South Kaibab Trail - Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, United States
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
South Kaibab Trail Grand Canyon National Park
One of the two superhighways into the Canyon, the other being the Bright Angel Trail, this path runs along a ridge offering stunning views. During the summer, visitors are advised to bring at least two quarts of water along because it can get very hot and the trail offers no shade.
Read more at:
Travel blogs from South Kaibab Trail:
- ... I missed the sunrise at 5:45 but started walking just before 6am, down the South Kaibab trail, and enjoyed seeing the canyon in the early morning light ...
- ... We leave our car parked in the Back-Country office parking lot and catch the 9 AM direct shuttle to South Kaibab trail -head ...
- ... We hiked from the south rim via the south kaibab trail ...
- ... We did not opt to hike straight down and back on Bright Angel or South Kaibab Trail but we watched the mules coming up and met a couple who hiked down to Phantom Lodge to spend the night and hiked ...
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, United States
Photos in this video:
- The Black Suspension Bridge - South Kaibab Trail by Paquet2386 from a blog titled Grand Canyon National Park
- Cedar Ridge Resthouse - South Kaibab Trail by Paquet2386 from a blog titled Grand Canyon National Park
- Desert Flowers on the South Kaibab Trail by Paquet2386 from a blog titled Grand Canyon National Park
- The start of the South Kaibab Trail by Paul-charlotte from a blog titled Begining of the Epic Journey
- The South Kaibab trail we took down by Ambs55 from a blog titled The World's Grandest Hole
- The South Kaibab Trail by Paquet2386 from a blog titled Grand Canyon National Park
- South kaibab trail by Emandnat from a blog titled canyons! amazing but unexpectedly cut short
Hiking One of the Most Popular Hikes in the Grand Canyon - RV Living Full Time
If you're not afraid of heights, South Kaibab Trail is a must-do hike in the Grand Canyon!
✩ SUPPORT US FOR FREE WHEN SHOPPING AMAZON:
✩ NEWSLETTER:
✩ INSTAGRAM:
✩ FACEBOOK:
✩ GADGETS WE USE:
✩ MORE ABOUT US: ✩
BIG THANKS to the following patrons who've pledged $25+ at to help produce this video!
✩ Tiltawhirl Imagery
✩ Stephen Jeffries
✩ Christopher S
✩ Karen M
✩ Ryan K
✩ John & Debbie
✩ Brenda N
✩ Everyday Family Adventure
✩ Streamin Freedom
✩ Ron & Billie
✩ Mike & Claudette
✩ Paul O
✩ Gigi G
✩ Chris M
MUSIC CREDIT(S)
* Dreams - Music by: David Cutter Music - davidcuttermusic.co.uk
* Melt by Broke for Free - brokeforfree.com
* Picker - Music by: David Cutter Music - davidcuttermusic.co.uk
Grand Canyon NP, Arizona. South Kaibab Trail. Part 1
Part 1 of 4 of my spectacular hike on the south kaibab trail in the Grand Canyon!
Our FAVORITE day hike in the Grand Canyon - South Kaibab Trail
South Kaibab Trail - Cedar Ridge - Grand Canyon National Park - Arizona - 52 Hike Challenge - (44/52) - VLOG#44 – (4K)
We post new videos every Sunday, don't forget to SUBSCRIBE!
*This is not intended to be a trail guide. This is a story of our family’s adventure at this particular location (vlog).
GEAR:
GPS/SOS Device:
Osprey Baby Carrier:
Deuter Baby Carrier:
La Sportiva trail shoes:
Pants:
camera gear:
Sony A7iii:
16-35mm gmaster:
ND Filter:
Rode Mic:
Gorilla Pod:
GoPro:
GoPro Gimbal:
PASSES:
National Park Annual Pass:
So Cal Annual Forest Adventure Pass:
MAPS:
South Kaibab to Cedar RIdge:
OTHER RESOURCES:
52 Hike Challenge:
Our Instagram: (DON’T FORGET TO FOLLOW US ON IG!)
