A Warm, Western Welcome to the Apache Trail – Home of the Legendary Superstition Mountains

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Warm, Western Welcome to the Apache Trail – Home of the Legendary Superstition Mountains OK CORRAL 1 A GGUIDEUIDE TTOO AATTRACTIONST T R AC TION S ALONGA LONG THETHE APACHEA PAC HE TTRAILR A IL LOST DUTCHMAN STABLES STATE PARK ( ) 480 982-4040 (480) 982-4485 Open Year-Round azstateparks.com Hwy. 60, the 5 mi. Year-Round N. on Idaho Rd., Hiking & Camping E. on McKellips Rd. to dead end, then 6109 N. Apache Trl., N. to OK Corral sign, Apache Junction, AZ turn right. 7 NAMEDic t scen “Best“Bes sceniczon a” n Ari ve i r’s 2 drivedri in Arizonmme THE DOLLY STEAMBOAT Fro — Frommer’sooks (480) 827-9144 • www.dollysteamboat.com (480) 983-4888 • Daily 9 am-4 pm ideb GuidebooksGu 9 10 3.5 miles NE of Apache Junction on Hwy. 88 8 Located at Canyon Lake, Arizona 8 TORTILLA FLAT, ARIZONA (480) 984-1776 tortillafl ataz.com 18 miles NE of 7 Apache Junction on Hwy. 88 Dutchman’s Hideout at the MINING CAMP RESTAURANT • (480) 982-3181 6 www.dutchmansionhideout.com 5 4 miles from Apache Junction via Hwy. 88 3 4 9 1 3 2 12 11 GOLDFIELD GHOST TOWN • (480) 983-0333 APACHE LAKE MARINA & RESORT 10 HWY. 88 at the foot of the legendary (480) 467-2511 • www.apachelake.com Superstition Mountains 4 32 miles east of Apache Junction on Hwy. 88 BARLEENS ARIZONA OPRY A warm, Western welcome to the Apache Trail – home of the legendary Superstition Mountains. (480) 982-7991 www.azopry.com A rich vein of history runs through this region. The Apache Trail once served as a stage coach Hike mountain trails or book an Old West Highway, 101 Apache Junction and freight wagon route from Mesa to Globe. Indians, cowboys and miners have all roamed off-road jeep tour. Catch the TO SCOTTSDALE PAYSON the mysterious Superstition Mountains. Jacob Waltz’s Lost Dutchman Mine is still waiting to cowboy spirit on a horseback 17 51 MOTHER LODE MERCANTILE SHEA BLVD. BEELINE HWY (480) 983-4500 • Open Daily 10am - 5pm be discovered in a hidden canyon. adventure. Fish a desert lake or APACHE TRAIL Located at Goldfi eld Ghost Town THOMAS 5 fl oat through narrow canyons on SCOTTSDALE RD. BUSH HWY 11 Today, the Apache Trail remains a treasure chest of adventure. Discover here a most MCDOWELL 88 Superstition fascinating ecosystem. Experience the breathtaking canyons, desert lakes, towering saguaro a steamboat. For dinner, loosen 10 GILBERT Mountains 202 ELLSWORTH RD. 143 202 cacti and desert wildfl owers. Keep a sharp lookout for desert bighorn sheep, coyotes, and your belts at the old Mining UNIVERSITY DR APACHE MAIN ST. APACHE TRAIL JUNCTION rattlesnakes. Camp Restaurant or enjoy a BROADWAY RD MESA N Branson-style stage and dinner TEMPE RURAL RD. 101 It takes more than a day to do Apache Junction. PHOENIXPHOENIX SOUTHERN AVE. IDAHO show. Hotels are available for POWER Explore the intriguing history of the area by visiting the museums, prehistoric Native 60 60 SUPERSTITION HWY American ruins and a century-old stagecoach stop. At the ghost town, try your hand at a one night stay or to fi t your 10 TO panning for gold or take a ride through the desert on a narrow gauge railroad, and remember vacation schedule. Stay and Play Map not to scale 202 TUCSON/GLOBE TOMAHAWK to take home some prickly pear fudge! CLUB COUNTRY APACHE TRAIL JEEP TOURS in Mother Nature’s Theme Park! APACHE JUNCTION CHAMBER OF (480) 982-7661 • apachetrailtours.com COMMERCE AND VISITOR CENTER 4x4 Desert and Scenic Canyon Tours 1-800-252-3141 or (480) 982-3141 Our trails will rock you! 6 www.ajchamber.com 12.
