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Brown Canyon Ranch

4.6 (7 reviews)

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Recommended Reviews - Brown Canyon Ranch

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3 years ago

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8 years ago

Helpful 2
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6 years ago

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7 years ago

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3 years ago

Fabulous area to hike and bike and visit history.

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5 years ago

Great place to visit loved the caretaker and her stories!!

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6 years ago

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Lehner Mammoth Kill Site - Trailhead near the plaque.  This is a 3-mile perimeter loop trail.

Lehner Mammoth Kill Site

3.0(2 reviews)
11.0 mi

I live 11 miles from this place, but it's only been ten days since I found it. A friend lives…read morenearby and said this is where she parks her car and walks her dog on a three-mile loop down to the San Pedro River and back. She took me here with another dogwalker and I've been coming here daily ever since. There isn't much at the actual kill site other than a plaque describing how Ed Lehner in 1952, landowner of this site, who found butchering tools along with tapir, mammoth, bison and horse bones dating 11,000 years ago when Clovis people lived here. There's nothing here now but the plaque on a high spot in the area. It's now used mostly for other things: It's a great place to set up a telescope on a new moon, or a camera tripod for those gorgeous sun rises and sunsets, and moon rises and moon sets. You have a panoramic view of the Huachuca Mountains. About 50 meters east is a trail that locals use for their dogs and horses. It is a perimeter trail that loops around the field. Birders at the nearby San Pedro B&B use this trail along the river early in the mourning and near dusk to spot birds of all kinds. There are harriers that fly over the field looking for a meal. I would not suggest anyone come here after dusk, as it's six miles from the border with Mexico.

Just a plaque. Nothing there. But nice to think there were mammoths there and was probably a kill…read moresite for prehistoric people.

Photos
Lehner Mammoth Kill Site - Plaque

Plaque

Lehner Mammoth Kill Site - View west toward mountains

View west toward mountains

Lehner Mammoth Kill Site

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Fort Bowie National Historic Site

Fort Bowie National Historic Site

4.0(17 reviews)
68.5 mi

Possibly the best National Historic Site I've been to in a very long time…read more - Great mile and half trail to access the fort. There is also an ADA road access option but I'd recommend the trail unless you can't make the hike. It's a fairly easy trail. Going back to the trailhead, take the Overlook Ridge trail located north of the visitor center. It affords better views of the site. - Lots of informative signs along the trail and at the fort describing the history (which is sordid - Cochise was framed!). - Also lots of signs identifying the various plants. - Visitor center has a great collection of artifacts and especially, old photos. - The fort itself is very interesting - many buildings (or rather, the remains of buildings) to explore. Don't forget to walk up the short trail on the west side to see the original fort.

This is certainly an interesting set up for a national historic site. You drive partially on a dirt…read moreroad and then park and set out on a 1.5 mile hike with placards and historic points of interest along the way. Make sure to bring water! If you have a disability, you can skip the hike and drive in, but you have to make prior arrangements so they can open the road for you. It's due to the road crossing sensitive ecological areas so they want to limit traffic. Since I visited in winter, a lot of the critters were hibernating/less active, so I didn't see any wildlife. The hike was ok. Sometimes the trail was narrow and so you were brushing up against grass. There's no water on the trail until the visitor center so make sure you bring water. There's a spring along the way (0.25 miles from the visitor center) but it's not treated and not recommended to drink from it. The ruins are not going to be restored, rather they put concrete/plaster over it to preserve them. There's some exhibits in the visitor center explaining things, but the volunteer and rangers are better sources of information. Otherwise I wish that there were more details. There's a small gift shop as well. Restrooms are at the trailhead and at the visitor center.

Photos
Fort Bowie National Historic Site - Tarantula on the path to the visitors center

Tarantula on the path to the visitors center

Fort Bowie National Historic Site
Fort Bowie National Historic Site

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Brown Canyon Ranch - parks - Updated June 2026

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