Most of those that have done Paliza in December in past years will have a hard time believing this but we were back on pavement at 1:30 and that was with a very long lunch at the top before heading back down. The lower section was about the same; brush, rocks, and a few areas with some erosion. The berms where the G-Wagon rolled are gone. The stream crossing where we winched out the Land Rover was a distant memory. The section of trail that destroyed my factory steps is completely flat now. The eroded hole that sucked in Danny's FJC is plowed over and the only way that I knew we had been there was the pile of cigarette butts that Onur left in the once formidable hole... (they're now scattered about the area.) The area where we camped a few years ago on Father's Day weekend was still very nice and it looks like the fire crews camped there when they were fighting the Los Conchas fire. That area wasn't trashed or anything so we have the possibility of a final camping trip in Paliza Canyon this spring before they close it to our hobby forever.
Downed trees were already pulled off the trail. The most exciting part of the day was a large branch that extended across the trail at rack-level. It got caught in my rack and gave a resounding "thunk.... thunk.... thunk" as it ratcheted through the rails of the rack. Scared the dogs so bad that Gracie dropped to the floor behind my seat, whimpered uncontrollably, and refused to come out until we stopped for lunch and she could see the coast was clear.
Great day to be in the mountains. Good friends and good weather. No trees on Paliza and the pickins' were sparse at VC so Bonnie and I passed on their limited selection. We went back to Wallatoa, picked up a tag, and decided to go up through Gilman tunnels to Porter landing and look for trees in that area. Disappointing to say the least. Badly burned area that was very picked over so we left at dark and were back at home around 6pm.
A foot of snow would have changed everything but, as it was, Paliza is now stocker friendly as long as you are careful and avoid the basketball sized loose rocks on the lower part of the trail.
-Mike-