Group Rates 2019 Xanterra South

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Group Rates 2019 Xanterra South Xanterra South Rim 2019 Group Rates Maswik Lodge March 1, 2019 through November 9, 2019 November 27, 2019 through November 30, 2019 December 18, 2018 through January 2, 2020 Maswik North Maswik South* Single/Double………………………………………………….$215.00 Single/Double………………………………………………….$112.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$224.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$121.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$233.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$130.00 Maswik Lodge - 2020 Estimated Rates *March 1, 2020 through March 31, 2020 Maswik North Single/Double………………………………………………….$235.00 *Maswik South will be torn down in Triple………………………………………………………………….$244.00 2019 and rebuilt in 2020 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$253.00 *2020 rates are ESTIMATED and subject to National Park Service approval. Winter Group Rates - Maswik Lodge North November 10, 2019 through November 26, 2019 December 1, 2019 through December 17, 2019 *January 3, 2020 through February 29, 2020 Maswik North Single/Double………………………………………………….$134.00 *Maswik South will be torn down in Triple………………………………………………………………….$143.00 2019 and rebuilt in 2020 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$152.00 *2020 rates are ESTIMATED and subject to National Park Service approval. Kachina and Thunderbird Lodges January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2019 Streetside Canyonside Single/Double………………………………………………….$225.00 Single/Double…………………………………………………..$243.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$234.00 Triple…………………………………………………………………..$252.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$243.00 Quad……………………………………………………………………$261.00 For additional lodging information please visit our web site at: http://www.grandcanyonlodges.com/lodging/ •Arizona Lodging Tax Rate: 6.9% •Group Porterage: $4.00 per person roundtrip •Guest Room Attendant Fee: $1.50 per person •Rollaway: $10.00 per night based on availability •Children: Age 16 and under stay free when sharing the same room and bedding with an adult •All rooms are Non-Smoking and subject to a cleaning fee of $175.00 per room for smoked in rooms •Group minimum is 10 rooms Legendary Hospitality by Xanterra 2019 Meal Coupon Rates Rates effective January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2019 Maswik Food Court Breakfast $13.40 Lunch & Dinner $23.65 One each - entrée, small juice and Inclusive One each - entrée, soup or side Inclusive small coffee or hot tea of tax salad, dessert and nonalcoholic of tax beverage Harvey House Café Breakfast $22.60 Lunch $25.55 One each - entrée, juice and coffee Inclusive of One each - entrée, dessert and Inclusive of or hot tea tax/gratuity nonalcoholic beverage tax/gratuity Dinner $43.05 Additional Information One each - entrée with soup or Inclusive of •No reservations - wait list salad, dessert and nonalcoholic tax/gratuity beverage Arizona Room Lunch $25.55 Dinner $58.40 One each - entrée, dessert and Inclusive of One each - entrée with soup or Inclusive of nonalcoholic beverage tax/gratuity salad, dessert and nonalcoholic tax/gratuity beverage •No reservations - wait list El Tovar Dining Room Breakfast $29.55 Lunch $38.55 One each - entrée, juice and coffee Inclusive of One each - entrée, dessert and Inclusive of or hot tea tax/gratuity nonalcoholic beverage tax/gratuity Dinner $75.60 Additional Information One each - entrée, soup or salad, Inclusive of •Dinner reservations must be made in advance by dessert and nonalcoholic beverage tax/gratuity calling 928-638-2526 ext. 6432 or send email request to [email protected] For hours and menu information please visit our web site at: http://www.grandcanyonlodges.com/dining/ •Food & Beverage Tax Rate: 6.9% (included in meal coupon rate) •Meal Gratuity: 18% (included in meal coupon rate at Bright Angel, Arizona Room and El Tovar) •Minimum order: 20 meal coupons •Meal coupon payment and selection: Finalized 30 days prior to arrival •Contact to Purchase: Group Sales Office Grand Canyon Banquet and Buffet Options Grand Canyon National Park Lodges offers a variety of banquet options for your group, wedding or family reunion. Our sales staff works closely with our catering and banquet staff to ensure a quality dining experience for your group. Our banquet menu offers an extensive selection sure to suit any group's needs. Banquet arrangements must be finalized 30 days prior to arrival. For banquet menu information please visit our web site at: http://www.grandcanyonlodges.com/groups/catering/ Legendary Hospitality by Xanterra 2019 Group Tour Rates Hermits Rest Tour 2 hours roundtrip that includes scenic stops at popular points along the west rim Regular Scheduled Exclusive Group - 20 person minimum Adult…………………………………………………………………..$25.00 Adult……………………………………………………………………$23.00 Child (0 -16)…………………………………………………………………..