ARIZONA'S YAVAPAI COUNTY
(Page 8 of 8)
January/February 1987
By Sara Pacher
The town actually straddles the Yavapai and Coconino County line and has, therefore, never been incorporated. Half its high school students attend classes in Cottonwood; the other half go to Flagstaff,45 minutes away through beautiful Oak Creek Canyon. (Flagstaff is also home to Northern Arizona University.)
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The People
I met few native Arizonians during my stay in Yavapai. Everyone seemed to be from somewhere else, but they all loved their new home with the intense pride of the nativeborn. (Arizona Highways has called Prescott "everybody's hometown.") They also seem willing and able to uphold Arizona's reputation as a last bastion of rugged individualism. Without exception—perhaps because most were once strangers there themselves—I encountered nothing but friendly, open people who were easy to strike up conversations with and who went out of their way to be helpful.
But what I enjoyed above all else about Yavapai was clean air, bones that never ached from dampness, and blue, blue skies!
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