Arizona's Natural Wonders

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Arizona's Natural Wonders 4 days, 3 nights Friday November 6 - Monday November 9, 2020 Activity Level: 3 Moderate Motorcoach Jeep Cruise Arizona’s Natural Wonders $1,269 per person $1,449 per person See the Arizona sites that visitors seek out from around Double occupancy Single occupancy the world. Enjoy a classic destination with some once-in- Deposit: $80 per person Insurance: $105 per person a-lifetime activities. Visit majestic Antelope Canyon on a 4-wheel-drive truck tour, take in Lake Powell and Rainbow Includes Bridge on an enchanting cruise, ride on a float trip down • Roundtrip motorcoach • Admissions & tours as the Colorado River and see the breathtaking Red Rocks transportation from Tucson described of Sedona on a jeep tour. Even if you’ve been to Northern • Pick-up/livery service • Motorcoach refreshments Arizona before, you’ll see it in a whole new light via these • 3 nights lodging • Taxes & tips for included exquisite experiences. items (except hotel • 6 meals housekeeping) • Services of a tour director Tour Highlights • Driver & local guide tips • Baggage handling • Visit Navajo Lands • Antelope Canyon 4WD tour • ½ day cruise on Lake Powell to Rainbow Bridge • Glen Canyon smooth Day 3 - Antelope Canyon & the Colorado River water float trip • Visit the Powell Museum This morning we board 4-wheel drive trucks to tour the • Sedona jeep tour incredibly scenic Antelope Canyon. This area has stunningly colorful sand formations and is noted for slot canyons and Day 1 - Tucson to the way the light gleams through the openings in the rocks. Lake Powell In the afternoon we take a glorious Glen Canyon smooth Travel by motorcoach water float trip on the Colorado River. The excursion begins to the Navajo Nation, with a drive through a two-mile tunnel before boarding which features one- the craft which continues to Petroglyph Beach to see of-a-kind parks and fascinating artifacts. You’ll look up in awe at the soaring some of the most cliffs above Horseshoe Bend as you learn the stories of breathtaking scenery the ancestral Puebloan people who lived here. The float in the United States. trip ends at Lee’s Ferry where our motorcoach meets us to We arrive in Page for continue to Flagstaff for our farewell dinner and a stay at a welcome dinner & Little America. (B,D) check in for a 2-night Day 4 - Sedona to Home stay at the Hyatt On our way back to Tucson we’ll stop in Sedona for a Pink Place Lake Powell. (D) Jeep Tour of the red rocks. You’ll also have time to explore Day 2 - Lake Powell this scenic town on your own before the drive home. (B) & Glen Canyon We’ll cruise Lake Powell today on a half-day excursion that takes us to Rainbow Bridge, the world’s largest natural bridge, Warm Creek Bay, Padre Bay and Dangling Rope Marina. At Rainbow Bridge National Monument an optional 1.25-mile roundtrip walk is the best way to witness firsthand the power of wind and water and their role in sculpting this remarkable landscape. We’ll visit the Glen Canyon Recreation Area and The Powell Museum, which commemorates the leader of the first Colorado River exploration through the Grand Canyon. (B,L) 16 | Pleasurebent Tours | 520-325-8839 | 800-584-6831.
Recommended publications
  • On the Distribution of Utah's Hanging Gardens
    Great Basin Naturalist Volume 49 Number 1 Article 1 1-31-1989 On the distribution of Utah's hanging gardens Stanley L. Welsh Brigham Young University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn Recommended Citation Welsh, Stanley L. (1989) "On the distribution of Utah's hanging gardens," Great Basin Naturalist: Vol. 49 : No. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol49/iss1/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Western North American Naturalist Publications at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Great Basin Naturalist by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. The Great Basin Naturalist Published at Provo, Utah, by Brigham Young University ISSN 0017-3614 Volume 49 31 January 1989 No. 1 ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF UTAH'S HANGING GARDENS Stanley L. Welsh 1 Abstract. —This is a summary monograph of the hanging gardens as they occur in the Colorado River and Virgin River portions of the Colorado Plateau in Utah. Discussed in this paper are the hanging gardens, their geography, geomorphology, aspects of distribution and diversity, and principal vascular and algal plant species. Animal trapping studies and plant productivity aspects are reviewed. The sea of aridity that overlies southern tively recent origin, geologically speaking Utah and vicinity is broken by seasonal influ- (Hintze 1972). ences and by the dendritic trenches of the The geological strata are remarkably evi- Colorado River and its tributaries. The effects dent in this arid setting, where vegetative of the river are restricted to its banks and cover is thin and where rate of soil develop- adjacent alluvial terraces; the riparian vegeta- ment is exceeded by processes of erosion.
