Handstands Around the World

a former gymnast with a neverending case of wanderlust


48 hours in Page, Arizona

Technically, the title of this post isn’t 100% accurate.

We did spend roughly 48 hours in and around Page, Arizona. But I’m going to extend the time and distance covered in this post by about 6 hours and 70 miles (115 km), respectively, so I can also share some photos of our drive from Utah to Page.

Our morning began in Zion National Park, packing up our campsite and heading out the east entrance on the Zion-Mount Carmel Highway, otherwise known as Utah Highway 9.

Outside the park, we turned south on US Highway 89, which soon splits into two branches: the main highway and US 89 Alt. We opted for the latter, which is the slightly longer but more scenic route between Kanab, Utah and Page, Arizona.


Table of Contents


The Grand Staircase

Within an hour of leaving Zion, we had begun our ascent from the red rock desert to Le Fevre Overlook, elevation 6800 feet (2070 m). Here, an expansive view to the north reveals most of the layers of The Grand Staircase – a stepwise sequence of rock layers spanning hundreds of millions of years of geologic history and stretching across the desert southwest from the Grand Canyon – home to the oldest and lowest layers – to Bryce Canyon – home to the newest and uppermost layers.

From Le Fevre Overlook, we could see all the way to Bryce Canyon!

Le Fevre Overlook

From this overlook, the road continues to climb, entering a beautiful ponderosa pine forest (which has since burned in the recent northern Arizona wildfires) and topping out at nearly 8000 feet (2440 m) of elevation, before beginning a steady descent into the Colorado River Basin.

Soon, we were back down to 4800 feet (1465 m) – roughly where our day began – and surrounded by red rocks once more.


Vermilion Cliffs National Monument

We were also now skirting along the southern border of Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, a largely wild and undeveloped section of the Grand Staircase named for its bands of deep red cliffs.

We were able to glimpse these cliffs from viewpoints alongside the highway, but I’d love to return someday and spend more time exploring this rugged, canyon-filled terrain.

Vermilion Cliffs National Monument

The Wave

Perhaps the most famous landmark in Vermilion Cliffs is The Wave, a uniquely-striated red, pink, and white rock feature that can only be visited by obtaining a permit, driving a rough dirt road, and hiking approximately 6.5 miles (10.5 km).

Unfortunately, despite entering both the advance and two-day-before lottery, we were not awarded a permit for this hike. We’ll keep trying, though, and hopefully we’ll be returning to this area someday in the not-so-distant future.

Photos and more information about visiting The Wave can be found here.


Glen Canyon National Recreation Area

After exiting Vermilion Cliffs, we entered into a narrow arm of the adjacent Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, an expansive NPS-managed area that encompasses Lake Powell. This would be our home for the next two days, though our campground was not in this section of the rec area.

We did, however, make a couple stops on our way through.

Marble Canyon/Navajo Bridge Interpretive Center

Stop #1 was at Marble Canyon, which is impossible to miss as the highway crosses it on a very high bridge. The Navajo Bridge was built in 1929 and remains the only vehicle route across the Colorado River for 600 miles (965 km)!

However, the original bridge eventually became unable to handle the volume and size of vehicle traffic. A new bridge, nearly identical in design to the old one, opened in 1995. The original bridge remains open for pedestrian traffic, so we parked at the Navajo Bridge Interpretive Center and, despite the blazing sun and 95°F (35°C) heat, walked all the way across.

Navajo Bridge: original on the right and new on the left
Walking across the original Navajo Bridge

If you don’t like heights, don’t look down while you’re walking or driving across. You’re 467 feet (142 m) above the river!

Colorado River flows through Marble Canyon, as seen from Navajo Bridge

For us, it was absolutely worth braving the heat, not only for the views, but because perched on the bridge struts – and occasionally soaring back and forth between them – were two California condors!

From a distance and with only my phone as a camera, I wasn’t able to capture them. But seeing these large birds in the wild, especially knowing their remarkable comeback from the brink of extinction, is an experience that will be forever imprinted in my mind.

