Jeffrey S.
Yelp
We were in the fortunate situation of having a few hours to kill so we fired up the map and saw a bunch of national monuments. After visiting Montezuma Well and Montezuma's Castle, we decided to head for Tuzigoot.
We have a national parks pass, but I think I recall them saying that if you get a pass at one of those three I just mentioned, it's good for all three. We were pretty interested in the ancient inhabitants of the Verde Valley, so we probs would have sprung for it anyways, but that national pass is pretty nice.
The Sinagua had quite the civilization. This is a pretty large pueblo on a hill, and there's a lot of research that's been done about when it was built. It wasn't all built at once, but rather over several phases. And of course, the great mystery that remains is why it (and so many others in the whole region) were abandoned.
Walk along and pop into a few of the rooms. Read the signage. Imagine life here with your whole family in one room, butted up against the next family's room, and the next, and the next. Life would have been so different then and you really get a feel for that here in this place.
Dogs are welcome, so the pup got to walk the grounds, too. On leash, of course. She's been able to sniff some pretty incredible places in her life we had a nice little walk.
Not much of the inside part is doable now because of COVID, and though it's not a large building, I can't say for certain what you're missing out on. But the outside is what you're after. We had a lovely walk, and you probably won't spend more than an hour here (less with impatient kiddos, much more if you're really reading and pondering). It's a nice road trip stop.
Speaking of road trips, here's an aside I just needed to document for my own sake. For reasons that cannot be explained by me, we started referring to this place as "The Goot" on our trip. The entire rest of the trip, it was The Goot. Today, it's still The Goot. I just love road trip lore.