Showing posts with label MTF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MTF. Show all posts

Saturday, November 18, 2017

2017/11/18 Buena Vista Trail in Montecito with LPTR & MeetUp


Looking down at the Santa Barbara Harbor from the mountain ridge above Montecito.



Five riders took to the trails to achieve glorious views and give their animals a real workout.
We went 3 miles in a bit less than 2 hours, climbing 660' in altitude and conquering extremely rocky and technical trails. Slow going, but scenic and challenging.




Montecito is a land of great estates, fabulously wealthy and famous people living behind gates and walls.
Despite the danger of crowding their homes up into the forest, where fires periodically rage, these are the coveted acres.

To reach our trail head I traveled up this eucalyptus-lined street.











And one by one the trailers and riders and their trusty steeds arrived.

More than a dozen had RSVP'd, but then slowly schedules changed and animals injured themselves, so in the end there were but 5.






We began with the Buena Vista Trail.

Looking at the map above that is the straight shot up the canyon, and was extremely rocky. We're not talking gravel and pebbles, this is the bones of the earth causing the barefoot mule to go rock-hopping to get up the trail. And of course it is not just an ascent, it is up for a while, then descending into a crack and across a creek bed, then back up the other side.


I know, it looks like a smooth trail but it is not. These boulders are more like what it was made of, and it takes a smart mule or horse to carefully pick their way across the terrain.

But the horizon of the mountain above beckons.



In some places rocks have been blasted away to connect the trail through.


In other places the massive boulders loomed over us, with caves scooped out of them by eons of erosion.
For scale, look on the bottom right corner to see the riders, passing through a shady tunnel of tree branches.

These photos show an invasive plant that goes by the common name of Cape Ivy or German Ivy.
Delairea odorata.
It climbs up and smothers native chaparral plants, choking them and preventing them from getting the sunlight they need. It is relentless and increases the danger of wildfires moving swiftly through these canyons filled with dead brush beneath their canopy.
Once we got to the top of the canyon we turned West on the Edison Catway, a bulldozed road used by utility workers for power line maintenance.
I asked my riding companions to pose there.
From left: SP on a mule, KM on an Arabian, JM and CT on Rocky Mountain horses.
And of course, the Santa Barbara Harbor behind. The islands were just barely visible today.
The power lines make a convenient spot to rest and take a break, and contemplate the 200 miles of trails available in these mountains, so lightly used they seem a hidden treasure.





But then it was time to continue down the Catway,
me and my shadow
and my mule
flopping his ears and enjoying his outing.









Some of my favorite things about this landscape are the dramatic cliffs and boulders, breaking through the trees, showing the geography of the land.


After the Catway we turned left and started to descend on the San Ysidro Trail. 

 This is a popular hiking route and we met lots of people with their kids and dogs having a healthy afternoon.



This cactus was growing at the bottom edge of a steep rock face, having somehow found a way to take hold and cling to the sandstone and multiply.








At some seasons of the year this creek bed will have water, but now it is mostly defined by the riparian trees that send their roots deep down to thrive here.





We knew we were almost back to civilization when we saw this rustic fence.
Fashioned from gnarled chaparral branches it could almost be made of driftwood.







We turned left here to follow the Old Pueblo Trail back across to the trail head we had entered the trail system from.

At this point we are tracking along the back fences of the Great Estates. The smell of bar-b-que wafted up, and the sounds of parties on this lovely Fall day that felt like Indian Summer.



And just before we got back to our starting point we found this wind-sculpted rock with a dedication plaque to Peter Bakewell.

"For his energy and time to make our trails in the Montecito area the pleasant riding and hiking paths they are today."
Montecito Trails Foundation 1981.





So it was with appreciation and gratitude that we ended our ride. Thanks to the MTF, Montecito Trails Foundation, that keeps these trails maintained for the use of the community. To the LPTR, the Los Padres Trail Riders, who sponsored and organized this ride. To my MeetUp group, the Horse and Mule Trail Riders of the 805, that attracted riders who had not previously experienced this trail system to join us.

