Primary Navigation

About Coronado National Forest
Park Overview 
Highlights 
Camping 
Fishing 
Picnicking 
Hiking & Walking 
Backpacking 
Horseback Riding 
Viewing Sites 
Search
Y! Travel The web
Local Maps
 Map

Driving Directions

Related Information
  Destination Guide
•  Arizona
  Hotels
•  Arizona Hotels
•  Local Hotels
  Interest Guides
•  Arizona Ski Resorts

Tools
Yahoo! Weather  Yahoo! Weather
Yahoo! Maps  Yahoo! Maps

 
Brush Corral Trail Content provided by   Wildernet
Quick Facts
Length:  7.4 Miles
USGS Map:  Mt. Bigelow
Usage:  Moderate
Trail Number:  19
Ending Elevation:  3,800 Feet
Elevation Gain:  3,200 Feet
Beginning Elevation:  7,000 Feet
Difficulty:  More Difficult
Reservation:  No
Season:  Spring - Fall
Directions
From Tucson, Drive up the Catalina Highway to the San Pedro Vista Point trailhead for the Green Mountain Trail #21. Travel this trail 0.3 mile to the Brush Corral Trail junction.
Location Information
This trail leads down the northeast slope of the Santa Catalinas to a historic Forest Ranger station that has not been used since shortly after World War I. Little is left of the cabin and old brush corral that made up this Forest outpost, and since the trail to it has been used so little for so long it is difficult to find and hard to follow as well. On its upper end, Brush Corral Trail can be accessed by way of the Green Mountain Trail #21. It branches off that trail 0.3 mile from its San Pedro Vista Point trailhead. From that junction, it drops past a second junction with the Shortcut Trail #21A offering good views of the San Pedro Valley and the Galiuro Mountains to the east.

Downhill of the Shortcut Trail junction, the Brush Corral Trail stays on the south ridge of Buehman Canyon, first on its west side then on its east side. Remembering this can come in handy, especially where several stretches of the trail are hard to sort out among the cattle paths and manzanita thickets.

The trail drops into Buehman Canyon at the location of the old Brush Corral Ranger Station. From this point the trail follows an old 4-wheel drive road to a trailhead on Forest Road 4407.

This trail can be very hard to find. Bring a topographic map and a compass and know how to use them.
Next: Backpacking
E
mail this page  Email this page
 More Resources at Wildernet 
 •  More Information: Guidebooks & Maps
 •  Trip Reports and Current Conditions
 •  More Information and Reservations

Copyright © 2009 Wildernet. All rights reserved.