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Red Rock Golf and Southwest History and Culture |
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Program Number: |
4803RJ |
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| Start
and End Dates: |
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| Duration: |
5 nights |
| Location: |
Sedona, Arizona
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| Price starting at: |
$898.00 - Price may vary based on date, departure city |
| Program Type:
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Golf
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| Meals: |
14;
5 Breakfasts, 4 Lunches, 5 Dinners |
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| Meal
Options: |
Vegetarian |
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In the red-rock surroundings of beautiful Sedona, experience a golf adventure for all levels of players and an exploration of Southwestern prehistoric culture and archaeology. On the golf course, PGA-certified pros provide small-group instruction to improve all aspects of your game. Off the links, Sedona’s culture and history come alive during field trips and excursions. Enjoy presentations on Hopi culture and Sedona’s storied past in the motion-picture industry.
Highlights
• Play two great golf courses, one a Trent Jones designed course set against stunning red-rock cliffs and in a lush desert oasis. Play 45 holes of golf, including a fun 9-hole scramble. • Experience three hours of small-group golf instruction with PGA-certified pros who delve into swing mechanics, chipping and putting. • Explore Montezuma Castle National Monument’s five- story cliff dwelling and enjoy an open-air trolley excursion to Sedona’s favorite destinations, including the Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired Chapel of the Holy Cross and Airport Mesa’s stunning overlook.
Activity Particulars
Walking up to two miles on golf courses, uneven terrain.
Coordinated by Northern Arizona University.
Sedona
Sedona was historically a rural ranching community in Oak Creek Canyon. Today, the sunny city attracts visitors to its red-rock cliffs and lush evergreens, international film festival, and lively art scene.
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Accommodations
Comfortable hotel with outdoor pool and spa.
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| Road Scholar Instructors | | These instructors are participating on at least one date of this program. Please note that changes may occur. | Richard Stephens
| | Rich has been director of Northern Arizona University’s highly popular Road Scholar programs since 2001. He previously spent many years in the field as a program coordinator and group leader, where he honed his skills and learned the importance of detailed, pre-trip planning. Before making his home in Arizona’s spectacular red-rock country, Rich spent 10 years in Yosemite National Park and the Santa Cruz mountains as an environmental educator. | | | | Stewart Lasseter
| | After completing studies in geo-science, natural history and Spanish at the University of Arizona, Stewart Lasseter studied as the protege of a Native American healer, learning from her practices of wholeness, kinesiology, mind-body medicine and dyslexia correction. He has years of experience bringing groups in touch with the natural world, and is currently pursuing post-graduate studies in health sciences at Prescott College. | | | | Garrett Roberts
| | From the historical to the cinematic to the dust-on-your-brow trail, Garrett Roberts knows the American West. His lectures invoke intrigue and humor to dispel the myths created by Hollywood’s western genre. Garrett replicates museum-quality 19th century leather equipment for theater, is an avid hiker, and enjoys singing jazz. He has also worked for Emmy award-winning wardrobe designer Michael Boyd and was the key costume designer for Stephen Spielberg’s “Into the West.” | | | | Chris Coder
| | Chris Coder has been a professional archaeologist since 1981, working on the Colorado Plateau, across the intermountain west and the Great Plains. He was a project archaeologist for the Grand Canyon National Park on the Colorado River from 1990-1996, and since then has been the archaeologist for the Yavapai-Apache Nation in Camp Verde. Chris has a bachelor’s in geology from Augustana College and a master’s in anthropology from Northern Arizona University. | | | | Chizomana Black
| | Chizomana Chio Black was born at Second Mesa on the Hopi Indian Reservation. A few years after Chio’s birth, her parents died and she was raised by an uncle who taught her that Hopi culture wouldn’t be understood unless it was shared, leading Chio to lecture at museums. Later, she put aside a pop music career when she adopted three Hopi children. Chio is a member of the Indian Living Treasures Association, which honors Arizona Indians age 60 and over for dedication to arts and crafts. | | | |
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