Monday, April 16, 2012

Why I Love Arizona

Well, it's certainly not because of my allergies.

Pretty.  And sneezy.

Sometimes I think living in Arizona is like a badge of honor.  We complain about the heat in the summer, the humidity during monsoons (everyone east of the Rockies scoffs at this..."Girl, you have no idea what real humidity is..."), the allergens during the spring, the dust, the traffic...

So why the heck do we stay?

I can't speak for the rest of the residents, but based on what I feel is the current over-population, obviously something is keeping us here.

Me, I'm an Arizona native.  I've been fortunate enough to have had the opportunity to do some pretty awesome traveling, and as much as I love going to other places...I love coming home.  I honestly don't feel an overwhelming desire to move out of the state, despite falling in love with a select few other areas in the country.  (None of them have yet managed to put up enough pros to outweigh staying in this state.)

The horse thing is a large part of why I stay.  Arizona is a big state.  And I've had the chance to ride in many different parts of it.  (Pretty much all but the far northern part...such as the Grand Canyon...one of these days...)

And it always amazes me how different the state is, even within the span of 50 miles of a ride.  So with that, I give you the Tour de Places-Ashley-Has-Ridden.

I love having all of my photos organized and accessible.  It means I tend to actually blog with pictures a lot more readily.

And because I'm easily amused and need no excuse to play around with Google Earth, I'm including relevant  approximate elevations.


Salt River and part of the Goldfield Mountains.
Located directly east of Phoenix about an hour, give or take.
~1400' elevation
The Salt River area has Bulldog Canyon and the trails around the Blue Point Recreation Area.  Immediately on the south side of these mountains is Usery Mtn Park:

"Standard" desert. And cholla cactus. Lots of cholla.
~1900'
A little to the south by another half an hour or so, and my typical riding stomping grounds, is the San Tan Park in Queen Creek.

I only have a couple hundred variations of this photo.
~1700'
Keep on heading south...waaaay south (like, just-north-of-the-Mexican-border-south) and you run into Sonoita and the Old Pueblo/Las Cienegas endurance rides down there.

Beautiful, rolling grasslands surrounded by mountains.
It's always windy here.  Non-stop.
~4600'
Re-centering on Phoenix and heading west, there's Estrella Mountain Park.  Back to what I consider "normal" desert with all the usual suspects...lots of washes, lots of cactus, and in certain times of the year, if you're really lucky, a few wisps of desert grass.

Grass.  Thoroughly interwoven with toxic weeds.  This is the desert.
~1000'
I did quite a bit of riding between the three parks: Usery, San Tan, and Estrella.  They have civilized trailheads with water, trailer parking, and signed trails.  Which also means they host a plethora of hikers and mountain bikers.  Good desensitization training.

Bouncing back to the east side, another hour or so past the previously explored area of Usery Mtn and the Salt River, is a beautiful trailhead called Picketpost Mountain.  It's the host of the section of The Arizona Trail that runs right through the area.  If you follow the trail to the north, you see this:


But if you go south, you ride right up against this:

Picketpost Mountain proper
~2400'

Back into the Valley, just northeast of Phoenix, there's the area that I call the North Scottsdale/Fountain Hills/Rio Verde confluence.  Dad's first horse came from the Rio Verde area, we spent quite a lot of time trail riding in the Rio Verde Foothills area, and McDowell Mtn Park is located there.

McDowell is like most other Valley parks: sand, cactus, and
more sand and cactus.
~1700'

In the northwestern part of the Valley, there's Wickenburg, site of quite a few rides we've done: 2 NATRC and 4 endurance.

Similar to "my" desert, but typically slightly cooler.
~2200'
Head out of the Valley northeast about 2 hours, and you'll hit Payson.  It's in the mountains, so it's much cooler, and a good summer option.  Payson itself has very little by way of trails, but if you head due east, you quickly run into several trail options.

"Red dirt" elevation, ~6700'.  This particular trail runs
right below the Mogollan Rim, which rises a vertical
1000' above this point.
Head northwest from Payson, and you run into the little towns of Pine and Strawberry.  They're also right below the Rim, and actually at a lower elevation than the more easterly-located Payson area trailheads.


Lower elevation, less red dirt.  (Which results in cleaner
pony legs and tails.)
~5400'
Now we're in the mountains, which are something of a fascination and novel concept to this long-time desert rat.  North of Phoenix by a couple of hours is Prescott, which is an amazing range of micro-climates within a very short span of time.  Exhibit A, Man Against Horse 50:

Gorgeous mountain sunrises.  Not that they're shabby down
in the Valley, either.  There is a plus to the dust pollution
in the air.
Ridecamp, down in the rolling grasslands.
~5300'
Wind up in the pine trees at ~7700' halfway through before
descending through red-dirt elevation and back to ridecamp.

Another hour or so north of Prescott is Flagstaff.  Flagstaff is pine trees and snow skis (for at least a couple of months in the winter).  And the best summer escape destination.  Fortunately, there are some nice horse camps up there to accommodate the droves of Valley-dwellers that make frequent weekend pilgrimages.

Flagstaff is green and gorgeous...but I wouldn't live there.  Too much of that white, fluffy stuff in the winter.

Greenery...pony-eating downed logs...
7300' (to start)
Aspen grove, which means the elevation went up...
to ~8900'
(Another pesky feature of mountains...I am a low-lander...
I cannot breathe properly at high elevation.)

One of my favorite features...mountain lakes!
~8000'
West of Flagstaff is the "gateway to the Grand Canyon": Williams.  My overwhelming takeaway impressions of Williams are if your horse doesn't trip on the rocks and fall and squish you, then you'll both be eaten alive by the vampire-alike no-see-ums.

That innocuous-looking meadow of grass in the background?
Not so much.  The grass hides the fact it is completely covered
in softball-sized (at minmum) volcanic rock.
~6600'
Williams is also the location of Al-Marah Arabians' Hat Ranch, where they let the babies run around and grow up for a couple of years, which goes a long way towards explaining why they seem to produce some outstanding endurance horses.

Maybe there is something to survival of the fittest?

Finally, just for kicks...Y'all want to know where I live?

In the middle of suburbia, surrounded by a sea of tile roofs.

(Question: If the plural of "hoof" is "hooves," wouldn't it make sense for the plural of "roof" to be "rooves"?  This is why I didn't become an English major.)

Elevation: Just over 1200'.  No wonder my respiratory system protests 5000'+.

Looking at where I get to ride, sometimes I forget I still live in suburbia.

And that riding variety is probably the Number One reason why I love Arizona.

(The sand washes make for good conditioning, too.)









3 comments:

  1. Wow, cool tour or Arizona via your ride photos! Part of why I love these endurance blogs, getting to see other areas of CA and outside CA that I can dream of riding in :)

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    Replies
    1. Yes, exactly! There are so many amazingly gorgeous areas to ride around the country, and we as endurance riders get access to some areas other people can only dream of seeing!

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