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Visiting Arizona's remote, gorgeous Wave arizona Visiting remote geologic wonder requires luck, pluck, but the payoff is incredible By Jeff Greenwald Updated Dec 7, 2012 2:11 p.m.
THE WAVE: Located at Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, in Arizona, just over the Utah border, with drawings for 10 permits for next-day hikes held daily at 9 a.m. at Grand Staircase-Escalante ...
VERMILION CLIFFS NATIONAL MONUMENT — Small wooden balls click rapidly in a whirling bingo basket, as 78 hikers wait to see if their numbers will roll out to win one ...
Small wooden balls click rapidly in a whirling bingo basket, as 78 hikers wait to see if their numbers will roll out to win one of 10 permits to visit an Arizona rock formation known as The Wave ...
Permit limits and remote access make some of Arizona's most spectacular places hard to get to. Try these areas instead. Skipping the US Travel 2025 🌴 This country's safest A spotlight on America ...
Small wooden balls click rapidly in a whirling bingo basket, as 78 hikers wait to see if their numbers will roll out to win one of 10 permits to visit an Arizona rock formation known as The Wave ...
Permit limits and remote access make some of Arizona's most spectacular places like The Wave and Havasu Falls hard to get to. Try these areas instead.
SALT LAKE CITY — The brutal summer heat proved too much on Tuesday for another hiker visiting The Wave, a flowing sandstone rock formation near the Utah-Arizona border that claimed the lives ...
In this May 28, 2013 photo, a hiker takes a photo on a rock formation known as The Wave in the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in Arizona. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management limits the number ...
Only 20 people are allowed to visit The Wave each day, with 10 chosen in an online lottery four months in advance and the other 10 picked in this daily 9 a.m. lottery.
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