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From Arizona's canyons to Utah's buttes and beyond, our national parks columnist shares the most adventurous Southwest road-trip itineraries

The post The 7 Best Road Trips in the Southwest appeared first on 黑料吃瓜网 Online.

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The 7 Best Road Trips in the Southwest

The Southwest always seems to me like a bit of a fever dream. The country鈥檚 deepest canyons, wildest buttes, and broadest deserts spread here from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean, offering a landscape so unlike any other in the country, you might think you鈥檝e left earth altogether. It is a hot, inhospitable territory that demands respect, but it is also outrageously beautiful, with rock outcroppings that seem painted in shades of red and white, blooming cacti, and shifting dunes that undulate like waves onto the horizon.

The easiest and most efficient way to explore the Southwest is by car, bouncing from one breathtaking adventure to the next, so I鈥檝e created seven different road-trip itineraries, one in each state of this stunning slice of our nation. I鈥檝e driven the majority of these routes, while the remaining few are on my list of dream adventures. And each of these has something for everyone鈥攂eaches, sand dunes, cliffs, rivers, hikes, bike rides, fishing holes, and more.

Set your playlist, and pack the sunscreen. Here are the seven best road trips in the Southwest.

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1. Nevada

Las Vegas to the Valley of Fire

馃搷 Distance: 175 Miles
馃殫 Duration: 3 days

man rides his bike in the desert around Rock Rock Conservation Area, a stop on one of the best road trips in the southwest
Desert mountain biking in the vast recreational spaces found amazingly close to Las Vegas (Photo: Courtesy Las Vegas Cyclery/Escape 黑料吃瓜网s)

The obvious, and most common, road trip from Vegas would be to beeline straight for the Grand Canyon, but you do not want to overlook the suite of public lands that rings Sin City. The fun begins just 20 miles west of downtown Las Vegas at Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, a 195,000-acre park that is internationally known for its multi-pitch rock climbing, though my epic adventures here have been of other types.

My favorite way to explore Red Rock is by road bike, pedaling the 13-mile Scenic Drive through the heart of the park. The road has one-way traffic and a big shoulder, so there鈥檚 plenty of room, and you鈥檒l have both long-range and up-close views of the surrounding red sandstone cliffs and canyons. has bike rentals (from $40 a day). If you show up in the summer, do your adventures early in the morning before the heat gets unbearable.

Next skirt around the south side of Las Vegas for 70 miles to Lake Mead National Recreation Area, home to the massive Hoover Dam. I like Lake Mohave, a shallow, narrow reservoir below Hoover that follows the original path of the Colorado River through a series of canyons. If you鈥檙e looking for a full-day (or multi-day) adventure, paddle a piece of the 30-mile Black Canyon National Water Trail, which begins at the base of the dam and ends in Arizona, passing beaches, hot springs, and side canyons.

woman canoes in calm water in the Black Canyon, Nevada
Joyce Kehoe of Boulder City, Nevada, paddles in the Black Canyon below Hoover Dam on the Colorado River. (Photo: Courtesy Desert 黑料吃瓜网s)

Only boaters with commercial licenses can launch below the dam, so hook up with , which offers DIY rentals and shuttles or guided trips throughout the water trail. Or for a quicker adventure, drive directly to Willow Beach, and paddle two miles upstream to Emerald Cave, a narrow side canyon with clear, shallow water below 75-foot sandstone walls (tours from $139 per person; rentals from $80 per boat).

Emerald Cave, near Las Vegas
A paddler explores the green waters of the Emerald Cave, in the Black Canyon,听roughly 60 miles from Las Vegas and only accessible via boat. (Photo: Courtesy Desert 黑料吃瓜网s)

has tent sites and RV sites in the hills above the sandy beach from $45 a night.

Driving north, you can stop at Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada鈥檚 largest state park at 46,000 acres, where red and pink sandstone cliffs and canyons fill the valley, the walls popping out of the tan, scrubby dirt. Catch the area at sunset and you could think the whole valley is on fire. The park is full of short, scenic trails for hikers. The 3.3-mile loop takes in iconic features, from a narrow slot canyon to the sinuous Fire Wave, where the striped sandstone seems to flow like water.

Snag a campsite at one of the two from $10.

