Showing posts with label Chiricahua National Monument. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chiricahua National Monument. Show all posts

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Echo Canyon Grottoes - Chiricahua National Monument


Our final stop during our May 2015 visit to Chiricahua National Monument was at the Echo Canyon Loop Trail. As part of the 3.3 mile loop trail had been washed out due to recent flooding, I only hiked down to what I hope was the Grottoes before returning to the parking area. This made a short one-mile round trip hike in the "Wonderland of Rocks".

If you are planning to travel I-10 between Tucson and Las Cruces, schedule at least a morning or afternoon to sightsee, hike, picnic or just relax at this unique little park in the southeast corner of Arizona.

Trail surface

This must be the picnic area

Heading toward the seal posing on a pedestal

The trail was built by the CCC as can be seen in the sign architecture

A few columns rise above the trees

It's a bird! It's a seal! No, it's just a rock poser.

Hoodoos in the forest

Another view of the trail

A whole mountainside of rock columns

Sugarloaf Mountain from the trail

Bent to the point of breaking

Giant chairs in a rock amphitheater

Another balancing act

Huddled up on the hillside

Naturally carve stone statues

From this direction, a stone tulip

If we all just work together we can roll the big rock over the hill

Looking back, the stone tulip becomes a bird bath

Split right down the middle

A lizard suns on the rocks

An Easter Island Moai in Arizona or just a balanced rock?

Looking south toward the Turkey Creek caldera

The Twins

Another view of Balanced Rock

Playing "King of the Hill"

Biggest trail cairn I've ever seen

Inspiration for Rock 'em Sock 'em robots?

This one fell off its pedestal

More columns

A trailside column

Elephant parade

Teed up, not teed off

Leaning columns

Entrance to Chiricahua National Monument is free.

The park website is http://www.nps.gov/chir/index.htm.

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Massai Point - Chiricahua National Monument


Massai Point is located at the end of Bonita Canyon Drive in Chiricahua National Monument. At an elevation of 6870 feet, it is more than 2000 feet above the surrounding grasslands. When the Turkey Creek volcano south of the monument erupted, it deposited hot ash that melted and coalesced into rhyolite. As the rhyolite cooled, it cracked vertically and horizontally. Untold years of wind, water and freeze/dry cycles have sculpted the remaining rhyolite into pinnacles and balanced rocks.

A short nature walk surrounds the parking area at the end of the road. While the nature trail is not accessible, wonderful views of the surrounding landscape are visible from a vehicle. In addition, an accessible trail or stairs lead to an exhibit building atop Massai Point. We stopped during our May 2015 visit to the monument.

Looking west from the parking area across Sulphur Springs Valley to the Dragoon Mountains

Looking north at Bonita Canyon Drive

Columns and more columns

Looking south toward the southern Chiricahua Mountains and the Coronado National Forest

Fins and columns

Looking northwest to Sugarloaf Mountain (7310')

Pinnacles below Sugarloaf Mountain

Split, but still standing

A tree struggles to survive above the rows of rocks

Exhibit building

Interior of the exhibit building

View to the south from the exhibit building

Note the observation building on Sugarloaf Mountain

Cochise Head - named after the chief of the Chiricahua Apaches

Harris Mountain (5632' with road), San Simon Valley and the Peloncillo Mountains

Higher peaks of the Chiricahua Mountains to the south

Dragoon Mountains (40 miles distant)

Leaning rocks

Eastern wall of the caldera of the Turkey Creek volcano

Dos Cabezas Peaks (8354', 22 miles)

Another look east at Harris Mountain

Entrance to Chiricahua National Monument is free.

The park website is http://www.nps.gov/chir/index.htm.