Tag: McDowell Sonoran Preserve (page 11 of 11)

Sunset at Sunrise

Marilyn and I hiked the Sunrise Trail on Saturday afternoon, hiking all the way up to Sunrise Peak.  As we were hiking down from the peak, I took this photo of the sunset.

I got this photo earlier in the hike.  Red Mountain is visible about a third of the way over from the right edge of the photo.  The very tip of Weaver’s Needle is also barely visible in this photo.

Here, Marilyn is hiking ahead of me on the Sunrise Trail.

As I was hiking up, I noticed a large rock pile ahead.   It took a while to get to it, but this is what it looks like as the trail passes it.

A closer view of a few of the rocks in the above photo:

A view looking back down the trail.

Marilyn, hiking up the trail.

A view of the fountain in Fountain Hills.

Looking south from just below Sunrise Peak:

 

Scottsdale, after Sunset, from the Sunrise Trail

I got this shot on Saturday while hiking back on the Sunset Trail with Marilyn.  We came to an overlook area and saw the lights of Scottsdale along with a colorful, post-sunset sky.  I rested my camera on a large metal toolbox that the city keeps out there.  Presumably it has shovels, picks, and the like for trail maintenance purposes.  Anyway, the first several tries didn’t work out because I still had to level the camera and I was trying to do so by supporting the camera and lens with my fingers.  I finally got two rocks that I positioned in between the top of that metal toolbox and the camera.  It wasn’t perfect, but it allowed me to hold the camera steady enough to get the photo below.

This photo was created using three exposures at ISO 200, f/4.0, with exposure times of 1/2 second, 2 seconds, and 6 seconds.  I first blended the exposures together by hand.  From this, I created a color layer.  I interposed a tone layer set at 50% opacity above the original three layers that I had blended earlier and below the color layer.

The tone layer was created by running the Mantiuk ’06 contrast equalization algorithm on the RAW file from the lightest (longest) exposure.  Ideally, you’d use all three exposures to create the tone layer.  I had tried this, but did not get good results due to a slight misalignment of the three images.  I mainly wanted the tone layer to explicate foreground detail, so I used that exposure to create the tone layer.

I have been asked about that big barren space is between the lights near the horizon and the lights nearer to the camera.  This is what I’ve figured out…

First, it’s important to know that we’re looking south and somewhat west in this photo. You can see that the sky is brighter at the far right in the photo. That’s where the sun had set perhaps 20-30 minutes before the photo was taken. (It got quite dark perhaps another 20 minutes after taking that photo – dark enough that we got out our headlamps so that we could be more certain of our footing on the way back. We thought we were locked in at the parking lot too, but luckily the gate senses vehicles that are trying to get out and automatically opens.)

Shea Blvd is the big, well lit road in the photo. If you start at the left edge of the photo, it starts a little over half way up and extends across most of the photo, angling slightly upward as you follow it to the right. The hill to the right in the immediate foreground eventually blocks our view of Shea Blvd. If you follow Shea Blvd from the left of the photo, you’ll see the lower slope of a small mountain just above the road – to the south. There is a small road which intersects Shea that’s visible in the photo. It goes south (and north) of Shea and runs between that small mountain and a hill to the west. That small road is 136th Street.

The big cluster of lights in the center of the photo, just to the north of Shea Blvd is Mayo Clinic. There are some residential areas which are part of Scottsdale just south of Shea in that photo, but they don’t extend very far south. Once I found these landmarks, I was able to look at a map to figure out the rest. Here’s a link to a map showing Shea and 136th St. You’ll have to zoom out a bit to see more of the surrounding area.

There is a big empty looking area south of those residential areas which are, in turn, south of Shea.  This sizable tract land used mostly for agricultural purposes.  There are some homes there too, but it’s much less densely populated than the cities which surround it. It belongs to the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. To the south of that – i.e. the lights further on up the photo towards the horizon – are the cities of Mesa and Tempe. Mesa is more to the left and Tempe is more to the right. I can’t say for certain where one ends and the other begins – it may even be that Tempe isn’t visible at all in the photo. I think too that some of the southern portions of Scottsdale are visible off to the right. If you look to the far right, you can see a small portion of Camelback Mountain at the edge of the photo.

Here is another photo looking in the same direction, but taken from a different overlook.  I don’t like this shot as well, but it does show what the area looks like in the daylight.

Rock Knob, at Sunset, from the Feldspar Trail

This photo was taken last Sunday just before sunset from the Feldspar Trail in the McDowell Sonoran Preserve.  The setting sun gave Rock Knob a nice reddish orange glow.

Tom’s Thumb Trailhead is now open

Marilyn and I drove out on 128th street (from Dynamite / Rio Verde Drive) last night to hike the Marcus Landslide Trail.  The Friday Hike group hiked a significant portion of the Marcus Landslide Trail, but we did not reach the end.  Marilyn and I hiked the Marcus Landslide Trail in its entirety.  I had hopes that it would meet up with one of the other Preserve trails, but it doesn’t.   But it doesn’t exactly dead end either.  It forks at one point and loops back to the fork.  After hiking it, I remembered that I had seen that loop on a map at some point in the past.  I probably saw it on the map of rock climbing access trails.  After scouring the Preserve website, I believe that this may be the most accurate map for trails in the area.  The Northern Mountain Region map, at the time of this writing anyway, is out of date.

When we visited the area in the past, we parked at one of several temporary parking areas.  These parking areas are no longer accessible.  Several of the areas that we visited on our hike had been plowed up and will presumably be re-vegetated.  The old roads in the area have been plowed up too.  Here’s what’s left of the road that used to go up to one of the temporary parking areas:

Morrell’s Wall is visible in the center of the photo, above.

Parking is now available at the newly constructed trailhead at the end of 128th St.  As far as I can tell, 128th St no longer goes through to Paraiso.  It appears that portions of Paraiso have either been converted to short sections of trail or have been plowed up and re-vegetated.  The new parking area has spaces for 200 vehicles and 12 horse trailers.  It has restrooms, but the doors were locked when we were there last night.  No water is available at this time (nor in the foreseeable future).  A grand opening ceremony is scheduled for October 18, 2012.

As Marilyn and I hiked out to the Marcus Landslide Trail, it became obvious that we had somehow missed the turnoff to the Tom’s Thumb Trail.  It turns out that the Tom’s Thumb Trail is accessible by walking through the shelter at the trailhead:

Morrell’s Wall, Gardener’s Wall, and Tom’s Thumb are all visible in the above photo.  If you look closely, you can see a small white sign on the sidewalk within the structure.  This sign indicates that the Tom’s Thumb Trail goes through the structure.

The Marcus Landslide Trail is accessible off to the camera’s left – it does not appear in the above photo.  You can also get to it by hiking through the structure, but you’ll need to turn off (left) on the new Feldspar Trail to get there.  This junction is near the location of the (old) lower temporary parking area.  Access to the three Sven Tower Climbing areas is just off the Feldspar Trail too.  There is a canyon there known as Mesquite Canyon.