Grand Canyon National Park, one of the Seven Wonders of the World, almost needs no introduction. One thing is for sure: visitors to the famous site in Arizona can go back time and again and never see it exactly the same way twice.

The park includes a number of National Historic Landmarks like the Mary Colter designed buildings – Desert View Watchtower, Hermit’s Rest, Hopi House, and the Lookout.


1. Havasu Falls

Havasu Falls
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Havasu Falls is one of the most gorgeous falls in the Grand Canyon, but it is difficult to reach. Visitors must hike 10 miles into the canyon to be rewarded with this blue-green waterfall.

Hiking the 10 miles back up to the rim post-visit is the most challenging part of the trek, but well worth the effort.

This international attraction draws throngs of visitors every year, and it is difficult to get a reservation. Once there, visitors will find turquoise waters and spectacular waterfalls.

Wildland Trekking offers multi-day hikes to Havasupai and is a good choice to help hikers get there. Patience is key for getting a permit to hike to the falls.

160 Main Street, Supai, Arizona, Phone: 928-448-2180


2. Horseshoe Bend

Horseshoe Bend
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Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend top the list of attractions for travelers coming to the Grand Canyon from the eastern end. Horseshoe Bend is 5 miles outside Grand Canyon National Park in Glen Canyon.

The horseshoe-shaped bend in the Colorado River provides visitors and photographers with spectacular views. Visitors can choose from a number of tours that will help them experience Horseshoe Bend from the river, the air, or on foot.

Tours start in Las Vegas, Flagstaff, the Grand Canyon, and Page, Arizona. Visitors can also experience Horseshoe Bend on self-guided tours.

Glen Canyon and Antelope Canyon are often paired with a visit to Horseshoe Bend.

Highway 89 South, Page, Arizona, Phone: 928-608-6200


3. Black Suspension Bridge

Black Suspension Bridge
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Black Suspension Bridge is also known as the Kaibab Bridge because it connects the North Rim with the South Rim via the Kaibab Trail. Built in 1928, it became the first safe passageway between north and south Kaibab. Prior to that, the only way across the Colorado River was hopping aboard a steel cage that dangled precariously from a cableway above the river. Today, it’s still one of few bridges to cross the Colorado River. In fact, other than the nearby Silver Bridge pedestrian bridge, Black Suspension Bridge is the only one for hundreds of miles. It’s popular with rim-to-rim hikers, visitors to Phantom Ranch, and guests on inner canyon mule rides. The bridge view of the canyon from 65 feet above the Colorado River is impressive.

Grand Canyon National Park, North Rim, AZ, Phone: 928-638-7888



4. Bright Angel History Room

Bright Angel History Room
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Bright Angel History Room is dedicated to genius Grand Canyon architect Mary Colter. The History Room is located inside Bright Angel Lodge in Grand Canyon Village. The rock fireplace is reflective of Colter’s architectural style. Visitors may notice that the geological sequence of the rocks in the fireplace reflect the same sequence as from river to rim along the Bright Angel Trail. The fireplace’s base uses granite-veined rock that is 800 million to over one billion years old. It’s a scientifically accurate representation of the geological natural environment of the Grand Canyon and is reflective of the painstaking perfectionism of Colter’s architectural choices.

9 Village Loop Drive, Grand Canyon Village, AZ, Phone: 928-638-2631


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5. Canyon Trail Rides

Canyon Trail Rides
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Canyon Trail Rides guides riders on mule rides along the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. This is the lesser visited side of the canyon, one which many visitors find more fascinating. Canyon Trail Rides has 1-hour and 3-hour mule ride trips. The 1-hour trips traverse the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Riders must be at least 7 years old to participate. The 3-hour rim ride to Uncle Jim’s Point follows the remote Ken Patrick Trail through woods and meadows. Riders must be 10 years old on this trip. The 3-hour mule ride to Supai Tunnel is the only one to descend partially into the Grand Canyon, and this trip requires riders to be at least 10 years old, too.

280 Bryce Way, Tropic, UT, Phone: 435-679-8665


6. Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Desert View Drive

Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Desert View Drive
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Desert View Drive is the name for Arizona Highway 64, which runs between Grand Canyon Village and the settlement of Desert View on the Canyon’s eastern edge. Those visiting the Grand Canyon coming from the east will get their first glimpse of the canyon along this scenic drive, including views of the Colorado River cutting through it. Other highlights along the drive are Mary Colton’s Watchtower, which is a must-do, and the Tusayan Ruin and Museum, which commemorates the remains of an Ancestral Puebloan village. At the Watchtower, visitors can expect a visitor station, bookstore, gift shop, general store, and seasonal campground. There are six well-developed viewpoints of the canyon, four picnic areas, and five unmarked pullouts.