Lees Ferry

Adjacent to Marble Canyon is the turnoff to Lees Ferry. This paved road is the only one within Glen Canyon that descends to the level of the river. Along the way, we passed some unique balanced rocks, a couple river access sites, and an old ranch. There is also a boat launch and campground here.

Balanced Rocks
Our lunch spot on the banks of the Colorado River

Lees Ferry is named for John and Emma Lee, who homesteaded here at the junction of the Paria and Colorado Rivers in the mid-1800s and began operating a ferry that was, at the time, one of the only crossings of the Colorado River in this area of Arizona.

The Lee family also built the Lonely Dell Ranch and planted an orchard. Today, some of the ranch buildings remain and the fruit trees, with the original ditch irrigation system, still bear fruit. Visitors can pick up to 5 lbs (2.2 kg) for personal consumption. Sadly, we were about a week too early for apricot season and all the other fruits wouldn’t be ripe for at least a month.

Orchards
Lonely Dell Ranch

Lake Powell/Glen Canyon Dam

From Marble Canyon and Lees Ferry, it was about a 45 minute drive up and around on US 89 to the Glen Canyon Dam, which forms the second largest manmade lake in the United States: Lake Powell. It took 17 years from completion of the dam for the reservoir to fill to capacity, and the lake and dam now produce power that is distributed to seven states.

A bridge – the largest arch bridge in the world, in fact, when it was built in 1959 – crosses the Colorado River immediately downstream from the dam. The pedestrian walkway along the side provides some of the best views of the dam.

Glen Canyon Bridge

Adjacent to the dam is the Carl Hayden Visitor Center. We stopped here to learn more about the dam, the Colorado River, and Lake Powell, and also to view the dam from the back porch.

The Glen Canyon Dam is 710 feet (216 m) high, 1560 feet (475 m) long, 25 feet (7 m) thick at top and 300 feet (91 m) thick at the base. According to an exhibit at the visitor center, that’s enough concrete to build a 4 lane highway from Phoenix to Chicago!

Our final activity in Glen Canyon was a boat tour of Lake Powell and Glen Canyon Dam. This tour departed from the Wahweap Marina and wove through the twisted waterways of Wahweap Bay and then down the Colorado River to the dam.

Wahweap Marina
Our tour boat

Our captain narrated parts of the journey, and we were able to spend most of the tour on the upper deck of the boat enjoying the views of Lake Powell and chatting with the other captain onboard.

Wahweap Bay
Made it to the Colorado River
Glen Canyon Dam

While this boat tour wasn’t our ideal plan for the day – we’d been hoping for either a permit for The Wave or the boat tour to Rainbow Bridge – it was a nice way to wrap up our time in Glen Canyon.

Wahweap

It’s not quite time to wrap up this post, though, as there are still a few pieces of our trip to touch on. Next up is Wahweap, which is the most developed site in the southern half of Glen Canyon.

Lake Powell from Wahweap Overlook

We spent two nights at Wahweap Campground, which offers coin-op showers and laundry as well as over 200 campsites. We stayed in the tent area, and while we had a great view from our campsite, it was hot and sandy and far from my favorite place we’ve ever stayed. More and more, it seems that campgrounds devote their best sites – which in this case included the ones with trees and shade – to RVs and toss the tent campers into the crappy outskirts.

Wahweap Campground

I would not stay here again. But the sunsets sure were gorgeous!

Our campsite
Sunset, night 1
On the second night, we headed down to Wahweap Beach to watch the sunset

Hiking

While predominately a boating destination, there are some hiking opportunities in Glen Canyon. We took advantage of two of the shorter ones in the Wahweap area one morning.

The Beehive Trail is located just north of Glen Canyon Dam at Beehive Campground. The trail is a 2 mile (3.2 km) lollipop loop, though we elected to only hike about half of it. We headed counterclockwise around the loop and took the marked spur trail out to a viewpoint of the Beehives.

Beehive Trail

From here, we returned to the main trail and took a shortcut across the slickrock to the other side of the loop and returned to the trailhead. I’m sure we missed some things by skipping the second half of the trail, but it was already getting hot and we had one more hike to do before our tour.

