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Well, I'm going to be telling about them in the liner notes for the forthcoming MP3 CD "Songs from a Tunnel", which should be available for public consumption within two weeks! But, as I've been here for some time I'll lay it down for you cats... :) In 1991, in the midst of a case of Shingles, I was guided up in a driving rain - driving my trusty Corolla SR5 (RIP) and dodging large boulders as they "clunked" down in the road in front - and thus did not have a good idea as to where I was. The next time I didn't have full directions, and guessed my way up to the foot of the road/trail. It's up San Gabriel Canyon, past the dam, which is reachable via the 39 N, which connects with the 210 and 10 (though you wouldn't want to take it from way down THERE by the 10), North of Azusa, CA. The Tunnels, as I came to know them, take place twice a year - the weekends that Daylight Savings Time comes and goes. When fires are in the area, or it's dry, don't count on having a fire up there. It's awful cold in the Fall sometimes. It's always a good idea to dress in layers, and perhaps have something to sweat the hell out of on the way up, to change out of when you get up there. Bring some food of course, water, and etc., to say nothing of your favorite noisemaker or other musical instrument. Sometimes people bring things like Saxes, which have prompted me to say "I gotta thing about chickens," before playing along w/bowed guitar. Mostly folks stick to the acoustic stuff, as it's sort of a no-no to be TOO amplified. I imagine it would be all right to have a pair of those porto-amp cylinders hooked up to a portable Zoom unit, and a guitar - but remember, who the @#$ is going to schlep it all up there and back, eh? Think about it. By the way, it's best to do this in the day. While driving up the populated section of Azusa, keep an eye out for a convenience store on your left; be sure to buy a parking pass, which is important if you're going to stay overnight. Continue up the 39, winding up through the canyon; you'll pass not only the visually stunning San Gabriel Dam, but also a site with odd ramps leading down into the water 50 ft. below, used to test torpedoes during WWII... Pay attention to the road, as it winds sometimes more violently than the Big Sur drive - and there are reasonably large drive-offs to park and dig the scenery. Before long you'll see a sign for East Fork, followed by a classic metal frame bridge across it, which you should take. After winding your way up, you'll also pass a trailer park's sign (they're way down in the ravine, and therefore not a toxic danger, though a good place to go in case of emergency), and soon, after Burro Canyon, a bend to the left and during the curve back to the right, there's an immediate exit to the left, Schumaker Canyon. Watch out for the oncoming traffic of course. The road goes up between some carved-out places in the side of the range, then you'll see the gate at the base of the trail, to the side a parking area. >From this point, it's 1-1/4 miles. Go over or under the gate, which is perfectly all right, as it just keeps the motor vehicles/etc off for the most part, though bicycles with tough tires are okay. Keep going. There isn't a fork-off you should take - stay on the main trail, watch out for tumbling rocks, and pace yourself. The road/trail has the same up-and-down pattern familiar to most Southern CA mountain roads, and not much easier to deal with on a stamina/confidence level. This hike is a real, Good Zen Experience, so long as you pay attention and don't walk on the edge of the trail, which often can be the only thing between the road and a ravine over a hundred feet deep - the kind of ravine you can imagine Homer going "D-oh!" all the way down. There may be an area right before the first tunnel that has fallen in - this happens perennially and the fixing of which is paid for mostly by the fee you paid when you bought a parking pass. You didn't? Shame on you. Don't pay attention to illusions offered that may show a tunnel far away; keep going. You'll get there. We stick to one concrete rule outside of the obvious ones of being kind to one another, otherwise coexisting peacefully, and hopefully in musical harmony as well - and that's "Pack it in, pack it out." as far as the litter factor is concerned. The particular hikes in question have been going on for quite some time, perhaps over 20 years now; and have developed a positive rapport with the Park Personnel. I prefer the Spring ones, as they've got the higher probability of being warmer, and take my acoustic guitar, a hat, pancho, several layers of clothes, enough tie-die to be respectable, food/water/etc., and a light aluminum beach/lawn chair. Some folks bring tents, congas, you name it, and on occasion several people create an ongoing reincarnated bit of technology known as The Cart, which all concerned dump their junk onto, and all concerned grab a rope and, collectively, pull. The first Cart was a heavy metal bedframe, welded to a pair of bicycles, whose tires were burst before we'd dragged it 100 feet. The last one I saw was impressive and had padded shoulder loops for those who chose to use it. There will be another Cart next time I'm sure. The base is a great place to meet folks to go up the trail with. I recommend against smoking while resting on the way up - there's a considerable altitude factor, and on the other hand you might decide to stop smoking tobacco altogether. I know *I* did after my second time up. In any event, the Tunnels predate the "Rave" as concept, and we're proud to say so at this point. The Park Service presently offers up a story that isn't the complete truth by a stretch, that this pair of tunnels was part of an aborted Nuclear War Escape Route halted in 1967. Period. The actual story goes back to the 20s if not earlier, and involves the Correction Facility that is still there, though no longer as a Work Farm as it was until the 70s. If you look at the film "I Was A Fugitive From A Chain Gang" (1932?), with Paul Muni - which by the way helped abolish Chain Gangs in most of the US - Muni's escape near the end of the film is down the Schumaker Canyon Road. The guys in the back working aren't extras either. Unfortunately for the planners of this great project, it was on the most weather-facing side of the canyon, and tended to erode badly. One thing the mountains in Southern California do really well is crumble. Still. Work continued until 1967, when the State, which had been quietly renting off parcels of land for strip mining just miles north of the Tunnels, encountered the work that the prison inmates had been doing for over 40 years - including an item findable on a Thomas map as "The Bridge to Nowhere", which is farther up the trail than the second tunnel. There's this bridge, just like bridges you see over ravines and such, only this one goes right into the side of a cliff. The entire area, if one thinks about the negative aspects, is a fine example of how the CA State and Fed Dept. of Interior have been letting people rape the land for ages, and for a fee, without letting us know. The Tunnels themselves are unfaced on the inside, and have a really cool post-apocolyptic Mad Max kind of feel to it, when there's a nice fire somewhere close to 2/3 the way through. There are paved "walkways" on the side, which can be handy to put your stuff on instead of the unknown ground. Bring a hat, as sometimes water drips through minute cracks in the tunnel casing. This can be particularly disruptive even if you like that kind of thing, and has who knows what minerals in it, so save your scalp the trouble. :) Do some brisk walks the week before so you're not dead by the time you get up there. And tell them I sent you! But only if you behave yourselves. :) So that's the long form, I guess. Questions? Stephen Goodman - http://www.earthlight.net/Studios EarthLight Productions - get the free Loop of the Week!