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  • El Vado De Los Padres From: Utah Place Names
    El Vado De Los Padres from: Utah Place Names VADO DE LOS PADRES, EL (Kane County, San Juan County). See The Crossing of the Fathers below. CROSSING OF THE FATHERS (Kane County, San Juan County). This famous crossing is now buried under several hundred feet of Lake Powell waters. It was here in November 1776 that the Domínguez and Escalante party finally found a way to cross the Colorado River on their return to New Mexico. The Indians called it Ute Ford and the Spaniards called it El Vado de los Padres. Padre Bay of Lake Powell, which now covers the crossing, was named to honor what used to be the mouth of Padre Creek. >T43S,R5E,SLM. Bibliography: Powell, J. W. The Exploration of the Colorado River and Its Canyons. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1961. Warner, Ted J., ed. Dominguez-Escalante Journal. Translated by Fray Angelico Chavez. Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 1976. EXPLANATION OF SYMBOLS... 1. An asterisk (*) following a place name indicates past or present inhabitation. 2. When a series of letters and numbers are present towards the end of an entry after the ">" symbol, the first group indicates section/township/range as closely as can be pinpointed (i.e., S12,T3S,R4W,SLM, or USM). A section equals approximately one square mile, reflecting U.S. Geological Survey topographic map sections. Because Utah is not completely mapped, some entries are incomplete. In this case, whatever information is available will be provided. The second group, when present, is altitude in feet followed by meters in parentheses [i.e., 6,000' (1,829m)].
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  • Distribution and Abundance of Pelagic Fish in Lake Powell, Utah, and Lake Mead, Arizona–Nevada
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  • Birds of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah and Arizona John R
    Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist Volume 5 Article 2 8-9-2011 Birds of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah and Arizona John R. Spence Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, National Park Service, Page, AZ, [email protected] Charles T. LaRue [email protected] John D. Grahame [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/mwnan Recommended Citation Spence, John R.; LaRue, Charles T.; and Grahame, John D. (2011) "Birds of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah and Arizona," Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist: Vol. 5 , Article 2. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/mwnan/vol5/iss1/2 This Monograph is brought to you for free and open access by the Western North American Naturalist Publications at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist 5, © 2011, pp. 20–70 BIRDS OF GLEN CANYON NATIONAL RECREATION AREA, UTAH AND ARIZONA John. R. Spence1, Charles T. LaRue2, John D. Grahame3 ABSTRACT.—The birds of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, in southern Utah and northern Arizona, are docu- mented, with information on abundance, distribution, ecology, residency status, and breeding status. In all, 316 species have been reported from the park since the first surveys in the region during the 1930s. Historical survey data from the pre-Glen Canyon Dam surveys are incorporated, as well as significant work done in the park since 1992.
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  • Glen Canyon, Lake Powell & Lake Mead
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  • Created in the 1963 with the Completion of the Glen Canyon Dam Construction, Lake Powell Became the Second Largest Reservoir I
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  • Glen Canyon Guide 2008 U.S
    National Park Service Glen Canyon Guide 2008 U.S. Department of the Interior Glen Canyon National Recreation Area Rainbow Bridge National Monument Picture: Western Mapping Company Mapping Western Picture: Digital laser scan enhancement A Voice From the Past I am captivated by the news of a potentially profound discovery made by park As I listen to the whisper of ancient voices, I take pictures and ponder my feelings. I volunteers in a remote canyon in Padre Bay. After scrambling my way into a add nothing to these walls; I leave nothing behind; I do not touch or take artifacts; I craggy canyon crevice, I scan the wall with anticipation, which yields quickly to preserve this story and take only the memory of this moment as I pass by here – on excitement in my moment of discovery. Mesmerized, I stand before an inscription my way back home. Cynthia Adams, NPS Park Guide potentially dating back more then 200 years; the only known inscription of its kind in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area or elsewhere in the Southwest. The language is foreign, the style unfamiliar, yet I feel strangely connected to this voice from the past: a single voice that draws me near whispering a simple yet direct message, “Paso por aqui año 1776” – passed by here year 1776. Who did pass by here and why? We know Padres Dominguez and Escalante passed through Glen Canyon in November 1776. Their extraordinary journal reveals the events of their journey as they departed from Santa Fe, New Mexico on July 29, 1776 in search of a trade route to California; a journey abandoned with the onset of early winter storms.
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  • 1 Interviewee: Robert “Bob” Cornelius (BC) Part 13 Interviewer: Tom
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  • Glen Canyon/Rainbow Bridge Park Guide 2012
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