Available Formats
Hardback
Published: 9th October 2018
Paperback
Published: 29th July 2010
Hardback, Second Edition
Published: 9th October 2018
Paperback, Second Edition
Published: 15th November 2016
One Best Hike: Grand Canyon: Everything You Need to Know to Successfully Hike from the Rim to the Riverand Back
By (Author) Elizabeth Wenk
Wilderness Press
Wilderness Press
29th July 2010
United States
General
Non Fiction
Walking, hiking, trekking
796.510979132
Paperback
184
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
226g
Find everything you need to know about the Grand Canyons one best hike, from the rim to the riverand back again.
The Grand Canyons striking geology and overwhelming scale inspires the millions who stand on its South Rim each year. Let expert author Elizabeth Wenk lead you into the canyons depths on the Bright Angel and South Kaibab trails to the mighty Colorado River, and spend the night at Indian Garden or Bright Angel campgrounds, or Phantom Ranch.
While tremendously rewarding, this 16.1-mile loop hike demands much, even of experienced trekkers. Hikers need to prepare for the hot temperatures, lack of shade, long distance, elevation change, and other potential dangers. One Best Hike: Grand Canyon is a step-by-step guide that helps you tackle this trip with confidence.
Inside youll find:
One Best Hike: Grand Canyon, with its can-do approach, nuts-and-bolts advice, and practical tips, will leave you wondering why you waited so long to embark on this truly special hiking adventure.
"Although the book is titled One Best Hike Grand Canyon: Everything you need to know to successfully hike from the rim to the river -- and back, what Elizabeth Wenk really provides is a wonderful primer on the geology, wildlife, natural history, and dangers of hiking in Grand Canyon National Park...this 166-page book is a rich resource, both for the main hiking content as well the supporting text that is scattered throughout. " --National Parks Traveler
From childhood, Elizabeth Wenk has hiked and climbed in the Sierra Nevada with her family. After she started college, she found excuses to spend every summer in the Sierra, with its beguiling landscape, abundant flowers, and near-perfect weather. During those summers, she worked as a research assistant for others and completed her own Ph.D. thesis research on the effects of rock type on alpine plant distribution and physiology. But much of the time, she hikes simply for leisure. Wanting to explore every bit of the Sierra, she has hiked thousands of on- and off-trail miles and climbed nearly 500 peaks in the mountain range. She recently relocated Australia with her family.