Recommended publications
  • Arizona Fishing Regulations 3 Fishing License Fees Getting Started
    2019 & 2020 Fishing Regulations for your boat for your boat See how much you could savegeico.com on boat | 1-800-865-4846insurance. | Local Offi ce geico.com | 1-800-865-4846 | Local Offi ce See how much you could save on boat insurance. Some discounts, coverages, payment plans and features are not available in all states or all GEICO companies. Boat and PWC coverages are underwritten by GEICO Marine Insurance Company. GEICO is a registered service mark of Government Employees Insurance Company, Washington, D.C. 20076; a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. subsidiary. TowBoatU.S. is the preferred towing service provider for GEICO Marine Insurance. The GEICO Gecko Image © 1999-2017. © 2017 GEICO AdPages2019.indd 2 12/4/2018 1:14:48 PM AdPages2019.indd 3 12/4/2018 1:17:19 PM Table of Contents Getting Started License Information and Fees ..........................................3 Douglas A. Ducey Governor Regulation Changes ...........................................................4 ARIZONA GAME AND FISH COMMISSION How to Use This Booklet ...................................................5 JAMES S. ZIELER, CHAIR — St. Johns ERIC S. SPARKS — Tucson General Statewide Fishing Regulations KURT R. DAVIS — Phoenix LELAND S. “BILL” BRAKE — Elgin Bag and Possession Limits ................................................6 JAMES R. AMMONS — Yuma Statewide Fishing Regulations ..........................................7 ARIZONA GAME AND FISH DEPARTMENT Common Violations ...........................................................8 5000 W. Carefree Highway Live Baitfish
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 & 2022 Fishing Regulations Fishing Regulations
    ArizonaArizona Game and Fish DepartmentDepartment 20212021 & 2022 FishingFishing Regulations i Get a GEICO quote for your boat and, in just 15 minutes, you’ll know how much you could be saving. If you like what you hear, you can buy your policy right on the spot. Then let us do the rest while you enjoy your free time with peace of mind. geico.com/boat | 1-800-865-4846 Some discounts, coverages, payment plans, and features are not available in all states, in all GEICO companies, or in all situations. Boat and PWC coverages are underwritten by GEICO Marine Insurance Company. In the state of CA, program provided through Boat Association Insurance Services, license #0H87086. GEICO is a registered service mark of Government Employees Insurance Company, Washington, DC 20076; a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. subsidiary. © 2020 GEICO ii ARIZONA GAME AND FISH DEPARTMENT — AZGFD.GOV 2021 & 2022 ARIZONA FISHING REGULATIONS 1 AdPages2019.indd 2 12/11/2020 11:36:21 AM AdPages2019.indd 1 12/11/2020 11:35:54 AM Table of Contents Fishing License Fees GETTING STARTED Licenses available at all license dealers, Department offices and online at azgfd.gov. License Information and Fees .......................................................... 3 More information about the new licenses can be found under Commission Rules R12-4-207, R12-4-209 and R12-4-210. Regulation Changes .............................................................................4 All fishing and combo hunt/fish licenses listed are valid for the take of all aquatic wildlife, which includes legal fish species, crayfish, frogs, waterdogs and Douglas A. Ducey, Governor softshell turtles. How to Use This Booklet .................................................................... 5 Started Getting ARIZONA GAME AND FISH COMMISSION LICENSES PRIVILEGES RESIDENT NON-RESIDENT Kurt R.
