Posts Tagged ‘Bowen Homestead’

The Morning Hike

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

In an effort to better promote the Sunrise and Sunset Hike offered at the JW Marriott Resort and Spa, Southwest Trekking has been making an effort to take out the resort staff on the hiking trails in the Tucson Mountain Park. With the Lorane Lee Hidden Canyon and Bowen Trail heads literally 200 yards from the front door, the JW Marriott Resort and Spa has some of the best on site hiking found in Tucson. 

Southwest Trekking offers a complementary one hour Sunrise (departing at 7:00am) and Sunset (departing at 5:00pm) Hike to all guests staying at the resort.  Depending on group size and ability, we will either hike the Bowen or Lorane Lee Hidden Canyon trail.  Both hikes offer stunning views of the amazingly rich Sonoran Desert and a knowledgeable guide to explain the unique fauna and flora found in the region.  The morning hike allows guests the chance to start their day with some fresh air and exercise, while the Sunset Hike offers a chance to view the setting sun in a truly scenic setting.

This morning, I had the opportunity to take Steve, the concierge from the JW Marriott Resort and Spa, out on the morning hike.  Steve was ambitious and I was itching to get in a little walk, so we were able to make it out to the stone house located 1.5 miles in on the Bowen Trail.  It was Steve’s first time seeing the stone house, and I’m quite sure he was as impressed as I was the first time I saw it.  We had a nice morning exchanging interesting facts about the city of Tucson and the Sonoran Desert while strolling through some of the most amazing stands of Saguaro Cactus found in the area.  It was an eye opener for Steve as to how accessible and immense the trail system is out in the Tucson Mountain Park, and how diverse the vegetation is along the entire hike. 

Unfortunately we didn’t get to see any animals this morning, save for a few trail runners and one dog, but it’s not uncommon to spot some Javalina, Mule Deer, and coyote on the trails in the early morning.  Steve mentioned that he could now understand why having a guide was important and beneficial to the guests; not only do we know where we are going, but we can also explain some of the interesting characteristics of the Sonoran Desert.  This was the whole reason for taking the staff out on the trails, so they could actually know how amazing the hiking is located at the JW Marriott Resort and Spa.  I took this as a success.  

As more and more hotel staff start joining us on the morning hikes, I’m sure we’ll see the popularity of the hike go up.  And the reason is simple, once you get to experience this amazing desert, you can’t stop talking about it.  If you are staying at the JW Marriott in Tucson, I encourage you to join us for one of our complementary hikes.  It’s also important to remember that there is amazing mountain biking right out the front door of the hotel as well.  If you ride, or want to ride, talk to a Southwest Trekking guide when you check in for more information.

www.swtrekking.com

A Mountain Bike Ride

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

Here is some information to a new trail I found out in the Tucson Mountain Park. There is always something new to find out there, and this was a real treat. It hosts some technical riding, and some great views.   However, it’s rather steep and technical in sections, with pretty good drops, so be careful not to biff it going through the hard bits.  This short new section of trail offers more advance riders the opportunity to change up their rides by allowing you to bypass some of  the Bowen Trail.

I accessed this trail by leaving from the JW Marroitt at Starr Pass and getting on the Bowen Trail.  I rode the Bowen/Yetman Trail past the stone house, through the wash, and up to the saddle.  At this point you can go straight (takes you down [riding towards the water storage tank that you can see] to the Starr Pass trail which is marked with a wooden sign), go right which eventually pitters out into nothing, or go left.  Take the left (almost a U turn) and follow the trail until you merge up with the Bowen Trail.   

I have included a link to where you can find a map and more details about the ride.  Copy and paste it into your web browser, and you are a-for-away.  If you have an account with Trimble Outdoors, you can download this file to your Garmin or simular GPS unit.  Good luck and happy trails.

www.trimbleoutdoors.com/ViewTrip/827062

DEER!

Monday, July 12th, 2010

 Is it hot here these days or what?  And to a year round local, it’s also muggy by our standards.  Time to sweat, and sweat, and sweat, then shower and sweat some more.  It makes perfect sense to sweat when it’s 100+ degrees and our humidity is creeping up, so don’t worry, I’m not embarrassed in the slightest.  I bring up sweating because of two reasons:  One, it makes you stink, and if any of you hang around me in the next few months, I apologize in advance.  Two,  it cools you down.  Most mammals sweat, either through skin or paws, and it also cools them down and makes them stink.