$12.50 Child (0 - 16)……………………………………………………………………$11.50 •8:00 AM or 9:00 AM Desert View Tour 3½ to 4 hours roundtrip that includes scenic stops along the east rim at popular points that may include Moran Point, Lipan Point and Desert View Regular Scheduled Exclusive Group - 20 person minimum Adult…………………………………………………………………..$45.00 Adult……………………………………………………………………$32.00 Child (0 - 16)…………………………………………………………………..$22.50 Child (0 - 16)……………………………………………………………………$16.00 •8:00 AM & 12:00 PM Sunrise or Sunset Tour 1½ hours roundtrip that includes two scenic stops along the rim at popular points Regular Scheduled Exclusive Group - 20 person minimum Adult…………………………………………………………………..$23.00 Adult……………………………………………………………………$19.00 Child (0 - 16)…………………………………………………………………..$11.50 Child (0 - 16)……………………………………………………………………$9.50 Step On Guide Services Your bus, our guide! Pick-up location anywhere within Grand Canyon Village Hermits Rest Desert View* Roundtrip…………………………………………………………………..$125.00 Roundtrip……………………………………………………………………$200.00 •Available December 1 to February 28 •8:00 AM & 12:00 PM •8:00 AM or 9:00 AM & 2:00 PM One-way - Desert View into Village……………………………………………………………………$200.00 •2 hours •10:00 AM & 2:00 PM One-way - Village to Desert View……………………………………………………………………$200.00 •8:00 AM & 12:00 PM •One-way - 2 hours •Roundtrip - 3½ to 4 hours •Available year-round *Limited Scenic Stops-allowable stops on CUA For additional tour information please visit our web site at: www.grandcanyonlodges.com/things-to-do/motorcoach-railway-tours/ General Group Policies: •All rates, surcharges and taxes are subject to change and are non-commissionable •Cancellation policy for full refund: Rooms 45 days and tours/banquets 30 days •Final payment due at 30 days THIS IS NOT A CONTRACT Group Sales Contact Information: Phone: 800-843-8723 Fax: 928-773-8555 Email: [email protected] Xanterra South Rim, 1201 West Route 66 #200, Flagstaff AZ 86001 www.grandcanyonlodges.com/groups/ 010619 DRM.
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  • Group Rates 2017 Xanterra South
    Xanterra South Rim 2017 Group Rates Maswik Lodge North Maswik Lodge South March 3, 2017 through November 4, 2017 November 22, 2017 through November 25, 2017 March 3, 2017 through September 2, 2017 December 20, 2017 through December 31, 2017 Maswik North Maswik South Single/Double………………………………………………….$215.00 Single/Double…………………………………………………..$112.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$224.00 Triple…………………………………………………………………..$121.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$233.00 Quad……………………………………………………………………$130.00 Winter Group Rates - Maswik Lodge North November 5, 2017 through November 21, 2017 November 26, 2017 through December 19, 2017 Maswik North Single/Double…………………………………….……………$128.00 Maswik South will be torn down in Triple………………………………………………………………….$137.00 September 2017 and rebuilt in 2018 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$146.00 Kachina and Thunderbird Lodges January 1, 2017 through December 31, 2017 Streetside Canyonside Single/Double………………………………………………….$225.00 Single/Double…………………………………………………..$243.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$234.00 Triple…………………………………………………………………..$252.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$243.00 Quad……………………………………………………………………$261.00 For additional lodging information please visit our web site at: http://www.grandcanyonlodges.com/lodging/ •Arizona Lodging Tax Rate: 6.9% •Group Porterage: $4.00 per person roundtrip •Guest Room Attendant Fee: $1.50 per person •Rollaway: $10.00 per night based on availability •Children: Age 16 and under stay free when sharing the same room and bedding with an adult •All rooms are Non-Smoking
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  • The Guide: Autumn South Rim Information and Maps
    National Park Service Grand Canyon National Park U.S. Department of the Interior The official newspaper September 2 to November 30, 2014 The Guide: Autumn South Rim Information and Maps Nonnative elk (above) and native deer can be especially aggressive in autumn and will defend their territory. Keep a safe distance of at least 75 feet (23 m). Need Information? Keep This Newspaper With You How Can We Help Plan Your Trip? Bring this Guide newspaper and your questions to a visitor center. Talk to park rangers, view exhibits, and learn about the park. The visitor centers, except for the Backcountry Information Center, also feature Grand Canyon Association Park Stores and a stamp for your Passport To Your National Parks® booklet. Grand Canyon Village GRAND CANYON VISITOR CENTER Hello. We are not interested in hiking, but Good day. I am excited to explore the Hi! I have children in my group and 8 am–5 pm do want to see great views from the free canyon on foot or by bicycle. would like to see great views and shuttle bus or our own car. participate in activities with my kids. BACKCOUNTRY INFORMATION CENTER 8 am–noon and 1–5 pm Park rangers suggest: Park rangers suggest: Park rangers suggest: ő Get your first view of Grand Canyon ő Walk any portion of the 13-mile ő Pick up a Junior Ranger booklet at any KOLB STUDIO by taking a five-minute walk from (20 km) Rim Trail to see Grand visitor center. Complete fun activities 8 am–7 pm Grand Canyon Visitor Center to Canyon.
