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Million Hills Wash Route
Hiking Around Las Vegas, Gold Butte National Monument
Million Hills Wash
Million Hills Wash
Trailhead parking on the edge of Devils Cove Road (view N)

Overview

Million Hills Wash is a nice 6.5-mile out-and-back hike in the wild and remote far southeast corner of Gold Butte National Monument. The hike starts from Devils Cove Road and cuts east all the way through the main backbone of Azure Ridge. There is no parking area and no trail.

The route follows an old road that runs down to New Spring on the edge of the main canyon, which at this point is New Spring Canyon. The route then runs down the canyon, which jogs back and forth following erosion patterns through layers of ancient limestone. There are no true narrows, but the route runs through narrow sections with towering limestone cliffs and wider sections with grand views of colorful hills. The route passes a high pour-over, merges with Indian Trail Canyon to become Million Hills Canyon, passes another high pour-over, and finally emerges on the east side of Azure Ridge. Hikers have a variety of options at that point, but turning around and returning to the trailhead makes for a great day-hike. Remember, it is all uphill on the way out.

Link to hiking map.

Million Hills Wash
Trailhead on the edge of Devils Cove Road (view E)

Watch Out

Other than the standard warnings about hiking in the desert, ... this hike is fairly safe, but there are several water-polished pour-overs to bypass. Always be extra careful when high enough to fall and get hurt -- help is a long way away.

This is wild and remote country without services of any kind (no restrooms, no water, no gas, no food, no cell service). Bring what you need to survive. Be prepared and be self-reliant. It is a big place, but someone will eventually find you if you stay on a main road, but be prepared to survive alone for a day or two, or even longer on side roads and trails.

While hiking, please respect the land and the other people out there, and try to Leave No Trace of your passage. Also, this is a very remote hike, so be sure to bring the 10 Essentials.

Million Hills Wash
Million Hills Wilderness Study Area sign (view E)

Getting to the Trailhead

Million Hills Wash is located out in Gold Butte National Monument, about 3-1/2 to 4 hours northeast of Las Vegas in a wild, remote, and scenic area.

From town, drive out to Gold Butte National Monument. From Whitney Pocket, continue south on the unpaved Gold Butte Road for 16.5 miles to a fork. Stay left onto Devils Cove Road and continue south, then east, then south again for 7.4 miles to the trailhead. These roads usually are suitable for carefully driven 2WD-HC vehicles.

Approaching the trailhead area, watch for a green splash of color down a canyon to the left, which is New Spring. Continue a bit farther south watching on the left for a carsonite Million Hills Wilderness Study Area sign and an old, closed road. There is no off-road parking. Park on the edge of the roadway; this is the trailhead.

Million Hills Wash
Hiker about 4 minutes into the hike (view NE)

The Hike

From the trailhead (Table 1, Waypoint 01), the route follows a closed road past a carsonite sign that announces entry into the Million Hills Wilderness Study Area. The old road proceeds generally downhill to the east. In about 5 minutes, hikers crest a low ridge and can see a patch of green in the canyon bottom about 0.2 miles distant, which is New Spring (Wpt. 04). The old road runs in and out of the wash and is fairly obvious and easy to follow, but note a fork in the wash (Wpt. 02) about 300 yards out where, on the return, it takes a moment or two to recall which way to go (stay right). The old road continues another 220 yards and drops into a larger wash (Wpt. 03). On the return, especially on a late return, the old road leaving the wash to the left is easy to miss.

Note in this area the rounded granite boulders. These are ancient rocks on the order of 1.5-billion-years-old. By the time hikers get to New Spring, the rocks are limestone with ages of only about 0.5 billion years, at most. The granites here and to the west were in place long before the sedimentary limestone began to be laid down, so there must be a great unconformity along here somewhere.

Million Hills Wash
Nice cactus garden on the low hill (view N)

In the larger wash, hikers can walk directly east about 250 yards to the Cottonwood Tree that marks New Spring. However, the heavy brush (mostly seep willow, Baccharis sarothroides) makes it difficult to watch for rattlesnakes underfoot, so it is safer to exit the wash to the left and walk along more open terrain until one can circle back into the spring (Wpt. 04) from below. The spring is dry, but the soils are damp.

Just below New Spring, an old cement cattle watering trough sits in silent testament to the old days when rain fell, grass grew, and sheep and cows roamed this country.

Just past New Spring, hikers drop into New Spring Wash, a large wash that runs down New Spring Canyon. For such a jumbled landscape, the canyon runs oddly straight south to a corner where it abruptly turns left to head northeast, then almost as abruptly bends right to run southeast, turns back to the east, and finally bends northwest! After this, the canyon winds in a manner that seems more appropriate for a jumbled landscape, but here the wash follows harder and softer layers of limestone as it cuts through Azure Ridge.

Million Hills Wash
Most of the old road is obvious; note Blue Diamond Cholla (view E)

At the end of the short northwest run, hikers arrive atop the first high pour-over (Wpt. 05). Bold hikers can tackle the polished rock directly, but for others, a bypass to the right climbs over a low ridge and drops down a steep, cobble-covered slope to the wash below. In this remote area, slips might be preferred to falls.

Back in the wash, the canyon turns and winds generally northward, winds around to head more easterly, and eventually arrives at a confluence (Wpt. 06) with another major canyon that merges from the north. This is Indian Trail Canyon, but it is not at all clear why a trail would run that way. Beyond the confluence, the canyon becomes Million Hills Canyon.

