FIELD LOG · HIGH DESERT · 6,000 FT · AZ Field Guide · ← ConchoDash.com
Camping · Guide

Dispersed Camping in the Arizona High Country

Free camping, big country, cold nights. Here's how to find legal dispersed sites — and how to not get caught out by the altitude or the afternoon storms.

Where

Where you can actually camp for free

The Arizona high country is full of legal free camping if you know what you're looking at. The magic phrase is dispersed camping — camping outside developed campgrounds on public land.

  • National Forest and BLM land generally allow dispersed camping for free, often up to 14 days in one spot.
  • Check the Motor Vehicle Use Map (MVUM) for the forest you're in.
  • Camp on already-used, bare sites rather than crushing new vegetation.
  • Avoid private and tribal land unless you have permission.
Elevation

The altitude changes everything

Camping at 6,000–8,000 feet is a different animal from desert-floor camping.

  • A 90°F afternoon can drop to the 40s after dark — pack a real sleeping bag.
  • Thinner air means stronger sun and faster dehydration.
  • Afternoon monsoon storms build fast and bring lightning; be off ridgelines by early afternoon.
Water & Fire

The two things that get people in trouble

These are the rules that matter for safety and for not getting fined.

  • Bring all your water; high-country sources are seasonal and not guaranteed.
  • Check fire restrictions before you go — they change weekly in dry season.
  • When fires are allowed, use existing rings, keep it small, and drown it cold-out.
Leave No Trace

Keep it open for the next person

Free dispersed camping stays free as long as people don't trash it.

  • Pack out everything, including food scraps and toilet paper.
  • Bury human waste 6–8 inches deep, away from water and camp.
  • Leave the site cleaner than you found it.
Pack List

What to actually bring

A short list covering the high-country specifics most checklists miss.

  • Layers for a 40-degree swing in one day.
  • More water than you think, plus a way to filter.
  • A real recovery kit if you're on forest roads, and a way to call for help with no cell signal.
  • Trash bags, a trowel, and a way to fully extinguish a fire.
↓ Supply Drop

Out near Concho or St. Johns? We'll bring it to your land.

Water, propane, groceries, gas cans, lumber, a forgotten part from town — Concho Dash runs errands and deliveries straight out to off-grid parcels in the area. No app, no membership. Text what you need.

See what Concho Dash hauls → Text or call · 480-201-7275

Heading out near Concho?

If you're basing a trip around Concho and St. Johns, the High Desert Survival Guide has the local terrain, weather, and safety notes worth reading first.

Get the High Desert Survival Guide →