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  • Grand Canyon National Park National Park Service Grand Canyon Arizona U.S
    Grand Canyon National Park National Park Service Grand Canyon Arizona U.S. Department of the Interior Chinese South Rim _f}W-^M^- S^*8SSiU»*W! - : go.nps.gov/gc_hourso Visitor Center Village Hermits Rest (Village HIP) mm&m%mmu Grand Canyon Visitor Center, MM. ftl Grand Canyon MM ffiiZMArft&fk', #&'- tLitiLM, MiifP Grand Canyon MM Grand Canyon MMfflWrMfl MM (1 1 **/ Hermit Road A/Rim Trail; ft Hift 10 am AHiSi 0 Verkamps Visitor Center 2 pm, 3:30 pm ilTrSISiA Yavapai Geology Museum Grand Canyon Visitor Center ^M£ ft**?**!*!! Kaibab/Rim Route- Backcountry Information Center AH? .AHi; (H.f.A'liv fefcl&fSN fXWiS 4 pm -A/h4fjT7>iIPH Grand Canyon Visitor Center Village Route- AlTusayan Route; ffA®- tfcfl32K> AABlRKIf* IIU&ELTH; A/**. A*|B], Hig 928-638-7875 Hermits Rest Route Transfer Hermits Rest Route A^rcAirT; $^AS Village 3UM11 RZirm®8&&®ijjitM, sHHif- &imu®in£nfti®B Route; RiA+A71 HB, H#7fpicjS5iig, ityigjiA6*4HJLjto •MmmBitimminm Bright Angel Bicycles & Cafe at Mather Point 3 $ gfTnA- $f> Bright Angel Lodge G$-$$Mft*S; AAliHiif. ^MM A'0s£i/j|'fi] go.nps.gov/gc_programso ffWTrfSA§?JLAffltyJag4t; ftjffiKH; H*AS0MftHft?(A 71; W*#* -^f*l*]#tfjffl-^ Arizona M*#A—AH- WM. *BJ Trailview Overlook MfTAAfAAAp; IR&MM; Bright Angel Trail fflfTAfTJ A#Hffif!f#, HA- 7SAWWUE- Hltfflpp; AED^ihfS, Aig ft; »lfjg. *?!,# (#1514) ; Affl/K- AHl* Wi-Fi (HJI) - HiiJSH HE 928-638-3055 f£? (SS3H If-WgH) - AEDFiiitl, Aig 928-638-2631 Maricopa Point SffA^TtHirJ; ttiAS;71fPi5y Orphan Mine Grand Canyon Association (GCA) Park Store at the Visitor Center G Bright Angel Trailhead tt^STl.
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  • An Adm I N I Strati Ve History of Grand Ca Nyon Nati Onal Pa R K Becomingchapter a Natio Onenal Park  - 
    Figure 1.Map ofGrand Canyon National Monument/Grand Canyon Game Preserve, National Game Preserve (created by Roosevelt in 1906),and unassigned public domain. ca.1906-10. President Theodore Roosevelt liberally interpreted the 1906 Antiquities Act The U.S.Forest Service managed the monument from 1908 until it became a national when he established by proclamation the 1,279-square-milerand G Canyon National park in 1919, relying entirely on the Santa Fe Railroad to invest in roads,trails,and Monument in 1908.The monument was carved from Grand Canyon National Forest amenities to accommodate a budding tourism industry. (created by President Benjamin Harrison as a forest reserve in 1893), Grand Canyon an adm i n i strati ve history of grand ca nyon nati onal pa r k BecomingChapter a Natio Onenal Park - In the decades after the Mexican-American War, federal explorers and military in the Southwest located transportation routes, identified natural resources, and brushed aside resistant Indian peo p l e s . It was during this time that Europ ean America n s , fo ll o wing new east-west wagon roads, approached the rim of the Grand Canyon.1 The Atlantic & Pacific Railroad’s arrival in the Southwest accelerated this settlement, opening the region to entrepreneurs who initially invested in traditional economic ventures.Capitalists would have a difficult time figuring out how to profitably exploit the canyon,how- ever, biding their time until pioneers had pointed the way to a promising export economy: tourism. Beginning in the late 1890s, conflicts erupted between individualists who had launched this nascent industry and corporations who glimpsed its potential.
