Cuyamaca Peak
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Cuyamaca Peak via Lookout Fire Road, Burnt Pine Trail, California Riding & Hiking Trail, Fern Flat Fire Road

Participants: San Diego Hikers' Net: Ed Butler (KF6DXX), Tom Chester (KF6HPS), Bob Gonsett (W6VR), Glenn Paden (KE6ZLY) and Ted Wilcox (KF6BFI).
Date: 10 October 1998 (Written up 11 October 1998)

Plants in bloom: The poison oak was a festival of colors all by itself, ranging from dark green, light green, yellow, pink to very red. Some small purple asters were blooming, as were several members of the sunflower family. There were some great seed pods on locoweed, all big and puffy, but filled mostly with air.
Weather: Sunny, temperature in 60s.
Bugs: Fairly buggy with black flies. They vanished at the peak itself, but were somewhat bad going up on Lookout Fire Road and fairly bad going down on the various trails and fire roads.
Number of ticks: None.
Number of rattlesnakes: 0
Other pests: None.

Mountain Lion Danger

As we started the hike, we learned that four mountain lions had been killed in the previous Thursday and Friday, all four at Los Vaqueros horse camp on 8 and 9 October 1998. That brought the total to 12 mountain lions killed in the park since 1987.

Since the late 1980s, the park has warned people not to hike, run, horseback ride or bike alone due to the danger of mountain lions.

In early August, 1998, the park was closed for about a week after a woman encountered a cougar near Stonewall Peak. In that incident, a woman used pepper spray on an aggressive cougar and finally repelled it from attacking her and a female friend after a 15-minute ordeal.

On 10 December 1994, Iris M. Kenna (1938-1994) was killed by a cougar near the bench dedicated to her while hiking to Cuyamaca Peak alone in the early morning. The bench is at the intersection of the Lookout Fire Road and Azalea Springs Fire Road / Fern Flat Fire Road. Although Kenna was in excellent physical condition, she was slight -- about 5-foot-4 and no more than 115 pounds.

In 1988, two cougars were killed after they chased a German couple and their young son.

Misc. Information

We talked with some State Forestry Fire Department firefighters resting on the Iris M. Kenna Memorial Bench on the way up, and learned that the pack of hoses that they were each carrying weighed 50 pounds, which we verified   by lifting them up. Firefighters are pretty impressive.....

In all of the below, "Fire Road" and "Trail" are pretty interchangeable. The State Park Map often says "Trail" when the signs on the trail say "Road". The reason for the confusion is clear: many of the fire roads have definitely become trails, with evidence  of a wide road nearly nonexistent in places.

The view from Cuyamaca Peak is stunning - we were able to identify Mt. Woodson, Santiago Peak (Santa Anas), Black Mountain, Mt. Baldy (Angeles Mtns.), Palomar, San Gorgonio, Volcan Mountain, San Jacinto, Middle Peak, North Peak, Toro Peak (Santa Rosa Mtns. ), and Granite Mountain, in rough order from west through north and east. Ed Butler provided the distance and azimuth to the following:

Peak Altitude (') Distance (miles) Azimuth (Heading)
Santiago Peak 5687 75 315° NW
Mount San Gorgonio 11499 80.5 351° NNW
Thomas Mountain 6811 46.6 355° NNW
Mount San Jacinto 10804 60 356° NNW
Volcan Mountain 5719 15 358.5° NNW
Toro Peak 8716 41 15° NNE
Rabbit Peak 6666 39.7 32° NNE
Granite Mountain 5633 10.2 45° NE
Garnet Peak 5900 8.6 100° SE
Monument Peak 6271 11.5 110° SE

From the Burnt Pine Trail, we got great views of the Lagunas and points south.

We exchanged mirror flashes with Tom Shore (KJ6NA), who was near the interchange of SR78 and I-15. Even though his mirror flashes were very visible when they were observed, most of the time only one person in our group would see them at a time. And even if one saw the flashes for one sequence, someone else would see them for the next sequence. Everyone saw the flashes at different times. Since the beam should be a circular spot of about 1300' in diameter (30 miles times 0.5 degrees, the width of the sun), perhaps we were just getting the edge of the beam sometimes, and other times some of us just weren't looking in the right place.

Part of the difficulty was then it was quite hard to remember the point from which the flashes originated, since Tom's location was "in the murk". We could clearly see Mt. Woodson, but anything lower and anything more distant was lost. Tom's mirror flashes shown as a bright flash amidst the soup.

Even though Tom had the advantage of knowing where to look, since he could clearly see Cuyamaca Peak, he had great difficulty in seeing our flashes, probably because the sun angle was not very favorable for us to send him flashes.

Hiking Log:

Recording number Mileage Time arrived Time left Altitude Comments
0 0.00 9:38   4800 Paso Picacho Campground
1 0.30 9:45   5000 Sign: "Cuyamaca Peak 2.4 mi"
2 0.50 9:52   5100 Jct. Azalea Glen Road
3 1.05 ~10:15 10:30 5400 Iris M. Kenna Memorial Bench. Sign: "Azalea Springs Fire Road to Azalea Glen Trail 0.5 mi; Cuyamaca Peak 1.5 mi"
4 2.00 10:56 11:03 6000 Big Stump
5 2.30 11:10   6100 Jct. Conejos Trail
6 2.30 11:16   6200 Jct. Burnt Pine Trail
7 2.75 11:33   6500 Arrive Cuyamaca Peak
8 3.25   1:35 6600 Leave Cuyamaca Peak
9 3.70 1:49   6300 Right on Burnt Pine Trail
10 4.50 2:08   6050 Jct. Conejos Trail. Sign: "Cuyamaca Peak 1.2 mi; Arroyo Seco Trail Camp 4.0 mi; West Mesa Fire Road 2.4 mi"
11 6.70 3:09 3:21 5250 Left on California Hiking & Riding Trail / West Mesa Trail. Sign: "Cuyamaca Peak 3.6 mi; "Arroyo Seco Trail Camp 1.6 mi; Paso Picacho Campground 3.9 mi"
12 7.35 3:38   5100 Trail Splits - continue left on California Riding & Hiking Trail (shown on park map but not topo map), with West Mesa Fire Road / Trail going right. Sign: "West Mesa Fire Road to SR79 2.2 mi; Paso Picacho Campground 3.2 mi; Burnt Pine Fire Road 0.7 mi".
13 8.00 4.02   5050 Left on Fern Flat Fire Road. Sign: "Paso Picacho Campground 2.7 mi; Arroyo Seco Trail Camp 3.0 mi; Fern Flat Springs 0.8 mi".
14 9.10 4:40 5:00 5500 Right on Lookout Road
15 10.25 5:29   4900 Car




Copyright © 1998 by Tom Chester.
Permission is freely granted to reproduce any or all of this page as long as credit is given to me at this source:
http://sd.znet.com/~schester/angeles_mtns/tchikes/cuyamaca_peak.html,
or http://www.fanciful.org/san-diego-hiker/981010.html
Comments and feedback: Tom Chester
Last update: 5 December 1998.

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This page was last updated on July 06, 2003.