
Yuma Travel Guide
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180 miles SW of Phoenix; 240 miles W of Tucson; 180 miles E of San Diego, Calif.
According to the book Guinness World Records, Yuma is the sunniest place on earth. Of the possible 4,456 hours of daylight each year, the sun shines in Yuma for roughly 4,050 hours, or about 90% of the time. Combine all that sunshine with the warmest winter weather in the country, and you've got a destination guaranteed to attract sun worshippers and other refugees from colder climes. In fact, each winter, tens of thousands of snowbirds (retired winter visitors) drive their RVs to Yuma from as far away as Canada. However, by late spring, all those RVers head north to escape the steadily rising temperatures, and by high summer, Yuma starts posting furnacelike high temperatures that make this one of the hottest cities in the country.
Long before RVers discovered Yuma, way back in the middle of the 19th century, this was one of the most important towns in the region, known as the Rome of the Southwest because all roads led to Yuma Crossing -- the shallow spot along the Colorado River where this town was founded. Despite its location in the middle of the desert, Yuma became a busy port town during the 1850s as shallow-draft steamboats traveled up the Colorado River from the Gulf of California. Later, when the railroad pushed westward into California in the 1870s, it passed through Yuma. Today, it is I-8, which connects San Diego with Tucson and Phoenix, that brings travelers to Yuma and across the Colorado River.
However, despite having more than a dozen golf courses and two important historic sites, Yuma has had to struggle to attract visitors (blame it on the lure of San Diego, which is just a few hours away). In the hopes of luring more travelers off the interstate, Yuma has in the past few years been working hard to restore its downtown historic buildings, expand its historic sites, and preserve its natural setting on the Colorado River. There is even a new visual arts center downtown that rivals any gallery in Scottsdale, and an adjacent historical movie theater has been restored to its former glory and now serves as a performing-arts center.