2. Utah

Bryce Canyon National Park to Capitol Reef National Park

馃搷 Distance: 125 miles
馃殫 Duration: 3 days

hoodoos in Bryce Canyon National Park, a stop on one of the best road trips in the southwest
Bryce Canyon National Park has the world’s most abundant collection of the slender desert spires known as hoodoos. You can see them while walking the Rim Trail past the famous overlooks of Inspiration Point, Sunset Point, and Sunrise Point, or descend below the rim and hike among them. (Photo: Courtesy )

It鈥檚 tempting to try to hit all of Utah鈥檚 national parks in a single trip, but you鈥檇 have to cover more than 1,000 miles and spend more time in your vehicle than on the trails. Instead, focus on this slice of Utah by driving the 122-mile Scenic Byway 12, which connects Bryce Canyon National Park with Capitol Reef National Park, hitting Grand Escalante National Monument in the middle. I drove this route last fall and was in constant awe of its beauty and diversity, as we cruised through sandstone tunnels at one point, then climbed to an aspen forest at another.

Pick up Highway 12 in the small town of Panguitch, about 50 miles east from Interstate 12, and keep driving east to Bryce Canyon National Park. Bryce, known for its hoodoos (sandstone spires that rise from the valley floor) is one of the country鈥檚 smallest national parks at just 35,835 acres, which means you can see a lot in a short amount of time. Combine Queen鈥檚 Garden Trail with Navajo Loop Trail for a that begins on the rim of the canyon, then drops into the belly, passing hoodoos, arches, and tall cliffs.

Burr Trail, Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument
This view from the historic Burr Trail, a 66-mile scenic back road that winds through sections of Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, shows the Lower Gulch approaching Longs Canyon. The road also offers views of the Henry Mountains and the famous geological feature known as the Waterpocket Fold. (Photo: Devaki Murch)

Heading north, Highway 12 moves through the heart of the massive Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, a 1.9-million-acre park with expanses of slick rock and sandstone canyons stretching all the way to the horizon. I was lucky enough to spend a couple of days in the monument, scrambling down slot canyons and bushwhacking through the heart of a broad canyon before reaching the lush Escalante River. It鈥檚 beautiful but unforgiving terrain that delivers plenty of solitude. Drive the unimproved dirt Hole-in-the-Rock Road (high-clearance two-wheel drive vehicles are usually OK) 33 miles south to the Dry Fork Slots to hike a through Peek-a-Boo and Spooky Slot Canyons, where the passage narrows to about a foot wide at certain points, and scrambling is mandatory. Too adventurous? Try hiking to , a 6.5-mile loop through a smooth canyon that ends at a 124-foot waterfall.

There鈥檚 plenty of camping and lodging around the town of Escalante. , inside the monument, offers seven primitive sites ($10 a night) with no frills. Or go upscale and snag a cabin or Airstream at , a camping-and-cabin resort with a drive-in movie theater, pool, and food truck (cabins from $175 a night).

cabins, movie screen, Airstreams, and lodge at Ofland Escalante, a stop on one of the best road trips in the southwest
Aerial view of Ofland Escalante, just near the town of the same name, in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, southern Utah (Photo: Courtesy The Nomadic People)

Driving 65 miles further north on Highway 12, you鈥檒l climb Boulder Mountain through Dixie National Forest before hitting the town of Torrey and Capitol Reef National Park. Here, you鈥檒l find historic fruit orchards, sandstone domes, and more canyons than you could ever hope to explore. Start your journey with , a 3.4-mile out-and-back that crosses broad sections of slickrock before ending at a 125-foot-wide natural arch. Or hook up with and go canyoneering, dropping into the belly of narrow canyons deep inside the park ($300 for the first person).

For a longer adventure, check out our sister publication’s “.”

3. Colorado

Colorado National Monument to Rocky Mountain National Park

馃搷 Distance: 310 miles
馃殫 Duration: 3-5 days

Grand Lake, Colorado
Grand Lake is the western gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, with its own bounty of recreational opportunities. (Photo: Courtesy Grand Lake Chamber)

Colorado offers a ton of incredible scenery, and this particular road trip takes you from the desert canyons of Colorado National Monument to the high alpine terrain of Rocky Mountain National Park. The diversity of adventure is off the charts, too, with opportunities for sandstone-heavy hikes, big mountain-bike descents, and whitewater rafting.

