Tubac Country Inn Hotel - Tubac, Arizona
Tubac Country Inn 3 Stars Hotel in Tubac, Arizona Within US Travel Directory Featuring a free continental breakfast delivered in-room daily, this Tubac, Arizona hotel is designed in southwest décor. Located in the artist community of Tubac, Tubac Center of the Arts is 1 minute walk away.
Each uniquely designed room is styled in southwest décor at Tubac Country Inn. Free Wi-Fi, a flat-screen TV and free Gilchrist & Soames toiletries in the en suite bathroom are provided. Select suites feature a fully equipped kitchen.
Located on a half-acre garden, guests can enjoy the spacious terrace and lounge by the fire pit. Free hot chocolate, cider, fresh coffee and tea are offered daily. Concierge services help guests’ book reservations at a variety of restaurants within 5 minutes’ walk of Tubac Inn.
Tubac Presidio State Historic Park and de Anza Trail is within 2 minutes’ walk of Tubac Country Inn.
Embarcadero Townhomes Tubac, Tubac, Arizona - United States (US)
for reviews, prices and info.
Embarcadero Townhomes Tubac, Tubac, Arizona - United States (US)
The Embarcadero Townhomes Tubac is conveniently located in the centre of the town. The vacation rental offers a fitness centre and a swimming pool as well as a business centre, a concierge and a laundry service. All rooms are air conditioned and come with a DVD player. Nogales International Airport (OLS) is within a 60 minute drive from the Embarcadero Townhomes Tubac.
Hotel Features
General
Air Conditioned, Kitchenette, DVD Player
Activities
Fitness Room/Gym, Swimming pool, Fitness Facilities
Services
Business Center, Concierge, Housekeeping, Laundry service
Internet
High-speed Internet is available at this hotel. Wireless internet on site.
Parking
The hotel has free parking.
Check-in
From 2:00 PM
Check-out
Prior to 11:00 AM
** Visit for more info, reviews, prices and booking. **
Tubac center for the arts flash dance
Cheryl does it again!
Tubac Art Fair
2009 Photo Montage Contest - Third Place Winner - Clara Harold
Dr. Rubin Naiman's Art of Dreams, Tubac, AZ March 2018
The Art of Dreams is a talk Dr. Naiman presented in his hometown at the Tubac Center for the Arts on March 22, 2018. It features the exquisite work of Irene Hardwicke Olivieri as an example of empathic emergence in art and life.
Poetry of the Wild on the Anza Trail in Tubac, AZ
Poetry of the Wild on the Anza Trail in Tubac, AZ. The music is by Philamonic Freeway. It is called Winnebagos. This art project was sponsored by the Tubac Center of the Arts in partnership with the Anza Trail Coalition. It ran from March 7-April 12th. The birdhouses are for sale.
$159,000 3BR 2BA in TUBAC 85646
HomesAndLand.com Fully Furnished with Sky Deck and Fireplace. This unit has all the charm of Tubac with the convenience of a turn key vacation destination. Enjoy the fabulous pool or workout in the new fitness center. Amenities galore! Find out more about this home for sale
See more homes for sale
Plein Air on the Santa Cruz 2018
Plein Air artists from five states gathered at Rancho Santa Cruz for four days of painting at the ranch and nearby locations, followed by an exhibition at the Tubac Center of the Arts. Participants included Tom Blazier, former president of Plein Air Painters of New Mexico, Leslie Miller, Director of Tubac’s School of Fine Art LLC, and Maria Tuttle of Oakland, California. Linda Ward traveled from Louisiana, and Priya Drews from Flagstaff, Arizona, to join local artists Cinda Pettigrew, Jan Holland, Betsy Kimbrough, Pam Wedemeyer and Virginia Vovchuk. Juror and instructor Greta Ward of Tucson led a workshop for over 15 people at the ranch during the retreat.
The retreat culminated in a show and sale of 28 works by ten artists at the Tubac Center of the Arts, during the Fall Arts Festival, November 3rd and 4th. Most of the artists worked in oils although watercolors can also be seen in the collection.
Select pieces from the show will continue to be on display at the Rancho Santa Cruz Gallery through December.
