It’s eight o’clock in the morning and its already creeping over 30 degrees centigrade. I’m sweating and every peddle feels like an effort. There is no shade and I’ve just been told that there are cactuses that will jump on you – and pierce you with their needles if you bike too close to them…
I am mountain biking with a guide from Arizona Outback Adventures in the Sonoran desert at the McDowell Mountain range, a few miles away from Phoenix. The Sonoran Desert is the real Wild West – it’s where the Apache lived, where Westerns were filmed, and the only place in the world where the Saguaro cactus grows.
Being from Wales I’m used to lush green surroundings. The golden brown of the desert, the heat and the sparse foliage are all alien to me. There is little humidity here; it’s a dry heat but it still saps your energy. The land looks deceptively flat, but it’s not. You can feel the strain of going uphill – even though to your eye it does not seem that you are.
The desert here is rocky with odd patches of sand. You have to make sure you think about the line you want to follow or you’ll end up in amongst the cacti. Keeping control is key to avoiding the spikes and needles that line the trail – especially when going downhill or riding through a sandy wash.
The environment looks harsh and unwelcoming, but our guide, as we cycled on, explained how the flora and fauna gives life to this part of the world. The first thing he told us about was the Jumping Cholla If you get too close this strange and harsh looking cactus will ‘jump’ from the mature plant and the spines will puncture your skin, bike wheel, shoes and or other items of clothing you may have. This is how it distributes its seeds. To get rid of them do not try and take them out with your hands – they will only implant themselves in your figures. You have to brush them off with a comb – which here is as essential as a rain coat is in Wales.
The flora has sustained ancient and Native American tribes for centuries. The cacti provide fuel and food; their spikes are used as sewing needles. This is not a dead dessert – it’s alive and its aggressive, as is the mountain biking. The slow ascent leaves me time to take in the large blooming flowers, still in all their glory before they close up to escape the midday heat. We see jack rabbits with their long, large ears, lizards scuttle out of our way, and a pissed off looking snake slithers off the path where it was sunbathing.
Then we begin our decent – what makes all that sweat and the heat headache worth it. Racing over the gravely paths and through sandy washes. The heat and the dust make it almost impossible to think that water runs through there during the rainy season– or that they even have a rainy season.
The McDowell Stake Park is the centre of mountain biking for the Phoenix area.Competitions are held there, such as The Giant Dust Devil Mountain Bike Series, and there are three competitive tracks: The Long Loop, which is for your average mountain biker, the Sports Loop for the intermediate, and the Technical Loop for the experts. The last two are about three miles long each, and the Technical Loop has a couple of steep drops and swooping turns. Get that wrong and you’ll end up with a bum full of spikes – but that is what makes it all the more fun.
When to go: November-April
Post ride: Head to old town Scottsdale for some authentic Mexican food, and wash it down with some Serra Nevada beer or some local wine. Yes, they do make wine in Arizona.
Camping: In winter you can camp in the national parks. Backcountry camping is free. It not recommended to camp in summer as the temperatures can exceed 40 degrees centigrade.







