The national monument contains a third species of columnar cactus that, like the organ pipe, is not found anywhere else in the USA, namely the senita ( pachycereus schottii) which also branches from the base. The organ pipe, which is much more common in Mexico, is distinguished from the saguaro by having thinner stems and by branching mainly from the base instead of from higher up the central trunk. Cross-country hiking is permitted in the monument - despite a variety of dangers including heat, lack of water, spiky plants, poisonous snakes and the possibility of encounters with armed smugglers and illegal immigrants - but most people stay on the maintained trails, of which only five are easily accessed: Alamo Canyon, Arch Canyon, Bull Pasture/Estes Canyon, Baker Mine/ Red Tanks Tinaja/Senita Basin and Victoria Mine, plus two easier routes, the 1.2 mile (loop) Desert View Trail and the 1.3 mile Palo Verde Trail, between the campground and the visitor center. The official campground is pleasantly scenic, set on a slight slope that allows partial long distance views southwards, and the sites are well-spaced, separated by tall cacti. For free camping (on BLM land), the nearest good location is along a dirt track forking west off AZ 85 beside Gunsight Wash, 2 miles south of Why, an increasingly popular location that may see hundreds of vehicles here at popular times. As both these tracks also start near the visitor center, all activity along the main road is concentrated in this one place, though the drive further south is still scenic, and the highway continues another 5 miles through the cactus forest to Lukeville at the border with Mexico.Ĭamping within the park is allowed at just two locations the main campground near the visitor center and a primitive site at Alamo Canyon. Although there are plenty of cacti along the highway, and a nature trail by the visitor center, a much better appreciation of the landscape is achieved by traveling along one of two unpaved tracks: the 37 mile Puerto Blanco Drive to the west (most of which requires a 4WD vehicle, however) or the 21 mile Ajo Mountain Drive to the east. Information and other visitor services are provided by the Kris Eggle Visitor Center, renamed in 2002 to commemorate a young NPS ranger who was killed by Mexican drug smugglers - an event that amongst other consequences has prompted construction of a more secure fence along this part of the international border. Once inside the monument, AZ 85 passes two roadside information points and a graded side track to Alamo Canyon (from where a trail leads along a scenic narrow valley to an old well), but there isn't much else of specific interest until the park headquarters and campground, 22 miles south of Why. Driving south past the hills, the saguaro grow every more densely and are joined by the organ pipes, while large cholla and barrel cacti are also much in evidence. From here AZ 85 heads due south into the monument, and is also mostly dead straight - two long linear stretches are separated by a short higher section through the edge of the Diablo Mountains, which provides a vantage point for the border control one or more of their vehicles are parked here all day, as the rangers scan the desert for any signs of activity. The two roads meet at the curiously-named town of Why, a small place whose facilities are limited to a few motels and gas stations. The journey is also notable for two very long straight stretches of road, through never-changing land filled with saguaro, making for quite a hypnotic driving experience. The latter crossing the Tohono O'Odham reservation and passing close to the Kitt Peak National Observatory, the largest such establishment in the world, which is open free of charge to visitors.
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