Aguila, Bouse, Lake Havasu, Oatman, Kingman

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Hassayampa River Preserve

Last week, we passed through Wickenburg and drove right past the Hassayampa River Preserve, but we can only do that so many times to a place before we finally decide that we have to pay it a visit, and so that’s our first stop today.

Hassayampa River Preserve

It’s a pretty little oasis here at the Hassayampa.

Burro Jim Motel in Aguila, Arizona

Somewhere between Nothing and Hope, you’ll find Aguila, and unless you are a desert farmer or just someone interested in what stuff and which places are out beyond our purview from the freeways, I have no idea what you’d be doing out here.

Ruin next to the road between Aguila and Bouse, Arizona

Horse tie-ups still in place. I guess that says something about how long this former establishment has been in ruin. Roadside in Salome, Arizona.

Old Brayton Ghost Town near Bouse, Arizona

Kinda neat little place along the road called the “Old Brayton Ghost Town & Museum.” To visit it, you are put on the honor system, and it is hoped you’ll offer $1 per adult and 50 cents per child to help keep things going. Our loop today is now traveling through Bouse, Arizona.

Parker Dam on the California-Arizona border.

London Bridge at Lake Havasu, Arizona

London Bridge, originally built in 1830, is now about 5,459 miles (8.844 km) from where it first spanned the Thames River. Today, it spans a small channel of the Colorado River to an island that came into being as the Parker Dam backed up the Colorado, forming Lake Havasu.

Sadly, we drove right by the Silver Dollar Chuck Wagon restaurant in Topock, Arizona, missing a “broasted chicken” dinner, but we’d just eaten an hour earlier in Lake Havasu. This is old Route 66, which at one time was the main road across the United States for those heading west. Somehow, I can’t imagine being out here in the 1930s in cars without air conditioning and services that were few and far between.

For those who took this road some 70 years ago out of Chicago and before the age of television, how foreign and exotic must this have looked to them?

In 1921, much of Oatman burned down, but the Durlin Hotel survived (not pictured). Besides having a population as large as 3,500 due to a gold find back in 1915, Oatman was put on the map after Carole Lombard and Clark Gable got married nearby in Kingman on March 18, 1939, and passed through on their honeymoon. Clark Gable enjoyed the town so much that he would frequently return to play poker with the local miners.

For that authentic Old West look, there should be donkeys everywhere in Arizona.

We are in Kingman and probably not where Clark Gable and his new bride Carole Lombard had dinner (nor did we), but we definitely like the old sign.

And this was the big payoff of the day, a spectacular sunset with crepuscular rays.

Last remnants of the golden fires of the late-day sky as we drive south back towards Wickenburg and Phoenix.

Would this be the last monsoon of the summer season near Phoenix?

Yarnell to Williams

Congress, Arizona

Today’s road trip started on Highway 60, but this time, we are heading northwest in the direction of Las Vegas. Before we ever get to Sin City, though, we’ll pass through Wickenburg and then turn off to Congress, Arizona.

Congress, Arizona

Not sure Congress can be called a town but if so, it might be more appropriately referred to as a Ghost Town.

Congress, Arizona

Frog Rock is a roadside attraction that might garner more attention than Congress that we just passed through.

Yarnell, Arizona

Lunch was nearby at the Ranch House Restaurant here in Yarnell.

I have a sweet spot for decrepit old buildings and signs from a bygone era. The motel is no longer open, and one wonders about how long until the sign goes away too.

Update: In late 2023, Grace Harris took a photo of the same sign that is now a lot worse for wear. She told me that at one time, the place was called the Boulders Motel. I asked Google’s Bard about it, and it appears that the postcard on the internet of this sign and location with the different name was from 1958. 

From a former bordello more than one hundred years ago to a steakhouse today. Hopefully, someday, we’ll come back for something to eat here in Kirkland, Arizona, at the Kirkland Bar & Steakhouse.

You can bet that if there are a lot of people in the Phoenix area who have never visited the Grand Canyon, there are even more who don’t know we have a township on the back roads to Prescott called Skull Valley.

Keep driving north through Prescott, Chino Valley, Paulden, and Ash Fork up on Interstate 40, turn east, and you’ll reach Williams.

Williams, Arizona

This is also the place you might catch the train to the Grand Canyon, but probably not this exact one.

Walnut Canyon National Monument, Arizona

We were in the area, so why not make time for a stop at Walnut Canyon National Monument?

Even though it’s summer, we live too far south to experience the luxury of sunsets that don’t happen until after 11:00 p.m. It’s only shortly past 7:00, and the sun is fading fast on our way home.

Globe to Ft. Apache

Near Superior, Arizona

Passing through Superior when we’re traveling east on Highway 60 is always a pleasure as it’s not too far from Phoenix and the landscape changes dramatically while traveling west on the I-10 towards California involves more than one hundred miles of desert.

Near Superior, Arizona

A quick stop at Boyce Thompson Arboretum satisfies our need for lush vegetation.

Globe, Arizona

Driving north out of Globe, you pass the Apache Drive-in, which is almost startling in appearance as you realize that it’s still open. How much longer can these relics from the past continue?

Flower in Arizona

A yellow bug for a yellow flower.

Off the road to Ft. Apache, Arizona

It’s still monsoon season here in Arizona, and where there’s some elevation, the water isn’t immediately absorbed by the thirsty desert. Not only does the rain replenish the plant life, but it also goes far to refresh our parched senses.

Ft. Apache, Arizona

A little off the beaten path is the Ft. Apache Historic Park. From here, we ventured into Pinetop for a short drive through town and something to eat.

Clay Springs, Arizona

Passing through Clay Springs on the loop back to Phoenix.

Payson, Arizona

Payson up on the Mogollon Rim is our last stop before heading down the hill and back to the hot desert we crawled out of.