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US 89, Northern Arizona
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The Glen Canyon Dam Bridge is 1,271 feet long, about 700 feet high, and was completed in 1964.† |
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There's a pedestrian walkway that allows you to safely gawk at this...

... the 1,560 foot wide, 587 foot high Glen Canyon Dam. Just like at Horseshoe Bend, my wide-angle lens wasn't wide enough to capture it all in one picture.
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The Glen Canyon Dam was built between 1956 and 1966. It generates enough hydroelectric electricity to power 650,000 homes. However, it has been plagued by controversy, even before it was built, mostly because it flooded Glen Canyon, creating Lake Powell.† |
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There's an expensive, fancy visitor's center at the edge of the canyon, overlooking the dam. Most likely, quite a few of your tax dollars went to building it, so you'd better enjoy it... that is, if you can get in the front door.
Remarkably, the most frustrating moment of my entire trip--dealing with long security lines, metal detectors, and full body searches--didn't happen at the airport. It happened right here at the visitor's center. In order to enter the visitor's center you must pass through security. Let me be clear. I didn't say you had to pass through security to take a tour inside the dam, or cross the bridge in front of the dam. No, the threat-level-red precautions are all designed to protect the visitor's center!
I took my place in line, which stretched out the door for some reason. It was about 10 minutes before the building closed, and I wanted nothing more than to buy a magnet at the gift shop. An entire busload of foreign tourists had just queued up in front of me, all of whom, it seemed, could not understand the concept of removing your keys from your pocket. The line crept forward, until finally, the person in front of me tried to go through. The bell rang, and he was led off to the side for a one-on-one inspection. This gave me a moment to think about any possible piece of metal, anywhere on my body. I had removed it all, and awaited my moment to step through the detector. But no! One of the six or so guards held up a hand, and told me that I couldn't go through until the previous guy came back from his pat-down, and successfully walked through the metal detector. In just five seconds, I could have been inside, but instead, I was told to stand there, for nearly ten minutes! And again, all of this was to ensure that a visitor's center was secure. Once inside, I walked around, saw the entire facility, made my purchase in the gift shop, and was out the door, all in less time than it took just to walk inside.
Still shaking my head from the totally unnecessary security exercise, I drove on up US 89.

For a few minutes, as you drive away from Page, you're treated to beautiful views of Lake Powell. These pictures really don't do it justice. It's other-worldly.

It does make you wonder, though, what it would look like here without the lake. Could those environmentalists be right? What amazing world lies underneath that flood of water? We'll probably never know.
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There is much more to see in this area, including the awesome Cottonwood Canyon Road, which travels through the Escalante-Grand Staircase National Monument. I traveled this road in 2004, but it was closed due to poor road conditions during this trip (in 2007). You can read about my drive down Cottonwood Canyon Road here. Also worth visiting in this area are two spots of particular interest to photographers: Antelope Canyon and The Wave. A visit to either requires some advanced planning, so you might need to add an extra day or two to your trip. |
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US 89 heads west through southern Utah, eventually turning north at Kanab. About 17 miles north of town is Mt. Carmel Junction, and the beginning of the amazing UT Rte. 9, which takes you through Zion National Park to Springdale, which is where Day 1 ends. |
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