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Located in picturesque Tropic on Utah's Scenic Highway 12, a
dedicated All-American Road, Bryce Point Bed and Breakfast is
only eight miles east of the entrance to Bryce Canyon National
Park and within walking distance of the park's eastern
boundary. From the picture window in your room you can see
Bryce Point, where more than a million visitors each year
enjoy a breathtaking view of Bryce Canyon.

Built in the 1930's and remodeled in 1990, the home has five
spacious guest rooms, each with private full shower bath. All
rooms have been individually created and feature picture
windows, comfortable queen beds, large closets, and color
televisions and VCRs for watching movies from the Inn's video
library. A cabin is also available for special occasions and
includes a living room, kitchen, laundry room, and a large
bedroom with bath.
You may come and go without entering common rooms via a
separate hallway that affords the privacy that you may desire.
Feel free to share the living room anytime with your hosts and
fellow guests in a warm and friendly atmosphere. Afternoons
are a great time to soak in the sun and the serenity of a
small country town on the wrap-around sundeck.
Awake mornings to the light aroma of a full breakfast, a
perfect start to a day spent viewing the dramatic wonders of
southern Utah. Begin with a hot cup of coffee and fresh fruit,
followed by a scrumptious entree. Your hosts, natives of
Tropic, are available to help you experience the best and most
of Bryce Canyon.
Horseback riding is available at Bryce Canyon Lodge, or you
may want to join a park naturalist for a special hike. You can
also take a day trip to spectacular Zion National Park or the
North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Area scenery is without
parallel, the wildlife is varied and exciting, and the hunting
and fishing are unequalled. |
Bryce Canyon Country's thousands of square miles encompass
three national parks, Glen Canyon National Recreation Area's
giant Lake Powell, the Grand Stair Case Escalante National
Monument, and three state parks.
Relax and watch as the sunset's final light plays mystically
upon the giant pink hoodoos of Bryce Canyon, turning them from
orange to pink to lavender in the west. The same fading light
imparts what appears to be an almost phosphorescent inner glow
to magnificent Powell Point in the east. After dark, gaze at
the billions of stars that seem so close, just out of reach
from the Grand Dee hot tub, always available to guests. |