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Deborah Wall: Now’s the best time to see less-crowded North Rim

The appropriately named Grand Canyon can be enjoyed from at least two perspectives. The South Rim is more popular and open all year. The North Rim is closed in winter, but the best time to visit there is upon us: September and early October, before most North Rim services shut down about mid-October because of early snows. In that window, weather will usually be clear, with a slight chill.

Located on the Arizona Strip — the part of the state lying north of the canyon and approachable mostly through Utah — the North Rim is less crowded, particularly now that summer travelers have gone home.

North Rim elevations average some 8,000 feet, more than a thousand feet higher than the South Rim. It also receives twice as much precipitation, clothing it with lush vegetation. You will find forests of ponderosa pine and blue and Englemann spruce, interspersed with aspen trees.

From Las Vegas, it takes about four and a half hours to get there. The final 45-mile leg, from Jacob Lake, Arizona, to the North Rim, is a treat in itself. There are open lush meadows, many boasting wildflowers and small ponds, which are especially good places to see wildlife at dawn and dusk. The park is home to deer, wild turkeys, badgers, bobcats, mountain lions and even a few black bears. Surprisingly, it is also, for the time being, home to a herd of bison. They usually hang out in the meadows just after the park’s main entrance gate.

Bison, despite great size and weight, are surprisingly agile, and surprisingly fast; he who loses a foot race with a bison likely loses more than dignity. Therefore, view the beasts only from the safety of your auto.

The hub of the park is the Grand Canyon Lodge, directly on the rim and surrounded by all sorts of services. They include lots of bathrooms, water stations, a ranger-staffed visitor center, gift shops, a bar, a post office and a quick-grab deli with sandwiches and pizza. The lodge is Western rustic, but its lodging is pricey. It has cabins of different sizes, all with porches, some near or directly on the rim. Any park visitor can go to the lodge and take in the views, relax on the living room couches or on the deck and take in a free ranger program.

The food at the lodge’s main dining room ranges from simple fare to upscale gourmet . Make a reservation and you might get a table by the window.

Be sure to drive out the scenic Point Royal Road. This paved road offers the very best of the North Rim. There are so many overlooks and short, easy hikes to take that maximizing the experience might require half a day. It’s worth the time. Plan on taking a picnic lunch and enjoying the day at your own pace.

Overnight accommodations are available at the Grand Canyon Lodge, 877-386-4383 or grandcanyonforever.com. Outside the park, the closest hotels to the North Rim are Kaibab Lodge, 928-638-2389 or kaibablodge.com, and Jacob Lake Inn, 928-643-7232 or jacoblake.com.

North Rim Campground reservations can be made via 877-444-6777 or recreation.gov. The same website handles Jacob Lake and Demotte campgrounds, which are outside the park and make half their sites available by reservation.

Gasoline is available on the road to the North Rim Campground.

Deborah Wall’s book “Base Camp Las Vegas: 101 hikes in the Southwest” ($24.95, Imbrifex) is available on Amazon. She can be reached at deborabus@aol.com.

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