Made decent progress yesterday, but we have a pretty big day of driving ahead of us.
Yesterday, we set out from Flagstaff for the Grand Canyon, which we arrived at sometime around 1. We entered through the South Rim entrance and headed east along the Desert View route, which wound along the canyon for about 30 miles.
A few years ago, my parents and I drove around the area, but I was still taken aback by its sheer size. We pulled off at a couple of viewing platforms, and stopped off at the Desert View Watchtower, where I got out and snapped some pictures.
All told, we were only in the park for about two hours, but needed to get on the road to gain some ground for today.
We headed up AZ-89, through over a hundred miles of barren Navajo territory. Looking at a map, it does look like there are some bigger Navajo settlements to the east, but what we drove through was rather empty.
Right before the Utah border, we hit Page, Arizona, where we briefly stopped to see part of Lake Powell and the Glen Canyon Dam. With about 100 miles to Zion National Park from there, we continued along 89, stopping off about 40 miles before the park in a small town called Kanab, Utah, where we stayed for the night.
Today, we’re finishing the drive into Zion. Unfortunately, as with most of these parks, we don’t have a ton of time to explore, but we’ll see what we can from the main route.
We’re hoping to be out of Zion by noon, so that we can make the approximately 350-mile drive from there to Moab, outside of Arches National Park. If we can get there by around 6, we should still have enough sunlight to see the main sights. It’s a smaller park, so it should be pretty manageable.
It’s all coming to an end quickly. Today is our last day of national park sightseeing. Tomorrow, we’ll finish the drive into Denver for our last new ballpark. From there, we’ll make our way across Kansas and Missouri, into St. Louis for one last game, before finishing in Chicago on Tuesday.
It does take time to come up having a website
that gives you the much needed results hence the web developer must be ready to help you along the route.
In the previous section, I offered up three questions you must use as
a focal point when creating a business model. So an employee’s birthday is a great opportunity for a
company to show they appreciate and recognize all their hard work over the past year by giving them business gifts.
In order to cope inside a fast-paced market, new applications are
needed. So unless any business completes the formalities and discover the necessary certifications they can’t start their
business. A well-developed business plan is much like your blueprint for victory.