Start near the western border of the state, at Colorado National Monument, a 20,000-acre park with sheer cliffs and vertigo-inducing sandstone towers. Just driving the 23-mile Rim Rock Drive is worth the price of admission, with near-constant views of the canyon below, including of the massive Independence Monument, a 450-foot tall sandstone pillar.

Independence Monument
Independence Monument was climbed by a trail builder and blacksmith named John Otto in 1911. Otto hammered metal bars into the rock and even carved footholds in places. He also lobbied fervently for protection for the wild lands of the area, and was key in the establishment of Colorado National Monument that year. (Photo: Graham Averill)

But you鈥檒l definitely want to get out of your car and explore this monument by foot. The Devil鈥檚 Kitchen is an easy, 1.2-mile out-and-back that gives you the chance to scramble over boulders and explore narrow sandstone channels. Get up close to Independence Monument on the , a 5.2-mile point-to-point that meanders past some of the monument鈥檚 most recognizable rock formations, including the set of rounded pillars dubbed the Coke Ovens and a tower known as the Kissing Couple, because it looks like two people entwined.

rider on the Palisade Plunge stopping for a mountain bike lap along one of the best road trips in the southwest
A rider feels the open air on the 32-mile Palisade Plunge, starting off the Grand Mesa at nearly 11,000 feet and descending about 6,000 feet into the town of Palisade, Colorado. The much-anticipated trail, over two years in the making, opened in summer 2021. (Photo: Graham Averill)

After exploring the monument, head east for 25 miles to the town of Palisade, where you can tackle a piece of the , a 32-mile mostly downhill piece of singletrack that drops 6,000 feet off the rim of the Grand Mesa into the edge of downtown. The trail has multiple access points, so you don鈥檛 have to bite off the entire distance. has shuttles and rentals starting in March (check then for prices).

Head 75 miles northeast to Glenwood Springs to spend the night at , which has van-life sites on the Colorado River (from $112 a night) as well as glamping tents and cabins (from $179 a night). You can book a half-day on the Colorado, which includes the 1.5-mile-long class III Shoshone Rapids (from $75 per person), or just soak in one of the 17 different pools at , where each tub is tailored to a different temperature (from $44 per person).

When you鈥檙e refreshed, or worn out, drive northeast for 125 miles through to Rocky Mountain National Park, one of the most popular national parks in the country (4.1 million visitors in 2023). Don鈥檛 worry, most of those visitors enter through the Estes Park side, while you鈥檒l access the park on the much-less crowded Grand Lake entrance. I remember, on a trip with my kids, seeing a moose in the valley near Grand Lake and marveling that we were the only people on the trail at the time.

Head to the for a choose-your-own-adventure sort of hike. For a short jaunt that packs a big punch, hike the three-mile out-and-back Green Mountain Trail up to Big Meadow, which in the summer is full of wildflowers and hosts the occasional moose. Or if you really want to get after it, combine the Green Mountain Trail, Tonahutu Creek Trail, and Hayach Lakes Trail for a 17-mile out-and-back that culminates at Hayach Lake, a natural pool that sits at 11,000 feet in elevation in the shadow of the craggy Nakai Peak. Turn it into an overnight if you like, choosing among multiple backcountry campsites along the way ($36 fee for a ).

For a longer adventure, check out our sister publication’s “.”

4. Texas

San Antonio to the Gulf

馃搷 Distance: 250 miles
馃殫 Duration: 3-5 days

Padre Island National Seashore
Padre Island National Seashore, looking from the north to the south (Photo: scgerding/Getty)

Texas is big, so you need to narrow your focus for a road trip here, because getting from point A to point B can sometimes take you all day. This particular route starts with some urban exploration in San Antonio and ends on one of the longest undeveloped beaches in the country. In between are quiet swamps, beach campsites, and plenty of paddle trails.

The San Antonio Riverwalk in San Antonio, Texas
The San Antonio River Walk in San Antonio, Texas, is an inspiration for waterfront pathways in many other cities. Some sections are lively, with waterside tables and umbrellas, and others are quieter amid greenery. (Photo: Robert D. Barnes/Getty)

San Antonio might not seem like the perfect place to start an adventure trip, but the city鈥檚 15-mile River Walk, expanded in the late 1990s, has served as an inspiration for other similar projects ever since and it鈥檚 still one of the coolest urban bike rides you can do. Five miles of the path cruise through downtown, but the best biking is just south of town in the , an eight-mile linear park that connects historic missions, grasslands, and wildflower meadows, all protected as the San Antonio Missions National Historic Park.

