Stevens/Fold Kullaberg style

fossana

Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2018
Messages
1,076
Intro
After reading the post from @Kullaberg63 on his Stevens East Benches route, I immediately put it on my to-do list. Allen's Stevens/Fold route ranks high among my all-time favorite routes, and I was anxious to try the variation. In March I did a spring warm-up trip to scout the Stevens Arch descent into Stevens Canyon and do the normal Stevens/Fold route. Thanks to @Jammer for the helpful Stevens Arch descent beta (to the extent it's possible to describe that).

prelude1.jpg

prelude2.jpg

Fast forward a few months to May. With a few days of cooler temps and possible rain predicted, I made a last-minute decision to try the E benches. Unfortunately, no rain came, as was the case for the prior 14+ days. I didn't get to the 40 Mile Tank (S Lobo) trailhead until noon, but didn't want to waste a cooler day. At the trailhead an older man peppered me with patronizing, unsolicited questions about my preparedness. :rolleyes: I finally told him to stop. Thankfully, my next 4 days would be spent in solitude.

Day 1
From the water tank I walked out to the 40 Mile trailhead and down Crack in the Wall. In contrast to my March trip, the wildflowers were in full bloom. From the rim I could see how low the Escalante River was. The USGS gauge measured ~0.18-0.21 CFS, far too close to the lowest flow rate recorded for the 69 years of daily mean data recorded, 0.16 CFS. Also climate-related is the insane amount of dry cheat grass this year.

I crossed through Stevens Arch and found my previously reconned downclimbs. I was greeted with (avoidable) poison ivy in Stevens Canyon. There were still quite a few pools remaining thankfully. Due to my late start, I didn't make my mileage target, but instead camped closer to the exit ramp from the Stevens grotto.

eBench0.jpg

eBench1.jpg

Day 2
I awoke early and finished the familiar section of Stevens Canyon. The lower springs were still running, so I didn't have to do an out-and-back to the thrashy spring area to find water. I headed up the Baker Route to access the E benches. Interestingly, I encountered a single set of footprints that I would continue to see intermittently through out the entire E benches section. There was thankfully still some water in the major drainage potholes. I camped in a small alcove.

Mid-Stevens rim walking
eBench2a.jpg

Day 3
Having soon left the sandstone "sidewalks" behind, it was a long day of screen/talus tiptoeing and ramp traversing. Due to the steeper terrain, most of the canyons had to be fully headed rather than cutting through midway. Unlike the prior day, I was no longer finding usable water. At the hanging gardens, the seeps were barely running if at all. I also encountered my first rattlesnake in this region after hundreds of Glen Canyon backcountry miles. I had no option for giving the juvenile a wide berth, but it stayed put. I camped ~0.5 miles from Fold Pass.

Looking ahead to the convoluted E Benches terrain
eBench2.jpg

The little surprise I got when crossing a talus slope near one of the hanging gardens.
eBench3.jpg

eBench4.jpg

Below one of the hanging gardens fed by a seasonal seep
eBench5.jpg

eBench6.jpg

Day 4
There was limited (and stagnant) pothole water in Fools. After spending the prior day with only one early water source and today's temps predicted in the upper 80s, I decided to exit Fold/Fools along on the standard drainages route instead of the overland route into Fools as the @Kullaberg63 party had done. The 3+ mile hike along the Escalante River was a welcome respite. Fools Canyon had some water, but it was mostly stagnant pools. I spent my last night tucked in one of the side drainages across from the start of the cattle trail.

eBench7.jpg

eBench8.jpg

eBench9.jpg

Day 5
Along the long branch of Sleepy Hollow, I ran into large group being guided by an outfitter from Page. They were doing a Coyote Gulch > Fools > Escalante River > Coyote Gulch loop. Upper Coyote was quiet, but as usual, the area around Jacob Hamblin Arch felt like a carnival, with screaming kids and large groups who could have starred in a SAR PSA as they fumbled up and down the long 4th class slab. I scurried up the slab to minimize the chance of having to participate in a rescue, and got back to my car ~1:30. The temperature was already in the low 90s.

When I got home, I estimated my final route to be ~60 miles, not counting the zigzags required for route finding and avoiding cryptobiotic soil/hazards.

eBench10.jpg
 
Excellent work on the hike, and thanks for the report. I gotta get into Stevens/Fold country soon.

Spent a couple days bumming around Escalante earlier in the month, the river flow in town was... a trickle, at best.
 
Awesome, as always.

You should've invited the guy at the trailhead to join you, then quickly serve him with an "alpine divorce." He didn't know he was talking to the likely FKT title holder for the Stevens/Fold loop.
 
Back
Top