Best Western Plus Ruby's Inn
At Ruby’s Inn, you can take a helicopter ride, watch a rodeo, admire Western art, wash laundry, shop for...
The park has one lodge and two campgrounds. Most travelers stay just north of the park in Bryce Canyon City, near the Hwy 12/63 junction or 11 miles east in Tropic. Other lodgings are available along Hwy 12, and 24 miles west in Panguitch. Red Canyon and Kodachrome Basin State Park also have campgrounds.
At Ruby’s Inn, you can take a helicopter ride, watch a rodeo, admire Western art, wash laundry, shop for...
Owned by the same folks as Best Western Ruby’s Inn across the street, Bryce View is geared toward budget...
Motel rooms, cabins and camping backing up to a cliff. Some pets OK.
Backed by natural hills and technicolor sunsets adjoining backcountry parklands, this stately stone-and-wood inn offers adventure out the back door.
The 100-plus NPS campground near the visitor center has a camp store, laundry, showers, flush toilets and water. Loop C is the closest to the rim (sites 59 and 60 have great views, but little privacy).
Built in the 1920s, the main lodge exudes rustic mountain charm, with a large stone fireplace and exposed roof timbers. Most rooms are in two-story wooden satellite buildings with private balconies.
Though more wooded than North Campground, Sunset has few amenities beyond flush toilets and water available. (For laundry, showers and groceries, visit North.) Twenty of the tent sites are reservable early May to late August.
Knotty-pine walls and log beds add lots of charm to the roomy one- and two-bedroom cabins here; some with kitchens, some with microwaves and minifridges.
This old, rambling white clapboard motel has been in the same family for ages. Cottages have the most character; dated standard rooms have simple beds with simple spreads.
Built in 1998 this purpose-built, farmhouse-style B&B at the far edge of town has spacious, spotless rooms. The welcoming owners make the bullberry jam served with home-baked goodies at the full country breakfast.
The 200 sites, camping cabins (no linens) and tipis (bring your own sleeping bag and cot) adjacent to all those services at Ruby's Inn are in a fairly forestlike, if commercial, setting.
Up on a bluff west of town, three exterior-access rooms lead out to an expansive, upper-level deck or ground-level patio with great views. The owner's background in art is evident in the decor.
Watch a rodeo, admire Western art, buy cowboy souvenirs, wash laundry, seriously grocery shop, fill up with gas, log on to the internet, dine at restaurants and then post a letter about it all.
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