HomeTravelAravaipa Canyon in Arizona Rivals Zion, With Foliage That Peaks in November

Aravaipa Canyon in Arizona Rivals Zion, With Foliage That Peaks in November

In most parts of the U.S., fall foliage is gone by November. But in southern Arizona’s Aravaipa Canyon, it’s just getting started. Around two hours from both Phoenix and Tucson, this towering, red-walled gorge, reminiscent of Zion National Park, hides one of the most spectacular—and least-known—leaf-peeping displays in the Southwest. 

Perennial Aravaipa Creek—Aravaipa is an Indigenous word used primarily by the Western Apache, meaning “laughing waters”—winds through the canyon, creating a rare oasis in the desert. Along the creek banks, cottonwood, sycamore, willow, and walnut trees light the way in gold and orange from mid-November into early December. On my most recent visit—December 2024—the foliage was just past its peak, with some bare trees and lots of fluttering yellow leaves. The scenery, coupled with the blissful lack of other people, makes it feel like a quiet section of Zion.

Aravaipa Creek flows through Aravaipa Canyon on a fall afternoon.

Eric Mischke/Getty Images

That feeling deepens the farther you go. Aravaipa Canyon stretches 12 miles, but most day hikers tackle a few and turn back. Some visitors bring multiple vehicles and set up a shuttle at both ends for a point-to-point hike, and others backpack the full canyon, camping along the way. However you approach it, you’ll cross the ankle-deep creek dozens of times and walk in it for long stretches, often because the canyon narrows so tightly and there’s no other option. Waterproof hiking shoes or neoprene socks help, though you may find regular trail runners work fine—I wore the former with wool socks, my friend opted for the latter, and both of us were comfortable. Trekking poles are nonnegotiable, even if (especially if) you don’t typically use them. The canyon floor is uneven, and going in and out of the creek makes it slippery. 

The creek not only sustains Aravaipa’s lush vegetation and provides hikers a rare year-round freshwater source, but it also lends the canyon its striking contrast. Beneath giant creekside sycamores, it’s easy to forget you’re in southern Arizona—until a saguaro or desert bighorn sheep reminds you. Late fall weather makes it even better: Daytime highs hover in the low 70s, and the water stays a cool 55 or so degrees.

Hiking through Aravaipa Canyon.

Taryn Shorr-Mckee/Travel + Leisure

Solitude is another part of Aravaipa’s magic. The Bureau of Land Management limits access, issuing just 50 permits per day (30 for the west trailhead, 20 for the east), whether you’re hiking or camping. Permits release on a rolling 91-day basis, and while far easier to get than famous hikes like The Wave or Phantom Ranch, they sometimes sell out in peak season (March and April, in addition to autumn). Hikers can stay two nights and three days, though permits are required for each consecutive day. 

The west trailhead, reached via a nine-mile stretch of well-maintained gravel road near the tiny town of Dudleyville, is by far the most accessible. The road to the more remote east trailhead frequently floods and requires a high-clearance vehicle. From either direction, the canyon unfolds mile by mile, an unexpected desert Eden where fall lingers long after it’s faded elsewhere and silence fills the space crowds never reach.

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