Bearizona

Bearizona: A Drive-Through Wilderness

Bearizona

After soaking in the Grand Canyon’s epic scale, we swung down to Williams for the quirkiest wildlife stop ever—Bearizona. Picture a forested safari where the animals roam and you’re the one in a moving cage. The highlights:

  • Long-horn mountain goats strolled past like dignified locals, horns curved and regal.
  • A pack of arctic wolves—snow-white ghosts against the ponderosa pines—gave us a once-in-a-lifetime show. One trotted right up to the car ahead of us, amber eyes curious, then sauntered off as if he had bigger plans.
  • Bison lounged in dusty clearings, tails flicking lazily.
  • Deer played hide-and-seek—perfectly camouflaged in the bark-brown stripes of the pine trunks until a twitching ear gave them away.
  • And, of course, bears. We timed it with the afternoon feeding, so rangers laid snacks along the roadway. Watching those hulking fur-balls amble over for dinner was equal parts adorable and spine-tingling.

If you ever wanted a live-action nature documentary with air-conditioning, Bearizona is it.

A Drive-By Glimpse of Flagstaff

Next up: Flagstaff. Compared with laid-back Williams, Flag feels like a mini-metropolis—university buzz, brick façades, and a skyline of pines back-dropping coffee shops and breweries. We didn’t get out this time (road-trip momentum, you know?), but the energy lining Route 66 was unmistakable. Mental note: come back for craft beer, Lowell Observatory stargazing, and maybe a hike up Humphreys Peak.

Spontaneous Sedona Detour

Sedona
Bell Rock, in Sedona

Heading south, a sign flashed SEDONA and—no surprise—we couldn’t resist. Even after countless visits, those rust-red buttes and juniper-scented breezes feel magnetic, almost mystical. We watched the rocks glow ember-orange in late-afternoon light, and soaked in the quiet hum of crystal shops and art galleries. Sedona is the kind of place where even a gas-station stop turns into a photo op.

Homeward Through Cottonwood

From Sedona we meandered down into Cottonwood, rolling vineyards and old-town charm sliding by the windows, before merging onto I-17 and aiming for home. Two hours later the Superstition Mountains greeted us like old friends over the Mesa horizon.

Gratitude for Close-to-Home Adventures

I keep marveling that all this diversity—high-desert canyons, alpine peaks, red-rock mesas, drive-through wolf encounters—sits just a few hours from my driveway in Mesa. Arizona never stops surprising me, and I’m determined to keep exploring every dusty highway and pine-scented backroad it offers.

Your turn! In your state, where’s your favorite place to sneak off to when wanderlust hits?

Eydie

Bearizona

Sedona

Eydie Avatar

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6 responses to “Side-Trip Stories from Our Grand Canyon Getaway”

  1. lrfdes2 Avatar
    lrfdes2

    Eydie: Thank you for the great pictures. I’ve had the chance to wander in your part of the country and loved it. My last visit west was to Moab in 2021. Here in PA near NYC, my choice is the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I just learned the Frick Museum just opened after being closed for renovations. I’m excited to visit it.

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    1. Eydie Avatar

      I’ve not been to Moab, but I’ve been to Bryce Canyon and Zion. I used to live in da Bronx…so I know the area. The MMA was a favorite of mine.

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  2. Diana Walker Avatar

    Thank you for this wonderful post and the amazing photos. What an amazing adventure, and I loved your descriptions. I live in a small town in British Columbia, Canada, right on a lake. In the summer, we love boating, swimming, fishing, and really enjoying the beautiful local scenery. Diana

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    1. Eydie Avatar

      Hi Diana, I’ll be in BC in June on a cruise. Looking forward to seeing the sights.

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  3. Jasmine Quiles Avatar

    I spent a couple of years in Arizona when I was in the military! I didn’t get to do much sightseeing back then, but I always loved the beautiful color of the red rock mountains — they’re just unforgettable.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Eydie Avatar

      I think you told me once, but I forgot what branch of the military you were in. Too bad you couldn’t do much sightseeing. I love the red rock of Sedona. Naturally stunning.

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