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Arizona

Exploring & Rafting the Western Grand Canyon With Your Grandchild

Program No. 2519RJ
Explore the Western Grand Canyon with your grandchild as you whitewater raft the Colorado River, learn about the life of a cowboy and ride a helicopter above it all!

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Prefer to enroll or inquire by phone? 800-454-5768
climate
Plan ahead.
What kind of weather can you expect? Take a look!
itinerary
Please Note:
The itinerary for this program is different on certain dates.
Age 9 - 13
ROOMING OPTION PRICING
The figures below indicate the rooming options available.
DATES
Jul 11 - Jul 16, 2023
Per Adult
1,899
Per Child
1,549
Select
Jul 11 - Jul 16, 2023
1,899
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
1,899
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
2,149
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
SOLD OUT
Jul 24 - Jul 29, 2023
Per Adult
1,899
Per Child
1,549
Select
Jul 24 - Jul 29, 2023
1,899
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
1,899
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
2,149
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
Select Date
Filling Fast!
Jul 29 - Aug 3, 2023
Per Adult
1,899
Per Child
1,549
Select
Jul 29 - Aug 3, 2023
1,899
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
1,899
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
2,149
/ Adult
1,549
/ Child
Limited Space
Jun 3 - Jun 8, 2024
Per Adult
2,049
Per Child
1,649
Select
Jun 3 - Jun 8, 2024
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,299
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
Select Date
Jun 16 - Jun 21, 2024
Per Adult
2,049
Per Child
1,649
Select
Jun 16 - Jun 21, 2024
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,299
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
Select Date
Jul 7 - Jul 12, 2024
Per Adult
2,049
Per Child
1,649
Select
Itinerary Note

This date begins in Flagstaff.

Jul 7 - Jul 12, 2024
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,299
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
Select Date
Itinerary Note

This date begins in Flagstaff.

Jul 21 - Jul 26, 2024
Per Adult
2,049
Per Child
1,649
Select
Itinerary Note

This Date begins in Flagstaff.

Jul 21 - Jul 26, 2024
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,299
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
Select Date
Itinerary Note

This Date begins in Flagstaff.

Jul 28 - Aug 2, 2024
Per Adult
2,049
Per Child
1,649
Select
Itinerary Note

This date begins in Flagstaff.

Jul 28 - Aug 2, 2024
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,049
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
2,299
/ Adult
1,649
/ Child
Select Date
Itinerary Note

This date begins in Flagstaff.

6 days
5 nights
14 meals
5B 4L 5D
View Full Itinerary

At a Glance

Share with your grandchild the thrill of whitewater rafting on the Colorado River in the depths of the Grand Canyon. With experienced river runners, navigate exhilarating whitewater rapids. Take part in outdoor field trips on the water, on the ground and in the sky as you learn about the geology, natural history and native peoples of the Grand Canyon. Round out a rousing week with s'mores and stories by the campfire!
Activity Level
Outdoor: No Sweat
Walking up to one mile on varied terrain, sometimes in hot conditions. Getting in/out of rafts. Elevations up to 5,500 feet.

Best of all, you’ll…

  • Raft 37 wild and scenic miles of the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.
  • Take a spectacular flight by helicopter from the river to the rim of the Grand Canyon.
  • Drive the only road to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and picnic and play on a Colorado River beach.

General Notes

Program is for grandchildren 9-12 or 11-13, depending on the date. Children must be 9 years old for rafting/helicopter rides. For a comparable family adventure for all generations, check out program #9878! Please note, helicopters cannot fly in excessively hot and/or windy conditions for safety reasons. Although this happens very infrequently, it remains a possibility. In that event, the raft trip will be extended to a location where ground transportation can reach the group.
Featured Expert
All Experts
Profile Image
Karen Landis
Karen Landis' front door opened up onto Route 66 for 38 years, giving her status as a Route 66 legend in the Seligman stretch of the road. In 1984, a customer at her Route 66 convenience store mustered the gumption to ask her to marry him, and Karen and Mike Landis — a legend himself and known as Arizona's No. 1 cowboy — ranched together for 29 years. Under Mike's tutelage and her indomitable spirit, Karen became a 'cowboy' in her own right and the two of them became one of the best-known ranching couples in northwest Arizona. Karen's independent spirit and ropin' and ridin' skills have opened up new perspectives to countless Road Scholar participants.

Please note: This expert may not be available for every date of this program.