Viewpoint on the Beehive Trail

Hike #2 was the Hanging Garden Trail, located just off the highway on the opposite (east) side of the Glen Canyon Dam. The trail travels about 0.6 miles (1 km) through the desert to an oasis tucked away beneath a rock overhang.

Hanging Gardens Trail
View from the Hanging Gardens Trail

Hanging gardens form when sandstone layers sit atop a less porous layer of rock. Water easily seeps through the sandstone, but when it hits the harder layer it is forced out through cracks in the rock and emerges as a spring.

Here, moss and ferns and tiny orchids thrive! It was so different from anything else we saw in Glen Canyon.

Hanging Gardens

Also, for lack of a better place to put it, here’s a photo from our brief jaunt out to Antelope Point, one of the only places in the Rec Area with access to the lake (on foot; you can’t drive all the way down).

Antelope Point

Horseshoe Bend

Though it’s technically within Glen Canyon, I’m giving Horseshoe Bend its own section, because access to this instagram-famous site is administered by the city of Page.

We pulled into the parking lot mid-afternoon and, despite the scorching desert heat, it was absolutely packed. We paid our $10 admission (good for the day, though it does not allow you to leave and come back), parked, grabbed our water bottles, and set off for the roughly 1.2 mile (2 km) roundtrip hike out to Horseshoe Bend.

The trail is wide, flat, and gradually downhill, with a slightly steeper grade right at the end. I was still limping a bit from my earlier calf injury, so it took us longer than normal to cover the distance. But soon we were approaching the edge and glimpsing Horseshoe Bend with our own two eyes.

Horseshoe Bend, Arizona

I imagine many of you have seen images of Horseshoe Bend before. If you have, it’s probably easy to understand why it’s so famous. And so crowded. What my photos don’t show is the roughly 150 other people who were there with us, and that’s not counting all the people we passed on the trail.

Luckily, it’s expansive enough that there’s room to spread out. And everyone was pretty good about taking turns in the best photo spots and offering to take photos of each other.

I’m glad we went. That being said, this is not a place I feel the need to pay to see again.

Just a few minutes up the road from Horseshoe Bend is this view of the Colorado River and our first glimpse of Glen Canyon Dam

Antelope Canyon

Of course, no visit to Page is complete without a tour of Antelope Canyon. Along with The Wave and Horseshoe Bend, Antelope Canyon is the other instagram-famous site in the Page area. And, like Horseshoe Bend, this one is also on the verge of being loved to death.

There are two sections of Antelope Canyon – Upper and Lower – and both can only be visited on a guided tour. Tours are offered by about a half dozen Navajo Nation-owned tour companies based out of Page.

We opted for a tour of Upper Antelope Canyon, which I will be recounting in much more detail in the next post. For now, I’ll just say this: Upper Antelope Canyon is a magical place. I’m glad we visited. But the tour itself was crowded, rushed, and overpriced.


Food and Drink

Since we were camping, we ate most of our meals at our campsite. However, after our Antelope Canyon visit we stayed in Page for the afternoon and hit up the town’s only brewery: Grand Canyon Brewing + Distillery.

We walked in the door, and right away I knew I was going to love this place. It’s a large facility with a rustic vibe; wooden furniture, bar stools made from polished logs, etc. We ordered two flights and food – a hatch chili chicken sandwich for me and a chicken caesar salad for my husband – and really enjoyed our leisurely afternoon here. We also brought a 6-pack of their delicious prickly pear wheat ale home with us!

Flights at Grand Canyon Brewing

Time Zones

And lastly, let’s talk time zones, because it is a constant source of confusion for visitors to Page.

Arizona does not observe daylight savings time (DST). However, Utah and the Navajo Nation, which spans much of northern Arizona, do. Therefore, from early March through early November, Arizona is one hour behind Utah and the Navajo Nation.

Page is in Arizona but not in the Navajo Nation, so it does not observe DST. However, Utah is just a few miles away, and the Navajo Nation is even closer. For us, camped at Wahweap, we were less than half a mile from Utah – close enough that our phones would sometimes ping off a nearby tower and change back to DST.

This wouldn’t have been a problem, except both our Glen Canyon Dam and Antelope Canyon tours were operating in Arizona Time (AZT). We found ourselves frequently googling “what time is it in Page Arizona” just to be sure.

