Trip to Los Coyotes park on Jan.23, 1999


This trip began with a bummer. We planned to go there with Pete Griffith, and missed each other by a minute or two at a meeting point. See, I came (as usual) late, but only by ~5 minutes, and figured that Pete and other folks who might be coming with him have already waited for me for some time. Given with Pete knowing that I may as well be late by as much as forever, I thought that they took off (especially 'cause we both knew the destination). Nevertheless, we waited until 9:20 by my watch, and rolled away slowly. I kept my CB on the channel we've been using on the previous trip all the time and was calling Pete once in a while, but to no avail. Oh well... I should have waited.... So we went solo, with my brother Nick and son Yuri.

Fun part begins when you discover than a trail shown on the map does not exist. Or, in many occasions, is clearly indicated by a locked gate. After some search in the bushes along highway S-2, we decided to go for more reliable paved road that turns off Highway 79 near Warner Springs Ranch. The road snaked along the hills, and lead us to the Los Coyotes Indian Reservation. Here you pay $10 at the gate, and I'd say it was the best-spent tenner during my life in San Diego!

First, the road surface turns into a good graded dirt. In a few miles, you come to a  very nice and spacious campground (how about an acre per site? just a **little** hyperbola). The  road continues into the woods - fir, pine, oak, etc., not too much overgrown and thick. Plenty of hiking trails, would take forever to explore. And, finally, plenty of Jeep trails, MOST of them topping Coyote Canyon bypass that we took. In future, I plan to add a trail map of this park, and show my very modest advances.
We began our trail exploration with some dirt road that winds up to Marshmallow Hill - very easy, just a bit steep, and off-camber sometimes - and up to ~5500 ft. You can see Anza-Borrego, Lake Henshaw, and probably Salton Sea (in a very clear day) from the same point! 
One bit of excitement - to make a U-turn on that spot that is barely a few feet larger than the truck's length, with looooong drop-offs on all sides. The trail proceeds along the ridge (can bee seen on the picture) to yet another peak - didn't go there. You don't need 4wd for that side trip, but rare rigs come with 2-lo (which is desirable).
After descending to the main road, we started looking for some four-wheeling excitement. It didn't take too long; first trail off to the East proved to offer more that I would like to take with only a come-along for a getchaback service. Later, we identified this trail as Old Mine Road. It starts quite easy and relaxed, and as you go in, it becomes narrower, twistier, steeper, etc. One side excursion discovered someone's past sand hill climb attempt. I only managed to make a few yards up this slope; the terrain doesn't let you to gain any momentum to get going. One of the few occasions when I had all four tires spinning, and just single - without any progress! Put it off 'til I get 33+" mudders. 
The trail started getting nastier. Don't know if the picture on the left gives any impression of smoothness of the surface, let's just say it is a bit bouncy. Now it indicated clear tendency to go down the canyon, along the creek. The count of water crossings was soon lost; the trail is obviously easier for short-wheelbase rigs with short overhangs. Once I hit the ground with my front bumper approaching the creek! Now and then some rocks appeared, growing in size and being laid out in denser and rougher pattern. Still, my 2" lift blocks in the rear paid off well, scored just a few hard hitch receiver hits. Off-camber situations became also more frequent, none dangerous for a simple reason - virtually nowhere to roll, with nearby trees' bark bearing scratches from previous exporers. If your paint job is vauable for you, better hike down this road. The branches threatening it come in 1"-2" thick variety. Dead tree trunks enhance the creek crossings with a foot-sized rocks and sandy bottom.
I didn't go to the end of any trail, for the reason of 50% chance of breakage or getting badly stuck, and only having my brother and 3-ton come-along to get me out. The picture on the right witnesses my shameful stop and turnaround. I could have made this portion of the trail without much wrestling and (probably) not much damage, but on this trail challenges proved to go one way. Behind the scene there is an abandoned Toyota pickup truck; wonder how the guys made it that far. It could've only been winched from there. 
Now, about the trail features. See these two trees left from my truck? Funny thing is that my jeep wouldn't make it along the seemingly obvious way, right of those two trees, and the path left of the trees should be chosen. I would've been wedged tight between a 2.5-ft rock and the tree; in a while three CJs "blasted" by at one place, at a fraction of a mile per hour, one - almost got stuck being barely able to yank his tires from that vise grip. In most tight places along this and other trails the line for a full-size Jeep must be chosen with very little respect to what the tracks indicate! 
This road was said to lead to an old mine; being a bit short in time and eager to check other places, we left the trail 'til the next time. Pete Griffith, I need you there!

And, the worst, I ran out of film taking these stupid truck-on-the-trail photos. The most excitement came later, on a Squeeze Rock trail (what a popular name around this countryland!). The trail began with a disappointingly easy entrance, suitable for an ol' lady in her '83 Cadillac. It took a look around the "corner" to appreciate all the fun.
The trail went on top of a huge granite boulder, mostly buried in sand. Right in the middle there was a trough in it, that could take a flipped-over Carmann-Ghia to fill it flat! Freaking over off-camber driving as I am, I took the middle line, to leave the hole between the wheels. A loud bang of the hitch against the granite indicated that my move wasn't exactly gross-meisters. What's more, the future prospects looked so exciting so I "parked" the truck at the boulder and went to explore the trail afoot (that may be considered as wisdom or lack of mojo, I'd rather admit the latter). Reached the same conclusion - the trail is "do-able", but going there alone is a major disadvantage. The Squeeze Rock itself is just two 2-ft. boulders, strategically laid out to only let a narrow-axle rigs through. Don't know if a Model 18, narrow-track Cherokee or Wagoneer, can make it through; wide-track definitely cannot. There's two ways around that squeeze, both involving careful planning and - oh well, off-camber moves. The off-camber parts are on the sandy surface, and the caution should be used not to slid sideways. Outcomes - you may end up tight on one or two ends of the full-sized jeep. Big guns, Broncos or Blazers, need not apply - with big mill, huge tires, and trusted-into axles this trail can be made, but some noticeable damage to the vegetation. The trail bore the prints of 12.5"-wide BFG M/Ts, maybe from the same gang that we saw before.
BTW, the trail is a through road.

Here I returned to my beast, parked in a weird position near the bottom of that boulder. A - what - 11-point turn was employed to get the rig around, and up I went. The need of a front locker became strikingly obvious right away. I made it up on the third or fourth attempt, choosing a different line every time and gunning the engine.
At this point, it was almost 3 p.m.; at 4 p.m., the park authorities would charge me aditional ten bucks, and in such deep canyons it would've become dark, so we cut our trip short and headed home.
Among the unexplored, there was a trail called "Dangerous Road", while others being up to a built short-wheelbase rig with at least 33-inchers around and a locker or two didn't receive such title!

Too bad photo shop botched the negatives, so all the pics are sort of faded. But, when you get there you won't believe it, so beautiful the place is. It's not the desert in any way, totally different. Doesn't change my attitude towards Anza Borrego, but as for the family weekend fun, it definitely tops the desert.

Note the previous photo. That's pretty much where the next story begins, of our trip with Pete Griffith past that place - follow the link:
 Los Coyotes Indian Reservation - Trip of Jan.30, 1999


If you have comments or suggestions, feel interested, or just want to bust me somehow, email me at pmatusov@mpl.ucsd.edu