Trinity: Crogan Hole and Tish Tang A Tang
Six Rivers National Forest
DAY 1 | DAY 2
(Note that a free permit is required for backpacking in Trinity Alps Wilderness. They are available at Lower Trinity Ranger Station in Willow Creek.)
In the bright morning sun, we headed up Big Hill Road to the Mill Creek Lakes Trailhead (car passable except the last mile or two could be a challenge) once more, this time for an overnight. What will the trails be like? That's a bit of a mystery and we had a loop to try them out. (I actually had a bigger one, but Daniil nixxed reduced it to this minimal one saying something about a dense pile of trees for miles where it dropped low.) I've been tracing out trails in USGS's elevation profile, which isn't quite the gold standard of where trails go, but it's better than the lines the Forest Service provides much of the time. It gave me predictions for how this would go. The worst of it looked to be along the first half of Tish Tang, but surely that couldn't be so since there's another trailhead to feed it.
We immediately hit a bunch of mature trees fallen across the trail. It wasn't looking good for my expectation that the first first ~3 miles would be pretty easy, but they were almost all of the trees on the trail for a bit. We got to admire the fog in the valleys as it burned off instead of sorting out the trail ahead.
The fire scar may be severe, but the place is not empty. The area was noisy with birds from the moment we opened the doors although it was reducing as the hours got later.
There were more flowers as we passed the water and turned along the north facing slope. Still lots of bird sounds too. The audio of the water grew and grew until we simply had to look for the waterfalls.
We found Crogan Basin Trail where it starts climbing the short way to Crogan Hole itself. It was marked with a cairn and looked easy enough to follow. We didn't notice the downhill side, which should have been before the meadow with the car camp from the days when this was a road. We could see the line of it plenty well as we continued along past the creek.
I expected the trail to start to get brushier at this intersection, but it waited until rounding the ridge to get bad.
Just short of a seasonal stream (currently running), we found a mystery wall and a little camping area. This one came complete with abandoned tent, which we weren't really prepared to pack out as we continued on.
Bret Creek was the largest we encountered and it looked like it had blown out the road at one point, but this had been repaired as road and blown out again. It wasn't much of a challenge as trail, although I found some very slick rocks while trying to keep my feet dry.
It looked like bear was keeping the tread trod as we finished with our section of Crogan Hole Trail. There was a very nice tread with deer bush arching over it pushing taller creatures like humans off onto less established tread areas. As we turned onto McKay Meadows Trail, it all seemed to wander off in different directions. In a few steps we came to the edge of the meadow and wandered off ourselves, right down the middle.
At the western edge of the meadow, we found another camp. This one came complete with abandoned tarp. Other than that, we felt it was quite a pleasant seeming camp and it was suggested we might utilize it. However, with my expectation that the next part would be much less good trail, I figured stopping there would be the end of the loop. Finding our way would be a casual wander in this afternoon, but too much for the start of a big day that would be left.
We started our wandering immediately. We weren't sure where the trail was, but we were sure there was a small pond in the middle of the meadow that we wanted to check out. Waterproof shoes came in handy for those who were wearing.
After checking out the pond, we wound our way out the end of the meadow and then west to meet the presumed location of the trail. Over a pile of fallen trees, we found it looking in good shape, at least briefly. There were more meadows coming to lose it in.
The map claimed we needed to cross Corral Creek a few times, which is really just silly. There it sat, flowing slow and easy and just as deep as it was wide. No rocks to help us across, so we found a place we could step across.
We noted the trout in this supposedly seasonal stream as we crossed. Unfortunately, once across, we just felt trapped and not really willing to step in the deep stream to cross back, so we returned to our crossing to circle a long way around the swamp alders spreading on the eastern side of the meadow.
Above the swamp alder, we found a well used game trail that was going our way. Sometimes it split, but it made an easy route around and along Corral Creek. We made it harder by trying to connect with the expected trail location again on the far side, crossing on a large downed tree. I ended up circling back again while the others stuck it out briefly and found a different crossing.
We found a post that could be mistaken for a burned sign post with bolt to hold a destroyed sign, but the second one a short way away suggested it was fence. It was short of the junction anyway. We didn't find the junction, but it's supposed to be on the other side of the creek from where we went. We didn't really find trail until after entering the biggest of the Patterson Meadows.