Moral of the story: if you’re staying in Page, Arizona, and you have tickets or reservations for anything, make sure you know (a) what time zone the tickets are in, (b) what time zone you are in, and (c) what time it actually is.

Or you could forgo scheduled events entirely, ignore the clock, and lose yourself amongst the red rocks and blue water and awe-inspiring scenery in and around Page, Arizona.


Up next: chasing sunbeams in Upper Antelope Canyon


37 responses to “48 hours in Page, Arizona”

  1. Stunning 😍.

  2. I always seem to be in awe of your hiking efforts, and here we are again, this time due to the staggering heat. Not for the fainthearted. You took in some breathtaking scenery, I love the colour of the Colorado River, the curious balanced rocks and the clear, shallow waters of Antelope Point. Oh and yeah, it’s not hard to see why folk flock to the Horseshoe Bend. What can you do? Those were some well-earned flights, I’d say Diana.

    1. Thanks, Leighton, I’m glad we could take you along for the ride and that you enjoyed it. That beer tasted so good after a long hot day in the desert.

  3. Oooh there’s so much I love in here! Those hanging gardens are super neat. And the scale of those dams is unlike anything we have here in Scotland. I would walk in 35-degree heat for those views from the bridges 🙂 I love that picture of Horseshoe Bend (but know what you mean about feeling you’ve seen a place and wouldn’t feel the need to pay to return) and am looking forward to reading about your experience of Antelope Canyon.

    1. Thank you! We really loved the gardens. We loved all of it, actually, despite the heat.

  4. Good lord! I’m dizzy from your explanation of the time zones! Bummer about the Wave, but you was a LOT of really great things. As a non-tent camper, I’m sorry to hear you tenters are getting the short end of the campsite stick. I wonder if that’s because they can charge RVers so much more?

    1. Yeah, the time zones thing makes me very glad I live smack dab in the middle of a time zone and don’t have to worry about this on a daily basis.

      That’s an interesting thought about the camping, and I’m sure that’s at least part of the explanation.

  5. We drove from Utah to Page in the dark and missed out on the scenery and many of these stops. I applaud your efforts to hike in the heat! We found the Horseshoe Bend overly crowded too. Yah, the view is nice, but not sure it was worth $10. Looking forward to hearing more about your tour of the Upper Antelope Canyon. We did the Lower Canyon. Lucky for us they were still limiting group sizes because of the pandemic. And even then I thought it was busy, so I can only imagine what it’s like now.

    1. Oh no! That’s a bummer that you weren’t able to see some of this. But I’m glad you made it to Horseshoe Bend and Antelope Canyon at least. Smaller groups must have been really nice there.

  6. It’s such a beautiful part of the world, with such striking landscapes. The photos of horseshoe bend are amazing, so I’m sad to hear it’s so busy with tourists. The same can be said for Antelope Canyon, but both feel like must visits on a trip to Paige 🙂

    1. Yeah, despite the crowds we were glad we visited both places. They’re popular for a reason.

  7. Stunning pictures! I just love this area of Utah/Arizona with all the red rocks and desert views. The Wave and Antelope Canyon are both on my wish list. I’m going to cross my fingers for you that you the permit for the Wave so I can follow along with you to it. 🙂 I also love that you included the section about the time zones in Arizona because it always messes me up trying to figure out what time it is there.

    1. Thank you, I hope we get it too. Eventually it has to work out, right?

  8. The hanging gardens are cool in the middle of the desert, but I think I like the views from the bridges the best. Looking forward to Antelope Canyon to see if you convince me to go or not go 😊 Maggie

    1. We liked the bridge views as well. And oh boy, the pressure is on. I’m not sure I’ll succeed in my convincing…

  9. The bridges are very impressive and, despite the heat, I understand the appeal of crossing them to physically feel the full impact of the surrounding landscape. Having seen condors fly in South America, it’s a beautiful sight indeed. I can’t wait to see more photos of Antelope Canyon, the first ones are already fascinating.

