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Arizona’s Beach Front Property
By Lindsay DeChacco
An intrepid drizzle plagues my first experience at
Lake Powell. It begins as I hike the short distance
from the dock at Rainbow Bridge to view one of
Powell’s most photographed, and consequently recognizable,
attractions: Rainbow Bridge National Monument.
Spanning 275 feet, the sandstone structure is the
largest natural bridge in existence. As I approach,
the grand arch obediently rises to 290 feet before
me, but no golden sunshine greets me at the end of
this rainbow.
Photo buffs wait in vain for some rays to irradiate
the sacred Navajo site, or an arcing rainbow to superset
its namesake monument. As hopes of a dazzling photo
op drain away, shutterbugs begin to shift their thousand dollar lenses onto unsuspecting onlookers hunched
beneath Big Bird-yellow ponchos and plastic trash
bags.
In more temperate moods, Lake Powell has happily
played the artist’s muse. Straddling the border between
Utah and Arizona, she is the unearthly beauty that
captures the imaginations of filmmakers, flirts with
photographers, lures fishermen and delights the rest
of her admirers with stunning scenery and endless
recreation.
A few hours later, we snake through the narrowing
passageways of Cathedral Canyon until the rocky encasement
hedges us in and clunks against either side of our
small powerboat. In the drizzle, fledgling waterfalls
begin to crest down the top tiers of the towering
rock layers. The canyon walls, smooth and free of
vegetation, are basted with a grain-like mineral
patina that glistens in the rain.
It’s this stoic and spiritual scenery that has telescoped
Lake Powell through time to stage everything from
biblical tales to sci-fi classics. At not yet 50
years old, she has starred in movies, graced the
covers of countless magazines and stirred her share
of controversy.
In 1968, Powell’s stark landscape portrayed the simian-dominated
otherworld in the original Planet of the Apes. Earlier
still, in 1965, she was filmmakers’ stand-in for
the Holy Land when they filmed the Greatest Story
Ever Told on her shores.
More recently, Lake Powell set the scene for Jodie
Foster and Mel Gibson’s pointed repartee and cat-and-mouse
games in the elaborate 1994 remake of Maverick. And
Christian Slater chased John Travolta among her rocky
outcroppings in a race to avert certain nuclear disaster
in 1996’s Broken Arrow.
Though the lake itself did not exist half a century
ago, its receptacle, Glen Canyon, bears the imprints
of the ancient world. Indian ruins, petroglyphs and
dinosaur fossils all contribute to Powell’s aura
of a prehistoric land.
Dismissed in 1858, one of its early explorers Lt.
Joseph C. Ives called it a “profitless locality,”
“intended by nature to be forever unvisited and undisturbed.”
However, 100 years later, Glen Canyon experienced
an unprecedented spike in popularity, catching the
eye of both environmentalists and the US Bureau of
Reclamation and inciting a stand-off worthy of its
spaghetti-western backdrop. All the ingredients were
present for a top-notch this-canyon-ain’t-big-enough-for-the-both-of-us
showdown: determined rivals, a coveted property —
add water and stir it up.
They did, about 500 feet of water. After the construction
of the Glen Canyon Dam in 1963, Lake Powell began
to fill amidst the protest of conservationists loath
to see Glen Canyon’s natural and archeological treasures
submerged. Nevertheless, over the course of 17 years,
the dam continued to siphon water from the Colorado
River and Lake Powell reached full-pool status in
1980.
Today, Lake Powell draws 2 to 3 million visitors
every season. Water has lent Glen Canyon’s scenic
and cultural riches, at least those that break the
surface, greater accessibility than Ives could have
possibly imagined one and a half centuries ago. Sparing
not a single creature comfort, modern day visitors
admire ancient petroglyphs from the decks of luxury
houseboats, and motor their way among Powell’s 96
breathtaking canyons in smaller speed boats.
The town of Page ushers visitors to the Arizona shores
of Powell. Belying its status as gateway to this
international playground, Page is a modest burg where
the churches congregate along the same street and
a familiar Wal-Mart is probably the biggest
business around.
