Don't let the shorter distance fool you; the hike to Jones Peak from the Bailey Canyon Trail is a tough one. The climb up through Bailey Canyon features steep canyon walls, sweeping views, and a well-maintained trail with many switchbacks. Along the way, there are ruins of a cabin in a lush gully, and then after some more switchbacks, you get to Jones Peak at 3375 feet. The peak offers panoramic views from Mt Wilson to Catalina. Overall it's a solid hike with a little bit of everything.
Parking is easy and free. There's a medium-sized lot at the Bailey Canyon Wilderness Park. Locals and dog walkers use the park–it can get crowded. If the lot is full, find a spot on the streets around the area that doesn't have "no parking" signs. Be respectful; this is a residential neighborhood. Use this trailhead address: Bailey Canyon Wilderness Park, 451 W Carter Ave, Sierra Madre, CA 91024
Gear For the Hike
I'd play it safe and bring 2L of water.
You can get away with fitness clothing here or light hiking gear.
I'd use trekking poles if you have them. They'll help on the steep slopes.
Osprey Hikelite 26Lightweight, carries all your gear, and your back doesn't get sweaty. Oh yea, it's also one of the most inexpensive packs you can get.
Bailey Canyon, which you will ascend, was named after R.J. Bailey, who received a homestead from the U.S. Government here in 1875. It had a reputation for being a great place for animal trapping, and you can even read newspaper articles about the animals trapped there in early editions of the LA Times.
The trail has an interesting story. Before 1969 there was no official Bailey Canyon Trail, and bushwhackers venturing up the canyon often had to be rescued by the Sierra Madre Search and Rescue Team. In stepped two youth organizations, largely comprised of the rescue team's children, the Sierra Madre Mountaineers and Sierra Madre Rangers. With the help of their parents, CA Parks, and the US Forest Service, they started building a trail to Jones Peak. They got as far as the cabin before work stopped in the early 70s. In the 1990s a $50,000 grant allowed the trail to continue to Jones Peak, and then on to the Mt Wilson Trail.
Jones Peaks is not an official summit name in the USGS database, there are no survey markers there, and it's not named on USGS topographic maps. But thanks to a tip from Rob S. - the peak was (informally?) named after Sierra Madre's first mayor, C.W. Jones.
The area that you are hiking through is recovering from the 1993 Kinneloa Fire. This is what regrowth looks like between then and now.
Jones Peak Hike Directions
The trickiest part of the hike are the twists and turns in the beginning. The first few images below all occur in the first half-mile, between the parking lot and the Bailey Canyon Trail.
There used to be a strange historical marker here that mentioned someone with smallpox or something along those lines. I noticed it was gone. The real story behind the cabin ruins is this. In 1910, three college students built the cabins and used them until 1942, when the canyon was closed to the public and became an Army firing range. The cabins stood for years until (of course) they were vandalized until almost totally destroyed. You can see an earlier stage of this type of vandalism playing out at Beek's Place.