#GrandCanyon #hiking #vlog
Grand Canyon South Rim - South Kaibab Trail / Bright Angel Trail
Grand Canyon South Rim - South Kaibab Trail / Bright Angel Trail
#grandcanyonsouthrim #southkaibabtrail #brightangeltrail
Experience The Grand Canyon in depth in this video adventure, tag along with my team of hikers and myself while we hike down via South Kaibab Trail, cross the Colorado River, spend some time in Phantom Ranch, hike towards Indian Garden, and finally hike up via Bright Angel Trail all in one day! Discover how long did it take, see what it takes to do this hike, hear advise from the hikers after this long adventure. This is a bilingual video, feel free to ask any questions in the comments if you missed something in your language.
Do you want to see more adventures like this one? Click here ????????
Don’t forget to subscribe to my channel & click the bell so you don’t miss out on new videos every Wednesday & Sunday
Follow me on social media!
Facebook: instagram: Chevito8
Twitter:
I want to hear from you!
Alejandrosadventures@yahoo.com
Grand Canyon - South Kaibab Trail
Me hiking a piece of the South Kaibab Trail in the Grand Canyon early in the morning.
Hiking the South Kaibab Trail - The Grand Canyon
Filmed at Skeleton Point on the South Kaibab Trail in the Grand Canyon. Unlike the Bright Angel Trail, this trail has no water on it so you need to bring your own.
【4K】Grand Canyon hike | South Kaibab Trail | Virtual Hike (2019)
Join me as I hike South Kaibab trail, one of the signature hikes at Grand Canyon.
#GrandCanyonNationalPark
#GrandCanyonHike
#HikingGrandCanyon
#SouthRimHiking
#VirtualHike
Hiking South Kaibab Trail with a Child | Grand Canyon, AZ
Family hiking South Kaibab in the South Rim of Grand Canyon National Park. We hiked with our toddler in a baby carrier the whole hike.
Like us and follow us on:
Instagram -
Facebook -
Twitter -
Website -
We hiked past Ooh Aah Point and Cedar Ridge until Skeleton Point.
The hike was 6.4 miles (10.3 km) and the elevation was 2,060 feet (628 meters).
We hiked in December 2017 and the trail was moderately trafficked from the trailhead to Cedar Ridge.
We only met a handful of hikers from Cedar Ridge to Skeleton Point. That stretch was the most challenging part of the hike. The view from Skeleton Point was amazing.
Don't forget to subscribe to our channel. We upload new videos weekly.
Cameras:
Yi 4k+
Nikon D610
MUSIC:
Artist: Nicolai Heidlas
Title: Sunrise
hooksounds.com
Photo slideshow and video transitions inspired from Orange83:
youtube.com/watch?v=adDcMhIN090&t=26s
youtube.com/watch?v=qaEndem1kUg
Grand Canyon from the East Entrance - Arizona - LeAw in the USA //Ep.45
We are living the American dream driving the Historic Route 66 from Chicago to Santa Monica but we are doing some detours to visit some places we like.
In this 45th episode, we visit Grand Canyon National Park. Enjoy the ride with us! ;)
Grand Canyon National Park, located in northwestern Arizona, is the 15th site in the United States to have been named a national park. The park's central feature is the Grand Canyon, a gorge of the Colorado River, which is often considered one of the Wonders of the World. The park, which covers 1,217,262 acres (1,901.972 sq mi; 4,926.08 km2) of unincorporated area in Coconino and Mohave counties, received more than six million recreational visitors in 2017, which is the second highest count of all American national parks after Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The Grand Canyon was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1979.
Grand Canyon was officially designated a national park on February 26, 1919, though the landmark had been well known to Americans for over thirty years prior. In 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt visited the site and said: The Grand Canyon fills me with awe. It is beyond comparison—beyond description; absolutely unparalleled through-out the wide world... Let this great wonder of nature remain as it now is. Do nothing to mar its grandeur, sublimity and loveliness. You cannot improve on it. But what you can do is to keep it for your children, your children's children, and all who come after you, as the one great sight which every American should see.
