REVIEW · SEDONA
1 Hour Earthing in Sedona
Book on Viator →Operated by Sedona Kundalini Yoga · Bookable on Viator
Red rocks meet bare feet in Sedona. This 1-hour earthing and grounding experience takes place at Amitabha Stupa and Peace Park, mixing an easy nature walk with feet-to-earth time and guided calm.
I like two things right away: the bare-foot grounding part is the main event, not a side note, and the tone is gentle. The experience is led by Sedona Kundalini Yoga, and one review singled out Dr Claudette for her calm commentary, plus you’ll do guided meditations and breathing exercises while the guides help you connect from your feet to the earth.
The one thing to keep in mind is that this is weather-dependent and you’ll be sitting on the ground outdoors. If it’s too cold, too wet, or the conditions aren’t right, the session can be canceled and you’ll need to rebook or get a full refund.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Earthing in Sedona: Why this spot and this practice work together
- Meeting at Amitabha Stupa and Peace Park: The 10-minute nature warm-up
- How the earthing session happens: From feet to the earth
- Guided meditation and breathing: What you’re practicing (and why it matters)
- Price and logistics: Is $150 worth 60 minutes?
- Group size and session length: What to expect in practice
- Who this earthing tour suits best
- Should you book 1 Hour Earthing in Sedona?
- FAQ
- How long is the earthing experience?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- What’s the group size limit?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Do I need an admission ticket?
- What happens if the weather is poor?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key things to know before you go

- Short easy start: a 10-minute walk in nature from Amitabha Stupa and Peace Park
- Bare feet grounding focus: you’ll sit and connect your feet with the earth and Sedona’s red rocks
- Guided meditations and breathing: practical practices to support balance and energy
- Small group size: maximum 8 travelers, which helps the guidance stay personal
- English-speaking experience: mobile ticket, offered in English
- Admission ticket listed as free: your $150 covers the experience, not an extra entry fee
Earthing in Sedona: Why this spot and this practice work together

Sedona is famous for red rocks and spiritual vibes, but this tour uses that energy in a grounded, literal way: your connection starts at your feet. The premise is simple—slow down, make contact with the earth, and let your body settle—then use breathing and meditation to support that feeling of balance.
What makes this setting useful is the flow of the session. You’re not thrown into a long ritual right away. You begin with a short walk, then you sit down where the earth is the focus. That rhythm matters because it helps you shift from travel-brain to body-brain faster.
This is also a clear-value style of experience. You’re paying for a focused hour with a small group, guided instruction, and a specific location designed for calm outdoor sitting.
Other spiritual experiences in Sedona
Meeting at Amitabha Stupa and Peace Park: The 10-minute nature warm-up

Your session starts at Amitabha Stupa and Peace Park, 2650 Pueblo Dr, Sedona, AZ 86336. The day begins with a 10-minute walk in nature, with points of interest along the way—think Buddha statue and a prayer temple.
That walk is short on purpose. It’s enough time to get your body moving and your attention off your phone, but it doesn’t drain you before the main practice. If you’re the type who wants a spiritual experience without a big hike, this is built for you.
One practical bonus: because it’s a walk-and-sit format, you don’t need to be an athlete to participate. The listing says most travelers can participate, and the group stays small (up to 8), which helps if you’re unsure where to place your attention while you walk and prepare.
How the earthing session happens: From feet to the earth

