Deep Hole and Sand
Pass
February, 2007
By John Evanoff
Everyone knows a little something about the Black
Rock Desert and its place in emigrant history as well as being the
home of Burning Man in the present. What few people know is the
more valuable find by William Nobles in 1852 of a direct route into
Northern California south of the Applegate Oregon Trail through
the Black Rock and traversing the Smoke Creek Desert’s northern
hillsides. This trail enters the southern portion of the Honey Lake
Valley and eventually moves past present day Susanville and then
on to Redding and Shasta Mountain. The Nobles Trail left the Applegate
trail and began at Deep Hole Springs northwest of Gerlach, moving
past Wall Springs to Buffalo Creek and then on to Smoke Creek. The
Smoke Creek Desert got its name from a small stream named Smoke
Creek which runs into it from the southern Buffalo Hills. To find
the original Noble Trail and the way into the Smoke Creek Desert,
you can drive north from Highway 80 on NSR447 past Gerlach and then
take the Smoke Creek Road turn heading west just a few hundred yards
past Deep Hole. Deep Hole has the curious distinction of not having
a deep hole compared with the many hot springs dotting the landscape
east, west and north of the area. Camp Deep Hole was a stage station
and Nevada Cavalry outpost in 1865. The stage station had a corral
for dozens of horses and bedding for freight drivers moving goods
to and from Northern California and the Honey Lake Valley to Paradise
Valley and the gold and silver mines north of Winnemucca. The Cavalry
post was manned by a small Troup devoted to keeping the Indians
from stealing the horses, oxen and cattle of the emigrants passing
through. It’s now of significance because it may become the
site of a giant coal-fired power plant in the near future. The continued
population growth in Northern Nevada has many environmental implications
including the never ending search for electric power. More geothermal
wells will undoubtedly be drilled along this stretch of desert because
of its many sources of hot water and as technology gains ways to
harness these renewable sources, there may not be a need for coal-fired
power generation. You will undoubtedly hear more about this tiny
spot on the map in the next couple of decades as energy sources
dwindle and mankind’s desire for electricity intensifies.
If you have the time to visit the Smoke Creek
Desert, do so over a period of several trips. The Smoke Creek was
actually a lake much like Pyramid Lake once and of course before
that was part of the ancient Lake Lahontan. The four-wheel drive
roads that move up all the canyons off the main dirt road called
Smoke Creek Road along the northwest side of the Smoke Creek Desert
afford a chance for discovery and enjoyment of some of the more
astonishing desert vistas in Northern Washoe County.
The Nobles Trail was heavily traveled by freight
wagons and three major stage companies throughout the late 1800’s.
Along the roadway, you’ll pass some of the stage stops that
eventually became ranches. The Smoke Creek Ranch at the western
part of the Smoke Creek Desert was one of the many larger stage
stops along with the Bonham Ranch to the South. Travelers got out
and stretched and horses were changed for the uphill ride through
the Skedaddle Hills and down into Honey Lake Valley. The Smoke Creek
Road eventually turns into the Gerlach Road moving west and then
on to Highway 395 at Viewland. Some of the freight wagons and stages
also moved south on the roads into Sand Pass and through what later
became Flannigan, a small railroad town at the top of the southeastern
most point of Honey Lake Valley. This road eventually turns into
the Fort Sage Road as well as the Hagstaff Road and ends up at Doyle
on Old Highway 395 in California.
All the creeks, the warm water springs and artesian
wells flowing from the Buffalo Hills to the north and the Skedaddle
Hills to the west make this region a natural for bird watchers and
wild game photographers, but the sunrise and sunset vistas of the
desert are by far the most breathtaking. The Basque used these canyons
and hills extensively for herding sheep in the early 1900’s
and if you come across some high piles of rock along your hikes,
these mounds were left by the sheep herders many years ago as guide
posts. A word of caution concerning the southwestern side of the
Skedaddle Hills, this area is the old Sierra Army Munitions Depot
and some security fences outline the region. The army exploded old
munitions up to a few years ago almost every day and some bunkers
of ordinance still remain in the Honey Lake Valley. You will be
stopped by security if you illegally enter the fenced off area.
There is some speculation that besides Noble and
a few other notable emigrant guides, the southern Smoke Creek Desert
area was also crisscrossed by Kit Carson. Carson was often sent
ahead of John C. Fremont’s main party to find Indian trails
and a path south in the group’s first venture to map the western
United States in 1844. A road paralleling the railroad tracks along
the southern edge of the Smoke Creek Desert is a excellent four
wheel drive trail for those who wish to explore the Terraced Hills
north of Pyramid Lake and Emerson Pass where a few people believe
Carson first saw the lake and then hurried back to catch Fremont
heading south into the San Emidio Desert south of the Black Rock.
He told Fremont of the lake and after Kit was sent up a hill that
still bears his name on many maps, they changed direction heading
over San Emidio Canyon and down Sweetwater Canyon to eventually
peer at the amazing body of water he later named Pyramid. They camped
by the large pyramid shaped rock at the lake’s eastern side
and that reminded Fremont of the great pyramid at Giza in Egypt
which he had visited years previously.
To the west, the Smoke Creek Road moves up a canyon
and Smoke Creek Spring, an artesian spring running from a ground
fault located west of a small reservoir near Twin Mountain. These
hills are fun to hike from either side, but the eastern side along
the Burro Mountain Road and its canyons are rock face and can be
tougher to maneuver over. The Northern Paiute, the Klamath and the
Shoshone Tribes walked trails throughout this region hunting mule
deer. Occasionally, you’ll see a few of these large deer along
with antelope, coyote, mustang, badger, skunk, sage grouse, quail,
chucker and lots of jackrabbit.
Further south near Sand Pass is NSR 445 which goes
west into Flannigan and south over Astor Pass into the northern
bays of Pyramid Lake and then on to Sutcliffe and back to Reno.
My choice is to move west through Flannigan and into the lower Honey
Lake Valley. The northern side of Tule Peak, which rises 8,750 feet
over the west side of Pyramid Lake, is majestic and makes for some
great hiking. Another road from NSR 445 at Flannigan and at Astor
Pass moving west is Fish Springs Road. This easy access dirt road
rolls past a spring filled portion of hills and canyons north of
Tule Peak. You may remember stories about the area in the late 1990’s
concerning the Washoe County’s possible purchase of water
rights in the area they wanted to eventually pump into Reno. Some
of those purchases have been put on hold, but it would not surprise
me that a county, state or federal agency ends up buying this ranch
and surrounding hillsides to aid Reno in its never ending search
for water sources.
As with any of your travels into the desert, be
especially careful of the roads. Many are not much more than muddy
or sandy paths and can cause you grief if you are not prepared with
four wheel drive, shovels and plenty of water, food, emergency supplies,
a good map and cell phone.
Next month I’ll take you to a valley north
of Reno that’s easy to find and travel to in an afternoon.
You’ll discover high desert valleys and mountains very few
people including the people who now live there, have ever seen.
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