Sounds good Paul. Please let us know what you find. I’d go up that way in a
heartbeat to observe in the warmer months. Thanks, George
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 16, 2019, at 8:56 AM, L Knauth <Knauth@xxxxxxx> wrote:--
Thanks for the report George. Looks like there are a lot of roads on the
high plateau south of the peak itself. A workman at my place this morning is
from Vernon and says there is a vast area south of Vernon and between Greens
Peak and Pinetop at 7500-8000' with very few people and miles of Forest
Service Roads. He says the Greens Peak area gets a fair amount of RV action
in the summer. In looking at Google Earth near Forest Road 96 west of Greens
Peak, there appear to be lots of open areas, many in cedar forests. I think
I'm going to go exploring in this area.
Paul
________________________________
From: az-observing-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <az-observing-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
on behalf of George Kolb <geokolb@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2019 5:48:14 PM
To: az-observing@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <az-observing@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [AZ-Observing] Re: Green’s Peak Area
We took a side trip to Green’s Peak while visiting in Pinetop to see what
opportunities there might be for use as a night sky observing site. Turning
left (north) off AZ260 onto Forest road 117 the view ahead was stunning -
rolling grass covered hills starting at an elevation of 8500 ft. The six mile
well graded dirt road steadily climbed until reaching a high plateau where
roads veered off in many directions however the adjacent meadows were laced
with 1-2 ft lava rocks making it impossible to stray from the road. We
noticed a group of campers centrally located in the large meadow up against a
large group of trees near an unimproved road. Obviously this location would
not provide unobstructed views. Also, the towering Green’s Peak was blocking
all access to the western sky. Then we saw it, the turnoff to Green’s Peak.
I have never seen a road like this in my life - an undulating 20-30% graded
shelf road that reminded me of the typical oscilloscope pattern. Up and down
f
or two miles and one switchback. Obviously no RV campers on this road - well
maybe Mike Wiles could do it. I quickly wished I did not commit us to
climbing this road but it was doable and soon enough we were at the summit -
10,133 ft with a fantastic view. The summit was designed for maintenance of
the 10+ towers that crowd the area with no room for visitor parking except
for parking on the loop.
Thanks Paul for calling attention to this beautiful place. It was a great
ride.
There is a lake 3 miles from the base of Green’s Peak called Carnero Lake.
Google Maps shows some campers parked near the shore so there might be
opportunities for an observing site there. We didn’t have enough time to
investigate. George Kolb
On Aug 10, 2019, at 1:30 PM, L Knauth <Knauth@xxxxxxx> wrote:--
Anyone been to area around Greens Peak (10,000') about 30 easy road miles
east of Pinetop? Looks on Google Earth like lots of open areas near the
Peak on National Forest Land that might make good observing sites? About 4
hours from East Valley. A contractor working on my hacienda project in
Gilbert saw my telescope trailers and alerted me to it saying he's been
there camping, amazing skies, and that very few people go there. Maybe after
monsoons and before snows?
Paul Knauth
--
See message header for info on list archives or unsubscribing, and please
send personal replies to the author, not the list.
See message header for info on list archives or unsubscribing, and please
send personal replies to the author, not the list.
--
See message header for info on list archives or unsubscribing, and please
send personal replies to the author, not the list.