Continuing down Million Hills Wash in a generally easterly direction, the canyon eventually wraps hard to the left and bends back to the west. As the canyon turns back to the right, hikers arrive atop a low pour- over (Wpt. 07). This time, the pour-over is fairly easy to descend. Note the Ragged Rockflower (Crossosoma bigelovii) with the five, long white petals growing on the walls of the poor-over. This is the only place in Gold Butte where this plant is known to occur.

Million Hills Wash
Hiker on old road; tree at New Spring becomes visible (view E)

Winding down the canyon in generally a northeasterly direction, hikers eventually arrive at the second high pour-over (Wpt. 08). This one can also be bypassed, but it is not too bad of a down climb; hikers need to awkwardly slide under the side of the large chockstone.

From there the canyon heads generally northeasterly again until bending back to a southeasterly direction. The canyon bends again to the east, runs through a fairly narrow section of canyon bottom where the walls are not high, and emerges onto a broad desert plain (Wpt. 09). The wash can be seen to cut through another small ridge to the east, and the Grand Wash Cliffs in Arizona can be seen in the far distance.

The edge of the wash at this point (Wpt. 09) makes a nice place to stop for lunch. For most hikers, this is the point to turn around and return to the trailhead (Wpt. 01). Other hikers, however, might consider continuing down the wash and making a very long loop to the south that eventually returns to the trailhead. For those interested, review your map carefully and save some critical waypoints.

Million Hills Wash
Merging into the larger wash (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Wash bottom choked with shrubs (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hillside above the Cottonwood Tree (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Approaching the Cottonwood from below (view W)
Million Hills Wash
Exposed metal water pipe below New Spring
Million Hills Wash
Hiker approaching old cement cattle watering trough (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Old cement cattle watering trough (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Old cement cattle watering trough (view S)
Million Hills Wash
The route continues straight down New Spring Canyon (view S)
Million Hills Wash
Limestone on the edge of the canyon (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
New Spring Wash takes a hard turn left (view S)
Million Hills Wash
Just beyond the bend, a narrow section of canyon bottom (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
The canyon runs curiously straight again (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Polished limestone bedrock (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
In the middle of the wash, the last Blue Diamond Cholla (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Another straight section of canyon (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Welcome shade on a hot day (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Interesting plants growing on a shady cliff face (view S)
Million Hills Wash
Nicely layered limestone (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker in sandy wash (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Easy hiking in sandy wash (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Easy hiking in sandy wash (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker atop first high pour-over (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Looking down the high, 2-step pour-over (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
On south side, top of the bypass (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker descending the bypass; lots of loose rocks (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Looking back up at the pour-over (view SW)
Million Hills Wash
Base of pour-over, continuing down the wash (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the wash (view N)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the wash (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
A place for monsters to hide?
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the wash (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Wash narrows and bends left (view NW)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the narrow wash (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the narrow wash (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the narrow wash (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the wash (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Interesting layers of limestone (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Interesting layers of limestone (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Another nice rock garden (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker passing a fossil-filled boulder (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Exposed central stem cavity of a fossil Crinoid
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the wash (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the wash (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Canyon bottom narrows again (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Another boulder in the wash (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker in narrow canyon bottom (view NW)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing in narrow canyon bottom (view W)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing in narrow canyon bottom (view W)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker arriving atop a low pour-over (view N)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker atop a low pour-over (view N)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker scrambling down the low pour-over (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing below low pour-over (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Nice canyon walls (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Canyon jogs north again (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Beautiful Beautiful Phacelia
Million Hills Wash
Canyon walls lay back (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Ocotillo are visible on the ridgeline (view NW)
Million Hills Wash
Ocotillo are visible on the ridgeline (view NW; zoom)
Million Hills Wash
Colorful walls as the canyon narrows again (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing past colorful rock walls (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Approaching another pour-over (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker atop the second high pour-over (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Pour-over; a little awkward but not too bad (view down)
Million Hills Wash
Looking back up at the pour-over (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the canyon (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker approaching the narrowest section of canyon bottom (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker squeezing past a boulder in the narrows (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the canyon (view E)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the canyon (view S)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker continuing down the canyon (view S)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker approaching the last narrow section of canyon (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker in the last narrow section of canyon (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
Hiker exiting the last narrow section of canyon (view NE)
Million Hills Wash
Broad, open desert below the last narrows (view SE)
Million Hills Wash
More narrows 0.8 miles out; Grand Wash Cliffs in distance (view SE)

Table 1. Hiking Coordinates and Distances based on GPS Data (NAD27; UTM Zone 11S). Download Hiking GPS waypoints (gpx) file.

Wpt. Location UTM Easting UTM Northing Elevation (ft) Point-to-Point Distance (mi) Cumulative Distance (mi)
01 Trailhead 760283 4014749 3,442 0.00 0.00
02 Fork in the Wash on Return 760485 4014878 3,345 0.17 0.17
03 Merge into Wash 760619 4015002 3,292 0.13 0.30
04 New Spring 760869 4015021 3,283 0.23 0.53
05 First High Pour-Over 761445 4014990 3,033 0.74 1.27
06 Confluence with Indian Trail Wash 761955 4015528 2,842 0.75 2.02
07 Low Pour-Over 762196 4015684 2,818 0.37 2.39
08 Second High Pour-Over 762544 4016039 2,622 0.39 2.78
09 End of Canyon 763068 4015891 2,445 0.50 3.28
01 Trailhead 760283 4014749 3,442 3.28 6.56

Happy Hiking! All distances, elevations, and other facts are approximate.
copyright; Last updated 240325

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