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grand canyon national park and the colorado river
(Photo: kojihirano/iStock)
grand canyon national park and the colorado river
Even though over 6.25 million people visited Grand Canyon National Park in 2017 alone, there are still plenty of places to find solitude in the park. (Photo: kojihirano/iStock)

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The Ultimate Guide to Grand Canyon National Park

Grand Canyon National Park has some of the best views in the United States. Here鈥檚 how to make the most out of a visit, whether its hiking, boating, biking, camping, or so much more.

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No wonder Teddy Roosevelt called the Grand Canyon 鈥渢he one great sight which every American should see.鈥 Walk to its edge, and the earth falls away into an expanse of peaks, plateaus, and gorges so vast it can be disorienting. Descend below the rim, and the sense of awe only grows. The canyon is essentially an inverted, 6,000-foot, 277-mile-long mountain range, where you are dwarfed by sheer stone walls stacked to the sky and vistas that multiply with every turn. In the desert landscape, the water can be the most astonishing sight. Turquoise streams rush whole out of rust red cliffs听and cascade through travertine pools. At the bottom of the canyon, of course, lies听the engine of this great geological conundrum鈥攖he thrumming, persistent Colorado River, which听carved the gorge over millennia. If there鈥檚 a better place to gain听perspective on our own relative insignificance, I don鈥檛 know it.

But all this comes with a downside. The park gets crowded. visited in 2021 alone. Don鈥檛 let that stop you from planning a trip, though. Just a fraction of visitors bother to descend into the canyon itself, which means it鈥檚 easy to find solitude. But with 595 miles of established trails, 278 miles of river to float, and countless panoramas, historic sites, and overlooks to explore, it鈥檚 hard to know where to start. Here鈥檚 how to make the most out of an adventure to one of our country鈥檚 most rugged and iconic places.

What You Need to Know Before Visiting the Grand Canyon

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Beware of the heat.

The interior of the canyon averages triple-digit highs June through August, and those temperatures contributed to in 2017 alone.听So unless you鈥檙e a reptile or riding in a raft, plan your visit for the other nine months of the year.

If a summer trip is your only option, head to the North Rim.

The North Rim gets about atenth of the visitors听and,听at an elevation of 8,297 feet,听runs nearly ten degrees cooler than the South Rim.听In fact,听all park amenities on the North Rim are closed November through April, and the听road into the park closes in December鈥攐r earlier if enough snow falls鈥攎eaning you can only access the North Rim听by听hiking, snowshoeing, or cross-country skiing with a backcountry permit.

Be prepared for some paperwork and hope for some luck.

Many of the park鈥檚 best adventures, like camping in the backcountry, running your own trip down the Colorado鈥檚 rapids, or spending the night at the Phantom Ranch at the canyon鈥檚 bottom, require winning a lottery to land the necessary permits.

Rafting Permits in Grand Canyon National Park

If you know your way around an oar rig, the odds of winning a permit for a noncommercial river trip are notoriously difficult, especially for popular times like autumn and spring. For example, there were 459 applications to launch on September 18, 2019, alone. On the other hand, some days in December, when the days are short and the nights are cold, see no applicants at all. No matter your launch date, it costs $25 to apply for a permit. If you win, a 听must be paid immediately and听is applied to your听trip鈥檚 final price tag, which will depend听on the size of your group.

Backpacking Permits in Grand Canyon National Park

Your odds for scoring are much better and only cost $10 per permit, plus $12 per person per night in the canyon or $12 per group above the rim. A word of note on this, though: the park鈥檚 reservation system is still dependent on pre-Y2K technology, meaning you have to apply via fax, regular mail, or in person. Your best chance for landing your dream hike is sending in a written application a little over four months before your planned trip during what鈥檚 called the earliest consideration period, which starts on the 20th of every month and runs through the first of the next. Trip applications submitted during this time are rewarded through a lottery. After that it鈥檚 first-come, first-served. Don鈥檛 fret if you don鈥檛 snag the spot you want, and definitely don鈥檛 cancel your trip. Most people don鈥檛 know it, but once you receive your permit, you can call the backcountry office to try and modify it. The nonprofit Grand Canyon Trust has a good explainer of the .

How to Get There

(Jad Limcaco/Unsplash)

Grand Canyon National Park is split into two distinct zones divided by, well, the actual canyon. It鈥檚 a long four-and-a-half-hour drive to get from one rim to the other, so plan carefully. If you鈥檙e visiting the North Rim, it鈥檚 quickest to fly to Las Vegas, a four-and-a-half-hour drive from the park. If you are bound for the South Rim, from Phoenix it鈥檚 a three-and-a-half-hour drive, or you can splurge on one of the few daily flights into Flagstaff, Arizona, just an hour and a half south of Grand Canyon Village, the main hub for exploring the park. No car, or prefer not to drive? runs vans from Flagstaff to the village three times a day from May 15 to October 16.

