry, trying to fix a disappearing trail by scraping grass and building a couple of cairns.

At mid-day I drive to the northern terminus and backpack in. On the climb to the heights are a great deal of tumbleweed, Russian thistle, growing in the tread, which I have not encountered before.

This makes disappearing trail even more invisible. Along the heights are a large number of downed limbs and trees across the trail, pine and juniper. Some are quite large, and I am glad to have brought the KatanaBoy.

Rain started at 6PM, so I had to quit sawing and quickly make camp, not making it to my destination of Eman Well. Sixty-seven blowdowns were cleared. Rain showers continued sporadically through the night.

The next day I started at first light and hiked back to the trailhead at Surprise Tank. (The surprise is that there is no longer a tank at that location.)

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Limestone Canyon Scouting 2024

NMVFO and the Albuquerque Wildlife Federation have their annual joint restoration project at Limestone Canyon south of the VLA in the San Mateo Mountains, in about a week, so I went to scout the area. FR 476 is rugged enough to recommend a high-clearance vehicle. Approaching the canyon, signs of a mild recent ponderosa wildfire is visible. I think this is from the Fisher Fire, because I do not remember these scorch marks from last year.

The campsite looked mostly unharmed.

I went upstream in the Limestone drainage to check out structures, one-rock dams for the most part, that we worked on last year. I did not notice recent signs of water flow, or damp sand. I did not see signs of flooding in the past year, but I am just a newbie at restoration and do not see all the clues that our AWF brethren notice.

Then I went up the narrower Fisher Canyon drainage to check out rock structures, including a Zuni bowl we helped build last year. (The bowl shape is hard to make out in photos, but is clear in-person.)

Looking forward to a fine project.

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