From Page, visitors can contract a tour guide to
take them to Upper Antelope Canyon, whose unremarkable
exterior also belies what is to be found inside.
The slot canyon’s sandstone walls are frozen in smooth
spiraling ripples and the shafts of sunlight that
spear the sandy canyon floor are invisible until
they are painted in dancing iridescence by kicked
up dust. Oddly familiar, even on your first visit,
Upper Antelope Canyon is another frequent resident
of the bimonthly glossy, a familiar face whose name
and address are less recognizable.
The Lake Powell Resorts and Marinas, managed by Aramark, provide lakeside lodgings, houseboat and powerboat
rentals to Powell’s visitors. The resort restaurant, the Rainbow Room,
much like the like-named Manhattan restaurant, offers
panoramic views and delectable cuisine prepared by
Chef Brandon Shubert. However, the atmosphere leans
toward the casual, featuring a Kokopelli- and Anasazi-inspired
décor over deco chandeliers.
The rooms at the resort are also markedly unprententious,
equipped with some trendily green elements, such
as built-in shampoo and conditioner dispensers in
lieu of individual bottles. A few of the rooms have
been renovated to be 100 percent environmentally
friendly.
An international staff and guest roster lend the
lodge a cosmopolitan flavor. Whether visitors are
enjoying the breakfast buffet, lounging poolside
or admiring views of the lake, a pleasant conglomeration of accents adds spice to
the hum of ambient
conversation.
Despite the lodge’s charms, houseboats garner the
greatest interest among visitors.
The 75-foot Odyssey-class, the marina’s largest model,
sleeps 12 and features a host of luxury amenities
including a gourmet kitchen complete with stocked
refrigerator, fireplace, home theater system, central
air and heating, a hot tub and a slide.
Most of the houseboats putter along Powell’s 1960
miles of shoreline carrying a flotilla of watercraft
in their wake, hauling enough ammo in their arsenal
to round out hour after sun-drenched hour with kayaking,
skiing, wakeboarding and fishing. But even with all this available to delight and distract,
there are still moments when the well-trodden destination
manages to transcend its trappings.
After dusk, the rocky buttes and plateaus paint geometric
shadows in the dim moonlit horizon and everyone gathers
around a glowing bonfire that spits sparks into the
crisp night air; the waves lap in the distance and
thoughts are unleashed to volley between the abstract
and the absurd.
Here, the majesty and magic of Lake Powell unfold
equally before rich and poor; a bag of marshmallows
rivals gourmet cuisine and even the finest of houseboats
can’t compare to a sandy cove with the clear heavens
stretched endlessly overhead, inviting visitors to
remain forever beneath their starry canopy.
Photo courtesy of Aramark/Lake Powell Resorts and Marinas
Castle Rock (Short) Cut
For five years, a popular Powell shortcut has been
closed due to low water levels. But a heavy snow
season proved to be the ticket to putting the defunct
passage back in commission.
“This winter produced the best overall snowfall of
the past eight years, with snowpacks generally well
above average,” said Barry Wirth of the Bureau of
Reclamation.
The effects of the long-term drought significantly
impacted the visitor experiences over recent years.
“There was more traffic in the channel,” said Debbie
Crick, who last boated at Powell shortly after the
cut was closed. “We spent more on gas and had to
travel farther to get to the beaches we were accustomed
to visiting.”
This season, the waters are expected to rise about
50 feet throughout the spring run-off, enough to
put Castle Rock Cut back in the pink with several
feet to spare. The cut requires elevations of 3620
feet for boats to pass through. Levels are expected
to peak in July at around 3640 feet (64 percent capacity),
up from the year low of 3588 feet (47 percent capacity).
If the bureau’s predictions proved correct, mid-June
saw Castle Rock Cut navigable for the first time
since 2003 and, according to Wirth, it should stay
that way throughout the rest of the boating season
and perhaps even into next season.
Powell enthusiasts are geared up. “We are planning
on going up to the lake this year,” said Crick who
has vacationed at Powell off and on since the mid-sixties.
She’s particularly looking forward to enjoying better
beaches. “There really are a lot of beaches accessible
without having to travel throughout the lake, [they’re]
just right off that cut.” |