Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Pima Canyon Trail to the Hohokam Mortars

Today I had a couple hours to hike and returned to one of my favorite trails in the Santa Catalina's, the Pima Canyon Trail. I was hoping I had time to make it to the Hohokam Mortars (spherical holes carved into stone used for grinding grain & spices with a pestle). I wasn't sure how far up the canyon the mortars were, but I was betting around 3 miles up, which would give me enough time if I could maintain a pace of ~3mph (~20 min/mile); they were and I did, almost to the minute.

The Hohokam inhabited parts of Arizona from approximately 1 CE to around 1450 CE, and  were very adept at living sustainably in the desert—unlike us modern primates—and were known for their irrigation systems (see details below).

I have hiked this trail many times in the past on various short and long hikes. The first time, in January 2019, I was joined by then hiking partners Jacques (Jack) from Quebec, and Misty, who had just moved here from Colorado. We hiked it as a point-to-point to Mt. Kimball ending at the Finger Rock trailhead on the south slope of the Catalinas. Most recently, in November 2024, I hiked it with Misty (Jack only hiked here a couple-three years), a brutal 14.5 miles round trip to Kimball—brutal because of the sketchy, deteriorated, and frankly dangerous upper reaches that still hadn't remotely recovered from the devastating fire in 2020 that burned 130,000 acres of the Catalinas. The trail still shows many scars from that fire, even at the better-maintained lower reaches.

Today's weather was pretty danged perfect, mid 60s at the start and a little cooler further up, a little cloud cover, and not a whole lot of other hikers, especially after about a mile in.


I included data from my watch (on the right) mostly for my
own accounting.




The trail starts at the end of McGee road, and abuts a development of rich folks homes, who apparently feel it is their right since they are, well, rich.


One last abode a few hundred yards in after which we are rid of them.





Lots of easy ambling paths mixed in with some rather more challenging and rocky sections.



The Hohokam mortars, not sure their exact age but well over 1,000 years I imagine.



Hohokam Culture (from the National Park Service)

The word Hohokam is a Piman language term for “all used up” or “exhausted,” and the name given by archeologists to the ancient farming peoples of the southern deserts of Arizona. The Hohokam lived in the Phoenix Basin along the Gila and Salt Rivers, in southern Arizona along the Santa Cruz and San Pedro Rivers, and north on the Lower Verde River and along the New and Agua Fria Rivers. Hohokam influences were even more widespread, with Hohokam-style architecture and artifacts as far north as Flagstaff, Arizona, south into northern Sonora, Mexico, and east into southwestern New Mexico.

The Hohokam were, in the words of archeologist Emil Haury, “masters of the desert.” Their cultural pattern existed from the first years A.D. through about A.D. 1450, barely 90 years before Spanish explorers arrived in the Southwest. During this time, they achieved remarkable successes. The Hohokam are probably most famous for their creation of extensive irrigation canals along the Salt and Gila rivers. In fact, the Hohokam had the largest and most complex irrigation systems of any culture in the New World north of Peru. Not even the complex societies in Mesoamerica had such extensive irrigation canals. Accompanying the canals were extensive villages that covered hundreds of acres and were occupied by several hundred people. Within the villages were monumental public works. Early in the Hohokam cultural sequence these consisted of ball courts and small, low, circular mounds made of earth. Later, the low circular mounds were replaced by much larger, rectangular “platform mounds” of earth, rock, and adobe covered with structures and courtyards built on top.

Hohokam villages are remarkable in the ancient Southwest for their stability. Unlike ancient pueblo towns, which often were abandoned after a few decades, some Hohokam villages were continuously occupied for up to 1,500 years or more. Hohokam villages also show that society was organized in a hierarchical fashion. The Hohokam represent one of the largest and most complex societies in the Southwest. At the cultural peak of the Hohokam in the “Classic” period of the A.D. 1100s through 1400s, there were tens of thousands of Hohokam people living in large villages scattered throughout the Phoenix and Tucson basins. Hohokam farmers truly had mastered the desert, in the sense that they were able to successfully grow crops in the same locations for hundreds of years and create a large, well-organized, prospering society.

Why this once-flourishing cultural pattern came to an end remains a mystery. Whatever the answer, however, people remained, descendants of whom include the Pima and Tohono O'odham of southern Arizona.




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