I have visited both the south rim and the north rim several times. I can say I have walked alone the rim and enjoyed new and grand vistas every 50 yards or so. I can say I have even been "in" the Grand Canyon.
However, I was never able to take the mule trip or get anywhere near the bottom. I did walk down the mule trail a distance and saw many wonders. As I get older, my recollection indicates I walked down about 1/4 mile, but that distance gets longer as I age.
Years ago, circa 1869, a famous explorer, John W. Powell, boated down the Colorado and his account is rather famous, and if memory serves, one of his actual boats is on display at the south rim.
This trip was thought to be the domain of men, with the sentiment the treacherous Colorado is "no place for a women" being the cultural norm even as late as after the first world war concluded in 1918. But our culture began to change, such as notably women obtained their natural right to vote. Amelia flew airplanes. Women smoked in movies.
Instead of all "White Anglo-Saxons Protestant males" were created equal, more reality started to fill the promise of all people are created equal. Another step toward creating equality among peoples took place in 1938. Two botanists, who happen to be women, climbed into sixteen foot homemade boats, along with several men, and headed down the Colorado, raging with snow-melt, and filled with silt. They were going to study the flora of the Grand Canyon, and "Brave The Wild River."
The terrific account is found in that new book, and as one who loves the Southwest, I am enjoying the read.
Here is a link:
Summary and reviews of Brave the Wild River by Melissa L. Sevigny
However, I was never able to take the mule trip or get anywhere near the bottom. I did walk down the mule trail a distance and saw many wonders. As I get older, my recollection indicates I walked down about 1/4 mile, but that distance gets longer as I age.
Years ago, circa 1869, a famous explorer, John W. Powell, boated down the Colorado and his account is rather famous, and if memory serves, one of his actual boats is on display at the south rim.
This trip was thought to be the domain of men, with the sentiment the treacherous Colorado is "no place for a women" being the cultural norm even as late as after the first world war concluded in 1918. But our culture began to change, such as notably women obtained their natural right to vote. Amelia flew airplanes. Women smoked in movies.
Instead of all "White Anglo-Saxons Protestant males" were created equal, more reality started to fill the promise of all people are created equal. Another step toward creating equality among peoples took place in 1938. Two botanists, who happen to be women, climbed into sixteen foot homemade boats, along with several men, and headed down the Colorado, raging with snow-melt, and filled with silt. They were going to study the flora of the Grand Canyon, and "Brave The Wild River."
The terrific account is found in that new book, and as one who loves the Southwest, I am enjoying the read.
Here is a link:
Summary and reviews of Brave the Wild River by Melissa L. Sevigny
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