Arizona Highway 64, Grand Canyon National Park, South Rim, AZ, Phone: 928-638-7888


7. Grand Canyon Railway & Hotel

Grand Canyon Railway & Hotel
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The Grand Canyon Railway & Hotel has a storied past that began in 1901. It was instrumental in bringing construction materials to build Grand Canyon Village in the early 1900s as well as delivering water to the village until 1926. Passenger service to the canyon stopped in 1968 with the popularity of automobiles, and resumed in 1989. It now brings over 50,000 people sans their cars to the Grand Canyon, helping to preserve the site. Numerous specialty rides throughout the year include Halloween and Christmas.

233 North Grand Canyon Boulevard, Williams, AZ, Phone: 928-635-4010



8. Grand Canyon Skywalk

Grand Canyon Skywalk
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Grand Canyon Skywalk provides a premier Grand Canyon West travel experience. The glass floor of the Skywalk juts out over the cliffside 4,000 feet above the canyon floor at Eagle Point. The Skywalk is 10 feet wide, and the horseshoe-shaped attraction extends 70 feet out from the rim of the canyon. Visitors first purchase a Hualapai Legacy Day Pass, which allows entry to tribal land and includes shuttle services to Eagle Point, Guano Point, and Hualapai Ranch. The Skywalk glass bridge is an add-on. VIP tickets include shuttle services, the Skywalk, a Hualapai tour guide, a Native American gift, a meal, a visitation certificate, and a photo opportunity with Hualapai members.

Eagle Point Road, Peach Springs, AZ, Phone: 888-868-9378


9. Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Tusayan Ruin and Museum

Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Tusayan Ruin and Museum
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Tusayan Ruin and Museum is an Ancestral Puebloan Indian site that is 800 years old. It is one of Grand Canyon National Park’s major archeological sites and comprises a small U-shaped pueblo with a kiva, living area, and storage rooms. It sits at the end of a flat trail that runs from the museum. Visitors can learn about the ruins at the museum and take a self-guided tour or opt for a ranger-led tour. In the museum, guests will find 2,000 to 4,000-year-old artifacts that tell the story of the prehistoric people who lived there. There is also a museum bookstore for more in-depth learning.

Arizona Highway 64, Grand Canyon, AZ, Phone: 928-638-2305


10. Desert View Watchtower

Desert View Watchtower
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The genius Grand Canyon architect Mary Colter designed the Ancestral Puebloan-style Desert View Watchtower. The 70-foot-high stone building, also known as Indian Watchtower, was built in 1932. Murals inside the Watchtower were done by Hopi artist Fred Kabotie. Visitors will first want to look up from the bottom of the stairs in the Watchtower at the spectacular mural on the ceiling. Climbing the 85 steps to the top of the tower rewards visitors with a 360-degree view. Guests will be able to see a portion of the Colorado River as well as the Painted Desert. In the Kiva Room, visitors will have expansive views of the canyon through large windows; it is also a book and gift shop. This National Historic Landmark is a must-do.

Grand Canyon Village, AZ, Phone: 928-638-8960


11. Yavapai Geology Museum

Yavapai Geology Museum
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The Yavapai Geology Museum, built in 1928, was placed precisely so that geologists could observe and understand the geology of the canyon. Architect Herbert Maier designed it to blend in with its environment, and local materials like ponderosa pine and Kaibab limestone were used in its construction. Inside, visitors will find a near perfect topographic model of the canyon view from the Yavapai Observation Station. It provides a tactile representation of the Grand Canyon in scale. Other highlights are interpretive panels, three-dimensional models, and exquisite artwork. Visitors can compare the view from the observation deck to the topographic model. The museum has a souvenir shop and book store, too.

Grand Canyon Village, AZ, Phone: 928-638-7890


12. Grand Canyon Village

Grand Canyon Village
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Grand Canyon Village is the busiest part of the entire Grand Canyon, and also the area with the most lookouts. It’s divided into three general areas, the visitor center and Mather Point, Market Plaza, and the Historic District. The Village Shuttle Buses make for the easiest way to explore the village and the South Rim. At the visitor center, guests can watch the 20-minute movie Grand Canyon: A Journey of Wonder, followed by a walk out to Mather Point. In the Historic District, visitors will find Mary Colter’s Lookout Studio, Hopi House, the Train Depot, Verkamp’s Visitor Center, and Kolb Studio. Market Plaza includes a deli and general store, US post office, cafeteria, gift shop, check-in for Yavapai Lodge, and shuttle bus pick-up.

