Men in Black UFO E.T. Big Foot Night Tour

Night sky stories usually stay on the page. This one turns the lights out and gives you night-vision goggles while a guide keeps the UFO-style mystery rolling. You get a slick limo ride, two canyon stops, and a schedule that’s short enough to fit easily into your Sedona trip.

I also like the focus on hands-on viewing. You’ll use night vision plus binoculars at both stops, and the tour keeps moving so you’re not stuck in one spot waiting for the sky to cooperate. The main catch is that the experience depends on good weather and a minimum group size, so it can be canceled and rescheduled if conditions or numbers don’t work out.

Key Highlights You Should Know

  • Small group (max 8) for a more controlled, guide-led experience after dark
  • Two separate canyon stops with about an hour at each for viewing time
  • Night-vision goggles and binoculars to help you spot faint lights and details
  • UFO, UAP, and Bigfoot-themed storytelling built into the ride and sky viewing
  • Pickup offered, plus a mobile ticket so you can keep things simple at 7pm

A 2-Hour Sedona Night Ride With Night Vision

Sedona at night can feel like two different places. By 7:00 pm, the city noise drops, the sky gets deeper, and the red-rock edges turn into silhouettes. This tour leans into that mood with a limousine ride and a guide who mixes observing the night sky with entertaining mystery stories.

The time commitment is friendly: about 2 hours total, and the night is split across two canyon areas. That matters because a night tour can go one of two ways: either you spend most of it driving and waiting, or you actually get time to look. Here, the schedule is built for actual viewing.

You’ll be in a small group of up to 8. With fewer people, the guide can better manage the viewing gear and keep everyone pointed in the same direction when something interesting appears (or when the sky simply rewards your patience).

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The 7:00 pm Start at 260 Schnebly Rd

The meeting point is 260 Schnebly Rd, Sedona, AZ 86336, and the tour ends back near the start. Since it’s near public transportation and the timing is set at 7:00 pm, you can plan your dinner earlier without guessing how long the evening will take.

Pickup is offered, which is a real quality-of-life upgrade for a night tour. In practice, that can help you avoid parking stress and the usual chaos of arriving late in the dark. If you’re driving yourself, keep your arrival time tight so you’re ready when the group departs.

You’ll also use a mobile ticket. This is convenient, but I’d treat it like anything tech-dependent: have your ticket accessible offline if your phone battery or connectivity gets weird out near the canyon roads.

Stop 1 at Fay Canyon Trail: The Dark Side Start

Fay Canyon Trail is your first viewing stop, and it’s designed to set the tone quickly. You’ll spend about 1 hour here, which gives you time to settle in, get your eyes adjusted, and use the first round of viewing gear.

Why this stop works: starting with a canyon trail area can help you get your bearings fast. Night tours can be awkward if you’re trying to adjust your eyes, figure out where the guide wants you to stand, and learn the “viewing routine” all at once. Here, the tour starts with a dedicated hour, so you’re not learning on the run.

What you should expect at Fay Canyon Trail:

  • The guide will direct your attention to the night sky and lights you might notice
  • You’ll use night-vision goggles and binoculars to improve what you can see
  • The experience stays entertainment-focused, not technical astronomy

A drawback to consider: since this is an evening outdoor stop, you’ll want to dress for the temperature drop. The tour requires good weather, and night canyon areas can feel colder than you expect, especially when you’re standing still.

Stop 2 at Boynton Canyon Trail: Better Viewing, Better Stories

Boynton Canyon Trail is the second stop, again with about 1 hour for sky viewing. This is where the tour leans more into legend mode. You’ll ride in the limo with the professional guide and get guided viewing using the gear, plus added context and stories as the night unfolds.

The value here is the “two-stage” plan. If one sky moment is slow, you’ve got another chance at a different viewing area. And because both stops are planned for viewing time, you’re not stuck doing a long drive between short photo ops.

At Boynton Canyon Trail, the tour is set up around the idea that you’re seeing more than stars. The guide’s narration includes themes like:

  • legends tied to Sedona
  • stories of ancient aliens
  • secret government agents monitoring extraterrestrial activity
  • UFO and UAP-style mystery talk

Is that factual science? No. But for the kind of night outing this is, that’s not the point. The goal is to give you a guided experience that feels fun, theatrical, and memorable while you’re actually looking up.

Your Limo Setup: Style, Comfort, and Group Control

The transportation is part of the experience. You’re not just walking to a meeting spot and hoping for the best. You’re riding in a luxurious limousine with a guide who runs the event, then transitions you to the two trail viewing stops.

For a night tour, comfort matters more than on a daytime excursion. If it’s chilly or the roads are dark, being in a warm vehicle between stops helps. Also, the limo format tends to keep your group together, which makes it easier for you to hear instructions and stay oriented.

Gear is another big deal. The tour provides night-vision goggles and binoculars, which means you’re not arriving with random optics and guessing how to use them. You just follow along and focus on watching.

One practical consideration: night-vision goggles can change what you perceive. If you wear glasses or have vision limitations, you might find it helpful to arrive with your eyewear plan ready. Since the tour doesn’t describe gear fit details, I’d keep it simple and be ready for a quick handoff and instruction at the start of the viewing sections.

