Posts Tagged ‘Grand Canyon’

Grand Canyon Tour – Puts A Different Perspective On Life

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

The Grand Ravine Countrywide Park is deservedly classed as a World Heritage Site. It has an area of 1,218,375 acres, 1,904 square miles. The majority of the park is maintained as wasteland. It can be seen from the moon and is something that everybody should experience once or more in their lifetime. The Grand Ravine lies on the Colorado Plateau in northwest Arizona. The Ravine , carved over millions of years by the Colorado Stream , is enormous.

It averages four thousand feet deep for its whole 277 miles.

It is six thousand feet deep (a mile is 5,280 feet) at its deepest point and up to fifteen miles wide.

The Grand Ravine State Park is a rich and sundry biological habitat with 75 species of mammals, twenty-five species of fish, fifty species of reptiles and amphibians, twenty-five species of fish, and over three hundred species of birds.

These include some species that aren’t found outside of the Park in any way. Human activities have impacted on the Grand Ravine State Park in several ways. These include the advent of non-native plants and animals, the contamination of streams with fecal bacteria, haze due to air pollution and worst of all by the development of the Glen Canyon Dam in 1963. Our aircraft, quad bikes and automobiles bug the tranquility of the Park. You can see the Grand Ravine on foot, horseback, mule, quad bike, canoe, helicopter ride or in a tiny plane.

The temperature in the ravines gets terribly high during the day, and hikers should take recommendation from rangers on water supplies, required food and avoiding dehydration and heat stroke. If you’re hiking, camping or riding off the main trails, in the backcountry, you’ll need a permit. Allows can be had thru the Backcountry Info Center. Rangers patrol and check camps they find for authorizes and to test that campers are adhering to the conditions laid down in the permit.