Land Beyond Zion Tours

Land Beyond Zion Tours đŸ„Ÿ The area's LEADER for Angels Landing permits and tours‌
We are Zion's most inclusive, woman owned, hiking guide company. We've got something for EVERYONE!

We believe everyone belongs outside, from tiny kids to our seniors.

03/18/2026

BOOK WITH US and you *might* get your own, personal experience with the magnificent California Condor! (Note, we do not touch or interact with these birds. They are extremely protected.)
Video courtesy of June Bug Jessop

Www.landbeyondzion.com
435-319-6665

03/18/2026

BOOK WITH US and you just might get your OWN, personal interaction with the California Condor! (Video courtesy of our amazing guide, )
*note: we do NOT touch or interact with these birds. They are a very protected species!

Www.landbeyondzion.com
435-319-6665

☀

INTERNATIONAL WOMENS DAY! We say it LOUD & PROUD! đŸ’Ș
03/09/2026

INTERNATIONAL WOMENS DAY! We say it LOUD & PROUD! đŸ’Ș

01/17/2026

📣 is SO EXCITED!! We have an INCREDIBLE offering 😎 in store this season and we're doing it with our good friends at ‌ Stay tuned for more updates!

Now Hiring Part-Time Hiking Guides for 2026 season!Land Beyond Zion Tours is looking for outgoing, adventurous humans to...
12/12/2025

Now Hiring Part-Time Hiking Guides for 2026 season!

Land Beyond Zion Tours is looking for outgoing, adventurous humans to join our guide team! This is contract work—not an employee position—perfect for someone who loves meeting people, being outdoors, and sharing their passion for the Southwest. You can pick up as many or as little trips as you like based on your schedule.
As an individual contractor, you are paid per tour. The following are our most popular tours, and what we pay to our contractors:
The Narrows: $200
Angel's Landing: $200
Zion Insider Full Day: $200
Kanarraville Falls: $150
(We have a few other shorter tours as well.)

You must be a morning person because Angels landing tours start as early as 6 am. You also need a valid CPR/First Aid card.
What we do:
We lead small-group hiking tours to epic places like Angel’s Landing, Babylon Arch, Kanarraville Falls, the Narrows, Gooseberry Mesa, and other incredible hidden gems in the Zion area.
Who we’re looking for:
LGBTQ+ friendly, woman-friendly, and welcoming to all
Fun, talkative, and naturally great with people
Enthusiastic about rocks, plants, animals, and the desert landscape
Don’t need deep Zion experience—or guide experience, but a deep love of nature is a must
Comfortable hiking 3–6 miles and being outside for 3–6 hours
Reliable and self-motivated (you’ll be handling your own schedule and taxes and communications with clients.)
This gig = good tips, flexible schedule, and unforgettable adventures.
You’ll be paid per tour and trained on our routes and history. Come help people connect with the wild beauty of Southern Utah!
Interested?
Email [email protected] with a short intro and resume. 1st round interviews start in January!

11/28/2025

Land Beyond Zion Tours is SO grateful this Thanksgiving! We love and appreciate all our amazing guides and our awesome guests! Without you, we wouldn't be here!!

đŸ’Ș
10/30/2025

đŸ’Ș

She watched 146 women burn to death because factory owners locked the exits.
Twelve years later, she became the most powerful woman in America.
As a girl, Frances Perkins couldn't understand why good people lived in poverty.
Her father said the poor were lazy or weak.
Frances, even then, knew that couldn't be true.
At Mount Holyoke College, she studied physics—safe, respectable, appropriate for a young woman. Then came a class trip that changed everything. Her professor took students to tour factories along the Connecticut River.
Frances saw exhausted girls younger than herself bent over machines in rooms with no windows, no ventilation, no exits. Twelve-hour shifts. Six-day weeks. Fingers lost to machinery. Lungs destroyed by cotton dust.
She realized knowledge meant nothing if it didn't help people live with dignity.
She abandoned the safe path—marriage to a suitable man, teaching piano to rich children. Instead, she earned a master's degree at Columbia University in economics and sociology, writing her thesis on malnutrition in Hell's Kitchen.
Her family was horrified. Nice girls didn't study poverty. They certainly didn't live in settlement houses with immigrants.
Frances didn't care what nice girls did.
By 1910, she was Executive Secretary of the New York Consumers League, investigating factories, documenting violations, pushing for reform. Clean bakeries. Safe exits. Maximum working hours. She testified before legislative committees, a young woman in a tailored suit telling powerful men their factories were killing people.
They hated her. She didn't stop.
Then came March 25, 1911.
Frances was having tea with friends in Washington Square when she heard the fire bells. She followed the smoke to the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory—ten stories of flame and screaming.
She stood on the street and watched young women jump from ninth-floor windows because the factory owners had locked the doors to prevent "theft" and "unauthorized breaks." Their bodies hit the pavement like thunder. Again and again and again.
146 workers died. Most were immigrant women and girls. Some as young as 14. They'd been making shirtwaists—the fashionable blouses wealthy women wore to demonstrate their modernity and independence.
Frances watched them burn so rich women could look progressive.
She made herself a promise that day: Their deaths will not be in vain.