Where to Stay In or Near the Grand Canyon

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国产吃瓜黑料 Inc.’s National Park Trips offers a free filled with a complete itinerary, beautiful photography, a park map, and everything else you need to plan your dream vacation.

South Rim

is a landmark, not only for its location just steps from the canyon rim but also for its iconic architectural style, which influenced many of the National Park lodges that followed. Built in 1905, it鈥檚 worth taking a look at the log-sided lobby, even if you aren鈥檛 staying there. Like most NPS lodging, rooms are basic, expensive, and hard to come by (from $394). You鈥檒l want to book a year in advance, especially if you covet one of the three balcony suites on the canyon side, which cannot be reserved online. You鈥檒l have tocall听the hotel directly, and they鈥檒l cost you double the regular room rate. There are , all pretty basic, and another half dozen in the town of Tusayan, just outside the park, about six miles from the rim.

For camping on the South Rim, your best bet is to head听25 miles east of Grand Canyon Village for the prized sunsets at . It runs $18 per night but is first-come, first-served, so plan to snag a site midmorning when campers are clearing out.

North Rim

Go for the Western Cabins at the听. With nothing between your front porch and the canyon but a few pine trees, cabins 301, 305, 306, and 309 are some of the best accommodations in the park ($271, open May 15 to October 15). If those are booked, grabbing an Adirondack chair from the main lodge鈥檚 veranda and settling in as the sunset washes the Deva, Brahma, and Zoroaster Temple buttes in flaming alpenglow is a solid second choice.

You can catch the same west-facing views at the ,听a mile or so north of the lodge. Book sites 14 to 19, right on the rim, if you can, though they鈥檙e often reserved听a year in advance.

Canyon Floor

The Phantom Ranch, tucked into a shady cottonwood grove at the bottom of the chasm, in 2018, and entries are due a whopping 15 months ahead of your desired dates. If you don鈥檛 make the cut, try for a spot at the adjacent Bright Angel Campground, which requires a backcountry camping permit. You can still order meals from Phantom Ranch, which will lighten your load for the hike in.

The Best 国产吃瓜黑料s in Grand Canyon National Park

(David Moskowitz/TandemStock)

Most park visitors never leave the developed enclave of Grand Canyon Village on the South Rim. They roll up in their rental car, park, stroll to the guardrail听rim, browse the gift shops, and then head to the next national park on their checklist. That鈥檚 not an exaggeration: the park estimates that the average听visit lasts less than four hours. Even hopping on the free shuttles that stop for fresh views along the South Rim every mile or so is听enough to leave most of the horde behind. The farther you get from the visitor听center, the more the crowds thin out.

Biking Routes

Rent bikes from , located听next to the visitor center, and cruise the South Rim. The Hermit Road winds seven miles along the rim from the village and is closed to private cars March through November, making it one of the most scenic cycling paths in the world. Or head east from the visitors center and link the bike path with the car-free Yaki Point Road. Jutting far into the canyon, Yaki Point is a popular spot to catch the sunset splash听rosy light across a 42-mile swath of canyon all the way from the Palisades of the Desert, 25 miles to the east,听to Havasupai Point, 17 miles west.

Hiking Trails

For day outings, skip the South Rim鈥檚 well-trampled Bright Angel Trail, which drops into the canyon right at the village, and take the shuttle bus from thereto the South Kaibab Trailhead. The seven-mile path, one of the best hiking trails in Grand Canyon National Park, descends 4,780 feet all the way to the river, but many people merely opt for the 1.8-mile round-trip to the comically named Ooh Aah Point. On the North Rim, the mild five-mile Widforss Trail winds along the rim and then ducks through ponderosa pine and aspen groves to Widforss Point, where you can catch views of sheer, jagged buttes like Wotans Throne and the Zoroaster Temple or the battlements of Transept Canyon.

Backpacking Trips

The remote, arduous may well be the Grand Canyon鈥檚 most astonishing backpacking trip. Start the 21-mile, three-day loop from the Bill Hall Trailhead at Monument Point (which shaves 2.5 miles off the traditional Indian Hollow Trailhead route), 34 miles down a sometimes impassable road from the North Rim town of Jacob Lake. It passes by Thunder River itself, a large creek that pours straight out of cave midway up the red canyon wall and tumbles down tiers of lush, vegetated pools. Don鈥檛 miss the chance to spend an afternoon exploring the twisting Deer Creek Narrows, or detour down the rafter鈥檚 trail to the river to check out the outlet of the narrows, 80-foot-high Deer Creek Falls.

