Although it is only 10 miles as the crow flies from the South Rim, and is part of the same National Park, the North Rim of the Grand Canyon provides a different environmental and cultural experience for visitors. Even today, the North Rim remains more remote than the South Rim. Fewer tourists visit this side of the Canyon, and there are fewer accommodations and facilities here, giving many visitors a sense that they are getting more of a wilderness experience here than in the crush of sightseers along the South Rim. The North Rim is also 1,000 feet higher in elevation, giving it a colder, wetter climate. Because the area often gets heavy snows in the winter, the National Park Service only opens it from May to October.
Explore the North Rim
Fire tower at Bright Angel Point
Famed environmentalist and author Edward Abbey worked for four seasons at the Bright Angel fire tower as a lookout. His experiences inspired his novel Black Sun about a man who worked on a remote...
Grand Canyon Lodge
References: Anderson, Michael. Polishing the Jewel: An Administrative History of Grand Canyon National Park. GCA, 2000. Anderson, Michael, ed. A Gathering of Grand Canyon Historians. Proceedings of the Inaugural Grand Canyon History...
Uncle Dee Woolley’s cabin
References: Anderson, Michael. Polishing the Jewel: An Administrative History of Grand Canyon National ParkGrand Canyon Association, 2000. Rust, Joseph. “From the Dirty Devil to the Bright Angel: The History of David D....
Wylie Way Camps
Developing the Grand Canyon for scenic tourism, especially along the North Rim, was a difficult task because of its isolation from major population centers and transportation routes. Many entrepreneurs at the Canyon pioneered new...
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