About Your Visit
No water, gasoline, food, lodging, or similar
facilities are available in the monument. A picnic ground has shaded
tables and fireplaces, but overnight camping is not permitted, and there
is no water. However, the entrance to the monument is only 17 miles from
downtown Tucson where every type of accommodation can be obtained. The
monument can be reached from Tucson by a paved highway called "Old
Spanish Trail," leaving Broadway Avenue, at the eastern edge of the
city. You will find a large parking area at the National Park Service
headquarters near the entrance. The Administration-Visitor Center has an
air-cooled lobby where information service is provided. Here, also, are
a number of exhibits which explain the natural history features of the
area and help make the monument of greater interest and significance to
you. A small cactus garden outside the building will help identify these
remarkable plants.
Saguaro National Monument and vicinity.
(click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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At the Visitor Center is the start and finish of a
9-mile loop drive along a surfaced road that provides access to the
Cactus Forest, the most spectacular and heavily vegetated part of the
desert. A self-guiding booklet, obtained at the information desk,
explains significant features marked along the drive. If you enjoy
horseback riding you can rent saddle horses at private ranches adjoining
the monument to ride either through the Cactus Forest or over mountain
trails of the Tanque Verdes and Rincons.
A diagrammatic view showing the developed area at the
left and the route of the proposed desert-to-mountain highway.
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