Challenge
Arizona and New Mexico, USA
A 770-mile desert-to-high-country traverse from Phoenix toward Albuquerque, prized for solitude, star-filled camps, complex navigation, and classic canyon country.
Overview
<p>A wilderness-forward long trail linking the Sonoran Desert near Phoenix to high mesas and forests approaching Albuquerque. Expect remote canyon systems, sky-island ranges, volcanic badlands, and creative navigation across singletrack, ranch roads, and cross-country segments. Strong map skills and a deliberate water strategy are essential.</p>
Highlights
<ul><li>Saguaro-studded desert rising into cool pine-fir sky islands</li><li>Photogenic canyon narrows, dark-sky camps, and sunrise horizons</li><li>Optional soaks near the greater Gila region and expansive wildlife corridors</li></ul>
Logistics
<p>No single permit covers the full route; regulations vary across BLM, National Forest, and state trust lands. Plan resupplies every 3–6 days via small towns or mail drops. Water sources are seasonal—carry high capacity and verify recent reports. Use reliable GPX tracks with paper-map redundancy.</p><p>Helpful planning links: <a href="https://www.recreation.gov">Recreation.gov</a>, <a href="https://www.openstreetmap.org">OpenStreetMap</a>, and <a href="https://www.leavenotrace.org">Leave No Trace</a>.</p>
Season
<p>Best in Spring (March–May) for milder temperatures and better water. Early Fall can work with careful heat and fire-weather management. Winter snow can linger on higher segments; summer monsoon brings intense storms and flash-flood potential.</p>
Safety
<p>Heat exposure, long dry carries, flash floods in slot canyons, limited cell service, and rattlesnakes. Carry satellite communications, pre-plan bailout points at road crossings, and monitor fire closures and weather windows before committing to remote legs.</p>
Distance
770 miles
Avg Completion
2-3 months
Best Season
Spring