San Antonio Missions National Historical Park, Texas
The ancient Mission Espada Bell Tower stands tall behind Pride of Barbados flowers at San Antonio Missions National Historical Park, Texas. (Photo: Courtesy Andrew Shirey/NPS)

After spinning around San Antonio, drive east towards the Gulf of Mexico, making a pitstop at Palmetto State Park鈥攁 small stretch just 25 miles east of San Antonio, that鈥檚 home to the sort of tropical jungle you鈥檙e more likely to find in Florida鈥攃omplete with dwarf palmettos blanketing the forest floor. If you bring your own boat or paddleboard, you can slide along the languid San Marcos River, or explore Palmetto鈥檚 small Oxbow Lake. Hiking trails lead through swampy marshes with light-green water filling the forest floor. If you鈥檙e not in a hurry, pitch a tent in the park鈥檚 ($12 a night) before heading to the beach.

Head south on Highway 183 to Mustang Island State Park, which separates Corpus Christi Bay from the Gulf of Mexico. The park protects five miles of Gulf-facing coastline, and has 50 drive-up where you can pitch a tent on the beach ($13 a night, first-come, first-served).

The beach is the obvious draw here. The Gulf is typically calm and warm, although some people are known to surf during hurricane swells. But the park also has more than 20 miles of marked paddling trails that traverse the western edge of the island, weave through islands in Corpus Christi Bay, and offer shallow water for fishing for redfish and speckled trout. runs daily guided trips (from $90 for two people) and rentals (from $50).

turtle heads out to sea at Padres Island National Seashore
At Padre Island National Seashore, a type of sea turtle known as Kemp’s Ridley returns from nesting to the water. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

If you need more beach (and who doesn鈥檛?) scoot 15 miles down the coast to Padre Island National Seashore. If you have a 4WD vehicle, you can down-island for up to 60 miles until you leave the crowds behind. The national seashore is a hot spot for birding, with 380 different species reported, thanks to the island鈥檚 location on a major migration route. Look for the endangered piping plover or the super colorful painted bunting.

5. New Mexico

Taos to the Bisti Badlands

馃搷 Distance: 275 miles
馃殫 Duration: 3-5 days

Bisti/De-Na-Zen Wilderness Area
Hoodoo formations stand watch over De-Na-Zin Badlands, in the Bisti/De-Na-Zen Wilderness Area, New Mexico (Photo: Brad McGinley Photography/Getty)

I haven鈥檛 spent enough time in New Mexico. Or seen enough of it. The last time I was there, on a fly-fishing trip, I couldn鈥檛 bring myself to leave the Taos area. So many fish, so many green chili dishes. But I regret my solitary focus, because the state has much to offer. This particular road trip delivers a variety of adventure and landscapes that I鈥檓 convinced only New Mexico has.

The trip begins with a bang by rafting a tumultuous section of the Rio Grande, just 30 miles southwest of Taos. Different run options offer a variety of adventure, but the classic is a 17-mile portion through the Rio Grande Gorge, also dubbed the Taos Box because it is walled by black basalt cliffs. The trip brings a full day of whitewater action, with a six-mile section of non-stop class II and III rapids known as The Racecourse. If the weather is warm enough, you can swim in a few pools along the way, and good guides will point out petroglyphs on the rock walls. Book your trip with and you鈥檒l get hot fajitas for a riverside lunch (from $110 per person).

Ojo Caliente resort, near Taos
Ojo Caliente, near Taos, is a hot-springs resort with pools of various sizes and temperatures nestled among cliffs and trees.听(Photo: Courtesy Ojo Spa Resorts)

Spend the night at the wellness retreat of Ojo Caliente Mineral Springs Resort and Spa, where the natural springs feature arsenic, Lithia, soda, and iron, all minerals thought to have healing properties (from $239 a night).

