Then on the way back we called in at Walnut Canyon, site of old Sinagua Indian dwellings, made from small caves half way down the canyon cliffs. It's a steep walk down into the canyon, but a lovely isolated spot that made it very worthwhile.
Wendy took a great shot of the red rocks of Sedona on our last evening under the light of a full moon,
Then alas it was time to move on from Sedona and we headed for Tuscon, Arizona where we had a gorgeous campground in a state park at the bottom of the Santa Catalina Mountains. In the late evening the mountains glowed (not quite as red as in Sedona but lovely all the same. We camped in an 'orchard' of mesquite trees.
They grow to enormous heights and are found everywhere in the Sonoran desert. There is a lot to do in Southern Arizona and we wished we had more time. The first day we visited The great Sonoran Desert Museum and wandered through the park admiring and understanding the unique characteristics of the Sonoran Desert. We saw wild Big Horn Sheep.
The variety of cacti that they have in the huge park is amazing. I nearly tripped over a rattlesnake before I was grabbed and pulled away by a ranger. Just down the road is Old Tuscon, a movie set where over 230 movies have been made. All the famous westerns, The Three Amigos etc. It's a bit cheesy but the guided tour we had from someone who had worked there (and as an actor) was very good. We learnt a lot about John Wayne and Dean Martin. The place is a working movie lot and sort of theme park, but much more movie lot.
We also visited Tombstone, one of the most famous wild west towns where the famous shootout at OK Corral took place. We viewed an re-enactment and learnt all about the town in the 1880s. We saw all the famous places like Big Nose Jane's Saloon, Birdcage Theatre and the iconic main street.
On the way out we called in at Boot Hill Cemetery to see the graves of the early pioneers. Most of them had epitaphs like 'Murdered with a Gun 1886'.
There wasn't time to visit the great Air and Space Museum with over 250 aircraft on display or BioSphere because we had a date with Zeke and Preston who were going to show us around the Catalina State Park. This they did very well, stopping from time to time to relieve themselves, and have a bite to eat. We were sorry to say goodbye to them.
Then it was time to leave and after a long 370 mile drive across Arizona we reached the border with California. We were stopped by the Border Patrol (as we were only a few miles from the Mexican border) before continuing on to Borrego Springs in the middle of the Anza Borrego Desert Park, our home for the next 4 days. It was hot, unseasonably hot at 105F (40C). Just 10 days ago in the Grand Canyon it was just 15F. Quite a contrast. We have a lovely campsite in a resort surrounded by a golf course. A veritable oasis. This is the view from our RV looking over to the Santa Rosa Mountains. It is much drier than the Sonoran Desert here, being in the rain shadow of the Sierra Nevadas (though they are called something different down here). Death Valley is 70 miles north of here
This week we sight the Pacific Ocean having crossed the US from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico.
Hasta la próxima semana.