We will return, and hope to see more riders on the trails when we do.

HAPPY TRAILS

Some trails are happy ones,
Others are blue.
It's the way you ride the trail that counts,
Here's a happy one for you.
Happy trails to you,
Until we meet again.
Happy trails to you,
Keep smiling until then.
Who cares about the clouds when we're together?
Just sing a song, and bring the sunny weather.
Happy trails to you,
Until we meet again.
      - Roy Rogers & Dale Evans 
                                                                 ##### FIN  #######

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Montecito Trail Foundation Fundraiser ride 9-24-11 MTF

Every year the Montecito Trail Foundation sponsors an annual fundraiser, and many different groups of people set out to explore the frontcountry. There were three different groups of riders doing different trails, and hikers and bikers. I chose to go on what was considered the most ambitious and technical of the trails. which went up the San Ysidro to the McMinnamee, down the Girard, and back over the Old Pueblo.

The day was extremely overcast, so there was no view, making what otherwise are steep drop-offs down canyons and an ocean overlook into a hazy trail surrounded by a cotton wool cushion of maritime fog. But that was nice, actually, it was cool and pleasant.

Length: 6.4 miles
Duration: 2.5 hours
Difficulty: Moderate, with most of the trails well maintained by the MTF. Many sections need trimming or brushing, but there are no trail hazards. Lots of single-track and steep ascents and descents, lots of sections where the trail is an exercise in mindful riding, scrambling over rocks.
Altitude gain: 1290 ft
Grade: III


View MTF Fundraiser Ride 9-24-11 in a larger map
 Tobe snacks and waits, as the riders arrive and tack up and get ready to assemble.
 The first area is a eucalyptus forest, lots of leaves underfoot, wide trails and easy to ride and chat with other riders.
 But soon we hit the mountain trails, and see many examples of stonework reinforcements like this wall that the MTF is responsible for.
 This bridge is much older, I would guess it dates back to the 1920's.
 The Hot Springs used to have a big resort, and this structure that looks like a forgotten temple is apparently one of the few things left after the Coyote fire burned it to the ground in the 1970's.
 Most of the trail is clear and open, but all of it could use trimming of overhanging branches.
 Ordinarily this would be an overlook from which we would see the islands off the coast, and a view of the city below. Not today! It is entirely a fog blanket obscuring any view.
So there didn't seem like much point in taking a lot of photos, I concentrated on riding and so did Mr Mule.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Montecito Trail Ride 4-29-11 MTF

A ride from the end of Park Lane, across the Wiman Trail to the Old Pueblo Trail,  across the McMenemy to the Vincent Trail, and then scrambled up the Vincent to the Edison Catway, back down the Girard and the San Ysidro, in the front country range of the Los Padres Forest in Southern California.
Length: 5.4 miles
Duration: 3 hours
Difficulty: Strenuous. Well maintained trails lead to the Vincent, a very steep single track rock trail, an extreme steady climb, not for the faint of heart.
Altitude gain: 1280 ft
Grade: II

View Montecito in a larger map

This is the view from just below the Edison Catway looking at Santa Barbara Harbor.
On this ride we started at Park Lane in Montecito, went up the Wiman Trail to the Old Pueblo Trail,   across the McMenemy to the Vincent Trail, and then scrambled up the Vincent to the Edison Catway. This part was exceedingly difficult as the Vincent was pretty much a straight steep wall of rocks, and while our mules did it flawlessly I would NOT want to ever try coming DOWN it and would advise horse riders against it. I also saw a large black rattlesnake slithering across the trail on the rocks. After coming to the Catway we went a short distance across the Edison and came back down the Girard Trail, McMenemy and then came out on the San Ysidro to our rigs.


This was my first attempt to make a map of a trail using GPS, and I couldn't get a photo yet that I could embed. But the MapApp works and that's a start!