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Welcome to Campaign Creek
Campaign Creek In Gila County, Arizona
Though short and barely technical , Campaign Creek is a fun, easy, beautifully sculpted pink granite gorge with narrows not unlike those found in Solome Creek.
Hikers familiar with the Sonoran desert in the Superstition Mountains will be surprised to find stands of ponderosa pine tucked away in the eastern section. Other attractions include a historic ranch site and an optional side hike to Mound Mountain, the highest summit in the Superstition Mountains.
Small cool pools of rushing water make for great swimming holes.
Tonto National Forest Info
Learn about the area before you head out!
Tonto National Forest Info
What to Know About Campaign Creek
From Phoenix, drive east on US60 through Superior and Miami to turn left (north) onto SR188. After 21.2 miles turn left onto J Bar Road which is well graded dirt (the green highway sign says "J-B Road") and drive south west for two miles until you reach the split with the Tule Trailhead road; turn left here following the sign pointing the way for Campaign Trailhead. After the road curves left and passes an active ranch and through a gate (a homemade sign reads "4x4 only please") the road becomes quite sandy in spots as it travels up the lower reaches of Campaign Creek. Stay on the main road as it travels in and out of the sandy wash and park at a pullout/corral on the right just before the road goes steeply uphill at a crossing of Campaign Creek (hopefully flowing across the road at this point) after a total of 4.9 miles.
Access:
Hike on the road continuing south for a little over one mile until the road crosses the creek again in a prominent bend and after coming down a hill - turn right and enter the canyon here.
The canyon is a bit brushy in the beginning, then soon opens more and more into a scenic granite waterway with several small waterfalls. A few easy downclimbs will get you past the first few short, vertical obstacles. Eventually you will reach one more vertical section than the others where I used a rope around a tree in the watercourse on canyon left to assist with a short hand line to safely get down through the falls and into a thigh-deep pool at the bottom. The pools continue to get deeper after this section (one or two possible swimmers), but can be climbed around with care and some slight exposure. After the deep pools the canyon opens for a short stretch before one more very short section of deeper, though less scenic narrows just before the canyon meets up with the road again.
It's believed that in 1873 US troops used points along this creek as campaign headquarters during General George Crook's regime. Thus the name.
This is a very pleasant hike through the Eastern Superstitions along Campaign Creek. It is a gradually climbing "out and back" route that follows the Campaign Trail (#256) and takes you past the creek's head waters and up to the Campaign / Pinto Divide. This is the ridge that defines the separation of drainage on the north side into Campaign Creek and to the south into Pinto Creek. Both eventually drain into the Salt River to the north.
From the Campaign Trailhead, continue about 0.2 miles southwest on the dirt road to the signed start of the trail. The trail climbs up onto the northwest slope of the creek bed and offers some nice views down into Reavis Mountain School along the way. After passing the school, you drop back down into the bottoms where numerous crossings of the permanently flowing creek are required. This is a pretty area and along the way at about 0.8 miles you'll notice a fairly vigorous spring emerging from the left bank of the hillside. This is depicted on the topo quad as merely "Springs", but if you look closely you'll see suspended plumbing running all the way back down to the school indicating this as their source of potable water.
At about 1 mile you'll reach the Reavis Gap Trail intersection where we stay left on the Campaign Trail. Beware of copious stands of Poison Ivy lining the edge of the wide trail. Continue the steady, but gentle climb south, where at about 1.5mi you climb a small saddle/ridge that shortcuts a "horseshoe" shaped bend in the creek. It is here that the "flowing" water in the creek originates. From atop the ridge you get your first views of the local terrain surrounding the valley. Quickly descending back into the creek bed, the trail meanders nicely from side to side and was possibly the most well maintained trail I've seen to date. It appeared as if the trail crew had been through just days before and spent a lot of time on "manicuring" the trail as opposed to just brushing it out. Personally, I'd rather see less detail and more mileage - oh well.
At about two miles in, look for a very weird and interesting rock formation towering above you on the right. We named it "Skeleton Peak". Continue on through a scenic old corral area and at about 2.5mi there are some nice pools at the intersection with the side ravine labeled "Spring" on the topo. Another half mile will bring you to the intersection of the now defunct Pinto Peak Trail. The Forest Service just recently decommissioned this trail and in addition to discontinuing any maintenance, they seem to have gone out of their way to erase any sign of it. If you look closely though, you can plainly see where it goes up the center of a ravine heading east. I've heard the hike up this trail to Mountain Spring is very nice and there was in fact a seep spring just a short distance up. I would hope not to see this trail lost to lack of use.
At about 4mi you come to Brushy Spring. This will most likely be your last source of reliable water. The Fire Line Trail lay just ahead at about the 5-mile point. This is a nice spot for a break and marks a changing point in the hike for several reasons. It sits in a beautiful little stand of Ponderosa Pines and marks the last of the predominant shade (unfortunately my camera has taken one too many spills and about every other photo comes out blurry :=( It also marks the end of the trail maintenance and things get significantly brushier from here. Lastly, the climb begins to get gradually more aggressive and continues that trend exquisitely to the very top.
The last half-mile is a bit of a grind, consisting of a steep scree surface winding through the dense Manzanita. Views of the prominent Pinto Peak (5991') begin to dominate the skyline to your left as you near the top. The thick jungle covering it from top to bottom dispelled any previous notions I may have had about someday climbing it. The top of the divide, on the other hand, is windswept and open providing for nice views south into the West Fork Pinto Creek drainage and the beautiful Oak Flat area where there is a confluence of five trails and nearly as many creeks. From here the return is back the way you came.
For those desiring something a little less than almost fourteen miles, a gentler overall climb, and exquisite trail conditions, the ten mile RT hike to the Fire Line intersection would provide the majority of the beauty that is to be seen on this hike. As with many "stream following" trails, I felt that there were many times that we were up on the side slope and missing much of the riparian beauty below. If I were to go back (and I will!), I would like to attempt to follow the creek bed itself upstream from the above mentioned "small saddle/ridge"(1.5mi) all the way to Fire Line, then return via the normal trail.
Just as a last note, if you have any time or energy left over, there is very short and worth while side trip to be explored on the drive back out. It is a very cool little slot canyon. You can catch a glimpse of this narrow opening from your car by looking directly left as you descend the only "4X4" hill back down to the cattle gate. The easiest access is to park right in the sandy drainage at the side of the road just prior to the gate. From here it is a short and scenic stroll up the sandy wash as the walls continue to close in around you. If you have sandals, take them or just wade barefoot through the clear water flowing over the sand. Ever hear the "babbling brook" on one of those relaxation sound tracks? This is where they recorded it.
Limited Fishing information.
Limited fishing information.
Limited boating information.
There are no formal campgrounds in this area. But you can camp along the creek in dispersed areas.
Several small pools do exist on this creek and make great swimming holes.