Here There and Everywhere

Expat wanderer

The Southwest Inn in Sedona

When you look for a hotel in Sedona, there is a confusing profusion.

“Sedona has been discovered,” my best friend from college tells me. She named her daughter Sedona, and she is one of the reasons Sedona is high on my list of places I want to experience. She had described Sedona in glowing terms, some forty years ago.

It took forever to figure out where we wanted to stay. We don’t like bedbug motels, and neither do we like resorts. We don’t like paying for services we don’t want, and we don’t mind paying for services we do want. We like relatively small, and we like our privacy. We are introverts. We want to experience Sedona.

After a lot of research, we chose the Southwest Inn in Sedona, and it worked for us. We had a lovely spacious room with a balcony, very quiet, in a part of town where we were only about five minutes from any where we wanted to go.

As we drove in, we loved it. There were hummingbirds dive-bombing the tree where we parked, and we watched the as we unpacked the car. We had an upper level in a two level building, so we had to haul our goods up stairs, but I had my FitBit and I needed the credit for stairs; we didn’t mind the stairs. We loved the brown adobe finish, and the private balconies with the views of the red rocks.

00SouthwestInnEntranceSign

00SouthwestInnEntry

00FountainSouthwestInnAtSedona

Breakfast was in this cheery, sunny breakfast room at the top of the entry building. They had home-made breakfast burritos, frozen, and two microwaves in which to heat them up, as well as pastries, cereals, fruits, juices, coffee, tea, water – one step up from continental breakfast, and it is included in your room. Many people take their breakfast back to their room to eat out on the balcony.

00BreakfastSouthwestInn

The hotel had a hot tub and a nice swimming pool and lounging deck, which we never used our entire time in Sedona. We kept intending to, but there was always too much to see and to do!

Our room was fine, spacious enough, good sized bathroom, but I didn’t take a photo and it wasn’t special enough that I can remember a single detail, other than the lovely balcony and the view, and oh, yes, it had one of those Southwest corner fireplaces, very fun. It was fine; it housed us well, and you can spend a lot more in Sedona and get a lot less. We wanted Sedona style, and we felt this fit the bill; it fit in well with local aesthetics, and it was quiet and modest with little luxuries, but without excessive showiness.

We also liked the management, very laid back, and very thoughtful. The room had nice things in it – bathrobes to wear to the pool, a nice coffee maker, the fireplace for cooler evenings. When I needed more shampoo, the man at the desk gave me a big container and asked if I wanted conditioner, too. They had a large, elegant dispenser of cool lemon water in the lobby, as well as coffee and tea all day long. There was a graciousness to it all that I liked, a generosity of spirit. They were very helpful telling us about things we needed to do (join the crowd at the airport vortex to watch the sun go down, for one) and the roads we needed to take. We followed all their advice, and it paid.

Our hotel was full of European hikers, families and people who, like us, look for a good value for the money.

April 20, 2015 - Posted by | Adventure, Civility, Customer Service, Fitness / FitBit, Hotels, Living Conditions, Local Lore, Quality of Life Issues, Road Trips, Travel | , ,

2 Comments »

  1. I know when I had to stay in Sedona for extended business my company put me in the Orchard Inn, which I loved. The rooms were spacious with fireplace and a beautiful view, and it was located on the man strand of town. Though I want to return with my husband and I keep thinking perhaps we can shake it up and find somewhere new to me to stay…thank you for the review it will definitely make it on our list of hotels to consider! ๐Ÿ˜€

    Comment by shopgirlanonymous | April 21, 2015 | Reply

    • The two seem comparable – I love the views at Orchard Inn, but I also love the dark adobe and the privacy of a smaller hotel . . . I hope you enjoy your next stay ๐Ÿ™‚

      Comment by intlxpatr | April 22, 2015 | Reply


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