Bisbee City Trail

The Ridgeline Interface: The Bisbee City Trail

Bisbee serves as the premier gateway to the Mule Mountains, a rugged range that acts as one of Arizona’s most unique “Sky Islands”—isolated mountain ranges rising from the desert floor that harbor distinct, high-altitude ecosystems. 

Forget the Stairs

The Bisbee City Trail is not a single paved path but rather a network of informal, rugged trails and old mining roads that traverse the hillsides surrounding Old Bisbee.

Trail runners exploring the Mule Mountains in Bisbee.

Running between Zacatecas Canyon and Moon Canyon, this trail is Bisbee’s “aerial highway.” It’s a rugged, single-track path that offers a topographical survey of the town, the Lavender Pit, and the sprawling borderlands to the south. It is the definitive route for those looking to understand Bisbee’s “vertical logic” from above.

Hiking on the “City Trail” high above Bisbee, Arizona.

The Aerial Vantage

You aren’t just looking at the mountains; you are standing on the Mule Mountains. From this height, Old Bisbee looks like a miniature architectural model tucked into the canyon floor.

Bisbee’s Lavender Pit seen from the City Trail.

The Botanical Transition

As you move along the trail, the vegetation shifts between high-desert scrub, agave, and prickly pear. Keep an eye out for local wildlife, including javelina and white-tailed deer that use the ridge as a transit corridor.

A rare foggy day in the Mule Mountains of southern Arizona.

The Mining Perspective

The trail provides an unobstructed view of the Lavender Pit’s terraced geometry, allowing you to see the true scale of the industrial extraction that shaped the region.

Exploring it offers a unique, challenging, and scenic hiking experience that blends urban and natural environments. Bisbee trails are notoriously steep. Whether you are seeking the solitude of the high ridgelines or a sunset view over the historic town of Bisbee, the Mule Mountains remain one of the most rewarding hiking destinations in the American Southwest.


Know Before You Go:

Pro Tip: This is the premier spot for sunset observation. Watching the shadows stretch across the canyons while the sky turns “Muck Rock pink” is a primary Bisbee ritual. Just ensure you have a headlamp for the descent, as the canyons go dark long before the ridge does.