Wednesday, May 08, 2024

Boondocking near Sedona - Montezuma National Monument

 We drove about an hour and a half from near Williams, AZ to dispersed camping in the Coconino National Forest about 15 miles from Sedona, AZ.

We had originally explored the area near the junction of I-17 and AZ Hwy 179 but after leaving the URRV at a candidate spot, we found a better spot closer to the Sedona outskirts.

Mid-afternoon, we drove down south via I-17 to the Montezuma National Monument to check things out.

The castle was pretty impressive:





Up to the early 1950s, you could actually drive up to the base of the castle as tourists:


You could also climb ladders (see above pic) and tour the castle but of course, the site proved fragile and I'm sure people stupidly damaged it as well.  So, now you can only view it from near its base.

To "make up" for the cessation of the tours, the US Park Service created this diorama near the base along the footpath to show life at the castle:

I liked the depiction of a mother chasing after her kid who is too close to the edge...(center top), some things never change.

We drove the long way to Sedona from the Montezuma National Monument, via the small towns of Cornville and Page Springs hoping for photogenic scenery.  None seen.

The scenery picked up as we approached Sedona:



Martha wanted to check out the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in town, here's some views of it.  The church was closed for the day.




On the way out of town, two notable rock formations:

Courthouse Rock

Bell Rock

We got back to camp with no issue.  This post was uploaded via Starlink by the way.  There's some cell signal but it's only 1 bar and flaky.

5 comments:

RichardM said...

Cool area. We’ve been near Sedona and Jerome but never made it to either one.

redlegsrides said...

RichardM, we hope the explore the area over the next few days.

CCjon said...

Interesting area, Did it say how many people lived in the castle?

redlegsrides said...

CCjon, I did not see that piece of information at the visitor center. The diorama shows a whole bunch of people and there were more structures or caves that existed before nearby as well so not a small population I would guess. It appears this place was a stop in the migration patterns of peoples as they headed further south.

Martha said...

In answer to CCJons question- they believe the castle housed 30-50 people at its peak- compared to Tuzigoot that was home to over 250 people.

These lesser monuments are well worth the stop- while small in size, they are rich in historical detail and far less crowded than the big name Parks! Oh who am I kidding- I’m all about collecting my passport stamps and buying a sticker!😉