Virginia Vovchuk planned and coordinated the retreat with the help of Susan Berryman and her family at Rancho Santa Cruz. Tubac Center of the Arts sponsored the event and hosted the exhibition. Contact for more info:
Tubac Presidio State Historic Park Tour 01142018
I know this video is long, but please take as much time as you can to watch some of it. If you visit the area, I strongly suggest visiting this Park, especially if you are going to come and shop in the commercial area anyway. You could easily spend a couple of hours touring the Park and Museum. I kind of went through quickly just to give you a flavor of what you would see when you visit. Take the Park tour, then take a break at one of the restaurants, then hit the more than 2 dozen stores and galleries. I am telling you that there is some stunningly beautiful art in Tubac. It is a lovely little village, and well worth the time and effort to visit! To learn more about this park, please see these links: or
BORDER PATROL STOP-Arizona-Tubac-TheZuell
20min north of the border from Nogales north to Tucson near Tubac.
Tubac in turmoil over 'temporary' checkpoint
Tubac shopkeepers say the I-19 border patrol checkpoint hurts their business; U.S. Border Patrol says it's not going anywhere.
Mike and Meghans wedding video Tubac Arizona
Made a video for Mike and Meghan Masero in Tubac AZ.
If you are interested in having your wedding or event shot and edited please feel free to contact me.
Website:
Twitter:
The University of Arizona Poetry Center
Virtually visit one of the largest standalone poetry collections and literary centers in the United States.
Mexican culture in the US: A travel guide for Cinco de Mayo and beyond | News Today
Mexican culture in the US: A travel guide for Cinco de Mayo and beyond | News Today When celebrating the Cinco de Mayo holiday, consider a more authentic Mexican experience than simply ordering a margarita and chips and salsa at the local sports bar.
Not ready for a trip to Mexico right now? There is plenty of Mexico to explore and celebrate in the United States since much of the Southwest was once part of our neighbor to the south.
Cinco de Mayo is not Mexican Independence Day, which was September 16, 1810.
May 5 commemorates the Battle of Puebla in which Mexican General Ignacio Zaragoza led his outnumbered troops in defense of Puebla against the French on May 5, 1862. Zaragoza was born in 1829 just outside the Presidio La Bahia in Goliad, which is now part of Texas.
The Presidio, or fort, displays a statue of Zaragoza, a Mexican national hero, who died of typhoid fever in 1862. Still operated by the Catholic Church, the Presidio hosts Mass at Our Lady of Loreto Chapel. Remember the Alamo and more!
The Misión San Antonio de Valero in San Antonio, now known as the Alamo, was constructed by the Spanish and was later occupied by Mexican and Texas troops.
The March 6, 1836 battle between Mexican troops and Texas revolutionaries is known among descendants of the Republic of Texas as a great fight against impossible odds. The Mexican troops crushed the revolutionaries, but the Texans fought back victoriously later that year, and the Republic of Texas was born.
For a celebratory atmosphere, visit Market Square, where the shops at El Mercado sell pinatas, jewelry, clothing, leather and other goods. The square also hosts Primer Sabado events, or First Saturdays, with food booths, art, music and children's programs.
The chilaquiles breakfast taco on flour tortilla at Blanco Cafe downtown and Henry's Puffy Tacos are local favorites.
San Diego, California
The birthplace of San Diego is preserved at Old Town San Diego State Historic Park, the site of the first Spanish settlement in California and San Diego's first downtown. Mexico took over the downtown after the country won its independence from Spain in 1821. The six-block site contains preserved and restored adobe and wooden buildings, thriving restaurants and shops.
The Barrio Logan neighborhood initially welcomed people fleeing the Mexican Revolution in the early 20th century, and the area is now home to a local Mexican-American community, Mexican street art and modern art galleries. Some early evidence of the artistic scene can be found at Chicano Park beneath the San Diego-Coronado Bridge overpass.
The Centro Cultural de la Raza is in Balboa Park, also home to the San Diego Zoo and the Reuben H. Fleet Science Center. The center is a cultural arts center dedicated to Mexican, Mexican-American, indigenous and other Latino art and culture. Established by Colorado's mix of early pioneers as Fort Pueblo, a smaller version of the current city of Pueblo was incorporated as part of the Colorado Territory in 1870. Colorado became a US state in 1876. With the arrival of the railroad and an abundance of coal, Pueblo became a thriving steel town.
Each September, thousands of people come to Pueblo for the Chile & Frijoles Festival to celebrate the harvest of the town's most important crops: the mirasol green chile and pinto beans. The festivities have included chili and salsa competitions, a jalapeno pepper-eating contest, a 5K fun run, art exhibitions and live entertainment.
