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Indian Creek Trail Content provided by   Wildernet
Quick Facts
Length:  9.3 Miles
USGS Map:  Cochise Head
Usage:  Light
Trail Number:  253
Elevation Gain:  2,300
Difficulty:  More Difficult
Beginning Elevation:  4,700
Ending Elevation:  7,000
Reservation:  No
Season:  Spring - Summer
Directions
From Tucson, Take I-10 east 124 miles to San Simon. For the north trailhead, take exit 378, turn right to Wood Canyon which becomes FR #700, and travel 15 miles to the end of the road. For the south trailhead, take exit 382, turn right to Portal and travel 17 miles to Forest Road #356. Continue for 7 miles to the end of the road.
Location Information
This long and scenic trail is in a part of the Chiricahua Range that is considerably removed from the extensive trail system that crisscrosses the Chiricahua Wilderness. Indian Creek Trail traverses a landscape of historic cattle ranches, pioneer homesteads and old roads where horse drawn wagons wore ruts that, in some places, are still visible. The route described here actually passes through two canyons, climbing up and over a saddle that separates them as it moves from one to the other.

Starting from the south, the trail begins off of FR 356, a 4 WD road, and follow Indian Creek upstream from its confluence with East Whitetail Creek along an old wagon road. Beyond the end of the old road, views of the striking profile of Cochise Head Mountain framed by the "V" shaped notch of the canyon are some of the best in the Chiricahuas. There is usually water running within a section called the narrows, as the underground flow of the stream is forced to the surface by the pinch of outcropping rock strata. Above the narrows, the stream forks and the trail stays with the west fork to the head of the canyon. There it climbs up and over a divide into Wood Canyon.

You will encounter an amazing degree of biodiversity in Wood Canyon. Plants here range from ocotillo of the Sonoran desert to Douglas-fir of the Canadian Zone. in some places you can see them both at once! There are extensive stands of bigtooth maple and sycamore in the area as well, making it well worth a visit in the fall of the year. The only permanent creek water in the northern Chiricahua Range is located along two stretches of this stream. Wood Canyon Park, near the head of the canyon, is one of the most lushly wooded basins in the Chiricahuas.

As with Indian Canyon, Wood Canyon is the site of a number of historic homesteads. In some places all that remains is a mound of rubble that was once a cabin. In others, a few fruit trees survive. Near the trailhead, the stream enters private property and the trail ends at Forest Road #700.
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