Hermit Trail

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Hermit Trail

Hermit Trail near Lookout Point
Length 8.9 mi; 14.3 km
Trailheads Colorado River
Hermit's Rest, Grand Canyon South Rim
Use Hiking
Elevation Change 4240 ft
Highest Point South Rim, 6640 ft
Lowest Point Colorado River, 2400 ft
Trail Difficulty Very Strenuous
Season Year Round
Sights Grand Canyon
Colorado River
Hazards Severe Weather
Overexertion
Dehydration
Flash Flood

The Hermit Trail is a hiking trail in Grand Canyon National Park, located in the U.S. state of Arizona. This trail provides access to a historic area of Grand Canyon and offers a more challenging route to the Colorado River for more experienced canyon hikers.

Contents

[edit] Description

Mileages and features along the Hermit Trail [1] [2] [3]
Distance (mi) Elv (ft) Location Connecting trails Toilet Water
0 6640 Trailhead, Hermit's Rest Rim Trail Portable
1.2 5400 Trail Junction Waldron Trail
1.6 5240 Trail Junction Dripping Springs Trail
2 4900 Santa Maria Spring Ephemerial
4 4200 Lookout Point
6.2 3120 Trail Junction Tonto Trail East
7.8 3040 Hermit Creek Campsite Tonto Trail West Composting Hermit Creek, Perennial
8.9 2400 Hermit Rapids, Colorado River Hermit Creek, Colorado River

[edit] Access

The trailhead is located 0.25 miles southwest of Hermit's Rest on the South Rim of the Grand Canyon. The trailhead is accessible by shuttle bus from Grand Canyon Village, Arizona on the Hermit Road. The road is closed to private vehicles between April and October annually, and is open to all traffic other months. Two exceptions are for vehicles with government issued handicap placards and backpackers with valid permits for overnight camping in the Hermit use area. Those users can obtain the gate code by visiting the Backcountry Information Center in the park. [1]

Access to the trailhead parking area and some of the facilities at Hermit's Rest may be restricted due to ongoing construction of a new restroom facility. Construction began in April 2006 and is scheduled to be completed by the end of September. [4]

[edit] Condition

Grand Canyon National Park categorizes the Hermit Trail as a threshold trail and does not officially maintain it. The trail is rutted in many places, and the once exquisite construction of placed stones on the upper-half of the trail is now crumbling and rough. [1]

[edit] Water availability

All water sources along this trail must be treated, filtered, or boiled before drinking. [5] [6]

Water is available year-round at Hermit Creek and the Colorado River. The trail between the Hermit Creek camping area and the Colorado River parallels Hermit Creek and provides additional water accessibility. Also, water flows periodically from Santa Maria Spring, located 2 trail miles in from the trailhead, but should not be counted on. [1]

[edit] Camping

Camping is allowed in designated sites along the Hermit Trail by permit only, issued by the Grand Canyon National Park Backcountry Information Center. Use of these areas overnight are regulated by the National Park Service, and they call for a maximum number of groups (7 to 11 people) and parties (1 to 6 people), as well as a maximum total number of persons.[citation needed]

There are two designated campsites in the Hermit Use Area. [7] The three letter code indicates the park's use area designation:

  • BM7 - Hermit Creek / Up to 23 persons for 1 group and 3 parties.
  • BM8 - Hermit Rapids / Up to 17 persons for 1 group and 1 party.

Use permits are available on a first-come, first-serve basis from the park's Backcountry Information Center. Requests are taken beginning on the 1st day of the month, up to four month's before the requested first night of camping. [8]

[edit] Hazards

Hazards hikers can encounter along the Hermit Trail include dehydration, sudden rainstorms, flash flooding, loose footing, rockfall, encounters with wildlife, and extreme heat. At the Colorado River, additional hazards include hypothermia (due to the river's consistently cold temperatures), trauma (due to collisions with boulders in rapids), and drowning. [9]

[edit] History

This trail was built in the last decade of the 19th century by horsetheives, but was improved by different prospectors of that era, most notably Dan Hogan. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway improved the trail further around 1910 to compete with the Camerons' Bright Angel Trail which charged a toll at the time. The railroad operated Hermit Camp about 7 trail miles below rim until 1930s when the National Park Service took over control of the Bright Angel Trail and officially rescinded its tolls.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d National Park Service Trail Description
  2. ^ a b Grand Canyon Explorer / Hermit Trail Description
  3. ^ Hermit Trail Guide; Scott Thybony, Grand Canyon Natural History Association, p.1 - ISBN 0-938216-31-7
  4. ^ Grand Canyon National Park Trail Closures
  5. ^ Grand Canyon National Park Safe Drinking Water
  6. ^ Grand Canyon National Park Backcountry Information
  7. ^ Grand Canyon National Park Use Areas
  8. ^ Grand Canyon National Park Backcountry Use Permit Procedure
  9. ^ Grand Canyon National Park Summer Hiking

[edit] See also

[edit] External links



Grand Canyon trails
Above-rim Trails: Bright Angel Point Trail | Cape Final Trail | Cape Royal Trail | Cliff Spring Trail | Fire Point Trail | Francois Matthes Trail | Ken Patrick Trail | Komo Point Trail | Rim Trail | Tiyo Point Trail | Transept Trail | Uncle Jim Trail | Walhalla Glades Trail | Walhalla Spur Trail | Widforss Trail | Widforss Forest Trail

Below-rim Trails: Beamer Trail | Bill Hall Trail | Boucher Trail | Bright Angel Trail | Clear Creek Trail | Deer Creek Trail | Dripping Springs Trail | Escalante Route | Esplanade Route | Grandview Trail | Havasu Trail | Hermit Trail | Kanab Creek Trail | Lava Falls Trail | Nankoweap Trail | New Hance Trail | North Bass Trail | North Kaibab Trail | Plateau Point Trail | River Trail | Royal Arch Route | South Bass Trail | South Canyon Trail | South Kaibab Trail | Tanner Trail | Thunder River Trail | Tonto Trail | Tuckup Trail | Waldron Trail