Chiricahua National Monument
October 27 -30, 2025
It's a short camping trip to Chiricahua National Monument in Arizona in our new Integra Arc Camper Van. We have thankfully rid ourselves of the mice from our previous trip. The Chiricahua Mountains are a unique volcanic mountain range with amazing rock hoodoo spires, balanced rocks and great hiking trails. We camped inside the Monument at the primitive Bonito Canyon Campground, no hookups with a maximum vehicle length of 29 foot. The monument has a scenic, curvy paved road from the park entrance to its highest elevation at Massai Point.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiricahua_National_Monument
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| We had a great campsite | 
We park, it's so nice to have nothing to set up, and then go on a short hike from our campsite on the Silver Spur Meadow trail to Faraway Ranch. A very easy trail through the forest along a dry creek bed with distant mountain views.
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| View along the trail | 
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| This is basically the view from our campsite | 
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| The CCC had a camp here that built it all | 
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| Sue posing in front of an old fire place | 
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| What is this rock structure on a hillside with a bared opening ? | 
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| Very cool views everywhere | 
We have no hookups here and are running off the house batteries to power the refrigerator, a few lights at night and the water pump intermittently. There is a campground rest room with running water, so our fancy cassette toilet is not getting hard use. Also we are not running the heater at all and are using a compact Butane fuel cook stove for cooking. In spite of our low usage, the battery voltage discharges to 2/3 overnight, but we can run our generator to recharge. This rig is already solar prepped, so I see a solar panel in the future.
We have an issue; the Van has a bed configuration that is (to us) very awkward to use and poorly designed. It works by removing all the couch cushions and then sliding the couch frame out from the wall on its slides and then positioning the removed couch cushions on top as the bed. This sounds good in theory, but really doesn’t work so well in practice. After setting it up and using it a few times, we have decided that it is more practical for Sue to sleep on the couch and for me to sleep on the floor in a sleeping bag. I know this sounds weird, but it’s so much easier to do this way.
On day 2 we drive to the Echo Canyon parking area and hike the Echo Canyon Trail. It was a great trail of moderate difficulty with fantastic views walking amongst the towering Hoodoos and balanced rocks. The trail traverses from the upper rock formations down to the creek level near the bottom and then gradually back to the top for a great cross section.
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| The Coati was checking us out | 
On day 3 our plan was to drive to the nearby town of Portal, New Mexico which we have heard much about, however when we started down the road, the washboard surface was very rough as in shaking the van apart. As it was going to be a 40 plus mile round trip we decided to turn around, but the road is definitely very scenic.
We then reversed direction back to Willcox, Arizona where we walked around the Main Street area and stopped for lunch at the Big Texan BBQ.
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| This is a great museum | 
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| This is a crazy Halloween story | 
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| An added attraction is the bar at the other part of the building | 
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| Dead Peoples stuff | 
Back at the campsite, we took a short ride to the visitors center where we went on a short hike on the Lower Rhyolite Trail which was moderate and very scenic.
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| Lots of nice acorns | 
We head for home in the morning making one stop at the Dos Cabezas Pioneer Cemetery. It contains many very interesting old gravestones.
We then drive straight back to Tucson. It was a very short but successful road trip with perfect weather.







































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