Guess where I’m hiking in 2021! Plane ticket is bought and I’m finalizing plans. In the mean time, read up on the Arizona Trail (AZT). The following was taken from Arizona Trail Association website at www.aztrail.org
The Arizona Trail was the dream of Dale Shewalter who envisioned a cross-state trail in the 1970s, and in 1985, while he was working as a Flagstaff schoolteacher, walked from Nogales to the Utah state line to explore the feasibility of a trail traversing Arizona. Immediately thereafter, Dale began traveling around the state giving presentations on his vision of a trail connecting communities, mountains, canyons, deserts, forests, public lands, historic sites, various trail systems, wilderness areas, and other points of interest. The idea was embraced by all types of trails users throughout Arizona, and by Arizona State Parks and the Kaibab, Coronado, Coconino, and Tonto National Forests, the Bureau of Land Management, and National Parks Service.
Inventory work was needed on determining the existing trails that could be interconnected to be designated as part of the Arizona Trail, and at the same time, where new trails would be needed to traverse Arizona’s diverse landscapes. In the late 1980’s, Dale was hired by the Kaibab National Forest to be the first paid coordinator for the Arizona Trail, and all agencies began establishing segments of the Arizona Trail.
By 1990, two needs became apparent – a formal partnership among all governmental agencies was necessary to better coordinate efforts and communication, and a non-profit organization for the trail was needed. Using monies from all four National Forests, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and funding of its own, Arizona State Parks assumed the lead role and employed paid coordinators for the Arizona Trail throughout the 1990s.
In 1994, the Arizona Trail Association incorporated as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and became an organized voice for the trail, and brought together passionate day hikers, backpackers, equestrians, mountain bicyclists, runners, trail builders, nature enthusiasts, cross-country skiers, and llama packers from throughout the state. These committed individuals (then and even more so today) provided the necessary route identification to “close the gaps” of the trail, provided the necessary volunteers for building and maintaining the trail, created maps and provided GPS coordinates, identified water sources and resupply points, and raised money and awareness for the trail.
Also in the 1990s and continuing today, various trail crews that spend extended periods of time working on the trail have contributed greatly. These include various youth corps crews, Sierra Club service trips, American Hiking Society Volunteer Vacations, scouting and college groups, Volunteers for Outdoor Arizona, REI service trips, Backcountry Horsemen of America, International Mountain Bicycling Association – Subaru Trail Care Crews, and many more. These trail crews can spend extended periods of time in the backcountry, where logistics can be challenging for the typical weekend volunteer work project.
Many large donors including outdoor stores and clubs, small businesses, and large corporations have provided valuable funding to the ATA for the AZT. Without their generous donations, the trail would not be where it is today. Additionally, many land managers have aggressively pursued Arizona Heritage Fund grants for the trail, and Arizona State Parks has facilitated this process.
Since 2000, some very significant milestones have been reached that originally seemed very difficult to achieve. These include: seeking and successfully achieving National Scenic Trail status; establishing easements and successfully building the trail on State Trust Lands (i.e., that is managed much like private land) in Pima and Pinal Counties; working to reestablish the trail in areas severely affected by major wildfires; traversing the challenging topography north of the Gila River; working through landowner opposition west of the San Francisco Peaks; the Arizona Trail Association absorbing much of the day-to-day coordination of the trail that was originally completed by the land managers (i.e., in better budgetary times); developing outstanding maps and GPS information to better assist trail users through the remote areas along the trail; and building the Arizona Trail Association to its current levels of membership, plus fun events, trail work weekends, and Arizona Trail merchandise. It is the above milestones that brought the Arizona Trail to its current completed state.
The Arizona Trail has become one of the premier long distance trails in the country. The diversity of people that have made this happen is as wide as the trail is long. The Arizona Trail demonstrates what trail users and land managers can accomplish when they share a common vision.
See you on the Arizona Trail.