Category: Arizona

  • Meteor Crater, AZ to Williams, AZ

    Thank God for free coffee at the RV Park! We left in good time and at first it really looked like we would make great progress, California seemed so close but…

    Flagstaff went still without mayor delays. We had a nice brunch at The Crown Railroad Café since the neighbouring vintage roadhouse Museum Club was still closed. The railway motif at our restaurant was not bad though and the omelettes delicious.

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    Off we went to Williams. Wow, what a place, gateway to the Grand Canyon, a hub for the railroad and Route 66 in full swing!

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    From there we should have gone West, but 60 miles to the Grand Canyon seemed like a short distance. OK, we spent the rest of the day at the Grand Canyon, watched a presentation and a movie at the visitor centre and took the 25 mile route along the south rim.

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    We’re very happy that this excursion cost us another day! We had dinner at a Steak House and went back to Williams to stay at the privately owned Canyon Motel & RV Park with yet another railroad theme. You can even get a room at a train car.

  • Navajo, AZ to Meteor Crater, AZ

    Despite truck fumes – some of the big guys let their trucks run all night- we had a good or maybe even better sleep. Breakfast was on a bench at a little park at the truck stop and a very peculiar man dropped by with not too clean clothes but one gold tooth and very white teeth. He had a lot of questions and some insightful comments, but we still did not exchange e-mail addresses.

    Instead we took off for Petrified Forest National Park, now no longer accessible via Route 66 but in the 50s and 60s on the route. Our quick excursion took half a day! Painted Dessert, beautiful rock formations, petrified wood and the Painted Desert Inn at Kachina Point were of great interest.

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    The Inn was built in the 1920s and restored by the Civilian Conservation Corps (a make work program for young unemployed people) in the 30′. Later it became a Harvey House http://harvey-house.info/arizona, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Harvey_Company. The architect for the reconstruction in the 30’s was a woman, Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter. We will meet her again in Winslow, AZ where she designed the beautiful La Posada Hotel. Her aim was to integrate her buildings into the landscape through shape and colour. Fred Kabotie, a very well known Hopi artist painted the storytelling murals.

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    Not quite as fancy as the Inn but nevertheless attractive was the Wigwam Motel in Holbrook and the old cars in front of each of them made it look even more authentic Route66.

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    The Jackrabbit Trading Post, no longer an attraction any more, was not that fascinating but Winslow definitely made up for it.

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    A railway town with connections to “The Eagles” and their song “Take it Easy” because one line in this song places them right into Winslow “Well, I’m standing on a corner in Winslow Arizona and such a fine sight to see”. We visited the corner, saw a statue in honour of the Eagles, listened to the song a dozen times because it was played over and over again at all stores.

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    We met three very dedicated people: Patrick the cyclist, Morgan the support cyclist and Mike the driver and organizer of this little outfit with a big heart. These three people are raising money for cancer research and help make a wish come true for some people with cancer, for example,  a bicycle for a little girl in hospital.

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    Dinner was at a former trading post turned restaurant run by a young man and his former school teacher mother. Mexican food it was and it was delicious.

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    With renewed energy all three of us marched to the famous La Posada Hotel, another Harvey Hotel designed by Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter. Absolutely great, a bit of nature, a bit of Monastery and museum where dogs are allowed in. The prices for rooms are not even that bad and we wouldn’t mind spending some time there at our next visit.

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    Last but not least we visited the Meteor Crater. Quite impressive and the museum gives it a vast context, which makes this even more complex.

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    We limped very tired to the Meteor Crater RV Park.

  • Grants, NM to Navajo, AZ

    Hurray, we made it to Arizona! —-well, not until the evening and just past the State Border (ca. 20-30 miles in)

    But first we visited the New Mexico Mining Museum in Grants. They even had a reconstructed Uranium Mine and a very knowledgable retired mining expert as guide.

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    Now we really booted it towards Arizona, or that’s what we thought. We stopped 10 minutes later for some pictures of breathtaking scenery which Martin captured in one of his panoramas.

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    The we reached the Continental Divide and no, we didn’t pour water on both sides to see that it runs to the Atlantic on the Eastern side and to the Pacific on the Western side.

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    But we started our shopping spree of Navajo arts and we couldn’t stop the shopping accidents for quite some time. Even during our lunch break at Earl’s Family Restaurant at Gallup, where local craftspeople offered their art right at the table. A lot of deciding was done and some pretty items purchased, but the delicious burritos were still enjoyed very much.

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    Gallup is an interesting town with theatre, city hall, etc. but most prominent are the many, many stores of native art and western accessories. And yes, we had to purchase some of these … a cowboy hat for Martin and boots for both of us.

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    After a quick stop at Walmart, our favourite “watering hole” we finally left the state and entered Arizona at a time when the Visiter Centre was closed already. Now we are sitting at a gas station/truck stop with the big boys but we don’t dare to wear our cowboy boots yet!