1. Canyon's End Motel

    1. Canyon's End Motel

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    Meadview, AZ

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    Canyon's End Motel

    4.4 (8 reviews)
    InexpensiveHotels
    Open Open 24 hours

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    Buffalo Bill's Resort and Casino - Decor in Room (B Tower) 6/15/25

    Buffalo Bill's Resort and Casino

    (1k reviews)

    $$

    Cool place to stop on your way to or back from California…read more Casino has a lot of slots. Plenty of places to eat. Clean restrooms. The roller coaster and log flume are seemingly abandoned.

    GETTING HERE:…read more Located in Primm Nevada (Stateline) off the I-15. It's next to the Primm Resort (the old Primadonna) and across the freeway from Whiskey Pete's (RIP). REVIEW: This is a very hard review to write. I too, like many other Yelpers, stayed here as a kid and in my early 20's. So much fun and so much history! I have great memories of the roller coaster, especially. All of that is now gone; thanks to shutdown and other extenuating factors. But, the memories remain. I visited recently to see a concert at the Desert Star of the Arena, so thought it best to get a room. I was in the B Tower, and suffice to say, it was horrible. I won't get into details, but it was bad. V bad. I felt it was too late to call the Front Desk (after the concert, when I returned to my room) that I just sucked it up and powered through the night. When I checked out I made sure to mention the state of the room and they were more than accommodating and courteous and assured me that I ^should have called them when I returned late to my room. This outstanding service bumped this review up from 1 star to 3, and I was close to rounding up to 4. There's a Denny's on property and be sure to check out the Bonnie and Clyde Car! There's an old/empty food court area and it's located at the back. It has a separate Yelp page that I will reiverw and update shortly. Prayer circle for Buffalo Bill's that it will power forward and come out even stronger than before. I know they can and will!

    Hualapai Lodge - Soap with tribal seal.

    Hualapai Lodge

    (107 reviews)

    $$

    When we decided to take a trip to Northern Arizona, a family member had booked this spot as many of…read morethe hotels close to where we were staying were sold out. This hotel is alright; it is kind of in the middle of nowhere without much to do near it. We stayed here as we wanted to visit the Grand Canyon Caverns near it. Prior to arriving to the hotel, I did not realize it sits directly in front of a train track. A train goes by once every 30 minutes or so. They have a box of ear plugs at the desk if you need them. While the train horns did wake me up, I drifted back to sleep quickly listening to the train on the tracks. Surprisingly we all had a decent night's sleep, but I know some people would absolutely hate the train tracks being right behind their room. Be aware unless you have Verizon or log into the hotel WIFI, your phone WILL NOT work here! We had zero service so we couldn't call or text anyone if we needed to. The hotel does have a small pool and a hot tub which were nice to use. They also have a small gift shop and a restaurant attached. The biscuits and gravy was delicious for breakfast. Breakfast is not included though; you will need to pay for any food you are wanting.

    Arrived late. It is great arriving here…read more I've arrived at Hualapai Lodge since about 1993. I was what the old-timer's called an "Indian Agent." For 36 years I had a professional relationship with our Nation's tribes in Natural Resource Issues; farming, grazing, transportation, forestry, wildland fire, fire rehabilitation, forest and woodland fuels. Tribal business sense and economic development skills have grown, developed and steadily appeared. In 1981, two Traditional Elders of the Yakama and Wanapum Bands of the Columbia River said, "...We're gonna Indianize you chris..." That has happened no matter where my feet landed. Because I was formally introduced to the Baha'i Faith by a Yakama Tribal member, signing my "declaration card" on the Yakama Nation, I have participated in sharing and discussions many of my "Last of the White Guys" co-workers never knew. My views toward "Indian Country" are weighted to the positive side. I see the positive, not so much the negative. I know the distance traveled since my wife's mother was removed from her home, age 7, and trucked to the Truxton Canyon Boarding School, later to the Phoenix Indian School. That is why we booked our stay here on TripAdvisor. We ended up driving more than our planned 6 hours per day, arriving 9:30 p.m. Saturday, May, 23, 2026. We called ahead as the sky darkened. Our room waited, reserved as contracted. What did we expect? Comfortable bed, bathing and brushing, some rest, a morning meal. Be advised, Peach Springs is the source of "The Peach Springs Oscillator." The Pacific Railroad Act of 1862, "An Act to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from the Missouri river to the Pacific ocean, and to secure to the government the use of the same for postal, military, and other purposes." To sweeten the pot for railroad builders, the U.S. Government granted every other 640 acre, 1 square mile "section" of land five miles either side of the railroad right of way. The route of the 1855 railway survey passed through the Traditional Use Area of the Hualapai People. December 8, 1941, the Hualapai People won their right to their aboriginal lands in the U.S. Supreme Court. https://www.fjc.gov/history/spotlight-judicial-history/hualapai-and-aboriginal-title The flattest part of Hualapai lands are the right of way for the Union Pacific Railroad. The Hialapai Lodge is built on the former railroad townsite of Peach Springs, on Old Route 66. You will hearrailroad locomotives thrumming along the nearby tracks. I have no prolem with railroad noise. Semi trucks and their Jake Brakes, railroad sounds are the soundtrack of my life. The Peach Springs Oscillator is time passed between each train. In booming rcomomies, a train every 20 minutes. Slowing economies, mote time between trains. Our economy is slowing in 2026 - at least in goods hauled by railroad. We had an excellent rest, clean sheets, comfy bed. Good selection of channels on our flat screen. We were pleased with our choice.

    Canyon's End Motel - hotels - Updated July 2026

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