This tour is a free shuttle from most hotels in Page. It includes a comfortable air-conditioned Van, professional Navajo guide, bottled water, and warm service, which is the most important.
Hotel pick up → Antelope Canyon(Upper or Lower) → Glen Canyon Dam Overlook → Horseshose Bend
There are three Antelope Canyons to choose from:
[Option 1: Upper Antelope Canyon]
It is the most frequently visited by tourists and beams of direct sunlight radiating down from openings at the top of the canyon are much more common.
[Option 2: Lower Antelope Canyon]
The lower canyon is in the shape of a "V" and shallower than the Upper Antelope. Lighting is better in the early hours and late morning.
[Horseshoe Bend] All tours will be visited here.
[Glen Canyon Dam Overlook]
A short hike down a set of rock-carved stairs leads to this viewpoint on the rim of the river & dam. This short walk takes you to a viewpoint on the canyon rim high above the Colorado River.
Please arrive 10 minutes early. Customers must contact the tour guide the day before departure to double confirm the pick-up information. Hotels that do not offer pick-up: Lake Powell Resort, Antelope Point RV Park, Antelope Canyon Inn.
Safeway (parking lot). Please select this departure point, if you arrive in the city of Page that day. Nearby hotel to pick up if your hotel is not on the list.
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon is a slot canyon in the American Southwest, on Navajo land east of Lechee, Arizona. It includes five separate, scenic slot canyon sections on the Navajo Reservation.
The Lower Antelope Canyon, called Hazdistazí, or 'spiral rock arches' by the Navajo, is located several miles from the Upper Antelope Canyon. Prior to the installation of metal stairways, visiting the canyon required climbing pre-installed ladders in certain areas.
Upper Antelope Canyon is called Ts bighnln, 'the place where water runs through rocks' by the Navajo. It is the most frequently visited by tourists because its entrance and entire length are at ground level, requiring no climbing; and because beams of direct sunlight radiating down from openings at the top of the canyon are much more common. Beams occur most often in summer, as they require the sun to be high in the sky. Winter colors are more muted.
Horseshoe Bend is a horseshoe-shaped incised meander of the Colorado River, located in the town of Page, Arizona, United States. The hike is about .6 miles one-way to the overlook. The overlook is about a 1,000 meter drop, looking down onto the Colorado River.
This scenic view provides spectacular vistas of the Colorado River as it flows through Glen Canyon and of Glen Canyon Dam itself. From the parking area, follow the metal handrail down the uneven rock steps.
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All sales are final. No refund is available for cancellations.
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This experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason. If you cancel or ask for an amendment, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
You will not receive a refund if you cancel.
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