“Around The Bend”

“Around The Bend”

Natural Attr
Last Updated: July 2026

Type

Microclimate & Forest Transition Zone

Accessibility

Moderate scramble with steep initial section; fitness required.

Best Season

Spring (March–May) and fall (September–October); summer feasible early morning; winter possible with appropriate gear.

Busiest Season

June–August weekends; spring break (March–April); Thanksgiving week.

Features

North-facing slope forest transition (pinyon/Douglas fir/ponderosa pine), cooler microclimate, Peregrine Falcon nesting cliffs above Pine Spring Canyon.

Elevation

6,200 ft

Overview

About This Attraction

The forest opens onto a cooler, north-facing slope where two-needle pinyon, Douglas fir, ponderosa pine, and southwestern white pines thrive in shade. This dramatic vegetation shift occurs at roughly 1.5 miles into the hike, where slope aspect reverses the sun exposure—cooler microclimates favor higher-elevation species. Peregrine falcons nest in the cliffs above Pine Spring Canyon each spring, making this a prime raptor-watching point. The trail moderates from here upward.

Quick Facts

Type

Microclimate & Forest Transition Zone

Elevation

6,200 ft

Access

Moderate scramble with steep initial section; fitness required.

Main Features

North-facing slope forest transition (pinyon/Douglas fir/ponderosa pine), cooler microclimate, Peregrine Falcon nesting cliffs above Pine Spring Canyon.

What You'll See

Two-needle pinyon, Douglas fir, ponderosa pine, and southwestern white pines on a north-facing slope; views into Pine Spring Canyon; cliff faces (nesting habitat); mule deer tracks; cool air compared to lower park elevations.

What Makes It Special

Rare ecological transition zone where slope aspect (north vs. south) drives forest-type boundaries; Peregrine Falcon nesting cliff habitat directly overhead; highest-elevation section of Pine Springs Trail marked by cooler microclimate.

Best Time to Visit

Spring (March–May) for peregrine falcon nesting; fall (September–October) for cooler temps and pinyon/pine foliage shifts.

Safety Considerations

Initial steep pitch (first 0.3–0.5mi) can be slippery when wet or icy; use caution and test footing. Cliff edges above Pine Spring Canyon—stay on trail, do not approach canyon rim. Afternoon thunderstorms possible June–September; exposed ridge = lightning risk; descend promptly if storms approach. Loose rock on steep sections; proper footwear essential.

Visitor Tips

  • Bring 2+ liters of water—no sources on trail.
  • North-facing slope provides shade early/late in the day; summer midday hikes are still doable but hotter at low elevations before the turn.
  • The steep initial 0.3–0.5 miles is the hardest pitch—trail flattens markedly after Around The Bend.
  • Spring visits: scan cliff faces above the canyon with binoculars for peregrines around sunrise (most active 5–8am).
  • Photo ops: shoot from the ridge overlook facing into Pine Spring Canyon at golden hour for canyon-wall backlighting.
  • The forest transition is the main event—stand at the boundary and look back downslope vs. forward upslope to see the vegetation zone shift.
ℹ️ Data Sources
📖 National Park Service — "Around The Bend" (official page) (checked 2026-07-13) 📖 National Park Service — Guadalupe Mountains National Park fees, hours & conditions (checked 2026-07-05) 📖 Climate data: Pine Springs, Tx Us, 5,590 ft (NOAA 1991-2020 normals, station USC00417044) 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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