Agua Caliente
Welcome! (Scroll down to get to the list of files)
This site was created as a central place for TourGuide POIs. If you're planning a trip or just returned this is the place to get your TourGuide files! Audio files that play as you near a Point of Interest.
- To see a video cast demonstration on how to create a custom tour click HERE
- You may also want to visit our Frequently Asked Questions HERE
- More information on Garmin's TourGuide feature HERE
- Click HERE for instructions on testing your tourguide file (after you create it and install it on your GPS device first).
There is no warranty expressed or implied with the files available on this site. For more information please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.
This site was created as a central place for TourGuide POIs. If you're planning a trip or just returned this is the place to get your TourGuide files! Audio files that play as you near a Point of Interest.
How To Create a GPI File from the Content Below
The directory below is an overview of the audio tours available. Click on the tour to see a detailed description and listen to the tour on-line. To create a GPI file containing one or more of the audio tours below, use the GPI generator tool by clicking HERE and follow the steps to select the desired content.- To see a video cast demonstration on how to create a custom tour click HERE
- You may also want to visit our Frequently Asked Questions HERE
- More information on Garmin's TourGuide feature HERE
- Click HERE for instructions on testing your tourguide file (after you create it and install it on your GPS device first).
There is no warranty expressed or implied with the files available on this site. For more information please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.
Agua Caliente
- Montezuma- Montezuma Castle is one of a number of well-preserved ancient dwellings in Arizona, including the Wupatki, Tonto, Walnut Canyon, and Tuzigoot National Monuments. It is probably the most spectacular; an imposing 5-storey structure built into a recess in a white stone cliff about 70 feet from the ground. When first (re)discovered it was thought that the ruins were Aztec in origin, hence the name bestowed on them, but they are now known to belong to the Sinagua Indian peoples who farmed the surrounding land between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, before abandoning the area. The National Monument: The Castle is just two miles from I-17 at the end of a side road that winds across flat scrubland and down into the valley formed by Beaver Creek