We found another camp in the trees beside the meadow. This one also came complete with an abandoned tarp, but this time a fancy, expensive one with "wing" in the name from Kelty, not just an ordinary blue one. Also a tempting camping area, but no one suggested it this time. We found remnants of possible trail just inside the woods until a fallen tree pushed hikers back out into the easy walking along the meadow.
I got distracted by the various unnamed lines, thinking we're meant to be looping that way, not this way, until realizing that it's Calf Swag Trail, which I'm not entirely certain is a real thing. Something to explore while feeling more adventurous. We were to climb the hill, which turned out to be over a very severe burn and there was little trail to see on the climb.
As we flattened out, there was something that could be trail. However, it wasn't enough to keep us from getting onto Oregon Creek Trail instead as we crossed. Oregon Creek was only slightly more obvious. We wound back over once more to find some maybe tread going our way.
Just as we were starting to be confident we were on trail, and not only that but the trail would even start to be better defined as we got into rockier terrain, I suggested that a meadow below where running water was clearly audible might be camp for the night. We were aiming at a ridge top camp with suspected water a short walk down the side, but winds were kicking up and the weather report had suggested the night would be a little windy, so this spot that seemed a little more sheltered, with definite water, looked attractive. I was pretty sure there were flat spots too. After much dithering, we descended to this meadow for camp, roughly halfway along the loop.
The stop time gave plenty of time to set up and cook and all the things.
Continue on to the next day ⇒
*photo album*
©2026 Valerie Norton
Published 20 May 2026
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Comments
Tish Tang a Tang and Horse Linto are both butcherings of Hoopa names. These were names of villages located at the mouths of the creeks where they meet the Trinity River. Glad to see the spelling Djishtangading showing up. That's a better guide to the right pronunciation. Lots of history in these mountains. Colorful names all over. I used to think, I know what a horse is, but what's linto?
The signboard you found along Crogan Hole Tr. probably WAS for a dispersed car camping site. What's now the trail was a pretty fair road before the area was put in wilderness. There are a number of examples of this kind of re-wilding in these mountains, which does my heart good.
The downhill side of Crogan Basin Tr. branches off Crogan Hole Tr. in an acute "Y" in the direction of opposite of your travel. There is, or was, a sign in a tree marking the junction, but there's no color contrast and it's pretty well camouflaged, as well as facing backward from where you were going, so it could be easy to miss. The two trails coincide for just 250 feet or so.
There's no doubt that Calf Swag Tr. is real. ("Swag" apparently means a low spot that gathers water. Rather than meaning free stuff given away at a party. I'm not sure I'd want a free calf, or even calf accessories.) But tread will probably be very hard to spot, due to accumulated litter falling from fire-killed trees. The ground appears to be open all the way at this point, though, so it shouldn't be hard to follow the route. It appears that the Red Salmon Fire actually burned up tangles of fallen logs that were the result of earlier fires. But the remaining standing snags will fall one by one creating new obstacles.
The name "Oregon Creek Tr." is clearly a corruption of Crogan Creek, a mapmaker's error. There is no Oregon Creek. This trail is a much more dubious proposition. Most of it may well be nonexistent at this point.
Your reports are very helpful, as always.
I was wondering what Tish Tang A Tang might mean, but got nothing out of that search. The Djishtangading spelling shows up under "variant names" in USGS's Geographic Names Information System entry for the creek.
I was pretty sure that the sign board was one of the more official road side camps. The old road could only be holding up so well against plant growth if it was very well used by vehicles.
The Forest Service has lines for most these trails in their GIS and they've got Crogan Basin written as Grogan Basin. Oregon isn't quite so obvious a misspelling of Crogan, but it does seem entirely misplaced.
I emailed the National Map folks (tnm_help@usgs.gov) about a simple mistake before and they fixed it in less than a week.
Lots of things will give me elevation profiles for tracks. USGS will give me a 3D picture of the landscape in which I can see where, for instance, Virgin Creek Trail and the trail to the lookout on the buttes were carved. Google uses the information from them to create a similar map that you see if you turn on terrain, but it doesn't have a compatible license to be used as a source for OSM. I expect both 3D terrain calculations are accessible via Google Earth software.