Hiking adjacent to Pocatello today

lead-draw1.jpg
One of the great things about living in a public state, especially a serious public land state like Idaho, is the backcountry quickly available. This is uplands today at 4:30 PM above Lead Draw, a 5-minute drive from my house and a one hour hike.

muleys-lead-draw.jpg
Since the Sierra Club, the Pocatello Trail Machine Assn., the Forest Service, and Bannock County worked to block Lead Draw off to full-sized vehicles and ATVs, the mule deer herd has come back to the drainage. I counted 48 deer today in a 2-hour hike. Five years ago I hardly ever saw any in Lead Draw. Photo Ralph Maughan 4:13PM on 3-31-07


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  1. MikeH Avatar

    Nice shots, Ralph. What lens and body for the first one?

  2. Ralph Maughan Avatar

    It was a Nikon Coolpix 8800. It has very good image stabilization. I’m sorry they made the Coolpix line into style digital and concentrated on digital SLRs where you have to carry extra lenses.

    The deer were across the Draw. The optical zoom was at 10X (equivalent to 400mm in 35mm camera terms)

  3. JEFF E Avatar
    JEFF E

    Ralph,
    I spend at least one weekend deer hunting just to the immediate east of where you were standing today, in the next draw over to the north. Did you see any of the moose that are calling that area home now? Also I believe the biggest reason Lead Draw ended up being blocked off was the high school keggers that were held up there on a regular basis.

  4. Ralph Maughan Avatar

    The next draw to the north is Kinney Creek which is nice until it tops out over the Ft. Hall Mine Canyon landfill 😉

    The view in the photo is to the north.

    Everything went on in Lead Draw. Shooting in every direction, including a couple suicides and a homicide. Hike cross-country and it wasn’t unlikely to come upon a tryst on a blanket in the sagebrush.

    ATVs diverted the tiny creek by breaking down the banks. There was a loop dirt road in the draw’s bottom. Now it is one wide single track with the other half of the loop revegetated. Hill climbs were starting in all directions. Google Earth shows Lead Draw as of about 3 years ago.

    Beaver might now be reintroduced to the drainage. That’s when the moose will come. Beaver have been reintroduced in the East Fork of Mink Creek at the bottom of Lead Draw. Last spring they cut down enormous willow trees and now there are about 5-7 ponds. Beaver at work on the willow trees.

    The number of moose was up last year on what was the Pocatello (now the West Side Ranger District). I haven’t seen any moose sign at all this spring so far.

    So far this year is a lot drier than 2006. The snowpack is melting very early.

    It’s a constant battle, however. The trailhead parking lot is completely trashed today with remains of an illegal bonfire, shell casings, trash, shotgun shells, plastic bags. Actually that keeps the number of hikers down. The beginning 1/4 mile is not inviting.

  5. JEFF E Avatar
    JEFF E

    Ralph,
    Actually there is one more draw between Kinney creerk and Lead Draw, doesnt really have a name and doesnt look like much from the paved road but if you park at Cherry springs and then go right accross the road you get into it. after a couple hundred yards it opens up ad is actually fairly large area. As for moose I have seen two to three in that draw or Kinney Creek for several years now. Stop by and talk to the folks that live in the last house on the right before you cross the cattle guard. They see them all the time in the creek there. I have also seen a cougar cross the road in that same place. There are elk that winter in the ceders between Kinney creek and the draw I am talking about just above the hi-way most years although the light snow may not have pushed them that low this year. A few years ago I was elk hunting on Scout Mountain and on the saddle between Scout Mountain and Old Tom Mountain counted five moose in about a five acre area. One bull, four cows. In addition there are any number of coyotes, badgers, probably some bobcat too. I wish I could get over there more.

  6. Ralph Maughan Avatar

    You are right. I forgot about that draw, but I have been up it. It does have a stream and if I remember at least some old beaver ponds.

    I haven’t been to the saddle between Scout Mountain and Old Tom for about 5 years, but it would seem like a place for moose with those nearby ponds. That was an important place to me. I recall that a long time ago I was up there in a dry winter and got talking with one of the guys with me, Ron Watters, and I decided I could have fun and make some money doing hiking guides and also promote a conservation message while doing so.

    Last year I saw moose tracks numerous times in Valvehouse Draw and a young bull standing next to the road at the “Beaver Ponds” (began as beaver ponds, but became artificially reinforced catchment ponds when the FS lined them with rocks) on the way to Crystal Summit.

    Other local news. The Corral Creek trail has really become a gully with the fast snowmelt this year. I asked the Forest Service to close it completely this year and rebuild the trail. It dumps a lot of sediment into Mink Creek. I suspect they won’t. Where’s the money?

  7. Alan Gregory Avatar

    I floated the Snake and Teton Riv with Ron back in the 70s. These pix make me homesick — again.

  8. Vicki Avatar
    Vicki

    These pictures remind me why I work so many hours. I am in my mid- thirties (a lady never tells) and am looking forward to the day when my back yard has no fence, and my free time has no boudary.

  9. literaryc Avatar

    I am part of a local wildlife trust and we go to the local common to clear brambles from public footpaths which is so gratifying and seeing these beautiful photos are just too beautiful to express in words.

  10. Jordon Avatar
    Jordon

    Good Day Mr. Ralph Maughan
    Just wanted to let you know that I appreciate you and your book. Thanks alot. It has become my main reference material for the outdoors. The only problem that I had with your book is durability. If you produced a leather bound book with straps that sealed it, I would definitely spend the extra $ to get it. It has become regular reading material while hiking. the extra weight is inconsequential. Again thank you so much.

Author

Dr. Ralph Maughan is professor emeritus of political science at Idaho State University. He was a Western Watersheds Project Board Member off and on for many years, and was also its President for several years. For a long time he produced Ralph Maughan’s Wolf Report. He was a founder of the Greater Yellowstone Coalition. He and Jackie Johnson Maughan wrote three editions of “Hiking Idaho.” He also wrote “Beyond the Tetons” and “Backpacking Wyoming’s Teton and Washakie Wilderness.” He created and is the administrator of The Wildlife News.

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