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  • Final Wilderness Recommendation
    Final Wilderness Recommendation 2010 Update Grand Canyon National Park Arizona National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior NOTE: This document is a draft update to the park’s 1980 Final Wilderness Recommendation submitted to the Department of Interior in September 1980. The 1980 recommendation has never been forwarded to the president and Congress for legislative action. The 2010 draft update is to reconcile facts on the ground and incorporate modern mapping tools (Geographical Information Systems), but it does not alter the substance of the original recommendation. In 1993, the park also completed an update that served as a resource for the 2010 draft update. The official wilderness recommendation map remains the map #113-40, 047B, submitted to the Department of Interior in 1980. FINAL WILDERNESS RECOMMENDATION 2010 Update GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK ARIZONA THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE RECOMMENDS THAT WILDERNESS OF 1,143,918 ACRES WITHIN GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, ARIZONA, AS DESCRIBED IN THIS DOCUMENT, BE DESIGNATED BY AN ACT OF CONGRESS. OF THIS TOTAL, 1,117,457 ACRES ARE RECOMMENDED FOR IMMEDIATE DESIGNATION, AND 26,461 ACRES ARE RECOMMENDED FOR DESIGNATION AS POTENTIAL WILDERNESS PENDING RESOLUTION OF BOUNDARY AND MOTORIZED RIVER ISSUES. 2 Table of Contents I. Requirement for Study 4 II. Wilderness Recommendation 4 III. Wilderness Summary 4 IV. Description of the Wilderness Units 5 Unit 1: Grand Wash Cliffs 5 Unit 2: Western Park 5 (a) Havasupai Traditional Use Lands 6 (b) Sanup Plateau 7 (c) Uinkaret Mountains 7 (d) Toroweap Valley 8 (e) Kanab Plateau 8 - Tuckup Point 8 - SB Point 8 (f) North Rim 8 (g) Esplanade 9 (h) Tonto Platform 9 (i) Inner Canyon 9 (j) South Rim (west of Hermits Rest) 9 (k) Recommended Potential wilderness 9 - Colorado River 9 - Curtis-Lee Tracts 9 (l) Non-wilderness 9 - Great Thumb 9 - North Rim Primitive Roads 10 - Kanab Plateau Primitive Roads 10 Unit 3: Eastern Park 10 (a) Potential Wilderness 11 - Private Lands 11 - Colorado River 12 (b) Non-wilderness: North Rim Paved Roads 12 Unit 4: The Navajo Indian Properties 12 VI.
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  • Biological Opinion for Hermit Road Rehabilitation in Grand Canyon National Park
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  • Getting Around the South Rim
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  • Group Rates 2016 Xanterra South
    Xanterra South Rim 2016 Group Rates Maswik Lodge March 3, 2016 through November 5, 2016 November 23, 2016 through November 26, 2016 December 21, 2016 through January 2, 2017 Maswik North Maswik South Single/Double………………………………………………….$205.00 Single/Double…………………………………………………..$107.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$214.00 Triple…………………………………………………………………..$116.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$223.00 Quad……………………………………………………………………$125.00 Winter Group Rates - Maswik Lodge November 6, 2016 through November 22, 2016 November 27, 2016 through December 20, 2016 January 3, 2017 through March 2, 2017 Maswik North Maswik South Single/Double…………………………………….……………$128.00 Single/Double…………………………………………………..$93.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$137.00 Triple…………………………………………………………………..$102.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$146.00 Quad……………………………………………………………………$111.00 Kachina and Thunderbird Lodges January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2016 Streetside Canyonside Single/Double………………………………………………….$215.00 Single/Double…………………………………………………..$232.00 Triple………………………………………………………………….$224.00 Triple…………………………………………………………………..$241.00 Quad…………………………………………………………………..$233.00 Quad……………………………………………………………………$250.00 For additional lodging information please visit our web site at: http://www.grandcanyonlodges.com/lodging/ •Arizona Lodging Tax Rate: 6.9% •Group Porterage: $4.00 per person roundtrip •Guest Room Attendant Fee: $1.50 per person •Rollaway: $10.00 per night based on availability •Children: Age 16 and under stay free when sharing the same room and bedding with
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  • Rim Trail U.S
