The first people to live in the canyon were Ancient Puebloans. Exploration through the canyon only began in the late 1800s when geologist John Wesley Powell, with a crew of 10 men, launched a river expedition that would last three months.
The journey begins at Mile Marker Zero - Lees Ferry, so named after John Doyle Lee, an American pioneer who set up a ferry service in 1873. It was an ideal location for a ferry crossing as the river was accessible from both sides. Operations ceased in 1928 when construction of the Navajo Bridge was completed 4mi (6.4km) downstream.
Today, Lees Ferry is the launching site for river rafting expeditions and considered the official start of the Grand Canyon’s Colorado River journey.
Boarding
the inflatable raft, I settle down taking in the Echo Cliffs to the
east and Marble Canyon to the west. The river is wide and calm and
reflective. The landscape is a vermillion hue with vegetation protruding
from the river’s edge. The atmosphere is
peaceful and tranquil. I push off heading west. Outwardly, I am calm and
relaxed but inside I am anxious and nervous as I ride into the unknown
of the Colorado River.
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