Blistered on the Chorro Grande Trail

In socks on rocks.

I was about two miles up the trail when I got a blister. It was bad enough that I decided, grudgingly, I had no choice but to take off my boots and hike back in my socks. Then it started to rain. Big, fat, summertime thunder storm drops slapping down.

I had set out mid-morning on Saturday for a short hike up Chorro Grande Canyon in the upper reaches of the Sespe Creek watershed. About a mile up the trail my right boot started grating on my heal. I had made the foolish decision to wear a pair of six inch logger-style boots I had not worn since last winter, although they had never given me any trouble before. When I plan on bushwhacking, I prefer their heavy sole and leather protection, as opposed to my usual choice of light-weight trail shoes.

Rather than stop and take off my boot to see if I could fix the problem, I pushed it another mile to Oak Camp. I thought the irritating burn on my heal would only amount to minor scrape, and that I would make an adjustment at the camp and then continue hiking.

A view from the trail of a dry Chorro Grande falls. It normally flows in two places over the rock face just above the group of green bushy oak trees in the foreground.

The dirt portions of the trail were splattered trackless by a light rain shower the afternoon before, and just short of the camp a set of bear tracks appeared for a number of yards. They were the only tracks I saw that day.

When I got to the camp I took off my boot and saw that I had a blister the size of a quarter on the back of my heal. I decided to take off both boots rather than hobble around like Quasimodo from one heavy boot and one barefoot. I had no tape or any supplies to pad the blister and it was unbearable to walk with the boot on.

A decent trickle of water was still flowing in the creek aside the top camp for a few yards before it seeped back underground. In typical fall fashion, it was pleasantly cool in the shade but still hot in the sun.

After a brief respite under the oaks I started back down the trail and shortly after it started raining. It rained lightly for about ten minutes. The big drops wetted down the landscape, my socks and the tops of my shoulders and hat. The fallen moisture made the humidity rise quickly and unpleasantly, but it also brought out the earthen and floral aromas of the mountain, a wilderness equivalent to the smell of the first drops of rain on hot asphalt in the city.

I made it back to my iron horse parked on Highway-33 frustrated the day ended short of my intentions, but with no further travails.

Oak Camp

Highway 33 heading into Sespe Gorge with Pine Mountain rising in the background.

Red sandstone along the Chorro Grande Trail.

Related Posts:

An Arrowhead, Fossils and Bear Tracks on Pine Mountain Or Return to Chorro Grande

Snow Day on Pine Mountain, Chorro Grande Falls

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Meadow Camp (Dick Smith Wilderness)

4.8 miles from Trailhead to Meadow Camp:

—>4.4 miles from Trailhead to Lower Buckhorn Camp

—> 0.4 miles from Lower Buckhorn Camp to Meadow Camp

—> 2.2 miles from Meadow Camp to Indian Creek Camp

From Santa Barbara: Gibraltar Road—>East Camino Cielo—>Camuesa Romero (dirt) Road 13 miles to the locked gate serving as the Trailhead.

Indian Creek Trail leads through the Los Padres National Forest and into the Dick Smith Wilderness. The footpath begins from Camuesa Romero Road, a little less than 1 mile above the confluence of Indian Creek and Mono Creek, and about 1.5 miles upstream from Mono Camp at Mono Debris Dam.

The Trailhead is located on Camuesa Romero Road where it is closed by a locked gate just east of Mono Creek. Just after the gate Camuesa Romero Road continues west and crosses Mono Creek and then Indian Creek several times. From the locked gate continue up the road for about one mile to find the start of the trail heading north into the mouth of Indian Creek Canyon. A metal sign-in box is located at the beginning of the trail, but is not clearly visible from the road due to being set back from it and behind a slight rise in the land.

Indian Creek Trail begins in a fairly arid and uninviting setting, but as the trail climbs up the canyon it enters a lush riparian habitat. The lower sections of the trail up to Meadow Camp are fairly well worn and easy to follow, although sometimes it’s easy to lose the path for a bit through the creek crossings. Above Meadow Camp the trail becomes a bit overgrown in places and certain creek sections there is little or no trail, although it’s easy to find your way up the relatively narrow canyon.

Indian Creek dries up during summer in the stretch that passes by Meadow Camp. The photos below were taken in mid-June; there was plenty of water for camping, but it was getting low. When this lower section of Indian Creek is dry sometimes water can be found near Lower Buckhorn Camp.

The meadow of Meadow Camp looking up Indian Creek Canyon. The creek runs to the right of where I took the photo.

Meadow Camp

Looking toward the creek. The camp sits well above the creek.

Just behind where I took this shot the land slopes down to the creek about 20 yards below.

Indian Creek flows beside, but below the camp.

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Fall Lightning

An uncommon lightning show tonight from the roof top overlooking the city.

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“Fortunately, the task of preparing this volume has been carried on by those who have had the feeling that a piece of work must be done, but who also have had a purpose to make it reveal beauty and exude the historical atmosphere of the region with which it is concerned.”

—Santa Barbara: A Guide to the Channel City and Its Environs (1941)

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Forest Service Contact Info, News and Road Closure Updates (Los Padres National Forest)

Los Padres National Forest homepage. News and information on road closures can be found under the Alerts and Notices tab.

Forest Headquarters
6755 Hollister Avenue
Suite 150
Goleta, Ca 93117
Voice: (805) 968-6640
TTY/TDD: (805) 968-6790
FAX: (805) 961-5729
Newsline: (805) 961-5770

Monterey
Ranger District

406 South Mildred
King City, Ca 93930
Voice: (831) 385-5434
TTY/TDD: (831) 385-1189
FAX: (831) 385-0628

Santa Lucia
Ranger District

1616 Carlotti Drive
Santa Maria, Ca 93454
Voice: (805) 925-9538
TTY/TDD: (805) 925-7388
FAX: (805) 961-5781

Santa Barbara
Ranger District

3505 Paradise Road
Santa Barbara, Ca 93105
Voice: (805) 967-3481
TTY/TDD: (805) 967-7337
FAX: (805) 967-7312

Ojai
Ranger District

1190 East Ojai Avenue
Ojai, CA 93023
Voice: (805) 646-4348
TTY/TDD: (805) 646-3866
FAX: (805) 646-0484

Mt. Pinos
Ranger District

34580 Lockwood
Valley Road
Frazier Park, Ca 93225
Voice: (661) 245-3731
TTY/TDD: (661) 245-0521
FAX: (661) 245-1526

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