Wide Open Desert Singletrack at Tucson’s Honeybee/Rail X
Honeybee/Rail X is where Tucson riders go when they want to move. Not picky lines, not consequence — just open desert, fast singletrack, and the kind of rhythm that makes two hours feel like thirty minutes.

Honeybee/Rail X is the network that built Tucson’s reputation for big-mileage desert riding, and it earns that reputation every time. Come here when your legs need miles and your head needs space.
The Network
The more mountainous trail systems of Tucson often demand your full attention. Honeybee/Rail X is the opposite — a vast, undulating desert network on the northwest side of town where the singletrack opens up and lets you breathe.

The terrain is classic Sonoran: rolling hardpack corridors through saguaro and palo verde, punchy climbs and rocky descents that don’t overstay their welcome, and enough variation in the lesser-used trails to keep the network interesting across dozens of visits. The main corridors move fast. The back trails move differently — quieter, rawer, more desert.
The scale is what sets it apart. A 30-mile singletrack day is straightforward here. Fifty miles is possible. Link in the Tucson Loop — the city’s urban trail network that connects almost seamlessly with Honeybee — and you can ride here from virtually anywhere in town without loading a car. That’s rare for any city.
For a desert city with Tucson’s trail reputation, this is what it’s all about.
Stats (Honeybee/Rail X)
- Distance: 10–30+ miles depending on loops
- Elevation Gain: Gradual (500–1,200 ft per 15 miles)
- Difficulty: Beginner–Intermediate (experts/pros just add more miles)
- Surface: Natural desert singletrack, sandy washes, rocky sections
- Best Bike: Hardtail or short-travel mountain bike
- Season: October–April all day; year-round early morning
- Trailheads: Big Wash (no permit); Missile Church and Edwin Road (Arizona State Trust Land permit required)
- Destination: Tucson

The Good
Nobody does wide open better than Honeybee. The main corridors are fast, buff, and endlessly linkable — the kind of singletrack where you find a gear and just go. There’s a rhythm out here that’s hard to find anywhere else in Tucson, where many trail systems demand constant attention and decision-making. Once you know the key junctions, Honeybee lets you switch off the technical brain and just ride.

The scale is the other thing. Most Tucson networks top out at 10–15 miles before you’re retracing. Honeybee/Rail X keeps giving — and the lesser-used back trails reward riders who know where to look. Get deep enough into the system and you’ll find sections that feel out there despite not being far from suburban Oro Valley.
The Loop connection is a feature many people miss. Honeybee connects almost seamlessly with Tucson’s urban trail network — meaning you can ride here from downtown, the university, or virtually anywhere in the city if you’re willing to put in the pavement miles getting there.
Winter base training on 60+ miles of combined trail and urban path is a real option.
The Bad
Popularity has a cost. Closer to the trailheads Honeybee gets crowded, and the crowd is mixed. Mountain bikers share these trails with hikers, runners and — of course — cows. Midway in the network (Edwin/Rail X Ranch Road) a meaningful contingent of OHV and 4×4 traffic changes the character of certain sections considerably. If you’re coming for a focused and fast riding experience, prepare for potential distractions accordingly.
The heat situation is also real and unforgiving. There is no shade at Honeybee. Zero. The desert is beautiful and completely exposed, and summer midday riding here isn’t a bad idea — it’s a dangerous one. Bring more water than you think you need. Then bring more. Cattle troughs are not a backup plan.
The Dirty
Somebody shouuld tell you about speed and cacti.
The trails at Honeybee are wide and well-defined, the singletrack is fast, and the whole vibe encourages you to lean in and carry speed. Which is great — until you remember that Sonoran Desert singletrack at 20 mph is lined with things specifically designed by evolution to puncture things. Saguaro, cholla, prickly pear, ocotillo. All of it close, all of it sharp, all of it at elbow height when you’re leaning through a turn.
The trails are forgiving. The margins are not. Keep your side knobs sunk in and your weight centered, because going off-trail here isn’t a soft landing — it’s an appointment with something spiny.
If you touch it, it will win.
The Verdict
Honeybee/Rail X Ranch is Tucson’s best big-mileage desert ride and belongs in any Tucson rider’s regular rotation as the go-to for fitness days, intro rides for visitors, and any day when you want miles over tech.
Skip it if you’re chasing consequence and chunk — 50 Year and Mt. Lemmon are waiting. Come back when your legs need work and your head needs space.
The best version of a Honeybee day: Early start, big loop into the back country, return home via the Loop and a coffee. Winter miles, desert light, zero cars. That’s what this network is for.

The Tucson MTB Ride Guide provides you everything to tackle mountain biking at Honeybee (and more) in full — GPS tracks, trailhead recommendations, and route options.







