I started the hike at Hollyridge Trail, walked on the dirt road briefly, then climbed north up the ridge to Mulholland Ridge, east to Mt. Chapel, Bell Knoll, Mt. Bell, and Baby Bell. I finally had to use a section of dirt road south to Mt. Hollywood. Then back on a use path straight down the west ridge, past Captain’s Roost and continue down the ridge over a couple prominent high points, and then all the way to Bronson Cave by sunset. A short walk on the road north took me to a use path that climbs west straight up the mountainside to a ridge and then the final pitch to return to Hollyridge Trail. What an enjoying trek!
Hike Description - If you’re looking for something different in Griffith Park, this loop is a winner. It would be good to have some familiarity with the park trails and competency in navigation, and some skill in negotiating dicey sections of trail. If you’re up to the challenge, you’ll find this hike to be rewarding. The whole loop is 4.1 miles (2.8 on trails and 1.2 on roads) with about 1900 feet in total evaluation gain. I’ve included enough detail in this blog narrative to give the specifics of how to do the hike. My Mt. Lee hike description will give you directions to the trailhead and the beginning of the hike. My Brush Canyon hike description fills in various details of hiking around the rim. |
I leave my office in Echo Park at 1:50, take the 101 north to the Gower exit, and drive north on Beachwood Canyon Drive 1.9 miles to Hollyridge Trail trailhead. There are lots of cars but I find a place to park. Every time I’ve hiked from here my destination was Mt. Lee, but today I’ll go the opposite direction.2:10 PM - Begin hike climbing Hollyridge Trail, a wide dirt road. It starts heading south and shortly cuts back north. Just past the junction where the road comes up from the horse stables, there is a path that veers left and heads up the ridge. This will be my route. I had scouted it out using the aerial view in Google maps. It showed a clear route. Up I climb. The foot traffic and erosion has created a trench. I’m literally climbing up a rut that’s 3 to 4 feet deep. But it works. After a few minutes I pass over Mulholland Trail (a wide dirt road) and continue up the ridge. This is a section Jerry Schad describes in his “Trip 4, Mulholland Ridge,” which helped inspire this hike. It’s pretty warm and I’m working up a sweat. Shortly a spur trail cuts left about 100 feet to Mt. Lee Drive. This makes a great alternative route to hiking to Mt. Lee. I continue up the ridge.
2:31 - Mulholland Ridge. This highpoint offers a nice panorama, but the thick marine haze, particularly to the south, makes for poor visibility today. I see horseback riders on Mulholland Trail far below. I turn right (east) and stroll along the ridge trail with nice views north and south with Mt. Chapel up ahead. As I approach the flank of Mt. Chapel the trail splits. The right path traverses the south face of Mt. Chapel. I veer left and in a couple more minutes is another trail junction. The path straight proceeds northeast to the summit. It’s a good route, but for today, I turn left (north) and follow the trail along the west flank of Mt. Chapel heading toward the water tank. I’ve not walked the route before. It’s not bad but there are some dicey spots. I arrive at the water tank and walk past it on the right. Great view toward Burbank and Glendale. I turn right and climb the path south to the summit.
Leave summit at 4:20 and head down the steep path west toward Captain’s Roost. It’s really slippery and I fall on my butt. I carefully work my way down and reach the road in 5 minutes. Captain’s Roost was incinerated with the May 2007 fire. It’s now been rebuilt but it will take years to revegetate. Stately palms with blackened trunks rise into the sky. The gentle path continuing west down the ridge is quite nice. There are some century plants, ice plants, and other domestic vegetation along the way. This trail makes a much nicer route to Mt. Hollywood than walking up a dirt road. After 7 minutes I reach the road about 300 feet east of the hairpin turn. I walk to the turn and continue west on the path down the ridge. It’s only about 360 feet from this point to Mt. Hollywood Drive but the hillside drops much fast then the ridge, leaving a steep climb down the road cut at the end.
Cross the street and start walking down the dirt road southwest. In about 275 feet I bear right onto a use path roughly paralleling the road. After a few minutes of climbing I arrive at a prominent outcropping. Then down to a saddle and up to another outcropping. I see hikers on the trail in Brush Canyon far below to north. The scenery is splendid and worth a return visit when the visibility is clean and there’s more daylight. I leave the ridge and a steep descent delivers me to the ridge route that is about 240 feet west of the big green water tank (#116) at 5:09. I’m getting a little nervous about the waning daylight and know I don’t have time to lollygag. I head down the ridge, a route I’ve hiked before. In a few minutes I reach the crest of the east quarry wall and get my first view down toward Bronson Caves. A film crew is wrapping up for the day. Down the ridge I climb, reach a saddle, then climb to a high point on the south crest of the quarry. The path bends north and requires some route choices as I negotiate my way west down the brushy hillside and reach the road culminating at the Bronson Cave site at 5:36. I snap a picture of the famous “Batcave.”
I walk from the caves down the dirt road north to Canyon Drive in Brush Canyon. When I reach the road I bear right and continue north past the parking lot and park gate. My task now is to find the use path that climbs 460 vertical feet west to Hollyridge Trail. I get out my aerials to confirm the route. The sun is down now so I have no margin of navigational error in the diminishing light of dusk. I walk just short of 0.2 mile and locate the rough path on the left, adjacent to the concrete check dam. I begin my final climb at 5:49. It’s steep and loose but I manage to achieve a ridge in 7 minutes. I turn right (north) and ascend the ridge bending northwest, climb a final steep pitch, and arrive at Hollyridge Trail at 6:04. I’m feeling a sense of relief that I’ve made it successfully. Across the road is a large flat spot. A photographer and his friend have set up a pinhole box camera to capture the Hollywood sign in the twilight. I stop and chat and savor the beauty of the lingering sunset colors. The lights of Hollywood twinkle as crews work to get set for Oscar Sunday. My pace is relaxed as I walk the final 200 yards down the dirt road to the Hollyridge Trail trailhead.6:17 - Done and fulfilled. I’m so ready for a warm shower and a good meal.
Epilog - What a thoroughly enjoyable adventure in Griffith Park. To complete a hike with about 70 percent of the route on narrow trails in a park dominated by dirt and paved roads is most satisfying.
(includes links to my other blog posts for hiking in Griffith Park)
(Detailed trail guide including driving directions, recommended season, map, notes, links, and photos)
- Mt. Lee - The Hollywood Sign - via Hollyridge Trail
- Brush Canyon to Mt. Bell (1582’) with options to Mt. Hollywood, Mt. Chapel, Mt. Lee, and Bronson Caves
- Brush Canyon to Mt. Bell at Dan's Hiking Pages - Hike report: May 6, 2010
- Griffith Park Six Peaks Hike - August 5, 2010 - including Bee, Chapel, Bell, Hollywood, Glendale and Beacon
- Mt. Hollywood, Mt. Bell Hike - 10-10-10
- Mt. Lee and More in Griffith Park Hike - March 9, 2011 - including Mt. Hollywood, Mt. Chapel, and Cahuenga Peak via Griffith Observatory
- Mt. Bell and Mt. Hollywood in Griffith Park Hike - Oct. 6, 2011 - via Vermont Tennis Courts and Hogback Trail
- Hollywood and Bell via Brush in Griffith Park - April 12, 2013
- Chapel, Lee, Cahuenga via Brush in Griffith Park - April 18, 2013
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