After taking in the Painted Desert and Petrified Forest National Park, we stayed the night in the OK RV Park in Holbrook, Arizona. It had been a regular mobile home park sometime in the past and had extra deep, narrow lots.
We left Holbrook on the morning of March 17th and headed to Tucson on US-60 West through gorgeous country full of canyons. The steep climbs and descents showcased a wide variety of formations and vegetation, from badlands with hardly any growth to flatlands with wildflowers to bare peaks, slopes with pines, and peaks with junipers.
Cemeteries seemed to be given much more attention than at home.
These totem-like formations in the Tonto National Forest are called hoodoos.
On the other side of this bridge, which crosses the Salt River and spans the Salt River Canyon, we entered the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation and left behind the Fort Apache Indian Reservation.
The first Giant Saguaros we saw!
We pulled off the road to enjoy a beautiful array of wildflowers.
Possibly Red Maids:
Possibly Mexican Gold Poppy:
Teddybear cholla:
Desert Marigold, with tiny little yellow flowers below:
The purple-pink tube flowers are possibly a type of toadflax:
Lovely variety of cacti behind the wildflowers, including cholla (grayish, short, multi-branched cactus on the left), ocotillo behind a prickly pear, and Giant Saguaro:
Monday, April 12, 2010
Holbrook to Tucson
Labels:
Apache,
Arizona,
Cemetery,
Cholla,
Desert,
Giant Saguaro,
Holbrook,
Hoodoos,
Wildflowers
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