Grand Canyon National Park, South Rim, AZ, Phone: 928-638-7888


13. Hualapai River Runners Rafting

Hualapai River Runners Rafting
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The Grand Canyon is one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World, and one of the best ways to see its majesty is from a raft on the Colorado River. Rafters will see millions of years’ worth of rock layers on the rugged canyon walls – limestone, sandstone, shale, granite, and schist – up close. Rafting trip options are either 1 or 2-day trips. The 1-day trips follow a 12-mile journey through whitewater rapids followed by a lunch at Travertine Cavern Falls and a smooth water ride, while the two-day trips follow the same path on day one, but camp at Spencer Canyon that night. On day two, participants take a leisurely ride on power pontoon boats as a guide narrates, then take a helicopter back to the West Rim.

160 Main Street, Supai, AZ, Phone: 928-448-2180


14. Papillon Grand Canyon Helicopters

Papillon Grand Canyon Helicopters
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Papillon Grand Canyon Helicopters offers visitors unique aerial experiences from four locations: Las Vegas, Grand Canyon National Park, Lake Powell/Page, and Grand Canyon West. Adventurers can take one of several tours from each departure point. All tours return guests back to their departure points. There are six tour options from Las Vegas, four from Grand Canyon National Park, three from Lake Powell, and two from Grand Canyon West. Some tours are combination tours with another adventure. Some tours even skip the aerial part altogether, like the Canyon Smooth Water Bus Trip, which is a combination bus and smooth-water raft trip. Choices range from 40 minutes to 12.5 hours.

3Phone: 702-736-6342


15. Paragon Skydive

Paragon Skydive
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This is one of the most exhilarating ways to experience Grand Canyon National Park. Paragon Skydive, located at the Grand Canyon National Park Airport in Tusayan, is committed to safety, and skydivers can feel secure that former World Champion Skydivers are running the show. Tandem skydives are provided with qualified tandem instructors. After a brief video, some paperwork, and being outfitted in the gear, skydivers are ready for an adrenaline rushing freefall at speeds up to 136 mph. When the chute opens, there is a rapid deceleration, and participants gently float to Earth with a spectacular bird’s eye view of the Grand Canyon.

Grand Canyon National Airport, 3551 Airport Road, Grand Canyon Village, AZ, Phone: 928-224-9661


16. Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Ranger Program

Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Ranger Program
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Grand Canyon National Parks Ranger Programs offer visitors to the canyon three departure points for ranger activities – South Rim Village, South Rim Desert View, and North Rim. At the South Rim Village, ranger programs include history walks, Kolb Studio tours, Yavapai Geology tours, wildlife tours, and night sky tours. There are also a number of evening lectures where visitors can learn more about the canyon. Desert View Ranger programs include learning about the Colorado River, Desert View Watchtower, and Tusayan Ruins. At the North Rim, Ranger Programs are seasonal, because the rim is only open to visitors May through October. Families visiting the canyon should also check out the Junior Ranger Programs.

Grand Canyon National Park, AZ, Phone: 928-638-7888


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17. Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Scenic Hermit Road

Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Scenic Hermit Road
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The Scenic Hermit Road is one of the more popular locations along the Grand Canyon. It stretches for 7 miles along the South Rim from Grand Canyon Village to Hermits Rest. During much of the year it is closed to private vehicles, but is instead serviced by the park’s free hop-on hop-off shuttle bus and commercial buses offering paid guided South Rim tours. The Canyon Rim Trail is also popular with hikers and bikers, who can hike and bike the entire length of the road or parts of it using the shuttles to assist. There are nine unique scenic viewing points along Hermit Road, which is what makes it so amazing.

Grand Canyon National Park, AZ, Phone: 928-638-7888


18. South Rim Mule Trips

South Rim Mule Trips
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Another spectacular way to experience the Grand Canyon is on a mule ride. Visitors to the Canyon can choose from South Rim Mule Rides, North Rim Mule Rides, and National Forest Trail Rides. Each mule ride departure point offers a vastly different experience. South Rim mule rides are the only ones that descend to the floor of the canyon, and require 13-month advance reservations. North Rim mule rides stick to rim trails or descend as far as Supai Tunnel. They are easier to get and can be reserved in the Grand Canyon Lodge lobby. There are 1 and 2-hour forest trail rides through Kaibab National Forest available through Apache Stables, near the park’s South Entrance.