Where am I going with this you may ask?  Well, on my morning hike at the JW Marriott I was sweating profusely and enjoying the relatively cooler temperatures (82 F at 6am), guiding a mom and her son in the wonderful sonoran desert.  They were eager to go, and I was already sweating, so we went a little furthur up the trail than we usually go.  When they decided to split off and finish a certain trail, I had to turn around a get back to the resort.  Since we had gone out a little further than usual, I decided I’d just run back to the hotel. . . you know, really get the sweat going.

So off I go, running down the trail, and actually enjoying it when all of a sudden a deer runs RIGHT in front of me.  I mean this guy missed me by a few inches, I was even privileged enough to smell his sweat.  It scared the living daylights out of me for a second, but once the adrenaline calmed down I was able to appreciate his beauty a little more.  The Mule Deer found here are, for the most part, much like white tail deer you find in the east.  However, they do have rather large ears, and are a little smaller than white tale deer.  It was a real treat to be so close to this large mammals as he was gracefully strolling around while eating grasses and leaves.  What boggles my mind about these large animals is that they have to go months without any real source of water.  Although we have entered our Monsoon season, most of the city has yet to feel any rain drops.  And seeing as the last spring rain we had was in early April, these poor creatures have been surviving solely off water found in the vegetation.  Quite an amazing feat seeing as most of our vegetation is extremely drought resistant, and usually doesn’t have any ample amount of moisture in it.

Anyway, that’s what my morning was like – dodging deer.

The Bowen Homestead

Monday, January 18th, 2010

signHave you ever been hiking in the TucsonMapMountains, near the Yetman Wash, and encountered ruins from an old stone house? If you have, then you’ve come across the old homestead of the Bowen family.  This iconic structure is located about 1.5 miles away from the JW Marriott at Starr Pass, which is the closest trail head to view the house.  An out-and-back journey is only a 3 mile trip, and covers relatively flat ground, making it an excellent choice for a short hike.  To the right is a close up of our map that Southwest Trekking made of the Tucson Mountain Park.  The closest access to the Bowen’s Homestead is at the JW Marriott, but it can also be reached via the Lee Gensner/Starr Pass trail head located at the end of Clearwell Road.  You can download our whole map off of this blog.  Look to the right of the screen for a heading titled maps, and click on the link to open a pdf file.  You can save it on your computer, print it out for later, or stop by the JW Marriott and pick one up on your way to the trail.

The house itself has an interesting history.   The wife’s, Ruby Bowen, health was diminishing while living in the housemid west, and it was suggested that a change in climate might be of some aid to her deteriorating health.  The Bowen’s moved to Tucson in the late twenties from a small city outside of Chicago called Rockford.  They soon set their sights on the Tucson Mountains, and decided to homestead the area in the early nineteen thirties.  It was at this time that the husband, Sherry Bowen, who was previously a type setter, went to work constructing the house out of native stones that you see today.  The Bowen’s eventually expanded their homestead to about 2,000 acres.  Almost twenty years after arriving in Tucson, the Bowen’s left their property and moved to New York City where Sherry could continue his career as a typesetter.  Their property was eventually included in the Tucson Mountain Park in 1983.

viewAs you walk out to the house, try and imagine as if you were taking a stroll around your property.  What an amazing area to call your home!  It’s important to remember that back in the 1930′s, Tucson was a much smaller city and covered a much smaller surface area.  Living out in the Tucson Mountains was pretty removed from the hustle and bustle (not to mention conveniences) of city life.  The Tucson Mountains themselves housed a much higher population of deer and big horn sheep back then, and with that came more mountain lions.  The wife kept a diary while they were homesteading the property which make references to the abundance of wildlife that was in the area.

Of course now the city of Tucson stretches right up to foothills of the Tucson Mountains, but thanks to the Bowen’s and Pima County, the Tucson Mountain Park is 2000 acres bigger and provides mountain bikers and hikers many miles to enjoy some of the thickest stands of Saguaro cactus found in the world.

Saguaro

Southwest Trekking

www.swtrekking.com