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Hiking opportunities range from short nature walks to
longer backcountry hikes. More than 800 miles of trail allow
exploration of areas otherwise inaccessible.
Mogollon
Rim Area:
Willow Springs #536, Hangman #600,
Los Burros:
#631, Pole Knowl
#602, Government Springs #95A
Past Sunrise turn off;
South Fork #97, Indian Springs #627,
Past Springerville,:
Murray Basin #607, Escudilla #308, Williams
Valley #80A

For excellent maps and
descriptions of hiking trails see Tracks website:
http://www.tracks-pinetop-lakeside.org/
Hikes south of Alpine and
a couple in Pinetop are described at:
http://www.arizonahikingtrails.com/showlowhikes.asp
Pinetop Lakeside area:
White Mountain Trail
System Trails are marked with blue diamonds and are all
open to bikes. They often bear directional arrows, trail
numbers, or colored dots. Yellow dots indicate a short route
back to the trailhead. Green dots indicate a connector trail.
Red dots indicate a side trail to a point of interest or a
particularly scenic vista.
The trails frequently make
use of and cross existing roads and travel ways. It's very easy
to miss a trail marker and lose the trail. Expect this. If you
become confused, backtrack to the point where you lost the
trail. Portions of the trail system use forest roads. Be aware
of possible vehicle traffic.
Partnership with the
Forest Service, Pinetop/Lakeside TRACKS, and the Arizona State
Parks Heritage Trails Fund have helped build these trails.
Volunteers have built the majority of the White Mountain Trail
System. If you or your community service group is interested in
volunteering, contact the U.S. Forest Service or
Pinetop/Lakeside Parks and Recreation Department.
All
of the trails in the White Mountain Trail System are open to
bicycles and horses..
These trails below are described on the Tracks website.
http://www.tracks-pinetop-lakeside.org/
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#107 Blue
Ridge Trail
Length: 8 miles
Rating: Difficult Use: Heavy Elevation:
6,950-7,656 ft.
#608 Blue
Ridge Cave Trail
Length: 3.5 miles Rating: Difficult Use:
Moderate
Elevation: 6,700-7,200 ft.
#629 Land
of the Pioneers
Length: 11 miles 7
miles short loop Rating: Difficult
Use: Light Elevation: 7,220-7,866 ft.
#631 Los
Burros
Length: 13 miles
Rating: Moderate Use: Light Elevation:
7,800-8,370 ft.
#632
Country Club
Length: 3.5 miles
Rating: Moderate Use: Moderate Elevation:
7,190-7,612 ft.
#633 The
Springs
Length: 3.8 miles
Use: Moderate/Heavy Elevation: 7,140-7,190 ft.
#635
Panorama
Length: 8 miles
Rating: Moderate Use: Moderate Elevation:
6,750-7,300 ft.
#636
Timber Mesa
Length: 6 miles
Rating: Difficult Use: Moderate Elevation:
6,640-6,960 ft.
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#637
Buena Vista
Length: 9 miles
Rating: Moderate User: Moderate Elevation:
6,520-6,773 ft.
#638 Los
Caballos
Length: 14 miles
Rating: Difficult Use: Moderate Elevation:
6,300-6,940 ft.
#640
Juniper Ridge
Length: 14 miles;
7.2 miles short loop Rating: Difficult Use:
Light Elevation: 6,370-6,998 ft.
#641
Ghost of the Coyote
Length: 16 miles
Rating: Difficult Use: Light
Elevation: 6,200-6,600 ft.
Woodland Lake Park
Length: 1.25-4 miles Rating: Easy Use: Heavy
Elevation: 6,950-7,000 ft.
#140
General Crook Connector
Length: 6 miles to Heber District Rating:
Difficult
Use: Light Elevation: 6,370-6,900 ft.
#631 A
Country Club; Los Burros Connector
Length: 6.5 miles
Rating: Moderate Use: Light Elevation:
7,000-7,800 ft.
#635A
Timber Mesa
Length: Panorama Connector 2.5 miles; Flume
Connector (635A)
Sawmill Connector (635B) 4.5 miles Rating:
Moderate Elevation: 6,800-6,900 ft.
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More trail
information that hiking and biking can share see Biking tab.
