Grand Canyon National Park will bid farewell to Superintendent Steve Martin on January 1, 2011, when he retires from the National Park Service. The University of Arizona graduate began his sprawling thirty-five year career in 1975 as a river ranger at Grand Canyon National Park. His subsequently served in leadership posts in numerous parks, and rose through the ranks of the NPS into the top career position of Deputy Director in Washington, D.C. Martin’s impressive legacy at Grand Canyon includes overseeing the construction of numerous high profile infrastructure projects including the multi-phase construction that has dramatically changed the visitor experience at the former Canyon View Information Plaza and nearby Mather Point. An avid hiker and river runner, Martin will no doubt continue to be a frequent traveler in the canyon’s backcountry. His replacement will be announced in the coming weeks. Thanks Steve! For more career highlights follow this link http://www.nps.gov/grca/parknews/2010-12-07_retier.htm
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Two Can Be a Charm When Hiking the Canyon
As he spring hiking season kicks in, it is worth remembering that 2009 was an unusually harsh year on solo hikers at Grand Canyon. In four separate incidents, men hiking alone have gone missing in the backcountry, their bodies to be recovered days later by Search and Rescue personnel. The causes of death range from falling to heat related illness.
These cautionary tales are a stark reminder that hiking with a companion dramatically increases your chances of survival should something go wrong. In the absence of a satellite telephone, sending a fellow hiker to alert park rangers is the only way to get an injured comrade to definitive care.
If you must hike alone, be sure you know the route, have an emergency plan, keep a realistic itinerary, and leave a detailed schedule with a reliable friend or family member. Hiking alone can be a wonderful experience. But it requires taking extra precautions and a keen understanding of the additional risks.
Strolling Through Earth History
Trying to comprehend the vast geologic time recorded in Grand Canyon’s visible rock layers is a daunting task. A nearly two billion year span from top to bottom is enough to bewilder even the most hardened geologist. Help is arriving in the form of the park’s new Trail of Time. This assortment of wayside exhibits, viewing tubes, and trail markers spaced a meter apart (each representing a million years), will stretch form Yavapai Observation Station to Verkamp’s Visitor Center just east of Grand Canyon Village.
Collectively these teaching tools should help park visitors wrap their intellect around the otherwise abstract concept of our planetary history. The next phase of construction will begin on March 1st, with project completion slated for the late spring/early summer. This leisurely stroll on a paved walkway is suitable for all ages, and wheelchair accessible. If you’re visiting this summer, be sure to work it into your itinerary.
Bicycle Rentals Now Available in Park
For years the park service has been creating a bicycle-friendly infrastructure throughout the developed South Rim and portions of the Greenway Trail System. Bike enthusiasts have enjoyed the fruits of these efforts; often with a tinge of guilt to have unfettered access (and no motorized competition save for shuttle buses) to spectacular stretches of pavement like Hermit Road (formerly West Rim Drive). "Where are the other cyclists?" I’ve heard on more than one occasion.
On May 1st, they arrived. The park service has awarded a bicycle concession to Bright Angel Bicycles. Rentals and tours are now available throughout the year. It's a great way for the whole family to leave the car behind and enjoy a carbon-friendly spin along the rim of the grandest of canyons.
Friday, February 12, 2010
2009, A Year in Review
The Grand Canyon has often been described as "timeless". But we calendar-driven humans can't help ourselves as we prepare to bid another year farewell. And it’s been a memorable twelve months indeed. Of course, the list of newsworthy headlines from the passing year would be too long to mention. But a few notable trends and happenings are worthy of special mention.
Despite the global economic woes, visitors still flocked to the grandest of canyons (though demonstrating a newfound frugality as local merchants would quickly point out). Their enthusiasm for public lands may have been fueled in part by the Ken Burns PBS documentary on national parks. Burns' high-profile production is rumored to be stimulating attendance system wide and will no doubt cement the critical role of the national parks in our collective psyche for decades to come.
Speaking of decades, Grand Canyon National Park celebrated its 90th birthday in 2009, and marked the occasion on the same day the park service officially opened the new Verkamps Visitor Center in Grand Canyon Village. Combined with the sweeping changes occurring at the main Visitor Center near Mather Point, the NPS has dramatically improved its ability to share the amazing story of Grand Canyon with the general public.
Other changes to the visitor experience in 2009 include the permanent closing of popular Mather Point to vehicular traffic, a rerouting of the historic mule day rides from the Bright Angel Trail to one through the forested South Rim, and new procedures for obtaining backcountry permits that eliminate the advantage to applying in person.
Finally, among the millions inspired by the Grand Canyon this year there were a handful of hikers that met their fate between the canyon walls. As we begin a new decade, we do well to honor their passion for the Grand Canyon, and to redouble our own efforts to cherish and protect this treasured landscape.
Jaw-Dropping Snowstorm Pummels the Park
Fifty-plus inches. That is the amount of snow that blanketed northern Arizona during the third week of January, and Grand Canyon National Park was by no means spared. After watching the weather-related destruction in California, park residents braced for the worst—and it arrived in the form of a multi-day pile up that will be talked about for years.
The storm resulted in a virtual shutdown of the region. Roads were closed, businesses shuttered, tourists stranded. When it was all over the views were as glorious as they were unsettling. The trade-off for scenic splendor was leaky roofs and bewildered critters, often up to their necks in wet heavy snow. In sixteen years in the park I’ve never seen anything like it.
Note: If you’re traveling to the park any time soon, expect heavy snow on all trails, and limited access to unpaved thoroughfares.