    National Park Service Day Hike - Rim Trail U.S. Department of the Interior Grand Canyon National Park Trail Condition: Inclines to flat. Well defined. Shade along trail. Most of the trail is paved and some sections are accessible. Excellent walking for quiet views of the inner canyon and for visitors who desire an easy hike with minimal elevation change. In winter surfaces may be slippery or icy when snowy. Beware of lightning during summer thunderstorms. Leashed pets are permitted on the trail but not on park shuttle buses. Directions to Trailhead: Begin from any viewpoint in Grand Canyon Village or along Hermit Road. Can access the trail from many of the shuttle bus stops. Trailhead Elevation: 6,820 feet, varies approximately 200 feet. Note: NO water along trail. Water in Grand Canyon Village area and at Hermits Rest. The Rim Trail stretches from Pipe Creek Vista west to Hermits Rest, a distance of approximately twelve miles (19 km), most of the trail is paved. Between Pipe Creek Vista and Bright Angel Lodge only a few short sections of the trail have grades that exceed accessibility standards. West of Bright Angel Lodge, the Rim Trail narrows and climbs the Bright Angel Fault to viewpoints along Hermit Road. Between Powell Point and Monument Creek Vista the trail is a 3 foot wide dirt trail. The section of the Rim Trail between Monument Creek Vista and Hermits Rest is also known as the Hermit Road Greenway Trail. Services: Distance Destination W = Water (in miles) to Notes (heading west) T = Toilet next point W T Paved trail begins here and heads west towards the Pipe Creek Vista 1.3 village.
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  • Best Trails: National Park Hikes
    Best Trails, National Park Hikes -- National Geographic Page 1 of 3 Best Trails: National Park Hikes By Robert Earle Howells and Dan Grushkin 1. Grand Canyon National Park // Arizona GPS: 35°50'N 111°46'W Perhaps the most iconic of all natural wonders in North America, the Grand Canyon is pretty much obligatory fare for this lifetime. That said, it is only right to pay the ditch a little more homage than a tailgate picnic. Instead, venture away from the crowds and into the depths to absorb nature’s greatest work the same way it was made‚ slowly and in peace. One-Night Stand On a quick stop, there’s no time for a knee-pounding plummet, so tone down the ambition and focus on one thing: unmitigated splendor. From a base camp at North Rim Campground or the Grand Canyon Lodge, head for the Widforss Point Trail for a ten-mile (sixteen-kilometer) out-and-back hike. The gradual path ducks in and out of a fragrant evergreen forest only to emerge for a stunning view at Widforss Point. From there you’ll look south toward such landmark formations as the Brahma, Deva, and Zoroaster Temples and across to the South Rim. Three Days or More With all due respect for a rim-to-rim hike, the Hermit Trail, a 15.4-mile (24.8-kilometer) round-trip below the South Rim, delivers much of the same impact and none of the mule trains. Start at Hermits Rest off Hermit Road and descend into the red-rock abyss’s 3,800-foot (1,158-meter) plunge that was carved out for hikers by Santa Fe Railroad workers.
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  • S Grand Canyon National Park Grand Canyon Arizona – Images by Lee Foster by Lee Foster
    Arizona’s Grand Canyon National Park Grand Canyon Arizona – Images by Lee Foster by Lee Foster Lt. Joseph Christmas Ives wins top honors in the history of American travel for the classic misjudgment of interest in a travel destination. Ives wrote, in 1857, after viewing the Grand Canyon, “Ours has been the first, and will doubtless be the last, party of whites to visit this profitless locality.” Little did Ives know that Coronado and his men had gazed into these reaches earlier, but saw little profit in scenery and more in gold. Ives could not imagine that by the 21st century nearly five million annual visitors, both Americans and citizens from many other countries, would rank the Grand Canyon as one of the superb travel destinations on the planet. For spectacular vistas from dizzying heights and for technicolor transformations, especially at sunrise and sunset, the Grand Canyon is world class. A mile deep, 600 feet to 18 miles wide, and 277 miles long, the Grand Canyon offers a sublime spectacle, with a slice of geologic time visible on the vertical walls. Not content to be completely wrong about the Canyon, Ives went on to generalize about the Colorado River. “It seems intended by nature that the Colorado River, along the greater portion of its lonely and majestic way, shall be forever unvisited and undisturbed,” said Ives. The mighty Colorado River, eroding its way through Utah and entering Arizona from the north, cuts into the deep gorges of the Grand Canyon as it passes west. The river, moving at assured and moderate speed, pushes boulders ahead with ease.
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