AZT – Trail, Saguaro

Hiking alongside Saguaro Cactus
Saguaros while walking at night
Jada and Kharen alongside a Saguaro. Saguaro can be enormous; such examples are over two hundred years old.

The lower-level landscapes down south are exposed, and the exposure lends itself to brilliant colors from cacti, bushes, and a few small leafy plants. On the descent from Mt Lemmon, there was grass a couple of feet high, and under the grass were tiny purple and yellow flowers from stringy ground-hugging plants sheltered by the grass. I heard hundreds of bees buzzing for about an hour but couldn’t see them since the grass also hid them.

The bees are plentiful around all the flowers. The bees create Prickly Pear Honey from Prickly Pear Cactus flowers, a brilliant red. The honey is also red and sweeter than typical, with a slightly tart aftertaste. The wildflowers were another pleasant Arizona surprise.

Wildflowers were everywhere and contrasted the desolate landscape. They are sparse but plentiful and varied. The contrast was impressive, and the types of plants that had flowers varied from ground plants to cacti. I’d love to find a plant identification app that works offline. I have a lot to learn about foliage and even what uses the plants have.

Wildflowers can be anywhere and sometimes everywhere.
Saguaro cactus and daisies
Cholla cactus. There are many species of Cholla in the desert sections of the AZT.
A big butt Jack Rabbit was hiking the AZT around some Cholla.
A Desert Mariposa Lily
A Desert Mariposa Lily and a Flowering Hedgehog Cactus (foreground)
Cholla cacti are everywhere in the desert. They are strangely beautiful and menacing.
A Rainbow Hedgehog Cactus
Saguaros and Daisies
Phloxes

Next: AZT – Trail, Snakes and Butterflies

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