Photos: Autumn arrives in the Santa Catalina Mountains
- Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily Star
Rebecca Sasnett
Photojournalist
- Updated
The Autumn Equinox, which began on Sept. 22, brings cooler temperatures and a change in scenery in the Santa Catalina Mountains.
Leaves in red, orange and yellow are adding some color along the Catalina Highway and hiking trails open after the Bighorn Fire.
Good spots to see the Autumn colors include Bear Wallow Trail, Ski Valley, Summerhaven and Marshall Gulch.
Due to the Bighorn Fire, there are still some hiking trails which are currently closed, as of Oct. 2. Some trails which are currently closed are Mount Lemmon Trail #5, Marshall Gulch trail #3, Aspen Trail #4 and others. For a full list of trails closed visit the National Forest Website at https://www.fs.usda.gov/detail/coronado/news-events/?cid=FSEPRD816994 or call the Santa Catalina Ranger District Office at (520)749-8700.
Fall colors
Updated
Light shines through a group of leaves changing colors in Marshall Gulch in Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
A hiker and their dog walk past trees beginning to change colors along Bear Wallow trail in the Santa Catalina Mountains, on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
Two people walk past tree beginning to change colors in Ski Valley near Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
A bird flies out of a group of trees with yellow leaves in Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
Trees are beginning to change colors for the fall season along Bear Wallow trail in the Santa Catalina Mountains, on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
The tops of trees start to change their color along Bear Wallow trail in the Santa Catalina Mountains, on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
Light shines through leaves beginning to change colors in Ski Valley near Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
A women collects colored leaves for at home art projects which have fallen from the trees above along Bear Wallow trail in the Santa Catalina Mountains, on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
A red leaf rest on the ground along Bear Wallow trail in the Santa Catalina Mountains, on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
Light shines through a group of leaves changing colors in Marshall Gulch at Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
An employee from The Mount Lemmon Cookie Cabin Pizzeria and Bakery walks though two large trees beginning to change colors in front of the pizzeria and bakery in Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
Customers walk past a tree changing colors while waiting for The Mount Lemmon Cookie Cabin Pizzeria and Bakery to open in Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
A pile of dried leaves rest on the ground at Marshall Gulch in Summerhaven, Ariz., on October 8, 2020.
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
While looking at the changing colors along a hiking trail in Bear Wallow, a hiker walks past a tree with red leaves along Bear Wallow trail in the Santa Catalina Mountains, on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarFall colors
Updated
Light shines on a tree changing colors as well as a tree which hasn't begun to change along Bear Wallow trail in the Santa Catalina Mountains, on October 8, 2020.Â
Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily StarTags
Rebecca Sasnett
Photojournalist
As featured on
There are still plenty of Tucson, Arizona autumn traditions you can enjoy during 2020, including finding fall colors, picking pumpkins, planting a fall garden, eating at Tucson Meet Yourself and more.Â
Arizona judges are free to sentence juveniles to what amount to de facto life sentences, the state Supreme Court ruled Friday, despite U.S. Supreme Court rulings that appear to prohibit that. The ruling involved two Tucson cases.
The annual festival typically brings in about 5,000 people and includes a variety of performances, food vendors, games, a holiday market and the lighting of a 25-foot tree.
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