Bike Rentals:
Cycle Mania 100 N White Mt. Rd
928-537-8812
Lower Fish
Creek Trail
The Lower Fish Creek
Trail follows the perennial flow of Fish Creek all the way to
the Black River. Cradled in a cozy wooded canyon that opens
up several times to accommodate meadows of wildflowers, the path
delves into the wilderness. Anglers will enjoy
fishing for native Apache trout. The steel-gray walls of the canyon,
with their strange spires and hoodoos, add to an untamed
feeling. The trail makes a gradual descent to the river. The
last mile of the trail rises into a mixed conifer forest just
past the cowboy camp. On a cloudy day, the forest gets dark and
disquieting. The trail ends at its confluence with the Black
River. On a sunny day, the swift-flowing water sparkles like a
neon marquee. After a rain, mist swirls around the craggy cliffs
so thickly, it hides the river.
Trail Guide
Length:
5.5 miles, one-way
Elevation:
8,400 to 6,800 feet
Difficulty:
Moderate
Directions:
From Hannagan Meadow,
drive .1 mile north on U.S. Route 191 to Forest Road 576 and
turn left. Drive about 4 miles west to FR 24 and turn right.
After about 1 mile, bear left onto 24/83. Drive about 5 miles to
83A and turn left. Travel 1.3 miles and turn left again onto the
signed road to the trailhead. Drive .4 mile to the trailhead. A
high-clearance vehicle is necessary.
South Fork
Trail
The trailhead
at Mexican Hay Lake
marks the downhill, or
easy, option of the 7-mile South Fork Trail 97, which travels
for much of its length along the South Fork of the Little
Colorado River up in the alpine zone of Arizona’s White
Mountains. The more difficult reverse route starts at the
primary trailhead in the South Fork Campground, some 7 miles and
1,500 feet down trail. The trail begins on a plateau adjacent to
Mexican Hay Lake, so named because pioneer settlers in the
region annually drained the lake to harvest and bale the tall
grasses growing there. For the first half of the hike, the trail
stretches nearly 4 miles across a park like forest of
300-year-old ponderosa pine trees. Leaving the plateau, the
trail drops sharply toward the river.
Trail Guide
Length:
7 miles, one-way
Elevation:
9,000 to 7,500 feet
Difficulty:
Moderate
Directions:
To reach the upper trailhead at
Mexican Hay Lake, travel 3 miles west from Eagar on State
Route 260; turn south on State Route 261. It’s
approximately 8 miles to Mexican Hay Lake. A dirt road, which
should be avoided in wet weather, leads to the trailhead on the
north side of the lake. To reach the lower trailhead at the
South Fork Campground, travel 5.5 miles west on Route 260; turn
south on Forest Road 560 and drive 2.8 miles to the campground
and trailhead on the west side of the stream.
Travel Advisory:
This hike is best done in late
spring, summer or autumn. Be prepared for any weather in
Arizona’s high country.
Information:
Apache-Sitgreaves National
Forests, Springerville Ranger District, 928-333-4372.
Lanphier Trail
The 5.6-mile-long Lanphier Trail in the Blue Range Primitive
Area, named for a family who homesteaded their namesake
canyon, has it all. Along the trail, the stream-fed trees shade
you on a summer hike of moderate difficulty. The trail also
offers pools to cool you off, curious geology and mountaintop
views. And it boasts some unusually named features. Take, for
instance, the Red Rock Pillars at mile 1.5. After the trail
climbs out of Largo Canyon, where it gets its start, it crests a
ridge, drops into Lanphier Canyon and travels under a canopy of
sprawling oaks along Lanphier Creek to an area where the walls
narrow and squeeze together. You’d never guess this spot is
called the Red Rock Pillars because you’ll see no “pillars,” and
the rock walls look more purple than red, but none of that mars
the charm. From the Red Rock Pillars, the trail runs up and down
the canyon walls for the next three-quarters of a mile. A
half-mile farther, the trail starts an austere climb
out of the canyon,
leaving the shade behind. For the next mile, the trail rambles
in and out of secluded basins filled with Gambel oaks, then
drops all the way back down to the floor of Lanphier Canyon
along the creek again.
