Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Sweet Home Sedona


Sedona, Arizona
On most any given day in Sedona, Arizona, visitors outnumber residents. Each afternoon, scores answer the seductive call of red sandstone to scramble up slickrock slopes in search of a vortex or view. Hundreds more drive up Airport Mesa or down Red Rock Loop Road to snap photos of rocks shaped like castles, critters, and kitchen implements. Shoppers jaywalk through Uptown, mountain bikers bomb down forest trails, and drivers—visitors and locals alike—hit the brakes when something unexpected crosses the road, be it a family of Gambel quail or a hot-air balloon gone astray.
            Life here can get pretty wacky at times. Maybe it’s because Sedona’s red rocks are riddled with vortexes (vortices, if you prefer). Whether they are whorls of energy or inventions to attract tourists, their draw is second only to the landscape itself. But more about the vortex scene another time. First, let’s consider Sedona’s other-worldly landscape, the reason why so many people (1) visit here, (2) move here, or (3) fantasize about moving here.
           The greater Sedona area, home to about 15,000 people, encompasses Uptown, West Sedona, and the Village of Oak Creek. It’s a bit like a suburb without an urb, a commercial/residential island surrounded by a sea of public land, most of it Coconino National Forest. Neither desert nor mountain but somewhere in between, the Sedona area is situated a couple thousand feet below the southern edge of the Colorado Plateau. Rugged canyons—splendid for hiking—are carved from the plateau’s Permian rocks. One, the canyon of Oak Creek, cuts through a 2,500-foot geological layer cake on its 12-mile length, revealing an earth shaped by oceans, deserts, swamps and volcanic flows.
           Sedona’s famed buttes and spires are sculpted from a 700-foot thick stack of mudstone, sandstone, and limestone colored dark red, orange, and gray. In some places, limestone forms a hard cap that protects lower, softer layers of rock, leaving water and wind to create shapes that tease the imagination. Taller peaks, like Bear Mountain and Capitol Butte, are topped with a gorgeous golden cross-bedded sandstone formed from ancient dunes. Counterpoint to the red and gold rocks is a patchwork of green (mostly piƱon and juniper) and intensely blue skies.
           Living in such a beautiful place can be both blessing and curse. On days when deadlines keep me at my desk and a quick dash to New Frontiers for groceries becomes a protracted battle to find a parking space among hordes of rental cars, I grit my teeth to see the drivers lounging at the tables outside the deli, sipping wheatgrass shakes or lattes. Mildly sunburned and smiling, wearing Tevas and shorts, they consult topos or phone apps to plan their next adventures. As for me, well, I am as jealous as a jilted lover.
           My green-eyed monster may violate Sedona’s New Age vibe, but the sin of envy makes sense if you agree with one of my favorite writers, Pico Iyer, who compares travel to a love affair. He points out that travel is “a heightened state of awareness in which we are mindful, receptive and ready to be transformed.” 
           Travelers--and lovers--fare best when they are open to the unexpected and willing to become lost. This state is familiar to Buddhists and yogis as beginner’s mind. Lovers know it as the discovery stage, when all seems magical and possible. Psychologists might call it infatuation or limerance. Here in Sedona, we've dubbed it Red Rock Fever, and it can make people do foolish things, like trying to hike up Bell Rock in flip-flops or abandoning a steady career to become a yoga teacher or tour guide. (Or travel writer.)
           Being a travel writer, I get to fall in love a lot. And though it may be a bit harder to drum up passion for the familiar, state of mind is quite portable, as easy to pack as a clean pair of socks and ready to go anywhere … even the grocery store. 


2 comments:

  1. Oh wow, this is beautiful! I would love to know how to make a living as a travel writer, but I'm not sure how. Looks incredible though.

    Sarah Allen
    (my creative writing blog)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you, Sarah! Making a living writing anything is the tricky bit, as you probably know. But that's a great idea for a future post.

    ReplyDelete