Within weeks, Frances was appointed to the committee investigating the fire. She didn't just write a report. She rewrote New York's labor laws from the ground up.
Fire exits—unlocked, accessible, clearly marked.
Maximum occupancy limits.
Sprinkler systems.
Regular safety inspections.
54-hour maximum workweek.
One day off per week.
The factory owners fought every provision. They called it "government overreach." They said it would destroy business. They said workers were trying to get something for nothing.
Frances responded with photographs of the Triangle dead. With testimony from survivors. With cold economic data showing that safe workplaces were more productive, not less.
New York passed the laws. Other states followed. Within a decade, American workplaces had been transformed—not completely, not perfectly, but irreversibly.
And Frances Perkins became the most hated woman in industrial America.
Business groups called her a communist. Newspapers mocked her as an "old maid" meddling in men's affairs. (She'd married late, to an economist who suffered from mental illness—a fact she kept private to protect him from institutionalization.)
She absorbed the hatred and kept working.

In 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt—newly elected president facing the Great Depression—asked Frances to join his Cabinet as Secretary of Labor.
She was 53 years old. No woman had ever served in a presidential Cabinet. The idea was considered radical, possibly unconstitutional, definitely improper.
Frances said she'd do it—but only on her terms.
She handed Roosevelt a list of demands:

A 40-hour workweek
A minimum wage
Abolition of child labor
Unemployment insurance
Old-age pensions

Roosevelt looked at the list. "You know this is impossible."
"Then find someone else," Frances said.
Roosevelt appointed her anyway.
For twelve years—longer than any other Labor Secretary in history—Frances Perkins fought for those "impossible" demands. And she won most of them.
The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938: 40-hour workweek, minimum wage, child labor restrictions.
The Social Security Act of 1935: old-age pensions, unemployment insurance, support for dependent children.
The laws weren't perfect. They excluded agricultural and domestic workers—a compromise Frances hated but accepted to get anything passed. Those exclusions meant most Black workers weren't covered, a racial injustice that wouldn't be corrected for decades.
But millions of workers—mostly white, yes, but millions nonetheless—gained protections that had never existed before.
Frances was never satisfied. She wanted more. She fought for universal healthcare (failed). She fought for broader coverage (partially succeeded). She fought against every senator and congressman who tried to water down protections.
They called her pushy. Difficult. Unwomanly.
She wore the same black dress and tricorn hat to every public appearance—a uniform that said I'm not here to be decorative. I'm here to work.

When Roosevelt died in 1945, Frances resigned. She'd been in the Cabinet for twelve years—the longest-serving Labor Secretary in American history, male or female.
She could have retired wealthy and celebrated. Instead, she taught labor history at Cornell, writing and lecturing until her death in 1965 at age 85.
Most people don't remember her name.
But every time you get paid overtime, that's Frances Perkins.
Every time a workplace has a clearly marked fire exit, that's Frances Perkins.
Every time someone collects Social Security or unemployment insurance, that's Frances Perkins.
Every weekend you have off, that's Frances Perkins.
She stood on a street in 1911 and watched 146 women die because profit mattered more than human life.
And she spent the next fifty years making sure that would never be true again—at least not legally, not without consequence, not without someone powerful enough to fight back.
She didn't just witness injustice. She built the architecture that made justice possible.
Her father said the poor were lazy or weak.
Frances proved that poverty was a policy choice—and policy could be changed.
She was the first woman in a presidential Cabinet. But that's not why she mattered.
She mattered because she looked at burning women and said never again—and then spent her life making that promise real.
Most people don't know her name.
But every person who's ever received a paycheck with overtime pay, every child who went to school instead of a factory, every elderly person who retired with dignity—they're living in the world Frances Perkins built.
One fire. 146 deaths. Fifty years of fighting.
And a country that learned, slowly and incompletely but irreversibly, that workers are human beings who deserve to live.

!!!! THIS !!!!!
10/29/2025

!!!! THIS !!!!!

When Billie Jean King walked into the Houston Astrodome in 1973, the crowd wasn’t there for tennis. They were there for a spectacle — a man versus a woman.
Bobby Riggs, a retired champion twice her age, had spent months mocking her on television. He called women “the weaker sex,” challenged her to “prove herself,” and strutted around in pig-themed shirts. To many, it was a circus. To Billie Jean, it was war.
She carried the weight of every woman who had been told to sit down, smile, and thank men for the spotlight. She knew if she lost, the movement for equal pay in sports could lose with her. Before the match, she told herself, “If I’m not strong enough, they’ll say no woman ever will be.”
The pressure was unbearable — 30,000 people in the stadium, 90 million watching on TV. She stepped onto the court wearing a sequined blue jacket, smiling just enough to hide her nerves. Riggs laughed, tossed insults, tried to rattle her. She didn’t bite. She dismantled him point by point, her precision colder than anger, sharper than pride.
When she won, she didn’t celebrate. She shook his hand and said quietly, “Thank you.” Then she looked up at the stands and saw women crying, cheering, holding their daughters.
That night wasn’t just a victory. It was proof. Proof that equality wasn’t a dream — it was a matter of endurance.
Billie Jean King didn’t just beat a man on a tennis court. She beat an idea — the one that said women had to ask permission to matter.
And she did it under lights so bright, the world couldn’t look away.

10/28/2025

This personally affects us!! Please consider signing to help keep tour companies alive!

Address

1 Springdale Avenue
Springdale, UT
84767

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Land Beyond Zion Tours posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category