Keep heading southwest to , a super volcano that erupted 1.2 million years ago, creating a 14-mile-wide circular depression that has evolved into a lush basin full of creeks and meadows. Think of Valles Caldera as a mini Yellowstone, complete with hot springs, wildlife-viewing opportunities, and broad grasslands. A large elk population calls the caldera home (look for them in the meadows during early morning and evening), and keep an eye out as well for prairie dogs and coyotes. The Valle Grande Exploration Trail is a short, .8-mile walk through a prairie to a manmade pond that served as a watering hole when the area was a private cattle ranch. The South Mountain Trail is a bit more involved, taking you four miles up a narrow valley and to the top of South Mountain, where you鈥檒l enjoy a view of the entire basin.

Bandelier National Monument, New Mexico, a stop along one of the best road trips in the southwest
The Frey Trail looks down upon the site of an ancient Tyuonyi village, at Bandelier National Monument, New Mexico. The area was home to the Ancestral Puebloans. (Photo: Courtesy Sally King/NPS)

You鈥檒l only be 20 miles west of Bandelier National Monument, which protects 33,000 acres of canyons and mesa that were the Ancestral Puebloans鈥 home until 1550. They used blocks of soft volcanic rock to build homes at the bases of cliffs, carving additional rooms into the walls themselves. Hike the 1.4-mile Pueblo Loop Trail to see some of these archeological sites first hand. You鈥檒l even get to climb ladders into some of the rooms carved into the side of cliffs. Grab a campsite at the monument鈥檚 ($20 a night, reserve up to six months in advance).

It鈥檒l add some mileage, but you need to cap this road trip off with a walk on the moon, or at least, as close as most of us will ever come to walking on the moon. The , in northwestern New Mexico, are loaded with some of the strangest rock formations you will ever see, with cap stones and some massive cliffs actually in the shapes of manta rays, all rising from rolling taupe shale hills. The Bisti Badlands are part of the BLM鈥檚 60-square-mile Bisti/De-Na-Zen Wilderness Area, which has no formal trails or paved roads. The De-Na-Zin parking area, off county road 7500, will give you access to the dry Bisti Wash, which you can hike into the heart of the badlands to see all of the weirdness for yourself.

6. Arizona

Grand Canyon to Monument Valley

馃搷 Distance: 250
馃殫 Duration: 3-5 days

grand canyon vista along one of the best road trips in the southwest
Don’t miss the Grand Canyon on your southwest roadtrip. It’s so big, it’s one of the few visible landforms on earth from outer space. (Photo: Courtesy Ecoflight)

I spent most of my youth believing Arizona was a desert wasteland, but in recent years I鈥檝e had the chance to turn that around with some of the state鈥檚 wonderful signature adventures. Yes, much of Arizona is desert, but it is no wasteland. It鈥檚 a vibrant landscape full of life and adventure. I鈥檝e driven ATVs across the desert, biked lonely gravel roads near the border of Mexico, and ridden a mountain bike into a cactus on the outskirts of Scottsdale. In short, I love Arizona, and as much fun as I鈥檝e had in that state, I still have so much to discover. The following road trip meanders through Northern Arizona, beginning in Grand Canyon and connecting a few waypoints that I still need to tick off my bucket list.

You could argue that all adventure trips in Arizona need to feature Grand Canyon National Park, and I wouldn鈥檛 disagree, so we鈥檙e hitting that 6,000-foot-deep ditch first. Also, Grand Canyon Village is just 1.5 hours from Flagstaff, so it鈥檚 a logical first stop. Is the Grand Canyon crowded? Yes. But the vast majority of visitors stick to a few scenic overlooks. The last time I was at the South Rim, I lost the crowds after hiking about a mile on the . But you鈥檙e going to do a lot of hiking on this road trip, so consider biking The Hermit Road, which hugs the south rim of the canyon for seven miles from the village, offering copious views along the way. The best part? It鈥檚 closed to private vehicles from March through November. rents cruisers (from $30).

Grand Canyon viewpoint
Everyone must see the Grand Canyon at least once in their lives. It’s truly breathtaking. (Photo: Courtesy Delaware North Parks and Resorts)

Try to get a room at , an iconic national park lodge if there ever was one (from $391 starting in March). Or snag a coveted site at , which is first-come, first- served.

