Autumn, when temperatures fall and the tourist hordes go home, is the perfect time to head to the Grand Canyon. Whether you have a weekend or a month, we've got options.
Car Camp
You don鈥檛 have to take all your vacation days to have a good adventure. For starters, you get a pretty damn good view of the canyon鈥檚 majesty from the National Park Service village along the South Rim. Skip the tourist vibe at El Tovar and the Bright Angel Lodge in favor of one of the campgrounds along the entrance road. The best is , located within walking distance of the canyon and a general store (good for last-minute s鈥檓ores supply runs). Even on a busy Memorial Day weekend, you can ditch the bused-in gawkers at this quiet, wooded site.
Rising early the next day is key: hit the Bright Angel Trail at 6 a.m. to avoid crowds and you鈥檒l be in the clear three miles down. Bring a picnic鈥攖he food in the village is pricey, but provisions are available just outside the park in Tusayan, Arizona鈥攁nd enjoy it at Indian Gardens, an oasis about five miles down the trail. From here, go another five miles to the Colorado River for an all-day trek, or head back up to your camp for those s鈥檓ores.
Go Fast
A trail run is the quickest way to take in the entire canyon. The bucket-list route is Rim-to-Rim-to-Rim (R2R2R, for those in the know), a punishing 42 miles up and down both sides. But R2R2R has its downsides. It鈥檚 a long day, even if you鈥檙e gunning for the record. (Ultrarunner Rob Krar .) It also requires careful planning. Start after 5 a.m. and you鈥檒l get stuck behind mule trains. Go too early or late in the year and you risk not having water for most of your trip; the North Rim water station is turned off from mid-October to May. Still, it can be worth it to see the entire canyon in one go.
There鈥檚 also a mellower 24-mile South Rim option: start at Hermit鈥檚 Rest and run parallel to the river to Bright Angel. You鈥檒l weave through clover-shaped canyons with stellar views of some of the best rapids, and you probably won鈥檛 see another soul until you hit Indian Gardens. From there it鈥檚 five miles to the finish鈥攃elebrate with ice cream at the .
Get Wet
The only way to say you鈥檝e actually done the Grand is to raft it. The second-best float is with a commercial outfitter. We like OARS鈥檚 from Lees Ferry to Whitmore Wash ($5,179). You鈥檒l hit the biggest rapids of the inner gorge and many of the most famous side hikes and cultural sites. Then, just as the rapids start to peter out, helicopter out to , no sweltering van ride required. Yeah, helicopter shuttles suck, but not as much as the development, jet boats, and dam sediment in the canyon鈥檚 lower 30 miles.
The only better trip is to round up 15 friends and put in for a 25-day private permit in the Park Service鈥檚 鈥攕urprisingly easy to win if you coordinate entries and target the off-months. Then quit your job, call that college buddy who worked as a raft guide, and hire to fully outfit you with gear and food (from $1,000). Order twice as much beer as you think you鈥檒l need.