    1. The condor sighting was really special. Antelope Canyon post will be next week 😊

  10. A lot of beautiful stops between Zion and Page! My dad and I did a similar route, but reversed, several years ago: we definitely saw Horseshoe Bend (and the crowds!), and we did the Hanging Garden trail, which was a lovely little oasis. We’d booked tickets for Antelope Canyon, but sadly, the tour got cancelled due to torrential rain: that was our second time trying to go, as the first attempt was thwarted by the pandemic. I’m hoping third time’s the charm when I return to Arizona some day! Glad you were able to see this magical canyon, Diana 😊

    1. Oh fun. One of these days you’ll make it to Antelope Canyon!

  11. The Navajo Bridge looks breathtakingly beautiful, and what a view that you can see around it! The whole area truly looks incredible.

    1. It really was such a neat place to visit! There’s a lot in a relatively small area.

  12. This area looks so much different during the warm months! I visited in January years ago, and the area was cold, windy and mostly devoid of people. How did I never realize the number of times we changed time zones driving through there either?!? Ignorance is bliss, I suppose.

    1. Oooh, I’m sure the weather would have been much more pleasant in January. It was so hot for us. And yeah, the time zone thing is so confusing.

  13. Sooooo true about tent sites! I don’t get why a house on wheels (RV) needs a nice shady spot when they’ll just sit in there with the generator and AC going. KOAs are becoming the worse, but sometimes they are just the best camping option along a route. Yes, I cannot wait to set up my tent on rocks two feet from another tent…

    The time zone thing had me laughing driving through the area. I gave up on knowing what time it was, but luckily did not have any tours booked!

    1. Exactly! Give the tent campers the shade and the soft ground. When I first booked this trip I couldn’t get into the Zion campground; all I could find was a site outside the park with cement tent pads for $80/night. Thank goodness we were able to get into the park campground, because what a total ripoff.

  14. While we did not spend 48 hours in Page, we did pass through twice and may have spent 6 hours there, as we saw Upper Antelope Canyon, Horseshoe Bend, Lake Powell and the Glen Canyon Dam. There is a lot going on here and after our 7 day canyon tour of Arizona and Utah, we are glad we saw it but see no need to come back and pay again. Thanks for sharing your travels Diana. Happy Wednesday. Allan

    1. Sounds like you got in a pretty good tour even if it was just for a few hours!

  15. Walking across the original Navajo Bridge looks like an amazing experience, as it offers breathtaking views of the Colorado River and the surrounding Grand Canyon landscape and allows visitors to appreciate the impressive engineering and the stunning natural scenery from a unique vantage point. Thanks for sharing, and have a good day 🙂 Aiva xx

    1. Thanks, Aiva!

  16. Oh, my word, those are two very HIGH bridges (count me out), but thanks for the views! Love your lunch spot on the banks of the Colorado River and just in general all the amazing rock formations. Lovely sunset photos at Wahweap. It’s amazing how much Horseshoe Bend looks like Hell’s Corner at the Fish River Canyon in Namibia (which you’ve commented on recently on our blog). Great post, thanks for sharing, Diana.

    1. You’re right, I do see the resemblance there!

  17. You captured the classic Horseshoe Bend photo! 😁 We’ve been to Lake Powell in the last few years but not since they decommissioned and removed that old coal-fired power station at Page.

    1. I did! I was excited for that. Only thing better would have been capturing that photo at sunset. I had no idea there used to be a coal plant there, but good that it was removed. I’m sure the air quality and views have benefitted from that.

      1. After the plant’s 775-foot tall smoke stacks came down in 2020, it was no longer easy to tell there was ever a coal-fired generating station near Page. The plant’s demise was a win for air quality in the SW, but a major financial blow to the Hopi tribe who benefited from its jobs and tax revenue.

        1. Oooh, I didn’t think about that aspect to it.

  18. crappy tent sites……. this is why I usually pay a few extra bucks to tent camp in the RV area which is allowed in Texas parks. Too many times tent sites are either 1 mile in on the trail or the middle of an open field.

    1. That’s nice that that’s allowed. I’ve definitely been places where that was not allowed.

Leave a Reply to Vanmarmot’s TravelsCancel reply