
Welcome to
The Bobcat Gazette
Stories for Thinkers
Recent Featured Articles
June 29, 2026Did you know if you ever did a stretch in Maricopa County under Sheriff Joe Arpaio, you probably...June 26, 2026While we humans look up at the Pocket Fire from below and worry about the possible loss of our...June 25, 2026The smoke was bad last night. I have a swamp cooler, not AC, so I had to turn it out and shut...June 24, 2026The raindrops that fell in West Sedona yesterday afternoon brought a complex set of feelings....June 23, 2026Like many Sedona locals, the sight of a huge plume of smoke north of town stopped me in my tracks...The Hoax That Blew Up on Facetime In January 2025, Prescott office worker Mark Michael Ellis,...More PostsSedona News
Last night, the soft patter of rain finally arrived in West Sedona, lingering for about an...From another state, with clear air at 8400 feet elevation, I put in a call to Bob Poole, media...July 2, 2026I met with Deb Packard Tuesday morning to learn more about her job as Human Resources...June 30, 2026As of the 5 pm update, I was talking to Dick Fleishman, the media liaison, and he said the fire...Hey Bobcat readers, I don’t have anything new to offer on the Pocket Fire that isn’t already...June 26, 2026While we humans look up at the Pocket Fire from below and worry about the possible loss of our...More Posts
Why Are We Here?
The Bobcat Gazette is a direct response to the tumult of recent times and the
over-commodification of news. News sites, in whatever format, are so
crammed with ads it feels like the content exists only to hold the ads up.Our goal is to create a community of voices who can speak for the trees,
the animals, the rivers, and for all of us who want a compassionate and
caring world. The Bobcat can’t be just one voice—it must be the voices
of many who want news updates and stories that inspire, inform, and make
you think, while honoring your intelligence and never treating you as a
commodity.A pounce is a group of bobcats, and we invite you to join.

What is Happening in The World Around us

Engaging Content About The Natural world
Discover the fascinating world of Sedona's wildlife through our engaging articles. From the majestic bobcat to the vibrant birdlife, we celebrate the creatures that share our environment. Each story invites you to appreciate and protect the natural beauty around us.
How We Use AI At The Bobcat Gazette
At The Bobcat Gazette, accuracy and transparency matter more than speed or convenience. We use AI in
limited, clearly defined ways to support our journalism, not replace it.What AI Does For Us
- We use AI tools to help with:
- Basic story formatting (headlines, spacing, and structure).
- Grammar, spelling, and style cleanup.
- Human editors always review and approve stories before publication.
What AI Does Not Do
- We do not use AI to invent or alter quotes.
- We do not use AI to fabricate sources, events, or “color” details.
- Every quote in our stories comes from real interviews with real people.
What You May Want To know

In-Depth Quotes
We love bringing a mix of voices and perspectives into our stories. Sometimes that means letting people’s words stand exactly as they said
them—even if the grammar isn’t perfect—because that’s where the truth
and personality shine through. We also do our best to share full quotes,
not just sound bites cut to fit a moment. If you ever spot a quote of
yours that doesn’t sound quite right, reach out and we’ll make it right.
What don't we print?
The Bobcat is not designed to be a full‑service news site. Not only do we pick and choose the articles that inspire us and that we want to share, but there are also a number of things a conventional news outlet offers that we intentionally don’t. We don’t run ads, paywalls, press releases, business profiles, or classified ads. We also don’t plan to publish a large volume of editorials and commentaries, though we reserve the right to speak out when a situation calls for it..
Ads and Consumption
Honestly, we’re tired of it too—the constant ads, the pop-ups, the endless push to consume. It’s hard to focus on good journalism when every inch of the page is trying to sell you something. We want to stay far away from that noise. That said, you will see sponsorships from local businesses or nonprofits we genuinely believe in—but they’ll be few and thoughtful, with a simple link at the bottom of the article. Down the road, we plan to create a sponsorship page for those who want to support an independent, grassroots news source. No paywalls here—just a cleaner, calmer place to read.

Want to be part of The Bobcat Gazette?
Live in the Sedona area with an upbeat, friendly demeanor, good
communication skills, and physical energy? You could come along as an
assistant on specific assignments—quiet, reliable help to make things
run smoothly.Photographer who’d document stories on location- Keep the rights to your photos, just allow us the use of them.
Social maven to assist with reposting? We’re not on X, Instagram, and we need help with posting in Facebook groups
so sharers for those platforms would be golden.Contributing Writers Wanted
We’re open to pitches that fit our format and mission. We can’t pay
you—not even Bobcats are getting fed here—but we offer a platform to
tell a story you find important, one-time rights to your piece, and a
link to your bio.We’re minimal editors: yes, we’ll have a say, but we won’t count words or nitpick every line. We just want it to flow.
There is a process to submitting a story that starts with a chat. Please email for further details.
Sponsor a Story
Bobcat Gazette is experimenting with a different way to fund independent, local reporting—one that keeps stories free to read and lets us pay contributing writers fairly in a field that’s notoriously underpaid. Our model is simple: one sponsor per story.
As a sponsor, you or your business (or a nonprofit you choose to champion) will receive a link to your website at the bottom of a specific story, and you’ll be its sole sponsor for one year. Early sponsorships start at just $300—less than $1 a day—with rates for more complex, multi-day investigations with travel rising to as much as $500. In return, we aim to pay writers for their work while allowing them to retain the rights to their stories—something most publications don’t offer.
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