Heading north for 130 miles, you鈥檒l hit the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, a 280,000-acre geological wonder of buttes, canyons, and cliffs that tends to get overshadowed by its grand neighbor. Still, you may have seen photos of the swirling pink and tan sandstone layers of rock in the Coyote Buttes known as The Wave. It鈥檚 a stunning scenic reward that requires a tough hike through the desert. Accessing the Coyote Buttes requires a ($6). Grab one four months in advance, or try your luck with the daily lottery.

river canyon at Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, worth a stop along one of the best road trips in the southwest
Hiking through passageways at Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, Arizona (Photo: Courtesy Bob Wick/BLM)

If you can鈥檛 score a permit, try hiking the 1.2-mile out-and-back through White Pocket. There are no marked or maintained trails in the monument, but cairns will guide you through more wavy sandstone features. Wherever you hike, look towards the sky for the endangered California Condor, which are hatched and released in the monument each year. And bring (or rent) a 4WD vehicle, as there are no paved roads inside the monument. Grab a site at the BLM鈥檚 , which views a cluster of sand-white buttes ($12 per site, first come/first serve).

Roughly 100 miles east, near the border of Utah, sits the 91,696-acre , a broad valley where 1,000-foot-tall sandstone towers rise abruptly from the earth. You can see some of the most iconic features, the Mitten Buttes and Merrick Butte, from the visitor center, but you鈥檒l want to hike the Wildcat Trail, a four-mile loop that wraps around the West and East Mitten Buttes. It鈥檚 the only self-guided trail open within the park, so to explore any more requires hiring a local Navajo guide with . A number of operators run auto tours of the 17-mile scenic loop road within the park, but consider booking a stargazing tour, also with Monument Valley Tribal Tours, that focuses on nighttime photography, framing the buttes within the context of the Milky Way and surrounding stars (from $95).

7. California

So Cal Coast to Mojave Desert

馃搷 Distance: 300 miles
馃殫 Duration: 4-5 days

young girls learning to surf manage a high five
High fives and a whole lot of fun at a kids’ surf camp off San Onofre State Beach, Southern California (Photo: Courtesy Endless Summer)

Because this is a collection of road trips through the Southwest, I鈥檓 focusing on Southern California, as the terrain in the area is more complementary to the Southwest vibe than, say, that of California鈥檚 Redwood National Park or Yosemite Valley.

This trip starts on the coast and ends with the dunes in the Mojave Desert, so there鈥檚 plenty of sand along the way, as well as big rocks, desert camping, and hiking. Keep the L.A. fires in mind when you鈥檙e traveling to Southern California. Hopefully the worst of that fire will be in the rearview by the time you make this trip, and while this route steers clear of the burn areas, the disaster has impacted residents throughout the region. Be considerate.

California鈥檚 coast is loaded with state parks, but San Onofre State Beach has a rugged character that鈥檚 hard to match, with cliffs rising directly from the beach and whales and dolphins often spotted in the water. If you fancy yourself a worthy surfer, you can paddle into the lineup at the world-famous Trestles break on the north end of the park, which has been ground zero for Southern California鈥檚 surfing culture since the 1940s. The park offers beginner breaks, too. In fact, San Onofre has one of the more gentle waves in Southern California. offers beginner lessons at the San Onofre Bluffs Beach, which is flanked by 100-foot cliffs (from $100 per person).

adult surf class at San Onofre Bluffs Beach, a worthy stop along one of the best road trips in the southwest
San Onofre State Beach in Southern California may have the fearsome Trestles break, but it also has gentle waves suitable for beginners. Here, participants gather for an adult surf camp at the San Onofre Bluffs Beach. (Photo: Courtesy Endless Summer)

Try to score a site at the (reserve up to six months in advance, starting at $45 a night) or San Mateo Camp, a couple of miles inland.

Leave the beach and head east, making a pit stop at the sleeper destination Anza-Borrego Desert State Wilderness, an often overlooked member of California鈥檚 crowded public-lands portfolio. The park is packed with palm oases, slot canyons, and after a wet winter, fields of wildflowers. Stretch your legs on the , a three-mile out and back that begins near the park鈥檚 visitor center and climbs up a canyon, ending at an overlook of a palm oasis (currently recovering from a previous wildfire) with a seasonal waterfall.