Grand Canyon National Park, AZ, Phone: 928-638-7888


19. Wildland Trekking Company

Wildland Trekking Company
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Wildland Trekking Company offers visitors five types of guided hiking experiences at the Grand Canyon. There are 12 backpacking tours to choose from, ranging from 3 to 7 days, including three variations of rim-to-rim hikes. They have three stock/porter adventure backpacking hikes to the Grand Canyon and Havasu Falls. Two classic base camp hiking tours on either rim are 3 and 4 days long. Inn-based Grand Canyon hiking tours range from 3 to 5 days, including 2 days to Phantom Ranch on the floor of the canyon. Five easy day hikes are also available.

4025 East Huntington, Suite 150, Flagstaff, AZ, Phone: 800-715-4453


20. Grand Canyon North Rim Lodge

Grand Canyon North Rim Lodge
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Grand Canyon North Rim Lodge was originally built in 1928, then rebuilt after a devastating fire in 1936. It was named a National Historic Landmark in 1987. Today, the historic lodge that sits above the canyon offers cabins and motel rooms for travelers to the beautiful North Rim. There are several choices for accommodations, including Western Cabins, which sleep four and are nestled in the pine forest, two-bedroom Pioneer Cabins, which sleep six, and Frontier Cabins, which sleep three. In addition, there are several motel rooms in the main lodge. This is the only North Rim lodging available. Amenities include the Lodge Dining Room, Deli in the Pines, The Coffee Saloon, and the Rough Rider Saloon.

Arizona Highway 67, Grand Canyon, North Rim, AZ, Phone: 877-386-8383


21. All-Star Grand Canyon Tours

All-Star Grand Canyon Tours
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Since the Grand Canyon is 277 miles long and up to 18 miles wide at some points, it’s maybe not the vacation destination to just show up without planning ahead. To get the most from the experience, visitors will want to decide what they want to see, North Rim? South Rim? West Rim? Bottom of the Canyon? All-Star Grand Canyon Tours knows the Grand Canyon intimately after leading innumerable eco-friendly tours. Guests can join a family-friendly sightseeing day tour, group day hike, or backpacking trip. Another option is to schedule customized private tours, from a simple day tour to multi-day adventures.

2420 North 3rd Street D, Flagstaff, AZ, Phone: 800-940-0445


22. Bar 10 Ranch

Bar 10 Ranch
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Bar 10 Ranch is a working cattle ranch and highly sought-after recreational destination overlooking the Grand Canyon. Visitors can expect a genuine Western ranch experience complete with covered Conestoga wagons and luxury accommodations in a serene environment away from the crowds. Choose from a menu of ranch activities all within view of the canyon that include horseback riding, hiking, four-wheeling, and skeet shooting. Bar 10 offers five tour and stay packages plus helicopter tours, river raft tours, evening entertainment, and a nature center. They even have their own airstrip for guests arriving by plane.

BLM 1045, St. George, UT, Phone: 435-628-4010


23. Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Bicycle Trails and Tours

Things to Do at the Grand Canyon: Bicycle Trails and Tours
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The Grand Canyon National Park System encourages visitors to enjoy the canyon in whatever way feels best, including biking. The park assists visitors with amenities like bicycle rentals on the South Rim, and bicyclist/backpacker campsites for overnight or multi-day stays. Bicycle/backpackers can choose from Mather Campground on the South Rim or the North Rim Campground. Park shuttles make it even easier for bikers to explore. Shuttles have bike racks, so bikers can pedal to their destination, and take the shuttle back. Cyclists should take the park’s elevation into consideration.


24. Bright Angel Bike Rentals and Tours

Bright Angel Bike Rentals and Tours
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For an environmentally friendly, unique, and affordable way to discover the Grand Canyon, biking its network of South Rim trails ticks all the boxes. In 2010, two friends came up with the idea of biking the Grand Canyon and proposed it to Grand Canyon National Park. They submitted a proposal against a bevy of corporate bids, and won. Now, the family-owned business offers visitors bike, stroller, tagalong, wheelchair, and trailer rentals to thousands of visitors each year. Visitors can take a rental/shuttle excursion to Hermit Road where they bike there and shuttle back. There are also two guided bike tours – Hermit Road Tour and Yaki Point Tour – plus a café and a store.

10 South Entrance Road, Grand Canyon Village, AZ, Phone: 928-638-3055


25. Grand Canyon Brewing Company

Grand Canyon Brewing Company
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Grand Canyon Brewing Company is located in Williams, Arizona, where they’ve been brewing and serving craft beer for over a decade. In 2017, they moved to larger space to accommodate their new brew pub and production facility. Visitors can expect year-round and seasonal brews, shotgun series (limited releases of anything goes experimental brews), IPA series, casks (unfiltered true ales and specialty brews), and lock stock and barrel beers (barrel-aged sour ales). Daily happy hours are from 2 pm to 6 pm with discounts on beers and well drinks. Grand Canyon Brewing Company brew pub has 13 TVs as well as pool tables and shuffle boards.

