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The USFS Ranger House – built in 1917 and located at 250 Brewer Road. This house was the home of the Sedona District Ranger, Jesse I. Bushnell. It continued to serve as a living quarters until 1996, when the structure was converted into an office space for the USFS Sedona Ranger District.
Red Rock State Park is a state park of Arizona, United States, featuring a red sandstone canyon outside the city of Sedona.The main mission of this day-use park is the preservation of the riparian habitat along Oak Creek.
[6] [7] The house was intended for Kamehameha's favorite and most powerful wife, Kaahumanu, [8] but she refused to live in the structure and resided instead in a traditional Hawaiian-styled home only feet away. [4] Kamehameha used the building as part of his encampment in 1802, [9] with over 1000 people in his entourage. [10]
Shaffer Springs, sometimes called Shaffer's Fish Bowl, is a natural seep and minor roadside attraction in the Black Mountains of Arizona, United States. Located in Mohave County , alongside the old alignment of Route 66 that runs between Kingman, Arizona and Oatman , the water from the seep flows into a manmade basin stocked with domestic goldfish.
Courthouse Butte is a butte just north of the Village of Oak Creek, Arizona, south of Sedona in Yavapai County. Summit elevation is 5,454 feet (1,662 m). [1] It is just east of Bell Rock. There are many different trails to hike, bike, and run on around Courthouse Butte.
The menu features house-made fish sticks, hot crab dip, shrimpburger, seasoned fries, hushpuppies, macaroni and cheese, and more. Beverages include soft drinks, alcoholic and nonalcoholic beer and ...
The restaurant, which opened in 1993, sits in one of the most picturesque cities in the country — Sedona is known for its breathtaking red rock mountains.
Kānāwai Māmalahoe, on a plaque under the Kamehameha statues. Kānāwai Māmalahoe, or Law of the Splintered Paddle (also translated Law of the Splintered Oar), also known as Kānāwai hoʻōla kanaka, translated as sanctity of life law, is a precept in Hawaiian law, originating with King Kamehameha I in 1797.