Last year around the Memorial Day weekend, I took a trip down to SE Oregon. While I was down there I made a note of mountains and areas that looked interesting. One of these areas, the Pueblo Mountains which are just south of Steens Mountain and the Alvord Desert caught my attention.
There is a route through the Pueblo Mountains which is part of the Desert Trail. The Desert trail is a trail that is envisioned to run between Mexico and Canada much like the Pacific Crest Trail or Continental Divide trail. There are about 8 sections so far that have been planned out, mostly in Oregon and Northern Nevada and the Pueblo Mountains just happen to be one of the sections. The route is not a trail but a series of cairns set up to guide the way. You can go to the Desert Trail's website and order maps directly from them for each of the sections. We did this on our trip and the map was very nice with all the cairn locations and coordinates from each cairn to the next. Very much worth the $6 for the map. If you like a more detailed map, the USGS maps are probably a better choice, however the USGS maps lack the cairn locations. We had both maps and we were glad we did.
Armed with the knowledge of this new area I wanted to explore, I recruited a friend from my club to go with me. Kevin Koski is a member of my local hiking club, the Peninsula Wilderness Club. He is also a member of Olympic Mountain Rescue and was recently recognized by the American Red Cross for his involvement in a rescue on Mt Rainier. Oh, and he has hiked the entire Continental Divide Trail from Canada to Mexico. In other words, A good person to have as a hiking partner. I'd been on a few trips with Kevin before. I enjoy Kevin's company and knew I could count on him to lead the way should the route be difficult. He has an almost sixth sense when it comes to route finding. He's a good guy and I knew he'd be interested in hiking a relatively unknown route. I invited Kevin about a year out from the trip.
Other than taking a few extra days off to extend our Memorial day weekend and buying maps, not much planning was put into this. Follow the story below as it unfolded by scrolling through the images.
The drive down
Day 1
Panorama
Day 2
I believe this is cairn 22 or 23. After this image, I put my camera away for the rest of the day to keep it dry. Along this stretch it was particularly nasty. Rain, sleet and sustained winds that we were hiking against, not to mention the fact that pushing constantly through the sagebrush was very tiring. This was the low point of the trip. My camera did not come out again until later after we had made our camp. No pictures from this cairn until around cairn 40. We stayed at about the 7100 foot level through here. Roll mouse over image to get a general idea of the route. No mouse?
Last night in the Pueblos. This was taken from camp during a break in the rain. Kevin is surveying the route ahead.
Day 3
We caught our ride from an old boy in a pick up truck. I rode in the back on top of a bunch of irrigation equipment while Kevin rode in the cab. From where I was I could see the guy was clearly drinking what looked to be a rum and Coke. At least he erred on the side of caution and drove right down the center of the road. Ha, I guess he figured that if he swerved he would have plenty of room to correct. Turns out our driver was a rancher and was none other that the owner of the water trough at the Starr ranch. He told Kevin he had lived in the area since the 70s. He was certainly a nice fella, despite the drinking and driving. I offered him $20 twice but he refused both times. Gas isn't cheap and I figured he probably went at least 30 miles out of his way to drive us back to Fields.
Once we were in Fields, Kevin bought each of us a delicious milkshake in the store. In the car, we decided to take a different route home by way of going south, back through Denio and heading west on HWY 140. I was pretty tired but we made it back home a little after midnight stopping only once in Bend for a Subway sandwich.
Part of me, no, a big part of me is disappointed that the weather wasn't better for this trip. I'm bummed that I didn't get to witness any great vistas from the ridge-line during the rough weather. Honestly, while I was on the ridge, I was just hunkered down putting one foot in front of the next, hoping we soon got to camp so we could warm up. Part of me wants to do this trip again, but due to the great distance from my home, I imagine I probably never will. There are other parts of the Desert Trail in my sights now, such as the Steens Mountain section or the Alvord Desert section. Until then, I'll keep dreaming about the SE Oregon high desert.
This map is an overview of the whole trip. Blue lines indicate the road trip which started and ended in Silverdale WA. The red line indicates where we hiked. See map below for more detail on the hike itself.
Go here for a full screen map of our route. Some of the cairns were logged by me. The rest of the cairns, mostly between cairns 20-40 were pulled from a GPX file that Allison from allisonoutside.net provided. Zoom in for high resolution TOPO view.
I would very much like to thank Allison for the GPX file and for the inspiration and information about this trip through her website. Give her page a visit, she has some great photos and a nice write-up of this trip. http://allisonoutside.net/2011/06/incrediburgible/
Thank you for this video. I am trying to formalize this Desert Trail route. The Desert Trail Association disbanded in 2020 and there is now no contact for the Association or anyone else who is caring for the Desert Trail. It’s as if it simply disappeared from the map.
I need a list of GPS locations for the cairns. Someone gave me a list for cairns 32 to 48, but I have been unable to find a list for Cairns 1 to 31.
Can you help? Or anyone reading this? Let me know if you have, or can get, a list for the cairns.
Great show! I am looking for a list of the cairns in the Pueblos with GPS locations (in NAD027, as on the topos). GPS would make the cairns easier to find. I have heard that such a list exists, but have only been able to obtain GPS for Cairns 32 to 48. If anyone has such a list or knows where to get one, please contact me at desert609@aol.com. Steve Tabor
Fascinating journey! I love the desert and thoroughly enjoyed your story and images!
Enjoyable read! What a great trip!
Thanks Sue!
Jay,
Nice Trip Report! It was a great hike, and I liked the randomness of it!
Thank you for this video. I am trying to formalize this Desert Trail route. The Desert Trail Association disbanded in 2020 and there is now no contact for the Association or anyone else who is caring for the Desert Trail. It’s as if it simply disappeared from the map.
I need a list of GPS locations for the cairns. Someone gave me a list for cairns 32 to 48, but I have been unable to find a list for Cairns 1 to 31.
Can you help? Or anyone reading this? Let me know if you have, or can get, a list for the cairns.
Thanks. Steve Tabor desert609@aol.com (510) 769-3414
Steve, I sent you an email.
Great show! I am looking for a list of the cairns in the Pueblos with GPS locations (in NAD027, as on the topos). GPS would make the cairns easier to find. I have heard that such a list exists, but have only been able to obtain GPS for Cairns 32 to 48. If anyone has such a list or knows where to get one, please contact me at desert609@aol.com. Steve Tabor
Steve, I sent you an email.
This route is part of the Oregon Desert Trail. If you google, you can find documentation of the route, etc.