    [Show full text]
  • John D Walker and The
    JOHN HENRY PEARCE by Tom Kollenborn © 1984 John Henry Pearce was truly an interesting pioneer of the Superstition Mountain and Goldfield area. His charismatic character endeared him to those who called him friend. Pearce was born in Taylor, Arizona, on January 22, 1883. His father founded and operated Pearce’s Ferry across the Colorado River near the western end of the Grand Canyon. Pearce’s father had accompanied John Wesley Powell through the Grand Canyon in 1869. John Pearce began his search for Jacob Waltz’s gold in 1929, shortly after arriving in the area. When John first arrived, he built a cabin on the Apache Trail about seven miles north- east of Apache Junction. Before moving to his Apache Trail site, John mined three gold mines and hauled his ore to the Hayden mill on the Gila River. He sold his gold to the United States government for $35.00 an ounce. During the depression his claims around the Goldfield area kept food on the table for his family. All the years John Pearce lived on the Apache Trail he also maintained a permanent camp deep in the Superstition Wilderness near Weaver’s Needle in Needle Canyon. He operated this camp from 1929 to the time of his death in 1959. John traveled the eleven miles to his camp by driving his truck to County Line Divide, then he would hike or ride horseback to his Needle Canyon Camp. Actually, Pearce had two mines in the Superstition Wilderness— one near his Needle Canyon Camp and the other located near Black Mesa Ridge.
    [Show full text]
  • Index 1 INDEX
    Index 1 INDEX A Blue Spring 76, 106, 110, 115 Bluff Spring Trail 184 Adeii Eechii Cliffs 124 Blythe 198 Agate House 140 Blythe Intaglios 199 Agathla Peak 256 Bonita Canyon Drive 221 Agua Fria Nat'l Monument 175 Booger Canyon 194 Ajo 203 Boundary Butte 299 Ajo Mountain Loop 204 Box Canyon 132 Alamo Canyon 205 Box (The) 51 Alamo Lake SP 201 Boyce-Thompson Arboretum 190 Alstrom Point 266, 302 Boynton Canyon 149, 161 Anasazi Bridge 73 Boy Scout Canyon 197 Anasazi Canyon 302 Bright Angel Canyon 25, 51 Anderson Dam 216 Bright Angel Point 15, 25 Angels Window 27 Bright Angel Trail 42, 46, 49, 61, 80, 90 Antelope Canyon 280, 297 Brins Mesa 160 Antelope House 231 Brins Mesa Trail 161 Antelope Point Marina 294, 297 Broken Arrow Trail 155 Apache Junction 184 Buck Farm Canyon 73 Apache Lake 187 Buck Farm Overlook 34, 73, 103 Apache-Sitgreaves Nat'l Forest 167 Buckskin Gulch Confluence 275 Apache Trail 187, 188 Buenos Aires Nat'l Wildlife Refuge 226 Aravaipa Canyon 192 Bulldog Cliffs 186 Aravaipa East trailhead 193 Bullfrog Marina 302 Arch Rock 366 Bull Pen 170 Arizona Canyon Hot Springs 197 Bush Head Canyon 278 Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum 216 Arizona Trail 167 C Artist's Point 250 Aspen Forest Overlook 257 Cabeza Prieta 206 Atlatl Rock 366 Cactus Forest Drive 218 Call of the Canyon 158 B Calloway Trail 171, 203 Cameron Visitor Center 114 Baboquivari Peak 226 Camp Verde 170 Baby Bell Rock 157 Canada Goose Drive 198 Baby Rocks 256 Canyon del Muerto 231 Badger Creek 72 Canyon X 290 Bajada Loop Drive 216 Cape Final 28 Bar-10-Ranch 19 Cape Royal 27 Barrio
    [Show full text]
  • Coronado National Forest Draft Land and Resource Management Plan I Contents
    United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Coronado National Forest Southwestern Region Draft Land and Resource MB-R3-05-7 October 2013 Management Plan Cochise, Graham, Pima, Pinal, and Santa Cruz Counties, Arizona, and Hidalgo County, New Mexico The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY). To file a complaint of discrimination, write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410, or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TTY). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. Front cover photos (clockwise from upper left): Meadow Valley in the Huachuca Ecosystem Management Area; saguaros in the Galiuro Mountains; deer herd; aspen on Mt. Lemmon; Riggs Lake; Dragoon Mountains; Santa Rita Mountains “sky island”; San Rafael grasslands; historic building in Cave Creek Canyon; golden columbine flowers; and camping at Rose Canyon Campground. Printed on recycled paper • October 2013 Draft Land and Resource Management Plan Coronado National Forest Cochise, Graham, Pima, Pinal, and Santa Cruz Counties, Arizona Hidalgo County, New Mexico Responsible Official: Regional Forester Southwestern Region 333 Broadway Boulevard, SE Albuquerque, NM 87102 (505) 842-3292 For Information Contact: Forest Planner Coronado National Forest 300 West Congress, FB 42 Tucson, AZ 85701 (520) 388-8300 TTY 711 [email protected] Contents Chapter 1.