Arch Rock, Joshua Tree
A moderate, two-mile loop takes you to the breathtaking sight of Arch Rock. You can also fork detour out to take in Heart Rock along the way. (Photo: Graham Averill)

Continuing east for 60 miles, and you鈥檒l wrap around the Salton Sea to hit Joshua Tree National Park鈥檚 southern entrance (if you鈥檙e tired or showing up late, look for free campsites on BLM land between I-10 and the park鈥檚 entrance). Spring is a great time to visit the park, as the temperatures are manageable, and the local cacti and Joshua Trees for which the park is named could still be sprouting flowers. Lace up your hiking boots and hit the trails. The easy 1.4-mile is a no-brainer loop that delivers you to a natural arch, with plenty of opportunity to scramble on sandstone boulders along the way. For a bird鈥檚-eye view of the park, climb the 5,456-foot Ryan Mountain via its and for a vista stretching clear to the 11,000-foot San Gorgonio Mountain. I tried running to the top of Ryan Mountain the last time I was in the park, but the 1,000-foot elevation gain got the better of me.

Aside from the BLM land near the south entrance, the park has six with sites you can reserve up to six months in advance. They鈥檙e all good.

Still want more desert? Great, because you鈥檙e heading 70 miles north of Joshua Tree into the heart of the Mojave National Preserve, 1.6 million acres of dunes, cliffs, and cactus that somehow only gets half a million visitors a year. You have to hike the , a 45-square-mile expanse that will have you thinking you鈥檙e in the Sahara. The popular three-mile Kelso Dunes Trail will take you to the top of the tallest mound, which rises 650 feet.

Also, the easy, mile-long Lava Tube Trail provides access to an actual lava tube, where the sun pours in through a 鈥渟ky light鈥 in the stone. Wherever you explore, keep an eye out for the desert tortoise, a threatened species that lives in the Mojave鈥檚 valleys and moves slowly through the heat. The preserve has three developed campgrounds. Try to reserve a spot at , which has potable water ($25 per night).

Graham Averill is 黑料吃瓜网 magazine鈥檚 national-parks columnist. He鈥檚 been in love with road trips since he read Jack Kerouac鈥檚 On the Road at age 17. His longest road trip to date was a month-long romp through the Southwest with his wife and twin then four-year-olds. Recently, he wrote about bucket-list golf courses, the best hikes in Joshua Tree National Park, and the nine national parks that will need timed-entry reservations this year. One of the weirdest places he鈥檚 ever slept for a story was a renovated lookout tower in the middle of the ocean.

graham averill, chilling on his tailgate after a long hike in joshua tree national park
The author after a long, hot hike in Joshua Tree (Photo: Graham Averill)

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These Are the 7 Best National Parks to Visit for Spring Break /adventure-travel/national-parks/national-parks-spring-break/ Tue, 04 Feb 2025 10:30:10 +0000 /?p=2694564 These Are the 7 Best National Parks to Visit for Spring Break

I found big adventure and warm weather in these national-park units spread across the Southeast and Southwest

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These Are the 7 Best National Parks to Visit for Spring Break

Planning spring break is high pressure. You only get a one-week respite from school or work, and the timing, late March or early April, makes it tough to find a location with consistently good weather. Those months could offer spring ski conditions or prime surf weather鈥攐r not.

More than a few times, I鈥檝e had to pivot at the last minute, having thought it would be warm enough for family surfing on the Outer Banks for spring break and then found temperatures in the low 50s. We moved our vacation further south.

Yes, south is the operative word. So relax, because I鈥檝e found seven national-park units in the Southeast and Southwest that offer gorgeous landscapes, many days鈥 worth of adventures, and just-about-guaranteed warm weather for the perfect spring break trip.

1. Cumberland Island National Seashore, Georgia

Best for: Swimming, Camping, and Contemplating History

Average Temperatures in March and April: Highs from mid 70s to mid 80s

seashells and empty beaches at Cumberland Island National Seashore
A bounty of seashells on Cumberland Island National Seashore, a barrier island shrouded in history (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Cumberland Island is wild. The largest barrier island off the coast of Georgia, Cumberland is a 17-mile-long, 36,000-acre swath of pristine beaches, tall dunes, maritime forests, fresh lakes, and marshy canals. Even though the Carnegie family once owned the island, and descendants still have some private property, Cumberland protects almost 10,000 acres of federally designated wilderness. The only way to reach the island is by a 45-minute ($20 one way) or private boat, and once you鈥檙e there the only way to get around is by foot or bike on hiking trails and 50 miles of sandy roads.

