Anonymous wrote:What about Sequoia and Yosemite? We have family in the area so are considering that route.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did Olympic National Park in Washington for a spring break. It was a little cool and a bit wet a couple days, but it was fantastic. Spectacular scenery and not too many crowds…highly recommend.
Utah parks are another option for spring break. Can be cool, but crowds are less than in the summer.
PP, here. Forgot to add, favorite thing about Olympic is it’s like going to three or four different parks- beaches, rainforest, mountains, lakes…
Anonymous wrote:Here is what we did last year for spring break- it was awesome!
Day 1: Fly to Vegas spend night
Day 2: Drive to Grand Canyon South Rim, spend night at Grand Canyon (Maswik Lodge). Hike south rim, sunset at Mohave point
Day 3: Hike Grand Canyon, leave early afternoon to drive to Kanab, Utah. Stop at Horseshoe Bend on way. Stay at La Quinta Inn in Kanab for 2 nights
Day 4: Sand Boarding at coral pink sand dunes, moqui cave hike
Day 5: ATV ride to slot canyon, canyoneering tour (booked through kanab tour company)
After your drive to Bryce Canyon, stay at ruby’s inn. Late hike/ sunset at bryce
Day 6: morning/ early afternoon in bryce, queens garden and Navajo loop trail. Drive to Zion. Spend 3 nights in Zion at cable mountain lodge
Day 7: rent ebikes and spend day hiking and biking in Zion
Day 8: more hiking in morning, horseback tour in afternoon
Day 9: drive to vegas and spend afternoon in Vegas, fly home
Anonymous wrote:Here is what we did last year for spring break- it was awesome!
Day 1: Fly to Vegas spend night
Day 2: Drive to Grand Canyon South Rim, spend night at Grand Canyon (Maswik Lodge). Hike south rim, sunset at Mohave point
Day 3: Hike Grand Canyon, leave early afternoon to drive to Kanab, Utah. Stop at Horseshoe Bend on way. Stay at La Quinta Inn in Kanab for 2 nights
Day 4: Sand Boarding at coral pink sand dunes, moqui cave hike
Day 5: ATV ride to slot canyon, canyoneering tour (booked through kanab tour company)
After your drive to Bryce Canyon, stay at ruby’s inn. Late hike/ sunset at bryce
Day 6: morning/ early afternoon in bryce, queens garden and Navajo loop trail. Drive to Zion. Spend 3 nights in Zion at cable mountain lodge
Day 7: rent ebikes and spend day hiking and biking in Zion
Day 8: more hiking in morning, horseback tour in afternoon
Day 9: drive to vegas and spend afternoon in Vegas, fly home
Anonymous wrote:If you haven't already done Grand Canyon, or Yellowstone it's a no-brainer to do one of those.
If not, we went to Zion a couple of years ago and it was amazing, but we went in Nov and it wasn't crowded; I hear it can get very crowded during spring break and summer and that that can be an issue with enjoyment of that park. Good thing about Zion is you can easily drive to Bryce as well (or even Grand Canyon).
I love the suggeston from PP of Sequoia and Yosemite -- I want to do that trip next.
Probably the most beautiful place I've been is Monument Valley; it's a Navajo park. But really only one day of a visit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great time to visit Utah. Arches, Canyon Lands, Bryce, and Zion. Can also mix in in SLC, Mesa Verde/Durango or Las Vegas depending upon your flights.
You really should attempt all this in 7 days. Either do Arches/Capitol Reef/Canyonlands or do Zion/Bryce. They’re on opposite ends of the state and gigantic parks - there’s too much to see to them and they’re too far from the Arches side of Utah to cram in both. If you want to see Vegas you could fly in and out of there and drive 3 hours to Zion. If you want to do Arches you could fly into SLC or the other small airport in Colorado, I forget its name.
NP. This is a fair point, although I did all 5 of these in 8ish days many years ago. But it was just two of us, no kids, and we did a lot of driving, and had to pack the two most exhausting hikes at Zion into one day. I’d recommend Zion/Bryce, with a day in whatever city you fly into. Zion is absolutely stunning. Apparently you have to get lottery passes to do Angels Landing now, so if you’re interested in that, look into it ahead of time.
Anonymous wrote:Joshua Tree - Mojave Désert - Death Valley - Sequoia
Anonymous wrote:If you haven't already done Grand Canyon, or Yellowstone it's a no-brainer to do one of those.
If not, we went to Zion a couple of years ago and it was amazing, but we went in Nov and it wasn't crowded; I hear it can get very crowded during spring break and summer and that that can be an issue with enjoyment of that park. Good thing about Zion is you can easily drive to Bryce as well (or even Grand Canyon).
I love the suggeston from PP of Sequoia and Yosemite -- I want to do that trip next.
Probably the most beautiful place I've been is Monument Valley; it's a Navajo park. But really only one day of a visit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great time to visit Utah. Arches, Canyon Lands, Bryce, and Zion. Can also mix in in SLC, Mesa Verde/Durango or Las Vegas depending upon your flights.
You really should attempt all this in 7 days. Either do Arches/Capitol Reef/Canyonlands or do Zion/Bryce. They’re on opposite ends of the state and gigantic parks - there’s too much to see to them and they’re too far from the Arches side of Utah to cram in both. If you want to see Vegas you could fly in and out of there and drive 3 hours to Zion. If you want to do Arches you could fly into SLC or the other small airport in Colorado, I forget its name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Sequoia and Yosemite? We have family in the area so are considering that route.
We did both of those in 2021 and it’s a good itinerary. Might still be some snowpack on the ground in mid April.