Profile Image of Karen Landis
Karen Landis View biography
Karen Landis' front door opened up onto Route 66 for 38 years, giving her status as a Route 66 legend in the Seligman stretch of the road. In 1984, a customer at her Route 66 convenience store mustered the gumption to ask her to marry him, and Karen and Mike Landis — a legend himself and known as Arizona's No. 1 cowboy — ranched together for 29 years. Under Mike's tutelage and her indomitable spirit, Karen became a 'cowboy' in her own right and the two of them became one of the best-known ranching couples in northwest Arizona. Karen's independent spirit and ropin' and ridin' skills have opened up new perspectives to countless Road Scholar participants.
Profile Image of Stewart Lasseter
Stewart Lasseter View biography
Stewart Lasseter completed studies in geo-science, natural history and Spanish at the University of Arizona. He then studied as the protégé of a Native American healer, learning from her practices of wholeness, kinesiology, mind-body medicine, and dyslexia correction. He has years of experience bringing groups in touch with the natural world and has completed post-graduate studies in health sciences at Prescott College.
Profile Image of Carrie Calisay Cannon
Carrie Calisay Cannon View biography
Carrie Calisay Cannon is a member of the Kiowa tribe of Oklahoma and also is of Oglala Lakota descent. She has a B.S. in Wildlife Biology and an M.S. in Resource Management. She is currently employed as an Ethnobotanist for the Hualapai Department of Cultural Resources. She administers a number of department projects and programs which promote the intergenerational teaching of Hualapai ethnobotanical knowledge. She works towards ensuring tribal ethnobotanical knowledge persists as a living practice and tradition.
Profile Image of Sandy Kehs
Sandy Kehs View biography
Sandy Kehs, a Pennsylvania native, fell in love with the West at 16. After completing her Master's degree in Spanish at Penn State, she chose Arizona as her home to further her bi-lingual skills, love of the outdoors, and interest in archaeology. She is involved in protecting archeological sites in Arizona through the Site Steward Program and also works for the Elden Pueblo Project, educating students about archaeology in Flagstaff. Other interests include bird watching, marveling at the night sky, and traveling with husband Dan.
Profile Image of Brendan O'Brien
Brendan O'Brien View biography
Brendan O’Brien holds a Master of Science in Geography degree from Northern Arizona University and calls Flagstaff home. He has held jobs in the outdoor education field for much of the last decade with time spent as a Park Ranger in White Sands National Monument and a forest technician in Flathead National Forest. Brendan loves all the outdoor activities that Northern Arizona offers and especially its crystal clear night skies where he can enjoy his passion for star gazing.
Visit the Road Scholar Bookshop
You can find many of the books we recommend at the Road Scholar store on bookshop.org, a website that supports local bookstores.
An Introduction to Grand Canyon Prehistory
by Coder, Christopher M.
People have inhabited Grand Canyon for the past twelve thousand years. Evidence of their lives exists throughout the canyon; but it is up to their ancestors and archaeologists to interpret those remains for us. This book provides a popular look at the architecture, art, and tools of prehistoric Puebloan peoples, as well as information about modern-day Native American tribes. With illustrations and color photographs.
Half Broke Horses
by Walls, Jeannette
Jeannette Walls, author of The Glass Castle, wrote this true life novel which unfolds across Northern Arizona from the 1920s to the 1960s. Its heroine, Lily Casey Smith, (Ms. Wall's grandmother) battled the elements, prejudices, economic conditions and politics of remote frontier Arizona. Many of the locations described - Peach Springs, Seligman, Flagstaff, the Navajo Reservation, the Arizona Strip - are sites visited by NAU Road Scholar programs. Readers of this selection will feel the sense of heritage from this tale of life in our distant corner of America. Note: may not be appropriate for young readers.
An Introduction to Grand Canyon Ecology
by Houk, Rose
56pp
Naturalist's Guide to Canyon Country
by Williams, David B. & Gloria Brown
Comprehensive and beautifully illustrated trailside reference to plants, animals, and geology of an area that includes nine national parks and monuments. 192 pp.
Carving Grand Canyon: Evidence, Theories, and Mystery
by Ranney, Wayne
Ranney explains how rivers in general can physically carve canyons, looks chronologically at the numerous theories that have been presented by successive generations of geologists regarding the Grand Canyon's formation, and describes a plausible sequence of geologic events that could create such a landscape. Numerous color photographs, detailed illustrations, and maps are provided. Annotation ©2005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR 160pp; 2nd edition 2012.
The Exploration of the Colorado River and Its Canyons
by Powell, John Wesley
Full text of Powell's 1,000-mile expedition down the fabled Colorado in 1869. Superb account of terrain, geology, vegetation, Indians, famine, mutiny, treacherous rapids, mighty canyons. 240 illustrations. 432pp





Important registration tip:
If you want to attend the live lecture, please do not wait until the last minute to enroll.
If you enroll after a lecture is complete, we’ll send you a recording of the event.