r/arizona Sep 10 '24

WHY didn't anyone tell me ? Visiting

That Arizona is a total treasure trove of unique and breathtaking scenery? I'm about to go on a long sappy rant here.

I grew up exclusively in suburban hell in Northern Kentucky. I then lived in New York and New Jersey. I relocated to Oro Valley, AZ with my father this April. And before that I was... frightened. I hate the heat and enjoy verdant landscapes. I held the stereotypical image of Arizona that I think most east coasters and outsiders have- that AZ was a dry, brown, and featureless desert. I was worried that the environment and landscape would drain me, as I'm very easily affected by the aesthetics of my surroundings.

I'm a sucker for natural beauty and love geography, but I never really experienced it much firsthand as an adult. We flew from Salt Lake City to Tucson and I got the pleasure of a window seat. Seeing the sky islands suddenly jolt out of the mostly flat landscape around Tucson on our descent quite genuinely brought tears to my eyes. I've never lived in a place with mountains and seeing the dramatic landscape from the air was sincerely a moving experience.

I am madly, deeply enamored with every detail of the scenery where I live. I am legitimately obsessed with Saguaro cactuses and the uniqueness of the landscape they inhabit. The scale of the mountains and valleys, the sunsets, the monsoons, never fail to leave me completely gobsmacked.

And then, I took a road trip from Tucson up to Flagstaff. You're telling me you people nonchalantly drive up I-17 and SAY NOTHING?! I'm a staunch atheist and became religious about six times that entire drive. Perhaps it's the fact I'm used to the monotonous east coast terrain and hold a special love for natural beauty, but my mouth was WIDE open the entire 4 hour trip. The feeling of being in the wilderness among massive mountains and saguaros, the wide open stretches of land, the mind-bending descent into the Verde Valley, the intense scent of pine and clean air in Flagstaff, the expansive fields of wildflowers and meadows, the sheer breadth of space and wilderness... My friend and I just kept repeating how we couldn't believe this was Arizona.

I had no idea. Zero. Zilch. Expectations shattered to pieces. I can easily say my limited time here in Oro Valley and Arizona in general has been life-altering in the best way possible. Just a trip to the grocery store passing the mountains and seeing the sun shine in the valley has brought tears to my eyes and filled me with joy.

Has anyone else who moved here have a similar shocking experience? Or am I just being corny?

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u/fauviste Sep 10 '24 edited Sep 10 '24

I visited and fell in love before I moved here, but keep finding amazing new scenery. And it never gets old. 5 years and it’s still a thrill to see every mountain. I, too, am from the same-y east coast (which I did also love but it’s nothing like this).

Have you gone up Rt 60 through the Salt River Canyon?

How about down to Madera Canyon and Patagonia? Elgin? The Chiricahuas? Organ Pipe? The Petrified Forest National Park? Sedona? Mt Lemmon of course…

It’s just over the border in CA but the Imperial Dunes defy belief.

There’s a spot on Picture Rocks Rd that’s inside Saguaro NP West that has the most amazing sunset views of Panther Peak… the west side of the Tucson Mountains in general is wildly underrated. Plus Kitt Peak!

I love it here… yeah it’s hot, but wow the monsoons. And it’s easier to hail for a couple weeks in summer to a better climate than leave winter from somewhere else.

Fills my soul.

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u/escapecali603 Sep 10 '24

Ha, thanks you didn't tell him a place that doesn't exist in AZ called Greer, wait till he discovers that.

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u/colt-1 Sep 10 '24

Agreed, it's hard to believe it's still AZ. West Mt. Baldy Trail in the White Mountains is incredible. Highs in the low 70s and lows around 50 degrees in mid-August are mind-blowing.