
This 1-mile roundtrip packs punch: 300 feet of elevation loss descends into a forested ravine, through archaeological terrain, to a hidden spring at a cliff base. The hike is short but relentless—steep terrain, zero forgiveness on winter ice, and summer heat that hits 100°F+. The payoff is real: a pristine spring hidden under a rock overhang, an archaeological site, and total solitude on the remote North Rim.
Moderate-to-hard
A hidden spring tucked under a cliff overhang, accessible only via steep descent. You'll pass marked archaeology, disappear into a shaded ravine, then navigate rocky outcrops to reach the payoff.
• The archaeological site marks the initial descent—keep your energy for the steeper return ascent.\n• False summit trick: The initial ravine seems like the end. Keep going—the real spring is further.\n• The boulder shelter at the spring gives you a lunch spot. Eat here; hydration discipline starts now.\n• Early morning (6 AM start) beats the heat and gives rescue light if needed.\n• Scout the return route from the spring before you commit—the ascent is steeper and longer than descent.
May through October (North Rim operating window). May-June and September-October offer relatively stable weather. July-August brings extreme heat and monsoon storms.
Short distance (1 mile) is deceptive. Steep terrain and 300ft elevation loss demand fitness. Not suitable for young children or those with limited hiking experience. Cliff edges and exposed drop-offs require constant supervision. No accessibility for strollers or wheelchairs.
No permits required for day hiking on this trail.
No shuttle required; pull into the roadside parking pullout.
Summer heat routinely exceeds 100°F; avoid 10 AM-4 PM peak. Winter ice makes steep sections treacherous—traction devices mandatory. The spring water is contaminated and unsafe to drink. Post-fire work may cause closures. This is a remote location; medical evacuation takes hours.
Not accessible. Steep, rocky wash with no paved or accessible-grade trail. Scrambling under outcrops required.
Short distance (1 mile) is deceptive. Steep terrain and 300ft elevation loss demand fitness. Not suitable for young children or those with limited hiking experience. Cliff edges and exposed drop-offs require constant supervision. No accessibility for strollers or wheelchairs.
Cape Royal area. North Rim has extremely limited services (open May-October). Potable water NOT available on North Rim—bring all water from outside the park. Nearest services are outside the park boundary.
It depends on your baseline. The 300ft gain over 1 mile is steep but not extreme. Most hikers in decent shape finish in 1-2 hours. The challenge is heat and hydration, not technical climbing. Start early, drink constantly, and you'll summit the return.
Absolutely not. The NPS explicitly warns: 'Do NOT drink the water.' It is contaminated. Bring a full water supply from outside the North Rim. No water is available on the rim itself.
Hard ice hides on the steep sections. You can't see it under leaf litter or shadows. One slip on ice means a nasty fall on jagged rock. Traction devices (microspikes) are not optional—they're mandatory. If you can't commit to spikes, wait for spring.
No permit required for day hiking. A map is smart. The trail is marked but can be confusing. Bring a printed map and a compass as backup. There's no cell signal to google your way out.
Yes, if you're experienced and disciplined. Leave detailed trip info with someone. The remote North Rim means rescue takes hours. If you turn back early due to heat or fatigue, that's a win, not a failure.
The NPS time assumes steady hiking with breaks. Most people hike slower, photograph the archaeology, and rest longer in the spring area. Add 1-2 hours if you're leisurely. Fast hikers may do it in 90 minutes.
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