|
Dragoon Mountain
Ride
- Ride through the mountains of Cochise’s Stronghold
Join us on a riding tour in the rugged
Dragoon Mountains, once home to the fierce Chiricahua Apache tribe and Cochise’s
stronghold on well bred horses while staying in comfortable accommodations at
night. Explore the Chiricahua National Monument and the areas around Fort Bowie
with expert guides during the day and join in on a Western dance at night. To
top it off we take you one an overnight pack trip into the mountains that you
will not so soon forget. True Western hospitality awaits you.
IRAZ01
Rates include 6 nights in cabin accommodations, all meals, one overnight
camping (optional), 6 days of riding, one night evening entertainment with local
band
8 days/ 7 nights $ 1,545 Single: + $295
... special
dates $1,275
... upgrade to Casita $ 140 pp
Dates 2008:
03/02-03/09 03/09-03/16
03/16-03/23
03/23-03/30 03/30-04/06 04/06-04/13
04/13-04/20 04/20-04/27 04/27-05/04
05/04-05/11 05/11-05/18 05/18-05/25
05/25-06/01 06/01-06/08
06/08-06/15
06/15-06/22 06/22-06/29 06/29-07/06
10/05-10/12 10/12-10/19 10/19-10/26
10/26-11/02 11/02-11/09 11/09-11/16
11/16-11/23 11/23-11/30
availability & reservation
Taxes: included
Gratuities: 15% to pay locally
Meeting: Pearce, Dragoon Mountain
Airport: Tucson Transfer: $230 for up to 6 people round
trip
between 8 AM to 8 PM.
($250
if traveling before 8 AM or after 8 PM)- to be paid locally Horses: Quarter, Quarter mix
Tack: Western Pace: All paces - there are loping rides
available throughout the week. The all day excursions are at a slower
pace due to the terrain Level: all levels
Min/Max: 3 to 12
... if only 2 riders - add $50 pp
Itinerary
Day 1 (Sunday):
Arrival in Tucson and 80 mile transfer to the ranch at 4 PM. You will be
staying at a working cattle and
guest ranch in the heart of Arizona’s Apache country at a 5,000 foot (1,500m)
elevation. The ranch buildings, nestled in groves of Arizona oak, manzanita and
mesquite trees, are almost invisible in this wooded canyon, with mountains
forming a dramatic, three-sided backdrop.
Dinner and overnight.
Day 2: After breakfast
we will introduce you to your horse, give some some tips and off we go on a 3
hour ride through some of the most beautiful country you have ever seen, with
scenery changing about every fifteen minutes. After lunch you have the option to
relax at the pool or participate in a 2 hour fast paced ride (only for good
intermediate riders). Dinner and overnight at the ranch.
Day 3: We load up the
horses and head off for an all day ride to the Chiricahua National Monument. This spectacular Canyon with its
fantastic rock formations is probably the least known of America's National
Parks, and yet is one of the most beautiful. For many years after the early
settlers arrived in this valley, the canyon remained totally undiscovered by the
white man, although it was used as a place of refuge by the Apache. We trailer
the horses to the parking lot of the Faraway Ranch, once the home of Ed and
Lillian Riggs. From there we ride past the recently restored homestead, an
interesting example of early Arizona architecture, through rolling meadows of
ranch country, and then up a steeply ascending trail winding through tall pines
reminiscent of Montana. After many switchbacks, each one revealing more
breathtaking scenery, we arrive in the almost lunar landscape of Balancing Rock
and the Heart of Rocks - an outing you will never forget. This trail is not for
novice riders, as it is steep, with switchbacks and steep drop-offs. This trip
may not be possible in winter, as the elevation is 7,000 feet (2,100m). Turkey
Creek is offered as an alternative.
Day 4: Extended day distance
ride through the Cochise Stronghold on interesting trails with some trots and
canters. Through the Stronghold Canyon, past the mountain divide which the trail
crosses on its way down to the West Stronghold. This is the route taken by
General Otis Howard when he met with Cochise to negotiate their peace treaty.
Nice picnic lunch out on the trail with breathtaking vistas. Late afternoon we
have time for a hot shower before Happy Hour.
Day 5: Today we will
explore the area around Fort Bowie. Fort Bowie was built in the 1860's to
protect the infamous Apache Pass, where many a wagon train was attacked by
braves led by Chief Cochise of the Chiricahua Apaches and Chief Mangas Coloradas
of the Mimbres. We ride past the ruins of the stage station, by what is left of
the old Fort Bowie cemetery, where the remains of soldier and Indian are buried
side by side. We pass through the canyon where the Battle of Apache Pass took
place, by the foundation of the house where Tom Jeffords, friend to Cochise and
Indian Agent at that time, once lived; past Apache Spring, the only source of
water for miles around, and thus one of the causes of contention between the
white man and the Indian, and finally onto the summit of the pass, where we see
the United States flag waving lone and tall on the long ago deserted parade
ground of old Fort Bowie. Today Fort Bowie is fast disappearing, crumbling back
into the earth, but it is a fascinating and nostalgic reminder of the tough
pioneers who won the West for us. After a long shower and dinner we are invited
to join the crew and other guests to a Western Dance evening with a live band.
Day 6 to 7: Join us
on a pack trip in the rugged Dragoon Mountains, once home to the fierce
Chiricahua Apache tribe. After a day's ride through their old camping and
hunting grounds, we set up our camp in some picturesque canyon, and enjoy a
dinner of steak, beans and all the fixin's cooked over a campfire. Later we
relax under the twinkling stars and listen to the lonely howl of a coyote, and
the sounds of the horses jostling each other on the picket line. In the morning
the smell of cowboy coffee and sizzling bacon wakes us, ready for another day's
adventure. (available March thru October – during
November thru February we will add two full day rides returning to the ranch at
night). Farewell dinner and overnight at the lodge.
Day 8: Early morning
ride after breakfast and departure back to Tucson around noon. Earliest light
departure should be around 3 PM.
|









|