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Canyon Fodder in Arizona, USA

Behind the rugged terrain lies a distinctly mild west, says Andy Mossack

October 30, 2012 16:39
The dramatic formations of the Arizona desert are breathtaking

By

Andy Mossack,

Andy Mossack

3 min read

This was right up there, dare I say it, with the day I was married and the births of my two children. The glorious red sandstone canyons of Sedona (most famous being the Grand Canyon) are breathtaking any time of the day, but when you’re hurtling through them in a helicopter with no doors and just a single strap between you and fresh air, boy do they take on a whole different dimension. We had only just met, but throughout that 35-minute flight, Pete the fearless pilot, was my new best friend.

The beauty of taking a helicopter ride through Sedona’s stunning landscape is that you get to see entire sections of it that are otherwise hidden or inaccessible; the 2,000 foot high Secret Canyon, the majestic Mogollon Rim running over 200 miles right across Arizona and the long-abandoned cave dwellings of Sedona’s ancient Sinagua Indians, the region’s first settlers, who after many years of contented living, mysteriously vanished.

Perhaps, it’s the mystery of the Sinagua that first fired the imagination of the new age movement, whose members believe spiritual vortices exist in Sedona’s sandstone.

With vast formations such as Cathedral Rock, Bell Rock and Airport Mesa, standing like red silent sentinels rising out of the surrounding flat desert, it’s hard to argue.