Despite Roosevelt's enthusiasm and strong interest in preserving land for public use, the Grand Canyon was not immediately designated as a national park. The first bill to establish Grand Canyon National Park was introduced in 1882 by then-Senator Benjamin Harrison, which would have established Grand Canyon as the second national park in the United States after Yellowstone. Harrison unsuccessfully reintroduced his bill in 1883 and 1886; after his election to the presidency, he established the Grand Canyon Forest Reserve in 1893. Theodore Roosevelt created the Grand Canyon Game Preserve by proclamation on 28 November 1906, and the Grand Canyon National Monument in 1908. Further Senate bills to establish the site as a national park were introduced and defeated in 1910 and 1911, before the Grand Canyon National Park Act was finally signed by President Woodrow Wilson in 1919. The National Park Service, established in 1916, assumed administration of the park.
The creation of the park was an early success of the conservation movement. Its national park status may have helped thwart proposals to dam the Colorado River within its boundaries. (Later, the Glen Canyon Dam would be built upriver.) In 1975, the former Marble Canyon National Monument, which followed the Colorado River northeast from the Grand Canyon to Lee's Ferry, was made part of Grand Canyon National Park. In 1979, UNESCO declared the park a World Heritage Site.
In 2010, Grand Canyon National Park was honored with its own coin under the America the Beautiful Quarters program.
The Grand Canyon, including its extensive system of tributary canyons, is valued for its combination of size, depth, and exposed layers of colorful rocks dating back to Precambrian times. The canyon itself was created by the incision of the Colorado River and its tributaries after the Colorado Plateau was uplifted, causing the Colorado River system to develop along its present path.
The primary public areas of the park are the North and South Rims, and adjacent areas of the canyon itself. The rest of the park is extremely rugged and remote, although many places are accessible by pack trail and backcountry roads.
The park headquarters are at Grand Canyon Village, not far from the south entrance to the park, near one of the most popular viewpoints.
The North Rim is a smaller, more remote area with less tourist activity. It is accessed by Arizona State Route 67.
The South Rim is more accessible than the North Rim; most visitors to the park come to the South Rim, arriving on Arizona State Route 64. The highway enters the park through the South Entrance, near Tusayan, Arizona, and heads eastward, leaving the park through the East Entrance. Interstate 40 provides access to the area from the south. From the north, U.S. Route 89 connects Utah, Colorado, and the North Rim to the South Rim.
Our gear:
# Camera: Panasonic GH4
# Camera: Iphone 7 Plus
# Drone: DJI Mavic Pro
Gear for your next adventure! Save up to 20%
More about us:
l-e-a-w.com
Facebook // LeAw //
Facebook // Sara //
Facebook // Luca //
Instagram // LeAw //
Instagram // Sara //
Instagram/ Luca //
Follow LeAw Leave Everything and Wander and be part of our adventure!
Grand Canyon: South Kaibab Trail!
Follow the Leungs on our road trip through the canyons in the west United States. First stop: Grand Canyon! Accidentally wrote December 25th on time markers (oops) actually 27th**
Recorded on iPhone 8.
MUSIC:
Destination by MBB
Creative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported— CC BY-SA 3.0
Sunrise Hike - South Kaibab Trail - Grand Canyon - 11/2015
Sunrise Hike - South Kaibab Trail - Grand Canyon - 11/2015
Hiking Down Grand Canyon National Park's South Kaibab Trail: Halfway Point (Mile 3.5) to Mile 5
I’m hiking the South Kaibab Trail from the south rim of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, down to the Colorado River.
4:00 p.m.: Lunch break is over at the halfway point (Mile 3.5). Two hours until sunset. Took me 1:50 to get to the here; if I can keep the same pace, I should be good to go make it to the Colorado River right around sundown. About another 2,000 feet of altitude to descend to the river. Hard to keep hiking constantly because you want to awe at the views and take pictures.
4:27 p.m.: Mile 4.
4:36 p.m.: Mile 4.3 – Tip Off Junction. The Tonto Trail goes east-west here. There’s 2.6 miles remaining to Bright Angel Campground. I continue past the junction on South Kaibab Trail.
