My brother and I got extremely lucky and snagged a reservation for a 4 person, private cabin at Phantom Ranch for Sunday night over this Labor Day weekend. Normally you have to make reservations a year in advance, but there was a cancellation right before he called the reservation # for another reason. Xanterra is the management company for a bunch of different parks. The agent mentioned it was available and he booked it on the spot.
We drove from the SF Bay Area to Laughlin, Nevada on Friday after the kids got out from school, arriving just after 1am. The next day it was only about 3.5 hours to the south rim of the Grand Canyon where we had a room reserved at the Thunderbird Lodge, only a few steps from the canyon rim next to the Bright Angel Lodge. Sunset that evening was amazing!
The next morning we caught the 6am hikers express bus to the South Kaibab trail head and began our 7 mile descent into the canyon. This trail is described as a ridge trail as it follows the ridge line contours with breathtaking views on the way down. We were hit with a light rainstorm for the first hour or so. It was a welcome relief from the heat. We made it to the bottom in roughly 3 hours.
My son enjoying the view from the overlook leading to the inner gorge! Phantom Ranch is in the tree filled canyon leading up the opposite side of the canyon.
If you have never been to Phantom Ranch before, I would compare it to the Yosemite High Sierra Camp layout, except it has power and running water and the store will be happy to run your credit card for a couple of beers or a carafe of wine. In addition, there are cute little cabins with private bathrooms and air conditioning, perfect for an early afternoon nap! We purchased a steak dinner, breakfast, and a sack lunch for the next day on our way up the Bright Angel Trail. Everything was wonderful. Not as gourmet as the HSC's but wonderful nonetheless.
The next morning it was up for breakfast at 6am and on the trail by 7:15am. We decided (as many recommended) to return via the Bright Angel Trail. This trail, by contrast, is a canyon trail. It follows the canyon bottom as it winds its way up from the river. It is 10 miles or so to the canyon rim but has a bit more of a gradual climb. Don't let my description fool you though. The last four miles of this trail climb nearly 3,000 ft in a series of incredible switchbacks that climb the canyon walls. Truly an amazing trail!
Suspension bridges over the Colorado River
Near the top of the trail looking down!
On Monday morning, we woke up at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, climbed nearly 4,300 feet over 10 miles, drove 11.5 hours home, and somehow made it to work/school on Tuesday. The trip of a lifetime!
"It is all very beautiful and magical here - a quality which cannot be described. You have to live it and breath it., let the sun bake it into you" - Ansel Adams
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/05/2012 09:39AM by Jayabrams.