A couple of hours south of Tucson lies Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. The southern boundary of the park is the international border with Mexico. The visitor center is about six miles from the border crossing station on Arizona Route 85.
This park has a broad variety of cactus species, including Saguaro, Ocatillo, various types of Cholla, and obviously the Organ Pipe. This is the only place in the United States where the park’s namesake cactus can be found naturally.
After passing through the border inspection station south of Why, there was another 17 miles of Arizona 85 to traverse before getting to the Kris Eggle Visitor Center.
We did not realize just how much area Organ Pipe Cactus NP covered until we were looking at the map at the visitor center. After conferring with the ranger behind the desk, we decided to take a couple of drives and will save the hikes for a later visit.
From the Visitor Center, we headed up Puerto Blanco Drive for 5 miles. The road was well-maintained gravel with some paved portions.
We drove 5 miles up Puerto Blanco Drive to where the one-way portion of the road began. To drive the Puerto Blanco Drive loop in its entirety would total 52 miles. There are many hiking opportunities off of this loop, including points of interest such as natural springs, tanks, and mines, but we just did not have enough time to do anything more than a quick drive through on this visit.
While all that we were seeing was beautiful, we really did not see anything on this 10-mile round trip that we did not see on the way into the park on Arizona 85. In retrospect, we would have made better use of that time by using it on the Ajo Mountain Drive loop, where we ran out of daylight.
After getting back to 85, we turned south and drove the approximately 5 miles to the other end of Puerto Blanco Drive. To be completely honest, this was mostly out of curiosity to see the new border fence that was under construction. We followed the South Puerto Blanco Drive road as far as the Senita Basin access road.
After the out-and-back detour to check out the border fence, we headed back north on Route 85 to the Ajo Mountain loop drive, which begins directly across the highway from the visitor center.
The first 2 miles of the Ajo Mountain Drive was two-way, then the road splits for a 17-mile one-way loop. We made it about half way through this loop before the sun set and it began to get dark really fast.