    [Show full text]
  • The Maricopa County Wildlife Connectivity Assessment: Report on Stakeholder Input January 2012
    The Maricopa County Wildlife Connectivity Assessment: Report on Stakeholder Input January 2012 (Photographs: Arizona Game and Fish Department) Arizona Game and Fish Department In partnership with the Arizona Wildlife Linkages Workgroup TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................................ i RECOMMENDED CITATION ........................................................................................................ ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ................................................................................................................. ii EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................................ iii DEFINITIONS ................................................................................................................................ iv BACKGROUND ................................................................................................................................ 1 THE MARICOPA COUNTY WILDLIFE CONNECTIVITY ASSESSMENT ................................... 8 HOW TO USE THIS REPORT AND ASSOCIATED GIS DATA ................................................... 10 METHODS ..................................................................................................................................... 12 MASTER LIST OF WILDLIFE LINKAGES AND HABITAT BLOCKSAND BARRIERS ................ 16 REFERENCE MAPS .......................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Saddlebrooke Hiking Club Hike Database 11-15-2020 Hike Location Hike Rating Hike Name Hike Description
    SaddleBrooke Hiking Club Hike Database 11-15-2020 Hike Location Hike Rating Hike Name Hike Description AZ Trail B Arizona Trail: Alamo Canyon This passage begins at a point west of the White Canyon Wilderness on the Tonto (Passage 17) National Forest boundary about 0.6 miles due east of Ajax Peak. From here the trail heads west and north for about 1.5 miles, eventually dropping into a two- track road and drainage. Follow the drainage north for about 100 feet until it turns left (west) via the rocky drainage and follow this rocky two-track for approximately 150 feet. At this point there is new signage installed leading north (uphill) to a saddle. This is a newly constructed trail which passes through the saddle and leads downhill across a rugged and lush hillside, eventually arriving at FR4. After crossing FR4, the trail continues west and turns north as you work your way toward Picketpost Mountain. The trail will continue north and eventually wraps around to the west side of Picketpost and somewhat paralleling Alamo Canyon drainage until reaching the Picketpost Trailhead. Hike 13.6 miles; trailhead elevations 3471 feet south and 2399 feet north; net elevation change 1371 feet; accumulated gains 1214 northward and 2707 feet southward; RTD __ miles (dirt). AZ Trail A Arizona Trail: Babbitt Ranch This passage begins just east of the Cedar Ranch area where FR 417 and FR (Passage 35) 9008A intersect. From here the route follows a pipeline road north to the Tub Ranch Camp. The route continues towards the corrals (east of the buildings).
