Hiking Project Logo

Explore the gateway to a threatened Tecate cypress grove and mini-Moab.


Your Rating: Rating Rating Rating Rating Rating      Clear Rating
Your Difficulty:
Your Favorites: Add To-Do · Your List
Zoom in to see details
Map Key

3.8

Miles

6.1

KM

Point to Point

2,214' 675 m

High

497' 152 m

Low

1,718' 524 m

Up

7' 2 m

Down

9%

Avg Grade (5°)

36%

Max Grade (20°)

Dogs No Dogs

Features Views · Wildflowers · Wildlife

Chino Hills State Park will close after a quarter inch of rain and during red flag warnings.

Description

If you're looking for the Coal Canyon Waterfall, don't take this trail. You want the Big Mo Trail. The poorly named Coal Canyon Trail takes you high above the canyon floor along the west ridge that separates Coal Canyon from Gypsum Canyon.

After crossing under the 91 Freeway through the Coal Canyon wildlife corridor, you enter the seldom-used southern section of Chino Hills State Park. There are three trails that begin at this point, so stay to the right and begin a climb along Forest Service Road 3S04. This road, also known as Main Divide, cuts through the middle of Cleveland National Forest. But in Chino Hills State Park, it is called Coal Canyon Trail.

The trail is fully exposed with no water sources, so plan accordingly. The first two miles are ordinary, but once you cross the State Park gate and enter the Coal Canyon Ecological Reserve, the surroundings begin to change. A grove of threatened Tecate cypress emerges, and the 25 foot, rich green conifers dot the chaparral backdrop.

As you approach the top, off to the right you'll notice a red scar of an abandoned surface mine. On the other side of this ridge is mini-Moab: a sedimentary outcrop of boulders that can be seen from miles away. The views from here are amazing. Looking across Fremont Canyon to the south, you can see Santiago Peak. To the north is Mt. Baldy, and to the west is Catalina Island and downtown Los Angeles.

Upon reaching the end of Coal Canyon Trail, you can continue along Main Divide to Sierra Peak, or take the south trail down into Fremont Canyon.

Flora & Fauna

Tecate cypress are what people come here to see.

Contacts

Shared By:

Warren Collier

Trail Ratings

  4.0 from 1 vote

#14792

Overall
  4.0 from 1 vote
5 Star
0%
4 Star
100%
3 Star
0%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%
Trail Rankings

#1,524

in California

#14,792

Overall
11 Views Last Month
2,390 Since Dec 22, 2017
Intermediate Intermediate

0%
0%
100%
0%
0%
0%

Photos

End of Coal Canyon trail, and looking into Fremont Canyon
Dec 23, 2017 near Corona, CA
Tecate Cypress
Dec 23, 2017 near Corona, CA
Foothill Mariposa Lily - Calochortus weedii var. intermedius
Dec 23, 2017 near Corona, CA
Mini-Moab in OC
Dec 23, 2017 near Corona, CA
Tecate Cypress Cones
Dec 23, 2017 near Corona, CA
Tecate Cypress
Dec 23, 2017 near Corona, CA

0 Comments

Weather


Current Trail Conditions

Unknown
Add Your Check-In

Check-Ins

Nov 27, 2022
Joe A
Dec 23, 2017
Warren Collier
15mi — 7h 00m
Welcome

Join the Community

Create your FREE account today!
Already have an account? Login to close this notice.

Get Started