Body & Soul1 min ago
Grand Canyon - best time to visit?
My wife and I intend visiting the Grand Canyon in 2006 on an escorted coach tour to include San Francisco, LA and the Grand Canyon. When is the best time to go to avoid extremes of heat, cold, humidity and crowds?
Our favoured tour at the moment is the Kuoni "Western Discovery" tour which only stays a night at each place, but means that the miles travelled each day are modest. How does this compare with other tours which stay up to 3 days in several locations, but which have to do many more miles on travelling days? (Most tours cover the same mileage in their 14 days).
We would like to take a fixed-wing or helicopter flight over the Grand Canyon. Is this best pre-booked in the UK before going, on the coach with the tour rep, or direct with flight operators when we get to the Grand Canyon? It is probable that we won't be able to fit in a flight on the afternoon of arrival as it will get dark shortly after we get there. Could a flight be arranged from the next stop in Monument Valley?
What experiences have you had with escorted coach tours on the West Coast of the US?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Hudson. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi there,I have never been on an Escorted Coach Trip to the US,but HAVE done a fly drive to the area you are going to.
A few pointers then:~
The Desert(Grand Canyon) has very dry heat,no humidity,and even SF is low in the humidity stakes if you go in the right months.The best months are(for GC & SF etc) April,May and June,or September October.Avoid July and August,you will fry in the Desert,and SF will not be tolerably comfortable.The Grand Canyon will be crowded(unavoidably really) at all times,but less people in the very hot season.Try to ensure that the coaches used are air conditioned.Now as regards itinerary,it's really amatter of persoanl choice.In the US most roads that you will travel on are good,smooth and enable long distances to be travelled in relatively short times.You have to bear in mind that staying more than one night in each place, means that either you are "stranded" in maybe an uninteresting place,OR you have more time in an area(like the GC) that has lots to see/do.It really depends on what you want to see, and for how long?
If you want to book a flight over the GC do it in the UK(via Kuoni?) as this will give you a guaranteed place.Do not do it through a Tour Rep,they will just shove you onto the flight that gives them the best comission.As far a booking it there,I wouldn't.GC gets incredibly busy,and you wouldn't want to go all that way and not get a flight.
As regards booking a flight from Monument Valley,check with Kuoni (one of the Best Tour Operators by the way)they should be able to advise you.If you cannot go from Monument Valley,then it might be worth looking for a tour that stays more than one night in GC?
Part 2:~LOL
To finish off(you will be fed up with me!)
Check any Coach Itinerary carefully,especially the distances covered.Does it give you any idea of what time you arrive/leave each stopover?
You will enjoy SF (everybody does) a friendly,cosmopolitan,reasonably priced city.It has good transport(Trams and BART,their underground)
Above all "culitivate" your Tour Guide,you can find out all sorts of "secrets" if you are nice to them!LOL
Above all,Have Fun.
Want any more(is there more!LOL)information,just post.
I don't recall that there's anything much in Monument Valley (not much of a settlement I mean; scenery is great, see a John Ford film) but you can phone up from anywhere, including the UK. My guess is that you could get a flight cheaper than Kuoni, say, sell it but you'll have to get to it yourself rather than be taken there; you pay for the convenience of a package tour. I did SF-canyon by car, in March (years ago, though), and it was fine, but it's 2+ days' drive from the coast to the canyon.
Kuoni are a very good operator, I've been other places with them.
My wife and I have just returned from a fly-drive holiday taking in San Francisco, Yosemite and Monterey (2 nights each). We then flew to Las Vegas and picked up a second hire car to do Hoover Dam, Grand Canyon (2 nights), Lake Powell (2 nights), Bryce Canyon, Zion National Park and back to LV. (1 night each). The pace was just about right; we had plenty of time to do everything we wanted and the driving was completely hassle free. We didn't do any more than 200 miles a day - which I am sure cannot be said of any coach trip. We decided not to do Monument Valley - a bit out of the way and although the scenery looks fantastic the other places we visited had it all. Simlarly, Death Valley would have been fascinating but that would have made for 2 longish days in pretty high temperatures. The flight from SFO to LAS was definitely worth its �45 each (America West Airlines). We didn't do the Grand Canyon flight; I had investigated options on the internet before we went and almost booked with Papillon and we actually called in at the airport on our way to South Rim. We decided to go and have a look at the Canyon first and then decide later about a flight. In the event, the weather was absolutely perfect and we viewed the canyon from just about all the "overlooks" (very efficiently served by shuttle bus). We only saw a couple of helicopters the whole time we were there and they seemed to by flying very high and we honestly thought that we had had unsurpassable views of the canyon and could not really justify the �100 each that the helicopter would have cost us.
I would heartily recommend a fly-drive for the freedom it gives you. The prospect of being cooped up on a coach for hours on end in baking temperatures (Yes, it was over 100�F around Lake Powell / Bryce / Zion and LV) and only being able to stop when the driver / courier says so, just does not appeal.
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