After completion of Interstate 40, it was ghostly quiet. Today, little is left of Route 66 era landmarks, but the trading post building still stands, serving as a tribal administration building. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in In recent years, Peach Springs has seen a significant comeback due to the promotions of the Hualapai tribe and their exclusive access to one of the last undeveloped sections of the Grand Canyon.
Visitors can tour the Grand Canyon West Rim on the Hualapai Reservation, stay at the Hualapai Lodge in Peach Springs, visit an authentic Native American village, and take a walk on the well-known Grand Canyon Skywalk — a glass bridge that juts out across the canyon, providing views some 4, feet down to the canyon floor. The Peach Springs area is called home to about 1, people today.
Route 66 travelers can continue westward for about 8. Grand Canyon. Route 66 Main Page. Arizona Route Arizona Route 66 Photo Gallery. To Truxton. Return to Route Very remote and rarely-visited tributary of the Grand Canyon, which provides a course for a rough track that descends all the way to the Colorado River.
Diamond Creek is a small tributary of the Grand Canyon that flows year-round, joining the Colorado river 16 miles north of the dusty Hualapai Indian tribal town of Peach Springs, which is situated at the head of the southern end of Peach Springs Canyon. This is one of the larger of the many hundreds of branches of the main canyon - it deepens gradually but steadily from an elevation of 4, feet at the town to 1, feet at the river.
Vehicular access is possible along a bumpy, unpaved track Indian Reservation Route 6 which thus provides the only such route to the Colorado between Pearce Ferry and Lees Ferry , miles apart.
The track ends at a beach, with sand dunes and pleasant grassy areas where Diamond Creek meets the Colorado, and is quite a wonderful place. There are various sites for camping, in such a remote location that other visitors are unlikely. This part of the Grand Canyon is known as the Lower Granite Gorge , and has weathered, colorful, igneous cliffs that rise steeply from the river; these are the oldest rocks in the canyon - underneath all the many different sedimentary layers, they date from the pre-Cambrian era, over million years ago.
For a Wild West good time, book a stay on the Hualapai Ranch. You'll spend your days learning how to quick draw, along with other important cowboying skills, then spend the evenings listening to cowboy stories by a campfire while making s'mores. Visitor Information. Cities Peach Springs. Spelunk yourself to sleep?
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