Highline National Recreation Trail Explained

Highline National Recreation Trail
Established:1870
Length Mi:54.7

The Highline National Recreation Trail is a 54.7miles[1] trail that runs below the Mogollon Rim in the Tonto National Forest in Arizona. The trail showcases beautiful vistas of rim canyons, brushy hills, distant mountains, unique rock formations, and wonderful stands of Ponderosa pine. The trail was established in 1870 and was used to travel between homesteads and to attend school in Pine, Arizona. Zane Grey (who had a cabin in the area) and Babe Haught used the Highline Trail while hunting,[2] and the Zane Grey Highline Trail 50 Mile Run ultramarathon takes place on the trail. The portion of the Highline Trail from the Washington Park Trailhead to the Pine Trailhead is part of the Arizona Trail passage 26.

Sections of the trail have been burned multiple times, including by the deadly Dude Fire in 1990,[3] and the Highline fire in 2017, where part of the trail was used as a firebreak.[4] The eastern part of the trail underwent significant maintenance an improvement between 2012 and 2018.[5] [6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Highline Trail #31, AZ . Hike Arizona.
  2. Web site: Highline Trail 31 . Tonto National Forest.
  3. Web site: Highline Trail Restoration Project . Volunteers for Outdoor Arizona.
  4. Web site: Highline Fire . National Wildfire Coordinating Group.
  5. News: Czinar . Mare . Volunteers rebuild battered Highline Trail into a much better hike . 2 February 2019 . The Arizona Republic . 21 November 2017.
  6. Web site: Highline Trail Rehabilitation . Volunteers for Outdoor Arizona.