Sedona

 
 
   
 
Welcome to Sedona! Here you will find information on the great City of Sedona. Use this information to help you determine what location will be the best fit for your next convention, meeting, or trade show.
City of Sedona
Sedona Conventions, Trade Shows, Conferences and Meetings
Finding Conventions in Sedona can be quite time consuming. At Conventions.net, we provide you with an easy to use, efficient means of searching for event planning resources for trade shows, conferences, meetings, and conventions all in a manner of seconds. You have the opportunity to choose from a vast selection of convention centers and meeting facilities in Sedona. We developed Conventions.net to make the search for event planning resources easier than ever.

Locating Convention Centers and Trade Shows in Sedona
At one time the most efficient way to locate Convention and Trade Show planning resources in Sedona was to call company after company simply based on their yellow page ad. Now, when you use Conventions.net you can find meeting planning resources in Sedona that meet your specific needs. Not only is this a convenient way to quickly locate convention and conference planning resources, but it is also an excellent resource to find industry suppliers such as hotels, resorts, event speakers, convention centers, and convention visitor bureaus.

We are affiliated with both large nationwide trade show planning companies as well as smaller local convention industry suppliers, which offer trade show and convention planning resources in Sedona. So, if you are looking to plan a meeting, convention, or trade show in Sedona you have nothing to lose, and only time and money to gain by letting Conventions.net help you fill your event planning needs.

Though local boosters make much of its setting, amid some definitive Southwestern canyon scenery, the New Age resort of SEDONA adds to the beauty of its surroundings. Architecturally, it includes several miles of redbrick interrupted by the occasional mock-historical mall. To the artists, healers, walking wounded and wealthy retirees who have flocked here in the last two decades, however, Sedona is "the next Santa Fe." Whether you love it or not, it will probably depend on whether you share their wide-eyed awe for angels, crystals and all matters mystical and whether you're prepared to pay over-the-odds prices for the privilege of joining them.

Established in 1902 by one Theodore Schnebly, and named after his wife, Sedona remained for most of the twentieth century a small farming settlement, unmarked on most maps. German surrealist painter Max Ernst moved here in the 1940s the bizarre backdrops of his later canvases seem less surreal once you've seen where they were painted and Hollywood movie-makers filmed in the area from the 1950s onward. However, Sedona's big break came in 1981, when Page Bryant, author and psychic, "channeled" the information that Sedona is in fact "the heart chakra of the planet." Since she pinpointed her first vortex a point at which, it is claimed, psychic and electromagnetic energies can be channeled for personal and planetary harmony the town has achieved its own personal growth, and blossomed as a focus for New Age practitioners of all kinds.

If you don't have much time to spend exploring, a cruise along US-89A enables you to see most of the sights, albeit from a distance; the best parts are south along Hwy-179 within Coconino National Forest. The closest vortex to town is on Airport Mesa ; turn left up Airport Road from US-89A as you head south, about a mile past the downtown junction known as the "Y" . The vortex is at the junction of the second and third peaks, just after the cattle grid. Further up, beyond the precariously sited airport, the Shrine of the Red Rocks looks out across the entire valley.
 
Conventions.net Monthly eNewsletter Sign Up





Email Marketing by VerticalResponse
Conventions.net - Top 100 Industry SupplierPCMA - Professional Conventions Management Association