Saguaro National Park usually gets boasting rights when it comes to Arizonaโ€™s iconic cactus โ€” but a short, easy trail in Sabino Canyon northeast of Tucson is home to its own prickly trove of spectacular saguaro specimens.

Standouts along the Bajada Loop Nature Trail include a rare crested saguaro and an old, enormous survivor with one twisted, still-living limb resting on the ground and a prickly pear cactus growing out of its trunk.

The 0.3-mile trail โ€” near the Sabino Canyon visitor center at 5700 N. Sabino Canyon Road โ€” is often bypassed by so-called serious hikers because itโ€™s short, flat and anything but a challenge. But those who give it a try often return โ€” sometimes sharing its sights with visitors.

โ€œOn a very short walk from the Sabino Canyon Visitor Center, a variety of saguaros can be found on the Bajada Loop Nature Trail,โ€ said Heidi Schewel, spokeswoman for the Coronado National Forest, which manages the canyon.

โ€œYoung cacti are emerging from beneath protective nurse trees,โ€ Schewel said. โ€œMature giants with exposed holes hint at cavities within serving as nests for Gila woodpeckers and northern flickers. During the summer, saguaros sport Arizonaโ€™s state flower, a creamy yellow and white blossom to be followed by succulent red fruits which attract a number of birds and insects.โ€

Schewel noted that the large crested, or cristate, saguaro is growing toward the northwestern curve of the short loop trail and includes โ€œmany small arms protruding from a twisted, swirled crown.โ€

โ€œSuch cacti are rare, each is an individual, and this specimen provides great photo opportunities from all angles,โ€ she said.

A short distance away is the towering old saguaro with one limb twisting improbably down from its trunk โ€” reaching all the way to the ground. A small prickly pear cactus appears to be surviving, if not thriving, in its perch on the saguaroโ€™s trunk.

Botanists and some casual observers have come across other examples of prickly pears hitching a ride on saguaros or other large cacti โ€” but itโ€™s fairly unusual.

Elsewhere along the trail, walkers pass a cluster of three saguaros growing side by side and all but touching one another.

Other eye-catching specimens stand tall in the distance, stabbing at the sky against the backdrop of the Catalina Mountains.


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Contact reporter Doug Kreutz at dkreutz@tucson.com.