Congratulations to Christine Maxa for being awarded the 2007 Bronze Award in the Reader Service category from the International Regional Magazine Association for an article she wrote for Arizona Highways, The 10 Best Hikes in Arizona!


Jamax produces distinctive four-color regional outdoor guides and custom publications with state-of-the-art equipment for the travel industry and specialized outdoors guides for the reader who aspires to experience the outdoors personally or as an interesting read from an arm chair. Our books and specialty publications capture with exciting photography, engage with excellent writing, and inspire with information

Each Jamax publication has quality and style. Award winning writing crafted in an interesting and pleasant manner combined with striking photography gives Jamax books and publications an enduring, positive impression.


Custom Publications
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  • Full Color Regional Books for the Tourism Industry
  • Panoramic and Scenic Posters (Custom and Stock)
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July 17th:  Join Christine on a wildflower hike at Arboretum at Flagstaff on July 17th. Learn some of the secrets of Arizona’s high country’s wildflowers on the hour-long walk. The Arboretum is located 3.8 miles south of Route 66 on scenic Woody Mountain Road, on Flagstaff’s west side. The first mile of Woody Mountain Road is paved and the remaining 2.8 miles are unpaved, but suitable for all vehicles. Walk is free with $7 admission.

November:  Join Christine and David for a night of skinny tire fun at the Arizona Outdoor Travel Club’s November meeting at 7 p.m. in the Scottsdale Civic Library located at 3839 N. Drinkwater Blvd.  Just east of Scottsdale Rd. and south of Indian School Rd.). Free.

Invoice No.
Get Out And Enjoy Arizona’s Great Outdoors!

When it comes to wildflowers in Arizona, the spring blooms usually get all the attention. Those glamorous gold, magenta and indigo spreads of Mexican goldpoppies, owl clover and Coulter’s lupine draw people from all over the nation to adore them. In order to produce a banner year, the temperamental desert flowers require the right amount of rain at the right time to trigger seeds into seedlings, no early winter heat waves to wilt the young shoots and a string of nice sunny March days to coax the plants to maturity and flowers. If one part of the mix is off, the temperamental darlings may not show.

High Country wildflowers, unlike the lower desert denizens, are far more dependable. They usually get winter precipitation to coax a springtime show in May and June. Then the summer monsoons produce a second bigger show from July into September.

To learn about high country wildflowers first hand, join Christine as she leads a wildflower hike at the Arboretum at Flagstaff on the morning of Saturday, July 17th from 9:30 to 10:30. Then pick up a copy of her book, Arizona’s Best Wildflower Hikes – The High Country, to see where the best trails are to view high country wildflowers in Arizona.
Happy Hiking!