4:47 p.m.: Mile 4.5 and my first glimpse of the Colorado River. Pretty amazing scenery around me. I’m getting close to the two-thirds point of my hike down from the South Rim to the river.
4:58 p.m.: Mile 5 – elevation 3,600 feet. 1:02 remaining to sunset; distance to Bright Angel Campground is two miles. Average speed 1.8 mph right now; just need pick up the pace a tad and to hit 2 mph in the next hour, then I will arrive at sundown. About 800 feet of descent remaining.
Recorded October 10, 2018
Visit my blog, “Quest for 243 – A global nomad's pursuit to see all 195 countries, 39 territories, & 9 de-facto nations,” at
Watch all my Arizona videos at
.
Grand Canyon South Kaibab Trail Feb 2, 2019
Grand Canyon South Kaibab Trail Feb 2, 2019
2018 April - South Kaibab Trail down to Phantom Ranch, Grand Canyon April 2018
This video is about South Kaibab Trail down to Phantom Rach with good friends
Views of the Grand Canyon from South Kaibab Trail
Here's a brief glimpse of the Grand Canyon from the South Kaibab trail. The hike took us about 8 hours to complete. We could have done it a lot faster, but hey, what's the fun in that? We were there to view the scenery and that's just what we did, and brought back some nice footage too. Music by George Winston, Early Morning Range and Lullaby.
Look at what was found at Bright Angel Campground in the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona
A walk around the Bright Angel Campground in the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona United States of America. The area is where Bright Angel Creek meets the Colorado River. There is a ranger station, emergency phone, year-round potable water, and toilets. To reach this campground you can travel the South Kaibab Trail (and cross the black bridge) or the Bright Angel Trail (and cross the silver bridge) from the South Rim, or travel the North Kaibab Trail from the North Rim. Cottonwood trees shade Bright Angel Campground and the creek is a wonderful place to cool off. Deer, ringtail cats, gray foxes, and squirrels are often seen. Popular activities include relaxing, wading in Bright Angel Creek, stargazing, fishing (license required), and day hiking. Day hike destinations include the River Trail and Phantom Overlook. Seasonal ranger programs are offered. Snack items and meals are available for purchase at Phantom Ranch Lodge (meals must be reserved in advance 303-297-2757).
Grand Canyon South Rim Trail, Arizona
10.3 mile hike from the Grand Canyon Visitor Center to Hermits Rest on the South Rim Trail in late April 2017.
Start time: 5am
End time: 1pm
Total time: 8 hours (including a long lunch & breaks)
Hiking Spencer Trail in Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
We spent a morning exploring a trail from Lee's Ferry – one the few places in hundreds of miles from which one can easily access the Colorado River from both sides. We hiked up to the crest where we were rewarded with fantastic views for miles around across the vast landscape.
▬ READ MORE ▬
★★ SUBSCRIBE HERE ★★
▬ FOLLOW US! ▬
✩ Website:
✩ Instagram:
✩ Twitter:
✩ Facebook:
Rim Trail - Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, United States
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
Rim Trail Grand Canyon National Park
Scenic and level walking trail, which is easy enough to bring the kids.
Read more at:
Travel blogs from Rim Trail:
- ... blueberry pancakes and unlimited coffee for my breakfast, it was yummy I then walked all the way along the rim trail back to the Grand Canyon Visitors Centre and caught the shuttle to the South Kaibab Trailhead! The views along the rim where incredible ...
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, United States
- Tusayan, Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, United States
Photos in this video:
- Day 14 - Overlooking the Canyon on The Rim Trail by Lasthours from a blog titled Day 14 - Page to Grand Canyon
- Village Shots from Western Rim Trail... by Keeleyhope from a blog titled Condors and Mohave Point
- Grand Canyon, rim trail. by Scott_mhairi from a blog titled Grand Canyon
- On the rim trail by Mcgradyemily from a blog titled What a grand place!
- Mel at rim trail by Mcgradyemily from a blog titled What a grand place!
- Rim Trail View by Keeleyhope from a blog titled Condors and Mohave Point