Northeast Arizona

We’ve compiled the best of the best in Northeast Arizona - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

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  • 1. Glen Canyon Dam National Recreation Area

    Once you leave the Page business district heading northwest, the Glen Canyon Dam National Recreation Area and Lake Powell behind it immediately become visible. This concrete-arch dam—all 5 million cubic feet of it—was completed in September 1963, its power plant an engineering feat that rivaled the Hoover Dam. The dam's crest is 1,560 feet across and rises 710 feet from bedrock and 583 feet above the waters of the Colorado River. When Lake Powell is full, it's 560 feet deep at the dam. The plant generates some 1.3 million kilowatts of electricity when each generator's 40-ton shaft is producing nearly 200,000 horsepower. Power from the dam serves a five-state grid consisting of Colorado, Arizona, Utah, California, and New Mexico, and provides energy for more than 1.5 million users. With only 8 inches of annual rainfall, the Lake Powell area enjoys blue skies nearly year-round. Summer temperatures range from the 60s to the 90s. Fall and spring are usually balmy, with daytime temperatures often in the 70s and 80s, but chilly weather can set in. Nights are cool even in summer, and in winter the risk of a cold spell increases, but all-weather houseboats and tour boats make for year-round cruising. Boaters and campers should note that regulations require the use of portable toilets on the lake and lakeshore to prevent water pollution.

    U.S. 89, Page, Arizona, 86040, USA
    928-608–6200

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $30 per vehicle or $15 per person (entering on foot or by bicycle), good for up to 7 days; boating fee $30 up to 7 days
  • 2. Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park

    For generations, the Navajo have grown crops and herded sheep in Monument Valley, considered to be one of the most scenic and mesmerizing destinations in the Navajo Nation. Within Monument Valley lies the 30,000-acre Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, home as well to the View Hotel, where eons of wind and rain have carved the mammoth red-sandstone monoliths into memorable formations. The monoliths, which jut hundreds of feet above the desert floor, stand on the horizon like sentinels, frozen in time and unencumbered by electric wires, telephone poles, or fences—a scene virtually unchanged for centuries. These are the very same nostalgic images so familiar to movie buffs who recall the early Western films of John Wayne. A 17-mile self-guided driving tour on an extremely rough dirt road (there's only one road, so you can't get lost) passes the memorable Mittens and Totem Pole formations, among others. Be sure to walk (15 minutes round-trip) from North Window around the end of Cly Butte for the views.

    Monument Valley Rd., Monument Valley, Utah, 84536, USA
    435-727–5874-visitor center

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $10 per person or $20 per vehicle (up to 4 people), May–Sept., daily 6 am–8 pm; Oct.–Apr., daily 8–5
    View Tours and Activities
  • 3. Dinosaur Tracks

    About 5½ miles west of Tuba City, between mileposts 316 and 317 on U.S. 160, is a small sign for the Dinosaur Tracks. It's free to see these tracks that a dilophosaurus—a carnivorous bipedal reptile over 10 feet tall—left in mud that turned to sandstone, but Navajo guides will often greet you as you arrive and insist on taking you around the site. They're very friendly and helpful, but if you take them up on their offer, they expect to be tipped, usually at least $20. Ask them about guiding you to the nearby petroglyphs and freshwater springs.

    U.S. 160, Tuba City, Arizona, USA

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free
  • 4. Monument Valley Visitor Center

    The handsome center contains an extensive crafts shop and exhibits devoted to ancient and modern Native American history, including a display on the World War II Navajo code talkers. Most of the independent guided group tours, necessary to go deep into the valley, leave from the center. You can generally find Navajo guides—who will escort you to places that you are not allowed to visit on your own—in the center or at the booths in the parking lot. The center adjoins the stunning View Hotel (and restaurant), which sits on a gradual rise overlooking the valley and its magnificent red rock monoliths, with big-sky views in every direction.

    Monument Valley Rd., Monument Valley, Utah, 84536, USA
    435-727–5874

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: May–Sept., daily 6 am–8 pm; Oct.–Apr., daily 8–5
  • 5. Navajo Cultural Center of Kayenta

    Take a self-guided walking tour through the Navajo Cultural Center of Kayenta, which includes the small Shadehouse Museum and a 2-acre outdoor cultural park. The museum is designed to resemble an authentic shadehouse (these wood-frame, rather crude structures are used to shelter sheepherders in the region's often unforgiving high-desert sun). Inside, visitors will find an extensive collection of Navajo code talkers memorabilia and local artwork, as well as exhibits on the beliefs and traditions that have shaped North America's largest Native American tribe. As you walk through the grounds of the cultural park, note the different types of traditional hogans and sweat lodges.

    U.S. 160, Kayenta, Arizona, 86033, USA
    928-697–3170-Hampton Inn

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free, Museum closed Nov.–Feb., Mar.--Oct., daily 10--7
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  • 6. Navajo Nation Fair

    Many rodeos are held near the center of downtown at the fairgrounds. The community hosts the annual multiday July 4 celebration with a major rodeo, ceremonial dances, and a parade. The Navajo Nation Fair, much like a traditional state fair, is held in early September. It offers standard county-fair rides, midway booths, contests, powwow competitions, and a rodeo.

    AZ 264, Window Rock, Arizona, 86515, USA
    928-871–6478

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5
  • 7. Navajo Nation Museum

    Devoted to the art, culture, and history of the Navajo people, this museum also has an excellent library on the Navajo Nation. Each season brings new exhibitions by native artists; call for a list of current shows. There are also permanent exhibits on the Long Walk—during which the Navajo were tragically and temporarily relocated to Fort Sumner, New Mexico—and on the culture and philosophies of the Navajo people. In the same building is the Navajo Nation Visitor Center, a great resource for all sorts of information on reservation activities.

    AZ 264 and Loop Rd., Window Rock, Arizona, 86515, USA
    928-871–7941

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free, Closed Sun., Mon. 8–5, Tues.–Fri. 8–6, Sat. 9–5
  • 8. The Navajo Nation Zoological and Botanical Park

    Amid the sandstone monoliths on the border between Arizona and New Mexico, the Navajo Nation Zoological and Botanical Park displays about 50 species of domestic and wild animals, birds, and amphibians that figure in Navajo legends, as well as examples of plants used by traditional people. Most of the animals here were brought in as orphans or after sustaining injuries—they include black bears, mountain lions, Mexican gray wolves, bobcats, cougars, golden eagles, Gila monsters, and prairie rattlesnakes. It's the nation's only Native American–owned zoo.

    AZ 264, Window Rock, Arizona, 86515, USA
    928-871–6574

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free, Closed Sun., Mon.–Sat. 10–4:30

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