Grand Canyon National Park
Grand Canyon Railway
ALL ABOARD TO THE GRAND CANYON!
More than 100 years ago the first passenger train arrived at the South Rim. Today, Grand Canyon Railway continues this tradition by providing daily service between Williams, Arizona, and Grand Canyon National Park. Every morning at 9 and 10:30 a.m., a vintage train leaves Williams en route to the canyon. Passengers travel in restored 1920s Harriman coaches arriving just steps from the edge of the South Rim in just two hours. You'll be refreshed and ready to enjoy an afternoon at one of the most beautiful places on Earth. The railway runs steam engines in the summer and diesel engines the remainder of the year.
A century ago most visitors arrived at the Grand Canyon by rail. In the early days, four U.S. presidents and countless others rode the rails to the Grand Canyon. Today, the historic railroad still makes the 65-mile trek across the Arizona high country every day of the year except Christmas Eve and Christmas.
While most passengers enjoy riding from Williams to the canyon and back on the same day, many spend a night or more on the South Rim before returning to Williams by rail. The railway provides travel packages suiting a variety of travel plans. For more information, visit www.thetrain.com, or call (800) THE TRAIN (843-8724).
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News from the Parks
December 2, 2008 - 1:03pm
For students of astronomy, Sunday and Monday night is the equivalent of a World Cup Final, a new Mac operating system, and a Zeppelin reunion show all rolled into one. That’s because, as Horizons guest blogger Pete Spotts noted in his post Sunday, Jupiter, Venus, and the moon will gather to direct a lopsided frown at North America, an arrangement that won’t happen again for another 44 years.
December 2, 2008 - 12:59pm
Fans of the hit movie “Twilight,” inspired by Stephenie Meyer’s vampire series, are swarming tiny Forks on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, where the novels are set, and checking out “Twilight”-themed tours, hotel packages and even food.
December 2, 2008 - 12:56pm
People from across the country gathered in Golden Gate Park's National AIDS Memorial Grove Monday to observe the 20th annual World AIDS Day.
December 2, 2008 - 12:37pm
Remember when Arizona Sen. John McCain criticized spending millions of taxpayer dollars to fund the DNA of grizzly bears in Montana during one of the presidential debates? “That’s us,” said David Restivo, a Roberts Wesleyan College alumnus and visual information specialist at Glacier National Park in Montana.
December 2, 2008 - 12:35pm
As the Great Smoky Mountains National Park prepares to celebrate its 75th year, students of history and geology are pondering questions that go back much farther than the park's creation in the 1930s. The most fascinating queries to them concern the actual formation of the mountains, their age and topography.
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