Flores Peak
Los Padres National Forest
(Map link.)
Robert wanted to be shown the way up to "Medicine Circle" and I have been meaning to do it in the daylight so I can more easily go a little further to the peak nearby. This is a common hike for the Wednesday "conditioning hike" that the local Sierra Club chapter hosts. (All are welcome to come to that. Hike participants meet at the Santa Barbara Mission at 6:30 PM on Wednesday.) For that hike, we start at the Rattlesnake Canyon Trailhead and walk up to Gibraltar Road, then a little way along the road before starting up a rough use trail. You know a hike has to have something good to be popular in spite of it involving a road walk. For Robert, I am cutting off those initial three miles and starting at Gibraltar Road. We find parking easily enough near Gibraltar Rock as no one seems to be climbing today. The trail is easy to spot heading east from beside the rock.
Long miles are not to Robert's taste, but he likes the trail, such as it is, going up Cathedral Peak, so I felt safe in not warning him about this one. It starts off steep and quickly gets steeper. It was a little easier a year ago, but now some of the long dead fire victims are starting to tumble over onto the trail. There is also no denying that the trail through soft sandstone seems looser as the drought goes on. The first hundred feet of trail requires ducking under fallen brush, scrambling on sliding hillside, and more scrambling over boulders. And from there we are going up at least as much as across. One of the reasons the road section during the longer version of this hike is not so bad is that it provides a nice rest before hitting the hardest climb.
It feels like we have been climbing for a while whine I look down at the GPS to see that it has just now ticked all the way to 0.20 miles. Ahead, the trail is still climbing steeply, but it is dropping off ever so slightly. There are still a few boulders to scramble up.
It is an odd experience to finally see the area in the daylight after at least a dozen climbs in the dark and near dark. The distant sights have never been clear enough to try to recognize. Now I look out and they look very similar to other sights but the details are wrong. My brain has not quite located me properly and keeps claiming various spots below are really somewhere else. Taken together, the information does not quite make sense. Slowly I start to kick out incorrect information for something more like the truth.
Meanwhile, it is fun to take in the peaks along the front side of the Santa Ynez Mountains.
A well used trail branches off down and to the right as we climb. I do not know where this goes, but it looks like something that needs exploring some time. Maybe it accesses the rocky knob below. We go left and the trail has gotten a lot easier by now.
We cross a ridge and there is one last steep push upward to "Medicine Circle". I point out what some claim are the rocks set down by past peoples for ceremonial purposes. They must be quite magical because they were not moved when a bulldozer scraped the vegetation away from this ridge to make a fire break decades ago. It went right through to middle of the circle of stones. I can still see the flattened path it left.
We turn to climb Flores Peak. It is only a little further, but the trail is much less used. The cut stumps of large bushes can be seen along it. This was a big fuel break once. Now, a route winds back and forth through this old cut. Little cairns show the way some of the time. It drops a short way, then climbs a slightly longer way to the high point. It was a higher point once, but someone cleared and leveled out enough space to land a helicopter at some point. An even thinner trail seems to wind its way up to Camino Cielo above.
The peak does not hold quite as exciting views as the initial ridge, so we head back and stop for some snacks while watching the world. The nearest person to us is one of three paragliders sitting around in the sky. A chill breeze off the ocean makes sitting in the sun exceptionally nice.
There is a spur trail along the ridge to it and explore the trail along it. I think it looks big enough to be an alternate route up and we go along it to see where it might end up. It does not get far, just to the far rock outcrop, then finishes.
Satisfied with our explorations for now, we head back down. It takes some care over the steep sections. I manage not to be quite careful enough on the last steep section with the end in sight. It is a very short fall backwards on trail like that, so we still get down without incident.
*photo album*
©2016 Valerie Norton
Posted 6 October 2016
Liked this? Interesting? Click the three bars at the top left for the menu to read more or subscribe!
Comments
Best wishes,
Robert
Did you attend San Marcos High School in the 90's? I think I was your algebra/trig teacher and Math Club advisor. I still hike a lot around here and the West in general. I know some local "secret" trails that you probably don't know about and might enjoy.
I wasn't aware of this hike, but did rockclimb a couple times at the nearby, impressive "Cold Springs Dome" years ago.
Happy trails,
George Egbert
Robert also posted this hike to Ed Hat and a comment there verified that the thin track I could see heading north does make it up to Camino Cielo.