    [Show full text]
  • Positively Apache Junction
    POSITIVELY APACHE JUNCTION A COLLABORATIVE REPORT OF ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY’S PROJECT CITIES & THE CITY OF APACHE JUNCTION This report represents original work prepared for the City of Apache Junction by students participating in courses aligned with Arizona State University’s Project Cities program. Findings, information, and recommendations are those of students and are not necessarily of Arizona State University. Student reports are not peer reviewed for statistical or computational accuracy, or comprehensively fact-checked, in the same fashion as academic journal articles. Project partners should use care when using student reports as justification for future actions. Text and images contained in this report may not be used without permission from Project Cities. TABLE OF CONTENTS 4 Acknowledgments PART 1 5 Foreword from Apache Junction’s Mayor GET ACQUAINTED 6 About Project Cities WITH THE PROJECT 7 About Apache Junction 8 Map of Apache Junction and Greater Phoenix 9 Executive Summary 11 Course Goals and Recommendations 11 TDM 372 Tourism Planning: Planning Tourism’s Future in Apache Junction: Adventure Awaits 15 TWC 544 User Experience: Creating a Rewarding Website Experience for Potential Visitors 17 Planning Tourism’s Future in Apache Junction: PART 2 Adventure Awaits GO IN-DEPTH: 18 Acknowledgments TOURISM PLANNING 19 Introduction 20 Problem 20 Methods 24 Findings 27 Recommendations 31 Areas for Further Exploration 32 Conclusion 33 Creating a Rewarding Website Experience PART 3 for Potential Visitors GO IN-DEPTH: 34 Acknowledgments
    [Show full text]
  • The Superstition Mountains: What Future Use Will Best Serve Arizona?
    [c. 1962] THE SUPERSTITION MOUNTAINS What Future Use Will Best Serve Arizona? A Special Report By Rep. Morris K. Udall The population of Arizona is increasing by some 60,000 people every year -- equivalent to the 1960 populations of Flagstaff, Prescott, Yuma and Safford combined. By 1970 our population will move well beyond 2,000,000. Additional land for commercial and residential purposes will be required. Existing facilities for every public need, including recreation and parks, will feel increasing pressures. Those of us entrusted with present day leadership in Arizona affairs ought to peer ahead now and then, as best we can, and take a long-range view. This report is an attempt to fulfill part of that responsibility. The press of population and our nation's diminishing recreational resources throughout the country have made Congress and the President anxious to undertake a long-range program of resource planning. If Arizona has any aspirations and needs in this field, the next few years will be the time to act. I expect that more new national parks, monuments and recreation areas will be created in the next 5 years than in the last 30. By 1964 a new National Recreation Area will come into being around Powell Lake behind Glen Canyon Dam. The 87th Congress has established Cape Cod National Seashore; it is considering and will probably establish new national parks at Point Reyes, California, Padre Island, Texas, and the Utah Canyonlands within the near future. The Wilderness Bill, a central part of this bi-partisan effort, has already passed the Senate and should pass the House before adjournment.
    [Show full text]
  • Snowbird Rally Trip to Tortilla Flats and Canyon Lake, Arizona April 7
    Snowbird Rally trip to Tortilla Flats and Canyon Lake, Arizona April 7, 2016 This report describes a day trip on April 7th, 2016. It was an event led and arranged by Marlene and Chris Carty, hosts of the spring Snowbird Trailer rally. The Snowbird International Travel Club has been around since about 1992. They gather twice a year, spring and fall. They have met in places as far afield as Gettysburg, PA, Calgary, Dollyland, Anacortes, Washington state, Santa Fe, NM, Toronto, San Diego, Galveston, Oklahoma City, now the Phoenix area and many other places. They have had as many as 105 rigs but are now down to 17 plus a few older "lifetime" members. They are a group of close, longtime friends who enjoy getting together and having a good time. The group departed the Canyon Vista RV Park in Gold Canyon, Arizona with the destinations of Tortilla Flats for lunch and a boat ride on the Dolly on Canyon Lake. After departing the RV Park we accessed Rt. 60 and then turned onto Rt. 88, also known as the Apache Trail. It was originally known as the Yavapai Trail. The Apache Trail in Arizona was a stagecoach trail that ran through the Superstition Mountains. It was named the Apache Trail after the Apache Indians who originally used this trail to move through the Superstition Mountains. Today, much of the Apache Trail is paved, and the section east of Apache Junction is known officially as State Route 88. Prior to the completion of the Superstition Freeway in 1992, the Apache Junction portion of the Apache Trail was part of US Highway 60, which was rerouted to the Superstition Freeway once it was completed.