Trail Guide
Length:
5.6 miles, one-way
Elevation:
5,600 to 7,360 feet
Difficulty:
Moderate to strenuous
Directions:
From Alpine, drive about 3
miles east on U.S. Route 180, and turn right (south) onto
Forest Road 281 (Blue River Road); drive about 25 miles to the
Blue Administration Site and a trailhead marked “Largo and Foote
Creek Trailhead.” Walk to the right of the trailhead posterboard
through two gates to the Blue River. Cross the river and head to
a corral, which marks the beginning of the trail.
Information:
Apache-Sitgreaves National
Forests, Alpine Ranger District, 928-339-4384;
www.fs.fed.us/r3/asnf/recreation/trails.
Indian Springs Trail
Indian Springs Trail,
near Big Lake in Eastern Arizona’s
high country, makes for a scenic, 7.5-mile loop. Designated for
mountain biking as well as hiking, much of the well-maintained
trail follows an abandoned railroad grade. A short connecting
trail from Rainbow Campground provides convenient access from
the Big Lake recreational area. After a half-mile, you’ll reach
the turnoff to the Big Lake lookout tower. This side trip, an
easy walk for most of its half-mile length, ends with a short
but steep scramble up a granite escarpment to the fire lookout.
Back on the main trail, after another half-mile, you’ll reach
Spillman Spring, where three hollowed-out logs channel water
from the spring and serve as water troughs for cattle and
wildlife. The trail follows a ribbon of green meadow to Indian
Spring. Located at the confluence of two shallow drainages, the
spring forms a tiny summer pond. From the spring turn left, and
hike a quarter-mile to an old railroad bed. The path leaves the
old railroad bed and wanders through woodlands and meadows
before crossing Forest Road 249E.
Trail Guide
Length:
7.5 miles, round-trip
Elevation:
Elevation of hike is 9,000
feet, but hike is relatively level.
Difficulty:
Moderate
Directions:
From Show Low head southeast on State Route
260 to State Route 273. Turn right onto State 273 and drive
southeast to the junction with State Route 261. Turn right and
head south on State 261 toward Big Lake. Passing the turnoff to
Big Lake, continue south on graveled Forest Road 249 for .7 mile
to Forest Road 249E, which is marked with signs for Buffalo
Crossing and Sprucedale. Turn right onto FR 249E and follow for
a half-mile to the Indian Springs Trail parking area on the left
side of the road.
Warning:
Water at the springs
must be treated before drinking.
Thompson Trail
Picture a
long alpine valley at nearly 9,000 feet of elevation with a
blue-ribbon trout stream running its entire length and forested
slopes of spruce, fir and yellow-leafed aspen trees ascending to
surrounding peaks. Imagine a level trail that meanders with the
stream, mostly in sun, sometimes in shadow, never more than a
few yards from the stream bank. Add a sunny Arizona fall morning
with frost underfoot and a fine mist exhaled from the shallow,
fast-moving waters. That’s a description of Forest Service Trail
629 (Thompson Trail) in the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests.
The trail traces a portion of the West Fork
of the
Black River near Big Lake in Arizona’s White Mountains. The
round-trip length of the hike is either 4.8 or 6.5 miles,
depending on whether you hike Trail 628A, the shorter loop that
begins where the Thompson Trail meets the West Fork Trail, 628
in the trail system. Because it traverses sensitive riparian
habitat, the Thompson Trail 629 is for hikers only. Trail 628, a
section of which travels along an old railroad grade above and
parallel to the Thompson Trail, is open to both hikers and
mountain bikers. Either route offers views of some of Arizona’s
most scenic landscapes.
Trail Guide
Length:
6.5
miles, round-trip
Elevation:
8,600 to 8,840
feet
Difficulty:
Easy
Directions:
From
Springerville, drive south on U.S. Route 180/191 to State
Route 260 and turn west. After 3 miles, turn south on State
Route 261, which joins Forest Road 113 as it loops around Big
Lake and becomes Forest Road 249E. To reach the trailhead from
Big Lake, drive northwest on FR 249E until it merges with Forest
Road 116, then it’s approximately 1.5 miles west to the
trailhead at the confluence of Thompson Creek and the West Fork
of the Black River at Thompson Ranch. A parking area and
information kiosk indicate the trailhead.
Travel Advisory:
This hike
is best done in late spring, summer and autumn. Be prepared for
any type of weather in Arizona’s high country.
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