OPINION
In this consolidated case the county and the homeowners’ association appeal from a ruling permitting defendant Don L. Red-man to land his helicopter under certain conditions at his home located on a three-acre site near the Rincon Mountains. We affirm as to the homeowners’ association but reverse as to the county.
The homeowners’ association contends that Redman’s use of his helicopter violates Article VI, Section 1 of the protective covenants governing the development in which Redman’s lot is located. That section reads:
No lot or portion thereof shall be used in whole or in part for the storage or dumping of rubbish of any character *438 whatsoever, nor for the storage of any property or thing that will cause such lot to appear in an unclean or untidy condition or that will be obnoxious to the eye, nor shall any substance, thing or material be kept upon any lot that will emit foul or obnoxious odors, or that will cause any noise that will or might unreasonably disturb the peace, quiet, comfort or serenity of the occupants of surrounding property. No noxious or offensive activity shall be carried on upon any lot, nor shall anything be done thereon which may be, or may become an annoyance or nuisance to the neighborhood.
There is ample evidence to support the trial court’s finding that Redman’s helicopter, as used, does not violate this prohibition; there is little evidence in contradiction. In these circumstances, we must affirm.
Adams v. Lindberg,
The county’s appeal raises much more difficult questions. Redman’s helicopter is permissible if it is an “accessory use,” defined by Pima County Zoning Code § 18.-03.020(A)(2) as “a use customarily incidental and subordinate to the principal use of a lot or building located upon the same lot or building site.” Whether one views Red-man’s helicopter as a means of commuting or a form of recreation, its use is incidental to the primary use of the property as a homesite. However, if customary is defined as “common,” the use of the helicopter is surely not customarily incidental to the ordinary use of a home. A common sense reading of the zoning code, therefore, would lead to the conclusion that Red-man’s use of the helicopter is a code violation.
The problem with this analysis is that many courts, perhaps influenced by the notion that it is no purpose of zoning to prohibit the unusual, have not treated “customarily” as involving commonness. See, e.g.,
Town of Paradise Valley v. Lindberg,
We believe it appropriate to define “a customarily incidental use” in terms of the purposes of zoning generally. As stated in
Rubi v. 49’er Country Club Estates, Inc.,
Notes
. We do not reach the argument of the association that any zoning violation is a violation of the protective covenants. That argument was not clearly presented below, was not clearly raised on this appeal, and is not clearly supported by the language of the protective covenants themselves.
