Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Explore an undergroun­d marvel in northern Arizona

- Margo Bartlett Pesek TRIP OF THE WEEK

Unique experience­s await visitors to Grand Canyon Caverns in northern Arizona, starting with a choice of five tours of the largest dry caverns in the United States.

The complex includes a motel, RV park and campground central to miles of roads and trails used by hikers, horseback riders and ATV enthusiast­s.

Grand Canyon Caverns also offers arrangemen­ts for tours to area attraction­s such as the hike to beautiful Supai Falls on the nearby Hualapai Reservatio­n or scenic one-day Indian-guided raft tours on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.

From Las Vegas, the drive to Grand Canyon Caverns takes about 2½ hours. Follow U.S. Highway 93 to Kingman, Arizona, about 100 miles away. Watch for the exit onto Historic Route 66. The scenic drive on the historic highway will take you through Peach Springs, headquarte­rs for the Hualapai Nation. A few miles beyond Peach Springs, turn at Exit 115 onto a short, paved road to the caverns. The route takes you past the motel and campground to a building that houses the cave entrance, a restaurant, a curio shop and other facilities. Explore your options for tours and accommodat­ions at gccaverns.com. You can book rooms, campsites and tours online or by calling 928-422-3223.

The caverns, which are open yearround, are located at 5,300 feet on the Coconino Plateau in a wooded area that sees cooler summers and snowy winters. But the weather outside matters not a bit once you are inside, where the caverns are always 57 degrees with very low humidity.

The formations inside the limestone caverns were formed long ago when water percolated through the stone, leaving calcium deposits behind.

These caverns have been dry for a long time. Fresh, cool air reaches them through many miles of passageway­s from the rim of the canyon to the north. There are at least a thousand caves within Grand Canyon National Park, open only

for scientific purposes. Most have never been fully explored.

Grand Canyon Caverns have been privately owned since the late 1920s. They were discovered by Walter Peck in 1927.

While working in the area, Peck, a cowboy and sometime woodcutter, nearly fell into the natural cleft that dropped into a subterrane­an wonderland. He discovered a saddle and two burials, which turned out to be two Hualapai brothers who died of the 1918 Spanish Influenza and were interred by other tribal members.

Newspapers sensationa­lized the burials as “cavemen.” More exaggerati­ons followed the discovery of the skeleton of an ice age ground sloth.

Peck returned to the site with friends and lots of rope. As he was lowered 150 feet, the surface inside a huge undergroun­d room glittered under the light of his lamp. Thinking he had found valuable minerals, Peck brought rock samples to the surface and hurriedly bought up acreage surroundin­g the cavern entrance.

When the samples proved worthless, he decided to charge adventurou­s visitors 25 cents each to be lowered into the dark hole by rope. He had many takers.

In the mid-1930s, access was improved with stairs, ladders and suspension bridges. Today, the modern entrance and 21-story elevator constructe­d in 1962 provide safe access for many more visitors.

The most popular tour runs every half-hour from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. for 45 minutes, at a cost of $20.95 per adult, less for seniors and children. A shorter guided tour takes about 25 minutes and costs $15.95. A much longer off-trail tour for explorers costs $69.95, and a new tour explores recently discovered caverns near the original rooms for $89.95. An evening ghost tour promises chills and thrills for $22.95. For special occasions, consider staying overnight in a luxury cave suite with dinner and breakfast at a cost of $800 for two. Margo Bartlett Pesek’s Trip of the Week column appears on Sundays

 ?? GRAND CANYON CAVERNS ?? Visitors can explore Arizona’s Grand Canyon Caverns on one of five guided tours.
GRAND CANYON CAVERNS Visitors can explore Arizona’s Grand Canyon Caverns on one of five guided tours.
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