    [Show full text]
  • Geologic Map of the Goldfield Quadrangle and the Northern Part of the Superstition Mountains
    Geologic map of the Goldfield Quadrangle and the northern part of the Superstition Mountains. SW Quadrangle, Maricopa and Pinal Counties, Arizona Authors Skotnicki, S.J.; Ferguson, C.A. Citation Skotnicki, S.J. and Ferguson, C.A., 1995, Geologic map of the Goldfield Quadrangle and the northern part of the Superstition Mountains. SW Quadrangle, Maricopa and Pinal Counties, Arizona. Arizona Geological Survey Open File Report, OFR-95-09, 2 map sheets, map scale 1:24,000, 26 p. Publisher Arizona Geological Survey (Tucson, AZ) Rights Arizona Geological Survey. All rights reserved. Download date 03/10/2021 02:07:42 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/630781 GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GOLDFIELD QUADRANGLE AND THE NORTHERN PART OF THE SUPERSTITTON MTS. SW QUADRANGLES, MARICOPA AND PINAL COUNTIES, ARIZONA by Steven J. Skotnicki and Charles A. Ferguson Arizona Geological Survey Open-File Report 95-9 August, 1995 Arizona Geological Survey 416 W. Congress, Suite #100, Tucson, Arizona 85701 Includes 26 page text and 1:24,000 scale geologic map (2 sheets). Jointly funded by the Arizona Geological Survey and the U.S. Geological Survey STATEMAP Program. Contract #1434-94-A-1222 This report is preliminary and has not been edited or reviewed for conformity with Arizona Geological Survey standards INTRODUCTION The Goldfield Quadrangle and Superstition Mountains are located about 40 km due east of Phoenix, Arizona, and a few miles east of Apache Junction, and include part of the Superstition Wilderness Area (Figure 1). Aerially extensive exposures of welded tuff fonn steep, rugged cliffs in the Superstition Mountains and overlie tilted felsic and mafic volcanic rocks, pre-volcanic cconglomerate, and Precambrian granite and Pinal Schist.
    [Show full text]
  • Arizona Game and Fish Commission Rules
    NATURAL RESOURCES 54 Arizona Game and Fish Commission Rules The rules contained in this publication are printed as supplied to LexisNexis by the Arizona Office of Secretary of State. TITLE 12 Section R12-4-210. Repealed NATURAL RESOURCES R12-4-211. Repealed R12-4-212. Repealed R12-4-213. Repealed CHAPTER 4 R12-4-214. Repealed R12-4-215. Tournament Fishing Permit Regulations GAME AND FISH COMMISSION R12-4-216. Crossbow Permit (Authority: A.R.S. § 17-201 et seq.) R12-4-217. Challenged Hunters Access/Mobility Permit R12-4-218. Repealed ARTICLE 1. DEFINITIONS AND GENERAL R12-4-219. Renumbered PROVISIONS R12-4-220. Repealed Section ARTICLE 3. TAKING AND HANDLING OF R12-4-101. Definitions WILDLIFE R12-4-102. Fees for Licenses, Tags, Stamps, and Permits R12-4-103. Duplicate Tags and Licenses R12-4-301. Restrictions for Taking Wildlife in Maricopa R12-4-104. Application Procedures for Issuance of Hunt Per- County Parks mit-tags by Drawing R12-4-302. Use of Tags R12-4-105. License Dealer’s License R12-4-303. Unlawful Devices and Ammunition R12-4-106. Licensing Time-frames R12-4-304. Lawful Methods for Taking Wild Mammals, Birds, R12-4-107. Bonus Point System and Reptiles R12-4-108. Management Unit Boundaries R12-4-305. Possessing, Transporting, Importing, Exporting, R12-4-109. Repealed and Selling Carcasses or Parts of Wildlife R12-4-110. Posting and access to state land R12-4-306. Buffalo Hunt Requirements R12-4-111. Identification Number R12-4-307. Trapping Regulations: Licensing; Methods; Tag- R12-4-112. Diseased or injured wildlife ging of Bobcat Pelts R12-4-113.
    [Show full text]