Sunday, May 6, 2012

Take a Hike: Hermit Trail


View from Hermit Trail, Grand Canyon

Early May is a great time for hiking Grand Canyon. Spring break crowds have gone, and summer crowds haven’t yet arrived. Daytime temperatures on the South Rim are comfortable, and wildflowers are in bloom. 

For those new to hiking Grand Canyon, the corridor trails—Bright Angel and South Kaibab—are recommended. But if you're ready for a day hike that’s a bit farther off the beaten path, Hermit Trail is ideal. It’s steep but easy to follow, with a couple good day-hike destinations, depending on your time and abilities. Before your trip, it's a good idea to check the National Park Service web site for weather and trail conditions and for information about day-hiking. You can also find detailed trail information on the park's site.

The trailhead is located a few hundred feet west of Hermits Rest. From March through November, day-hikers can get to the trailhead via the free Hermits Rest Route shuttle. 

The trail descends steeply through the Kaibab, Toroweap, and Coconino formations, then levels out (but not for long!) on the reddish Hermit Shale formation at Hermit Basin. The trail is unmaintained and narrow in places, with sharp drop offs. When you reach Hermit Basin, you can find a shady spot beneath a juniper or pinon to relax and have a snack. At 1.5 miles, the signed intersection with the Waldron Trail makes a good turnaround point for a two- or three-hour hike.

For a longer hike, continue down the switchbacks to Santa Maria Spring, the 2.5-mile point. There’s a shady resthouse here (but don’t count on being able to get water at the spring). Some great views can be found from a rocky platform a few yards further along the trail, but remember that hiking out of the canyon takes roughly twice as long as it took to hike in. On the way back to the rim, stop often to enjoy the scenery—and to catch your breath.

A visit to Hermits Rest, designed by architect Mary Colter, is a good reward for your 5-mile hike. The building is an imaginative recreation of a miner’s camp. Inside is a gift shop and snack bar, and outdoors there's a lovely shaded patio that’s often visited by ravens.

The hermit immortalized in all these place names was Louis Boucher, a miner who began guiding tourists to his camp at Dripping Springs in the late 1800s. In 1912 the Santa Fe Railway developed Hermit Trail and set up tent cabins and a dining hall far below the rim near the Colorado River. Tourists traveled to the camp on muleback. The camp operated until 1930, supplied by an aerial tramway leading 6,000 feet down from Pima Point. If you stop at Pima Point on your shuttle ride back to Grand Canyon Village, be sure to peer over the edge, where you’ll be able to spot the outlines of the camp.

Views, history, and a great hike—a perfect way to spend a spring day!


No comments:

Post a Comment