To learn more about the region's history, check out the renovated El Pueblo History Museum in the Union Avenue Historic District. For arts and culture, look to the Sangre de Cristo Arts & Conference Center and the Buell Children's Museum. And the annual Colorado State Fair hosts nearly two weeks of livestock shows, rodeos and music starting in late August. Spanish land grants, Arizona
Established in 1752 as a Spanish presidio, the town of Tubac (now in Arizona) was once a stop on the road from Mexico to the Spanish settlements in California.
Tubac Presidio State Historic Park preserves the site of the Presidio San Ignacio de Tubac, the oldest fort in what would become the state of Arizona. Now it's an artist colony and home to many galleries. When you're finished gallery hopping, head to Elvira's restaurant, which was established in 1927 in Nogales, Mexico, and reopened in Tubac.
About 50 miles from Tubac, Rancho De La Osa was part of the original three million-acre land grant from Spain's king to the Ortiz brothers of Mexico in 1812. The rancho fell within the boundaries of the United States after the 1854 signing of the Gadsden Purchase settling the US-Mexican border. It now welcomes overnight guests, who can view a cannonball on display that Pancho Villa reportedly fired at the house during the Mexican Revolution.
The nearby Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge welcomes horseback riding, hunting, bird-watching and bird migration counts.
Visita
Independence day fireworks in Sedona & Cottonwood, AZ--2011
Continental Congress as an official way to declare the United States' independence from Great Britain. Two hundred thirty five years later, July 4th is still one of the biggest holidays of the US.
Residents of Sedona and Cottonwood were not exceptions. Hundreds of people gathered and celebrated their 235th anniversary. It was quite a big audience for these relatively small cities. The Children's Park was the spot for this year's Cottonwood 4th of July celebration.
A Barrio Story
Marc David Pinate and Milta Ortiz and their Borderlands Theater artists are producing some of the most important and compelling community theater in the southwest. Working directly with residents, Borderlands produced a multimedia, multigenerational event that shared the history and the story of Barrio Anita and the people who live there.
Producer: Andrew Brown, Mitchell Riley
Videographers: Arlene Islas, Mitchell Riley, Gage Judd
Editor: Mitchell Riley
Visiting Tumacácori National Historical Park and attempting to walk to Tubac
Tumacácori National Historical Park in southeastern Arizona preserves an 18th-century Spanish mission church and tells the story of Jesuit Eusebio Francisco Kino arriving here from New Spain. After exploring the mission and museum we walked on the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail trying to walk to Tubac for lunch, but we had to turn around due to high water on the trail. We still made it to Tubac for some delicious lunch and chocolate.
We are Matt & Diana and we live in an RV full time and are on a journey to visit all 400+ National Park Units. To follow us along subscribe to our channel here
Tumacácori National Historical Park was unit #9 out of #419 on our journey to visit them all. See a detailed write up here:
If you want to follow our adventure in real time and receive weekly updates, subscribe to our newsletter here
#adventurousway #nationalparks #roadtrip
We are Arizona Humanities
Learn more about how we build a just and civil society by creating opportunities to explore our shared human experiences through discussion, learning and reflection.
Thank you to the people and organizations who made this video possible. Special thanks to: TigerMountain Foundation, City of Surprise, White Tank Library, Tubac Presidio State Historic Park, AZ Heritage Center, Sedona Public Library, Desert Botanical Garden, Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, Florence Community Library, Dr. Paul Hirt, Dr. Kathy Nakagawa, Deni Seymour, Carrie Cannon, John Westerlund, Darren Chapman, Jana Bommersbach, and Health, Law and Humanities program series participants. This is just a fraction of the many grantees and program participants across the state that we work with to bring the humanities to Arizonans. We could not visit every place, so we encourage you to check out our website and learn more.
Finally, thank you to Palo Fierro Productions for creating an amazing video that tells the Arizona Humanities story.
Arizona Midday: Jackalope Art & Craft Fair Feature
Laura Fischer highlights vendors from the Spring 2016 Jackalope Art & Craft Fair
Tlaquepaque in Sedona, AZ Festival of Lights
River of Life Choir setting up for concert Dec. 9, 2017 & the crowd getting their spots ready to listen in and enjoy the concert.