I had a very exhausting and scary experience today I wanted to share with all of you. I am in Organ Pipes National Monument and temps were supposed to go to 88 today. There is no electric and generator time does not start until 4:00 pm, so after taking a morning tour and having a quick lunch, I headed off for a hiking trail to take some photos of cactus in bloom because I did not want to hang around my hot RV. One of the campers here had told me last night there were lots of things in bloom and the first part of the trail was easy, and the trail was about a mile long. So, even though it was about 84, I took off with a bottle of water, my sun hat, and camera at about 1:30 pm on my bike to the trailhead.
The trail was supposed to be about a mile long and relatively flat. After walking the flat part and then slightly uphill, the trail got narrower and at one point, at least to me, disappeared. I reached a point where I could go straight, left, or right. I took the left trail because it headed downhill, but then it petered out, and I started cutting across the area, but walking through plants and cactus. It was very rocky, and I almost fell several times. I ran out of water, and had to rest several times in a very small amount of shade. I was really exhausted and had trouble getting my breath because it was so strenuous, but I did not want to go all the way back the way I had come because I figured I was more than halfway to the end. Finally, another couple was coming towards me and helped me get back on the right path. (They would have offered me water but did not have any with them because they also thought it was short!)
Here is what I did right and wrong:
1) Good thing - I stopped at the campground kiosk and asked for a trail map, but they did not have one. In fact, there are no detailed trail maps of that trail. I thought I had enough water for an easy, short trail.
2) Bad decision - I should have taken my cell phone and walking stick. I probably also should have taken a small flashlight. I should also not have listened to a fellow camper. I should have gone to the visitor center and got more information. I also probably should not have tried hiking in the heat.
When I got off the trail, I rode my bike to the visitor center and asked to speak to the head ranger. He took my pulse and got me some water and found me a place to sit near the AC to cool off because I looked awful. First, it turns out the trail is 1.5 miles long and considered moderately difficult! Here is what I told him:
1) That trail starts out wide and has rocks marking the sides, but in the middle it looks like whoever maintained it just gave up. They should have rocks on the sides and/or red flags on bushes the entire length. Where there is an old trail or an animal trail branching off, they should put rocks or an arrow sign.
2) There were no detailed trail map signs at the beginning or end of the trail, which there should be. (People walk both directions.)
3) In addition, there should be markers with numbers or signs telling you how long the trail is both at the beginning and periodically along the way. There was nothing telling me how long or difficult the trail was. It's on the website, but that is not enough. I told him I did not expect the park staff to protect me from everything, but information would have been nice.
Anyway, I also wrote all of this on a satisfaction survey. Hope they do something about it!