Rubio Canyon

Mount Lowe

Info: 

Sunset Ridge to Mt. Lowe Trail Camp is 10 miles round trip with 2,700-foot gain; to Inspiration Point is 11 miles round trip.

Mount Lowe Railway Trail

Professor Thaddeus Lowe, Civil War balloonist, man of fame and fortune, was the quintessential California dreamer. His dream was to build a railway into--and a resort complex atop--the San Gabriel Mountains high above Pasadena. In the 1890s, his dream became a reality.

During the height of its popularity, millions took Professor Lowe's "Railway to the Clouds" to fine hotels and spectacular views of Southern California. Until it was abandoned in the 1930s, it was the Southland's most popular tourist attraction.

From Pasadena, visitors rode a trolley up Rubio Canyon, where a pavilion and hotel were located. After taking refreshments, they boarded the "airships" of the great cable incline, where carried them 3,000 feet (gaining 1,300 feet) straight up to the Echo Mountain Resort Area. "Breathtaking" and "hair-raising" were the most frequent descriptions of this thrilling ride. Atop Echo Mountain was the White City, with a hotel, observatory, and a magnificent searchlight purchased from the Chicago World's Fair. When the searchlight swept the mountaintop, the white buildings of the resort were visible from all over Los Angeles. From Echo Mountain, tourists could board a trolley and ride another few miles to Mount Lowe Tavern at the end of the line.


Echo Mountain

Info: 

From Cobb Estate to Echo Mountain is 5 miles round trip with 1,400-foot elevation gain.

Sam Merrill Trail

Professor Thaddeus Sobreski Coulincourt Lowe's Echo Mountain Resort area can be visited by retracing the tracks of his "Railway to the Clouds" and also by way of a fine urban edge trail that ascends from the outskirts of Altadena.

This historic hike visits the ruins of the one-time "White City" atop Echo Mountain. From the steps of the old Echo Mountain House are great clear-day views of the megalopolis. Energetic hikers can join trails leading to Inspiration Point and Idlehour campground.

Pasadena and Altadena citizens have been proud to share their fascination with the front range of the San Gabriel Mountains. This pride has extended to the trails ascending from these municipalities into the mountains.


Upper Arroyo Seco

Info: 

Switzer Picnic Area to Switzer Falls is 4 miles round trip, 600-ft elevation loss; to Bear Canyon is 8 miles round trip, 1,000-ft gain; to Oakwilde is 9 miles round trip with 1,400-ft loss.

Gabrielino National Recreation Trail

Arroyo Seco is undoubtedly the best-known canyon in Southern California. It's the site of the Rose Bowl and has the dubious distinction of hosting California's first freeway, the Pasadena. But the ten miles of canyon dominated by the freeway bear little resemblance to the ten miles of wild and rugged arroyo spilling from the shoulder of Mount Wilson.

And the arroyo is rugged. A quiet stream--lined with colonnades of alder, live oak and mountain lilac clinging to the narrow sides of the gorge--cascades over boulders of big gray granite. A walk through the wildest part of Arroyo Seco that visits Switzer Falls and a couple of peaceful trail camps.


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