A chronicle of our Arizona road trip, from June 8 to June 16, 2011.
Days 1 & 2: Cameron and Grand Canyon National Park
We rolled out the driveway a little after 9 a.m. on a Wednesday morning, pumped with anticipation for this year's road trip. Traveling up our local stretch of Interstate 15, we were headed for the eastbound Interstate 40, the major artery from Southern California into northern Arizona. Last year, we'd traveled north to visit grandparents and family living outside of Portland. The year before that, we'd traveled north again, to the beautiful coastal region around Big Sur and Monterey. This year, it was time to head in a different direction: east for Arizona!
I started developing the master plan for our trip back in February. I've found that often, the best lodging choices book up early in the year, and this trip was no different. Because I hadn't considered visiting Grand Canyon National Park way back in the summer of 2010, even by Feb. '11, the vast majority of lodging within the park was already booked up – and at this early stage, I had very flexible dates. All I knew for sure was that we wanted to travel sometime in June, to avoid the worst of the summer heat and crowds. But I was already too late: plugging dates into the reservation system at the
official lodging site revealed that the historic El Tovar Lodge, and the cabins and rooms at Bright Angel, were already booked fairly solid. So, if you're even thinking of a trip to the Canyon, and want to stay conveniently within the park, I recommend firming up your plans and making your reservations as early as possible at the National Park lodging website, maintained by Xanterra:
Grand Canyon Lodges.com
My first plan of attack when considering any destination is, of course, the web. (Make that,
hours and hours on the web.) But when I need to sink in deeper, I look to guidebooks, where I can easily flip back and forth, and also get vetted, verified information and opinions about a place. So I checked out the
Frommer's Arizona from the library, and spent several late nights filling my head with ideas. One idea I got from the guidebook was to avoid the crowded southern entrance to the South Rim of the Grand Canyon (and also avoid the overpriced chain motels clustered in Williams, the biggest nearby town), and to enter the park from the less-traveled eastern entrance.