This is my dear friend Michael. His hometown is Tuba City.
I have heard Michael speak often and with real feeling about Tuba City, so I am making it the first in my periodic series of hometown spotlights. This is, after-all, primarily a travel blog.
Tuba City is the Navajo Indian Reservation's largest community with 8,225 people. It is located within the Painted Desert on the western side of Navajo Nation in northern Arizona. The town is only about 50 miles from the eastern entrance to Grand Canyon National Park. Most of Tuba City's residents are Navajo but there is also a small Hopi minority.
The name of the city most probably came from Toova, a Hopi headman from Oraibi. The Navajo name for Tuba City, Tó Naneesdizí translates as “tangled waters” which probably refers to the many springs below the surface of the ground which are the source of several reservoirs.
The written history of the town goes back more than 200 years. When Father Francisco Garcés visited the area in 1776, he recorded that the Indians were cultivating crops. Today, there are two motels in town and a shopping center with a Basha's Dine Markets supermarket, a pizza joint, a chinese restaurant, and other stores.
For Michael...
Tuba City - in three words: Lovely, Home, the Rez
what brings him to DC?
Posted by: mom | March 02, 2007 at 06:29 AM