301 North 7th Street, Williams, AZ, Phone: 800-513-2072


What is 25 Best Things to Do at the Grand Canyon known for? What to do.

What are the top attractions to visit at the Grand Canyon?


The top attractions to visit at the Grand Canyon according to local experts are:



Havasu Falls, Arizona

Located inside the Grand Canyon in Arizona, Havasu Falls is a waterfall located along Havasu Creek, a tributary of the Colorado River. As part of the indigenous Havasupai tribal lands, it is a major natural and recreational tourist destination in the southwestern United States. Arizona’s 277-mile-long Grand Canyon has been slowly carved by the Colorado River over the past several million years of Earth’s history, with the river’s waters cutting through many layers of rock as the Colorado Plateau’s land has been continually uplifted by geologic activity.

History

The Canyon has traditionally been inhabited by various indigenous American tribes, including the Navajo, Paiute, Yuma, and several modern tribes of Pueblo people, who consider the canyon a notable holy site. The primary inhabitants of the Havasu Canyon area are the Havasupai people, a Yuman-speaking tribe that once occupied a sect of land in the Canyon roughly equal to the size of the state of Delaware. As a result of European settlement in the American West and the eventual development of the Grand Canyon National Park, the Havasupai’s land has diminished considerably, now limited to an approximately 185,000-acre reservation in Coconino County, Arizona.

The Havasupai people are closely associated with the waters of Havasu Creek, a 50-mile tributary of the Colorado River which flows into Havasu Springs and through the village of Supai. The creek’s waters are well known for their unique blue-green coloring, which serves as a naming source for both the creek itself and its indigenous people, as havasu translates to “blue-green water” in Yuman. The coloring of the water is due to the calcium carbonate that lines the creek’s limestone banks, which also contribute to the creek’s constantly-changing landscape, as rapid mineralization of substances within the water causes new diversions to form quickly within the course of the year.

Attractions

Today, the Havasupai’s primary means of subsistence is tourism to the waterfalls and natural sites of the Havasu Creek area. Several major waterfalls flow along Havasu Creek, including Upper and Lower Navajo Falls, Mooney Falls, and Beaver Falls. The third waterfall along the creek, Havasu Falls, which is located approximately a mile and a half north of Supai, is its most notable tourist site, attracting thousands of hikers and visitors annually. Prior to the flood of 1910, the falls was known as Bridal Veil Falls, which flowed in a near-continuous sheet over the area’s 100-foot cliffs, but floodwaters changed the falls’ flow into the single stream falling from the notch it traverses today. Natural pools created by mineralization are located at the bottom of the falls, although the pools have greatly diminished in number due to flooding in the 1990s, and as such, a man-made dam has been constructed to preserve the remaining pools.

The hike to the falls is a 10-mile hike from the Hualapai Hilltop parking lot area and is not recommended for beginner hikers. The falls is accessible via a small side trail off of the area’s main hiking trail, which opens into a plateau area for viewing. A small rock shelter behind the falls is accessible via swimming and allows for views of the falls’ water from behind. A large picnic table area is also available on the opposite side of the creek from the falls, and a nearby Havasupai Falls Campground is provided for overnight accommodations. As the falls are on reservation land, visitors are asked to leave no litter and to bring no drugs, liquor, weapons, or pets along on their hikes.

In order to hike to the falls, visitors must request permits from the Havasupai Indian Reservation. Reservations may be made by phone or online via the Reservation’s website, but permit space is often limited. Multi-day hiking and camping tour packages are offered through Wildland Trekking, which provides tour guides elaborating on the area’s natural and cultural history. Three, four, and five day tours are offered, including backpacking options, family spring break tours, and a Premier Tour that includes a night of lodging with a group dinner on the Grand Canyon’s rim.

The Havasupai Reservation may be reached from Highway 66, near the community of Peach Springs, Arizona, which provides access to Indian Route 18 and Hualapai Hilltop. The Hilltop provides access to the village of Supai via an eight-mile trail that may only be traveled on foot or horseback. As the most remote extant community within the contiguous United States, Supai is known as a thriving cultural and artisan community, showcasing traditional indigenous lifestyles. A lodge within the village provides accommodations for visitors, and a small store offers travel goods and convenience foods. A visitors cafe offers American fare such as burgers and fries.

3493 Hwy. 95 N, Lake Havasu City, AZ 86435, Phone: 928-448-2121

More Things to Do in Arizona

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