The granddaddy of Grand Canyon hikes is going rim to rim, dropping all the way to the river, crossing the bridge at Phantom Ranch, and then climbing out the other side. Some break up the journey with a night at Phantom Ranch. Others prefer to knock it out in a day鈥攖he current record is two hours and 39 minutes.听To preserve knee cartilage, most people start at the lower South Rim, descend听4,460 feet on the Bright Angel Trail, and then听ascend听5,850 feet on the North Kaibab Trail to the North Rim Lodge, for a total of 21 miles. Some of the听more ambitious hikers and runners go听rim to rim to rim, but for the one-way trip, you鈥檒l need transportation back. If you can鈥檛 talk a friend into picking you up on the other side (a four-and-a-half-hour drive one-way), you can drop听a car off yourself and catch a ride back with the for $120.

Boating and Paddling

There are two ways to boat the Colorado River: by motorized raft听or in a human-propelled oar or paddle raft. I can鈥檛 recommend the former. The outboard engines feel like a violation of the river鈥檚 stretches of sublime silence, and the huge听30-foot rafts鈥攑acked shoulder to shoulder听with passengers鈥攎ute even the formidable whitewater.

The best way to experience the river is at its own pace,听taking on the towering waves of famous rapids like Crystal and Lava Falls in an 18-foot oar rig. You鈥檒l drift for days through face-melting scenery, blast down hundreds of galloping rapids, and camp each night on sand beaches beneath a lane of bright stars. Plus听you can pack听steaks and fresh veggies in coolers, chill beers beersin drag bags in the river, and best of all, enjoy the complete lack of cell-phone reception. If you don鈥檛 have the experience or a permit to DIY, more than run river trips through the Grand Canyon, ranging in length from three to 18 days and costing around $2,000 to $6,000.

Where to Eat and Drink Near the Grand Canyon

(Craig Zerbe/iStock)

If you鈥檙e driving up from Phoenix, stop in Flagstaff, a college town with a burgeoning food and brewery scene. For lunch, pop by for locally sourced beef patties served on English muffins, and grab a Blake, which features homemade Hatch-chile mayo, roasted green chilies, and sharp cheddar. Staying for dinner? The folks at say their fare is good for the soul鈥攃ast-iron cornbread, jambalaya, and slow-smoked barbecue are all on the menu.

Inside the park, dining options are mainly limited to large-scale concessionaires who win service-contract bids. , which runs most of the Grand Canyon鈥檚 restaurants, now sources 40 percent of its ingredients from sustainable or local vendors. At the El Tovar dining room, the signature prime-rib hash鈥攚hich features Arizona-grown beef, cage-free eggs, bell peppers, and chipotle hollandaise sauce鈥攕hould set you up for a descent into the canyon听and back.

听in Grand Canyon Village听sells Flagstaff-made baked goods, sandwiches, and coffee. The cinnamon pound cake is worth stashing in your pack for a midride snack.

Across the canyon, the view from听the veranda at the听 makes for some of the best alfresco dining on the planet. From the dinner menu, try the wings, which are braised in spicy prickly pear cactus juice. Wash it down with Flagstaff-brewed beers named after park features, like the Phantom Ranch Red.

Just outside the park, the Meadows Edge Coffee Trailer, beside the , serves a blueberry-pomegranate smoothie and the canyon鈥檚 best latte. A little farther on, at the junction of 89A and Highway听67, the Jacob Lake Inn is famous for its听. There are听15 varieties on offer, including chocolate parfait and lemon zucchini with pecans.

If You Have Time for a Detour

While getting a permit to float through the Grand Canyon takes some doing, paddling 15 miles upstream from听the park into Marble Canyon requires no permits, fees, or reservations. Dogs are also allowed, so you can finally let the pups out of the van.

For camping, part of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (the section of river between Lee鈥檚 Ferry and Glen Canyon Dam)听contains first-come, first-serve听sites. Or relatively strong paddlers can rent a kayak from in nearby Page, Arizona, and head upstream to camp听in the听Instagram mecca that is . From the beach, you can just make out the silhouettes of the hordes on the rim.

Want to mountain bike at the park? You can鈥檛. But the , on Forest Service land abutting the North Rim, has become the听go-to destination for fat-tire听riders wanting to cozy up to America鈥檚 favorite abyss. Twenty-two miles of singletrack wind through ponderosa pine forests and meadows, occasionally popping out at the rocky rim for eyefuls of the Big Ditch. Most cyclists post up for a few days听at dispersed car-camping spots like Locust Trailhead, midway on the route.


Editor’s Note: We frequently update this National Parks guide, which was originally published on Dec 4, 2018.

Lead Photo: kojihirano/iStock