After the walk, you reach the training destination within the Peace Park area. This is where the session becomes distinctly physical: you sit down and connect your bare feet with nature, including Sedona’s red rocks.
This is the heart of the experience, and it’s why the pacing is worth paying attention to. In a lot of wellness activities, feet are incidental. Here, your feet are the tool. The guides explain the benefits of earthing and grounding, and they show you how to connect from your feet to the earth while you settle in.
You’ll also hear guided meditations and breathing exercises during the grounding time. So even if you’re not sure what you’re supposed to feel, you’re not left to guess in silence. The guidance helps you focus on sensations you can actually track—pressure, warmth, stillness, and that gradual shift toward calm.
Tip for comfort: since the practice explicitly includes bare feet, wear easy slip-on footwear for the start. Bring something to protect your feet when you move around afterward, especially if the ground feels cool or if the weather is damp.
Guided meditation and breathing: What you’re practicing (and why it matters)
This isn’t only a nature moment. The guides bring in breathing and meditation as part of the grounding process. In other words, you’re pairing physical contact with mental training.
One review highlighted the quality of the guidance, calling out Dr Claudette’s gentle commentary. That matters because earthing is a practice where expectations can get in the way. If you expect dramatic results instantly, you can end up tense. A gentle teacher helps you stay present and experiment without forcing anything.
The breathing exercises and meditation are also useful because they give you something structured to do while you’re sitting. You’re not just sitting and waiting for the universe to cooperate. You’re working with your attention, your breath, and your body’s signals, guided in real time.
If you’ve never tried grounding before, this format is beginner-friendly. The tour is short, the guidance is active, and the focus stays on the basics: connect your feet, slow your breathing, and notice how your body feels.
Price and logistics: Is $150 worth 60 minutes?
At $150 per person for about 1 hour, this is not a budget activity. But it can still be good value depending on what you want from Sedona.
Here’s what you are paying for, based on what the experience actually includes:
- a guided, purpose-built grounding session at a specific spiritual setting
- small group size (max 8), which can make instruction easier to follow
- active teaching: explanations plus guided meditations and breathing
- a location that pairs spiritual calm (Amitabha Stupa/Peace Park) with literal earth connection
If you’re looking for a casual stop, you’d probably feel overcharged. But if you want a structured wellness hour with coaching and a calm environment, the price starts to make sense.
Also, there’s a weather reality. The session requires good weather, and if conditions are poor, the organizer will offer a different date or a full refund. So treat this like an outdoor wellness practice, not an always-happen indoor class.
For timing: it runs within the general hours of 9:00 AM–5:00 PM, and the activity window listed runs from 10/21/2023 through 11/27/2026.
Group size and session length: What to expect in practice
A maximum of 8 travelers is a big deal for an experience like this. It usually means less waiting, fewer awkward moments, and better chances to get your questions answered. For an activity centered on learning a technique (how to connect through your feet), that matters.
Because it’s about 1 hour, you should go in with a simple mindset: you’re doing a session, not a life overhaul. In a short timeframe, the best outcome is often “I feel calmer” or “I know what to do next time.” That’s a realistic goal for grounding, and it fits the tour length.
One more small but helpful note: the experience uses a mobile ticket and is offered in English. It also says it’s near public transportation, which is useful if you’re not driving everywhere in Sedona.
Who this earthing tour suits best
I think this works especially well if you:
- want an outdoor wellness experience that’s calm and guided
- prefer sitting and breathing over intense movement
- like spiritual settings without heavy ceremony
- are new to grounding and want someone to show you what to do
It’s also a good fit for couples or friends who want a shared reset while staying in a guided group. The small size keeps it from feeling like a big bus tour.
If you hate being outdoors or have strong sensitivity to cold or damp ground, you’ll want to check the weather carefully before booking, since the tour requires good conditions.
Should you book 1 Hour Earthing in Sedona?
Book it if you want a short, focused grounding practice with instruction, a small group, and a setting that supports calm. The experience is built around bare-foot earthing, guided meditations, and breathing, and the tone sounds intentionally gentle—something Dr Claudette’s commentary was praised for.
Skip it (or at least think twice) if you’re looking for a long hike, a big sightseeing day, or an indoor, weather-proof activity. This one lives outdoors and depends on conditions, and at $150 for about an hour, you’ll want to feel that guided hour is exactly what you want.
If you’re the type who likes to try a technique, learn it properly, then use it again at home, this is the kind of booking that pays off.
FAQ
How long is the earthing experience?
It’s about 1 hour.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $150.00 per person.
Where does the tour start and end?
You start at Amitabha Stupa and Peace Park, 2650 Pueblo Dr, Sedona, AZ 86336, USA, and the activity ends back at the same meeting point.
What’s the group size limit?
The experience has a maximum of 8 travelers.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the experience is offered in English.
Do I need an admission ticket?
The experience listing shows Admission Ticket Free.
What happens if the weather is poor?
This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
What is the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.


























