I had forgotten just how breathtaking Sedona is, like living in a postcard. The town’s first postmaster was a guy named Schnebly, a very awkward name to spell and pronounce. So the town was named after his wife, the lovely Sedona.
- With morning views like this, it’s worth the alarm clock.
- Sedona is just south of the Grand Canyon, and shares some of the red rock geological formations.
- Mike having a scenic snooze.
- Checking out the view from a taller vantage point.
- The Palatki Indian Ruins are a World Heritage Site. The tribe lived there from 500 to 1425 AD, when they were driven out by drought.
- This pictograph shows a tribesman planting seeds that fall from his hat. They believed that music made the seedlings grow.
- Be careful where you park in Sedona.
- Cathedral Rock. I don’t see a cathedral, but I do see two people kissing in the middle.
- Whoopee ti yi yo, get along little doggies.
- The red-orange sandstone is unique to Sedona, and glows at certain times of the day.
- When the things you plan need a helping hand, I will understand. Always.
- Gnarly climb up some crumbly rock.
- Sitting in the “vortex” where energy is strong.
- Doesn’t this look like the Sphinx in Egypt?
- Springtime in the Sonoran desert.
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