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Grand Canyon National Park

Plan your Grand Canyon National Park vacation, book Grand Canyon hotels & lodging and Grand Canyon tours on thecanyon.com. Our Grand Canyon vacation guide to hotels inside and near Grand Canyon National Park includes South Rim and North Rim hotels & lodging and hotels in cities near the Grand Canyon like Williams, Flagstaff and Sedona. More than Grand Canyon hotels, thecanyon.com also offers the best Grand Canyon tours like helicopter tours and Colorado river rafting, Grand Canyon tours from Las Vegas or from Sedona, and attractions like the Grand Canyon Skywalk or Grand Canyon Railway. More...
Grand Canyon Tours & Things to Do
Grand Canyon Skywalk & West Rim Tours - See it by Helicopter, Hummer, Bus or Boat
Grand Canyon Skywalk Tours - See the Grand Canyon From Every Perspective
Out of Africa Wild Life Park
Your Best Family Adventure
Grand Canyon tour vacations - Hydros Adventures
Guided Grand Canyon hiking, backpacking and river rafting adventures
 
Grand Canyon Tour - Helicopter, Land & River Trips
Great West Adventure Tours
Every kind of Grand Canyon adventure tour available
U-Drive Tours - Self-Guided Driving Tours to the West Rim
Drive to the Grand Canyon Skywalk in one of our Hummers or Jeeps
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Wildland Trekking Company

Guided Grand Canyon hiking and backpacking packages
 
Grand Canyon Hotels, Resorts & Lodging
Las Posadas of Sedona
Affordable, luxury Grand Canyon area/Sedona bed and breakfast suites
Adobe Village Graham Inn
Sedona's finest luxury inn - near the Grand Canyon
Adobe Grand Villas
Boutique Sedona bed & breakfast resort
 
Find amazing Grand Canyon facts & information, maps, weather and pictures. Make all your Grand Canyon hotel & tour reservations, for both the Grand Canyon and nearby cities like Las Vegas, Sedona & Flagstaff.

A Quick Look at Grand Canyon National Park

Grand Canyon National Park is one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World, a designated World Heritage Site, and one of the Crown Jewels of the National Park System. Declared a national park in 1919, the mile-deep, 277-mile long gorge draws nearly five million visitors annually to the lofty rims and world-class whitewater that await the active traveler.

The 1.2 million acre park is home to numerous animals (from the endangered California condor above, to cougars, rattlesnakes and Gila monsters below), over 1,500 species of plants, archaeological sites dating back thousands of years, and one of the most complete geologic cross sections visible anywhere on the planet.  Sustaining these plant and animal communities, as well as carving the Canyon ever-deeper, is the powerful Colorado River, the lifeblood of the desert Southwest.

Grand Canyon Visitor Info

Most visitors come to the Canyon during the mild spring, summer and fall; the Grand Canyon's mild weather is a refuge from the summer heat of central & southern Arizona areas like Phoenix.  While fewer visitors come to see the winter snows that frequently blanket the lofty South and North Rims (7,000 and 8,000 feet above sea level respectively), most locals agree that winter is a great time to visit the Grand Canyon because parking is readily available, crowds are minimal and the views are spectacular. The South Rim is open all year, whereas the more remote North Rim visitor area is open from mid-May to mid-October.  Learn more about when to visit and other Grand Canyon information and facts in our Frequenty Asked Questions (FAQs).

The average visit to Grand Canyon is a scant two hours. Most agree that it can be an overwhelming spectacle to absorb during such a short time frame.  Luckily there are a number of organized activities available to park visitors.  A partial list must include National Park Service ranger talks (free to the public, and advertised in The Guide newspaper available at the entrance stations), backpacking, day hiking, Grand Canyon whitewater rafting, Grand Canyon helicopter tours and fixed-wing air tours, and the historic mule rides to Phantom Ranch on the Canyon floor.

All of these activities (ranger talks aside) are offered as guided, commercial experiences. Day hiking and backpacking can be done on your own, though you need a National Park Service permit to engage in the latter.

The remote nature of the park, lack of public transportation to and from, and the fickle Grand Canyon weather and harsh terrain can make Grand Canyon a challenging place to visit. But it’s the rare visitor that wouldn’t agree with the park’s patriarch, President Theodore Roosevelt, who declared that the Grand Canyon is the one great place that every American should see. 

Read more articles, stories and musings on the Grand Canyon and other Arizona destinations on our blog.

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