Mt. Graham--lower road (desert section)

Mt. Graham--lower road (desert section)

Mt. Graham Official Website

Birds of Interest

This hotspot, having been created summer 2021, has been birded infrequently. As a result, eBird species-frequency data do not yet tell the full story of what birds you may find here. 

Among USFWS-designated Birds of Conservation Concern for the Sonoran Desert, Sierra Madre Occidental, and Chihuahuan Desert regions, species observed within the hotspot so far include Gila Woodpecker, Woodhouse’s Scrub Jay, Verdin, Cactus Wren, Curve-billed Thrasher, Phainopepla, and Scott’s Oriole.

About Mt. Graham

See all hotspots at Mt. Graham

Mount Graham is the tallest of southeastern Arizona’s sky islands—mountain ranges that rise like forested islands out of a desert sea. Ascending this mountain is the ecological equivalent of traveling from Mexico to Canada. Varied biotic communities, layered in life zones, provide ideal habitat for a diverse array of plants and animals, including endemic species found nowhere else in the world.

Known as Dził Nchaa Si’an (or Big Seated Mountain) to the Western Apache, Mount Graham has been home to Indigenous people for thousands of years.

In the late 1800s, Apache tribes that lived here for generations were forced onto reservations, restricting their access to the natural resources and spiritual sites on this mountain. Mount Graham still holds profound cultural significance to tribes today, and many sites are considered sacred.

An influx of Mormon farmers and ranchers in the late 1800s, and mining ventures in the early 1900s, prompted a need for lumber from the pine-covered mountain. Numerous sawmills were built across the range; remnants of some mills are present today.

The Swift Trail follows the original wagon route used to transport lumber down the mountain. Place names along the parkway recall early pioneers, from the namesake Forest Supervisor T. T. Swift, to the families that tended orchards, planted crops, and grazed cattle along the mountain creeks and meadows.

The Civilian Conservation Corps, which employed young men in the 1930s during the Great Depression, had multiple camps on Mount Graham. They constructed roads and bridges, such as the original stone bridge that crossed Wet Canyon. They also developed recreation sites on the mountain, including many of the trails and campgrounds enjoyed by visitors today.

Features

  • Roadside viewing

  • Restrooms on site

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

  • Entrance fee

Content from John Montgomery and Mt. Graham Visitor Guide

Last updated November 19, 2023

National Forest Service
National Forest Service