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The UFO, UAP, Bigfoot Theme: Fun Storytelling With a Viewing Twist

This is not a “drop you at the trail and let you figure it out” situation. The guide blends the viewing with a narrative about mysteries in the night sky and beyond. The tour highlights UFOs, UAPs, underground military bases, and extraterrestrial activities, wrapped into a single entertainment experience.

It also includes the Bigfoot angle. Even if you’re not a die-hard believer, the theme gives the tour an easy hook: you have a storyline to follow while you’re looking up. That can make the experience feel faster and more engaging than a straight stargazing walk.

The best way to think about the tour: it’s a guided night show where the background is Sedona’s sky. You’re getting a structured evening outing plus a viewing boost from night-vision gear. If you love campy mysteries, “what if” stories, and a bit of theater under the stars, you’ll likely enjoy it.

If you’re hoping for a science-only astronomy lesson, you might feel like the narrative takes center stage. The description is built for entertainment first, information second.

Price and Value: Is $140 Worth It?

At $140 per person for about 2 hours, this isn’t a bargain-basement activity. But it also isn’t “pay for the car, bring your own gear.” You’re paying for several things that add up in a night setting:

  • a guide-led group experience
  • a limo format between two canyon viewing stops
  • night-vision goggles and binoculars provided for the viewing

For value, think about what you would otherwise need. If you were building this yourself, you’d be paying for transportation, then sourcing night-vision gear (which is not something most people have lying around), and then sorting out where to go and when. Even if you manage to copy the route, the guided part is what makes the experience smoother.

Where the value can drop: if the tour is canceled due to weather or minimum travelers, you lose time. And because this is planned for a short evening window, rescheduling can be annoying when your Sedona calendar is tight.

Also, the experience has an online rating of 3.6 out of 5 based on 5 ratings. That tells me you should go in with realistic expectations: many people will enjoy the concept and execution, but not every booking is a slam dunk.

Weather, Timing, and What to Bring for a Canyon Night

The tour needs good weather. That’s not just a fine-print note; it affects whether the outing happens at all. A night canyon tour is exactly where rain, wind, or poor visibility can change everything—especially when you’re relying on the sky, the darkness, and night-vision use.

Timing is fixed: start at 7:00 pm. That means you should plan your dinner earlier and avoid long last-minute detours. Once you’re here, you’ll spend about an hour at Fay Canyon Trail, then about an hour at Boynton Canyon Trail, and you’ll return afterward to the meeting area.

What I’d bring (based on what night outdoors usually demands, and what this tour setting implies):

  • layers (because canyon evenings can cool down fast)
  • shoes with decent grip for dark conditions
  • a charged phone (not for photos necessarily, but for accessing your mobile ticket)
  • something warm for your hands, since you’ll likely wait and observe

If you’re worried about cashless payments or app-based purchases, bring a backup plan. One of the practical frustrations people note about Sedona arrangements is that connectivity can be spotty and language support can vary. Even if the tour itself isn’t described as requiring Wi‑Fi, your personal payment and confirmation tools are still your responsibility—so don’t rely on only one method.

Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Prefer Something Else)

This is a good fit if you want a short, structured night outing that mixes:

  • limo comfort
  • guided viewing with night-vision goggles
  • a story-driven theme (UFOs/UAPs/Bigfoot)

It’s especially suited for people who don’t want a long astronomy lesson. You’re here for a memorable night vibe, not a semester of celestial mechanics.

It may be less ideal if:

  • you want a purely educational stargazing session with no themed entertainment
  • you get frustrated if an outdoor plan depends on weather and minimum bookings
  • you prefer full transparency in gear instructions and technical astronomy details (the tour description doesn’t position itself that way)

Should You Book the Men in Black UFO E.T. Big Foot Night Tour?

Book it if you like the idea of a guided, story-first night adventure with real viewing tools. The combination of two planned canyon stops, a small group size, and supplied night-vision goggles makes it feel like more than a simple “walk and look” event.

Skip it (or pick another option) if you’re traveling on a tight schedule and can’t tolerate the chance of weather-related changes or a minimum-group cancellation. Also, if you want scientific clarity over entertainment, set expectations before you go.

If you do book, do two smart things: dress for a colder-than-you-think canyon evening, and plan a backup for any tech or payment needs. With that, you’ll be set up to enjoy an oddball, fun Sedona night that actually gets you looking at the sky.

FAQ

What time does the tour start?

It starts at 7:00 pm.

How long is the Men in Black UFO E.T. Big Foot Night Tour?

The duration is listed as 2 hours (approx.).

Where do I meet for the tour?

The meeting point is 260 Schnebly Rd, Sedona, AZ 86336, USA.

Is pickup available?

Yes, pickup is offered.

How many people are in the group?

The tour has a maximum of 8 travelers.

What viewing equipment is provided?

You’ll use night-vision goggles and binoculars.

What are the stops during the tour?

The stops are Fay Canyon Trail and Boynton Canyon Trail, each with about 1 hour.

What is the price per person?

The price is $140.00 per person.

Is the tour canceled for weather?

Yes, the experience requires good weather, and if it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

Who is the provider of the experience?

The provider is Sedona Kundalini Yoga.

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