Norris wrote:Hi tekewin,thanks for the great TR! Thought you would like to know, the true Deer Springs drainage has a brush-free route to Marion Mtn. The drainage with the running water which crosses the trail is not the Deer Springs drainage. Most refer to that as "Bed Springs". Deer Springs has been dry this year. On your way down, some distance below Bed Springs, you may have noticed a blue and red hose running up the hill above the trail, on the uphill side of a dry gully. That is a water supply that the rangers have set up for a trail camp which they operate near the Deer Springs drainage. If you go up the left side of the true Deer Springs drainage (shown on the USGS topo), and cross the gully at an obvious point shortly after you leave the trail, you encounter an area of ferns and other water loving plants, with a large dead log running through it. After you cross this, you come to clean rock and pine needle duff and can follow this all the way up to the flat area below Marion.
I'm pretty sure that it's the California Conservation Corps (CCC) that has set up that major encampment at Deer Springs. I believe the rangers, had they set up the encampment, would have been a lot more LNT. The CCC crew made terraces, fire pits, trails across the meadow, water lines, etc. There's a lot of abandoned junk down in there too. They came back last summer after letting the gear overwinter, but now it's summer again, and I didn't see any signs of recent habitation when I was there July 4th. Now, the gear is a largely a pile of ruined junk.
It kind of rubs me the wrong way that they've told hikers not to camp there for years (50 years?) because it was a "sensitive area" and then they allow the CCC to go in and build a major encampment. At least they turned the "no camping; sensitive area" sign face down.
As far as routes to Marion Mountain are concerned, I've taken the liberty of sketching some out:
http://caltopo.com/m/1J35I've given each route a name, none of these names are official in any way.
- The Owl's Hooch Route. By far the easiest route is the Owl's Hooch Route. I call it Owl's Hooch because it starts at the Owl's Hooch campsite in LRV. From there it goes over Newton Drury Saddle and then contours over to Marion. Easy peasy, no brush to speak of.
- The Norris Route, so called because Norris is the person who described it, goes up the Deer Springs drainage. Per Norris, this is a good route with minimal brush.
- The HJ Route, so called because I'm the only person I know who has done it and for lack of a better term, goes from Deer Springs Crossing but goes up the dry drainage to the south of the Deer Springs drainage. Minimal brush, pretty easy going, a little less steep than the Deer Springs drainage.
- The Ridge Route. I haven't done this entirely, but a lot of people go up the Marion Mountain Trail and just start heading straight up the ridge to Marion Mountain. Reportedly, this is a good route.
- The "Don't Go There Route". I tried dropping down the Middle Fork of Stone Creek a couple of weeks ago. Fail. Really bad brush and very large boulders. It was ugly. And no water. I finally had to bail out of the canyon and go north.
- The Wellman Cienega Route. There are a couple of lines that if you take them can avoid the worst of the brush. I haven't found a line yet that avoids all brush, but reportedly there is one.
- The Hidden Jean Route. Well, this isn't a Marion Mountain Route, but it's in the same area. I have been told by reliable sources that there is a nearly brush free way down from Jean somewhere over there that descends to Wellman Divide. I sure wasn't able to find it when I tried a year or so ago.
HJ