Roadtrip #4A: Sedona, AZ and back
Happy Spring 2009 to all you road trippers...
My family and I are taking a "mini" road trip to our neighboring state of Arizona for a free week-long stay at a resort near the town of Sedona, courtesy of a grueling 4-hour timeshare presentation I endured on the last road trip.
We'll use this as our base camp during the week to visit places in the near vicinity. We've been to Arizona twice already and visited most National Parks, so we're kind of making sure we pick up all the "leftover" destinations that we've skipped over. For instance, we'll be taking a few days to visit the southeast corner of the state that we missed last time. A plethora of National Monuments are also on the list.
Once again, Google Maps has given me the opportunity to show our route and all planned destinations of our 10-day excursion. You'll probably have to zoom in since some things are crowded together.
Our itinerary: (which of course is always subject to change)
Day 1 - Drive to (and tour) Tombstone, AZ
Day 2 - More Tombstone, Bisbee (Mine Tour), and Chiricahua National Monument
Day 3 - Drive through Phoenix, Sun City West, arrive at Sedona
Day 4 - Chill day - Tour the town of Sedona if it's not too crowded
Day 5 - Visit Jerome, AZ
Day 6 - Trio of National Monuments, including Sunset Crater Volcano
Day 7 - Visit Flagstaff, downtown area, etc.
Day 8 - Visit Tuzigoot NM and take the Verde Canyon Railroad
Day 9 - Chill day - Leftover ideas will go here if any
Day 10 - Drive through Williams, AZ and Barstow, CA to get home
I may do spotty reports this time around (meaning not every day), although in the end I will report on everything I've seen. This will also be the first road trip that I get to put my Canon EOS 50D SLR camera and 5 different lens to the test. And what better place to do it than Arizona? :)
And of course, if you have any ideas that I haven't listed here, please feel free to share. I'm always open to spontaneity.
Our trek starts at 4:00am PDT on Wednesday, May 13, 2009. Stay tuned for the usual fun-filled field reports...
My "home turf" = the Chiricahuas
Joey,
Looks like another great trip you've got lined up. Cave Creek in the Chiricahua Mountains is always going to be a "home turf" to me. I was a lookout on Silver Peak for six months back in the olden days.
We look forward to your periodic updates!
Mark
Be careful along I-17 South
Quote:
Oh, and I'm a little worried about one thing. I've been used to the 75MPH speed limits on the highways, and I was instinctively doing that (maybe 1 or 2 MPH over) on the 101 north loop after we left Sun City West. It was then I saw a camera off to the side. It was also then I remembered that Arizona has speed cameras (CA does not). It was also then I saw the next posted speed limit sign say 65MPH. *sigh* Crap. Now I'm going to be all paranoid this week. I didn't see any flash from the camera, but this was during the day so I don't know if the flash would have gone off anyway. Maybe the local AZ folk would know about this. We do have a rental and I read AZ law about how they have to match up the speed camera photo with the vehicle owner's license photo (and they don't have mine). Maybe I'm OK? I don't need another point on my record after the 2007 Escalante, UT fiasco.
Since you're doing your best to avoid speeding tickets, beware of the speed trap in I-17 South as you approach Phoenix. As you descend the highway, you may very well run into a local law-enforcement officer parked on the median or shoulder with a radar or laser gun to bust you for speeding. It's easy to speed because it's all down hill around Black Canyon City.
Conclusion, Stats, and Pics
We're back at the fort, with a semi-full report.
This was not our "official" annual road trip for the year, although it certainly felt like one. Getting to stay in one place for a week and yo-yo out from there really allows you to explore the immediate vicinity in detail, which is in sharp contrast to traveling in one direction the entire time.
Favorites: Hmm, well if I had to pick one, I suppose it would be the Verde Canyon Railroad train ride. I think it was that much better because we sprung for 1st-class tickets instead of coach. If you don't like sitting on soft couches, getting a buffet meal or being served drinky drinks, then by all means go for the coach price. Honorable mentions are the Queen Mine Tour in Bisbee, and the lightning show in and around Sunset Crater Volcano NM.
Improvements: I really don't have much to complain about here. The Best Western in Tombstone could have had better breakfast accommodations. It's almost better to go into town and get a worthy breakfast. And while all the Indian pueblo ruins were cool, once you've seen a few types, you've seen them all. (We saw probably 20 or more over the course of the trip.) It was starting to get redundant after a while.
What's next? I mentioned this in my last field report, but we're going to the northeast U.S. in October, starting in Washington DC and looping up and around, hitting all the colony states. We've already bought our airfare and van rental since tickets have been going cheap. We just need to figure out the accommodations and the activities, which I'll be doing over the summer as long as it's economically feasible.
Stats are as follows:
Total miles: 2,137
Total stops: 18
Total elapsed time: 9 days, 12 hours, 5 minutes
Total states: 2 (Just CA and AZ this time)
Total national parks: 0
Total national monuments: 5 (Chiricahua, Wupatki, Sunset Crater Volcano, Walnut Canyon, Tuzigoot)
Total state parks: 1 (Riordan Mansion)
Type of rental: 2008 Dodge Grand Caravan
Gallons of fuel: 95.67 (22.34 MPG)
Total cost of trip (estimated): $868 (my share of hotels/resort, van rental, gas, food, train ride, and souvenirs)
Oh yes, and pictures have been posted to my albums, marked as Roadtrip #4A. It's hard to get in the best 60 pictures when you have over 900 to choose from.
If all goes well, I'll be reporting to the forums again in October 2009. See ya.
That pic almost didn't happen
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mark Sedenquist
Without question, my favorite shot is this one:
Haha, you can thank my mom for that one. We passed the family of quail as we were leaving the resort (there were twice as many chicks as you see in the pic) and she absolutely insisted we turn around and go back so she can take pictures. The intersection at the bottom of the hill was a roundabout, and I'm sure I looked like an ass to all the other drivers yielding to me as I made a complete circle to come back up to where they were feeding. I figured it was a good time to test my 300mm telephoto lens.
She ended up using my pics instead of hers. Too funny...