dirt road Cumberland Island National Seashore
No joke that this place is wild. This dirt road in the maritime forest of Cumberland Island is the main drive, and otherwise you travel on foot or bike.听(Photo: Courtesy NPS)

The island has no stores, so bring everything you鈥檒l need, and be prepared to pack it all back out. You鈥檒l see some ruins from a Victorian-era mansion built in 1884 as a winter home for Thomas Carnegie, as well as the remnants of a freedmen鈥檚 community of former slaves. You may spot members of the colony of feral horses that still roam the island, which are likely descendants of the horses brought over by the British during the War of 1812.

As for beaches, Cumberland offers 15 miles of undeveloped sand and dunes facing the Atlantic. For solitude, keep heading north away from the docks until you reach a patch of sand that鈥檚 too far for day-trippers to claim. It鈥檚 tough to find this much raw beach on the East Coast, so soak it in. The Atlantic is rough, but fine for swimming. Stay out of the marshes on the west side of the island, as they鈥檙e popular hangouts for alligators.

Where to Stay: is an all-inclusive hotel operating in one of the Carnegies鈥 former vacation homes (from $895 a night), but most visitors . Sea Camp has bathrooms and showers and allows fires (from $22 a night). Stafford Beach is more remote, requiring a three-mile hike from the docks, and it, too, has bathrooms with showers (from $12 a night). Book your spot early, up to six months in advance.

2. Big Bend National Park, Texas

Best for: Hiking, Biking, Climbing, Canoeing, Stargazing

Average Temperatures in March and April: Low to high 70s

Chisos Mountains, Big Bend National Park
A summer shower passes through the Chisos Mountains, Big Bend National Park, Texas. These mountains are considered the heart of the park, with many of the best hikes in the region, particularly in summer when the high elevation offers cool temps. (Photo: Gary Nored/AnEyeForTexas)

The 800,000-acre Big Bend National Park has been a spring-break destination for decades. My mother-in-law still talks fondly about spending college spring breaks camping there during the 1960s.

Late March and early April are the busiest times to visit the park. But 鈥渃rowded鈥 is a relative term; I hit the place a few years ago at the end of March and never felt overwhelmed or discouraged by other visitors, mainly because the park and its neighboring Big Bend Ranch State Park are so large. I hiked, rode my bike, camped, and enjoyed the 鈥淔ar West Texas鈥 vibe of it all.

The Big Bend landscape is straight out of a Western, with its vistas of canyons, the towering Chisos Mountains, and big stretches of rocky desert. It鈥檚 a great place to explore by boot, bike, or boat, an ideal multi-sport national-park trip.

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Hikers should tackle the 5.5-mile out and back Window Trail, which descends 1,000 feet from the Chisos Trailhead, at 5,400 feet elevation, through Oak Creek Canyon to a sheer drop-off framed by towering cliffs. Be prepared (and take water) for the steady climb back to the trailhead. Depending on recent storms, there could be a small stream in the center of the canyon, but the trail is still navigable. Subject to changes in the water level, you can paddle a 20-mile section of the Rio Grande through Santa Elena Canyon, which narrows to 100 feet wide, with limestone cliffs blotting out the sun. The area has been in a drought for the last couple of years, so spring trips aren鈥檛 guaranteed, but check with for water levels and trip options (from $160 per person).

 

 

 

Rio Grande Angell Expeditions video by Taylor Reilly

Just outside the national park is , with its bounty of mountain biking, where you can pedal to a backcountry oasis and through a slope filled with sparkling gemstones. Regardless of what you do, at the end of the day you must soak in the historic hot springs that are carved out of the Rio Grande.

octillo plant in Big Bend area
Octillo blazes red in fall in Big Bend Ranch State Park, Big Bend area, Texas (Photo: Gary Nored/AnEyeForTexas)

Where to Stay: Chisos Mountain Lodge inside the park has 72 rooms, a restaurant, and a general store (from $170 a night). has 60 sites up almost a mile high in elevation; make reservations up to six months in advance ($16 a night).

3. Death Valley National Park, California

Best for Cycling, Hiking, Stargazing

Average Temps in March and April: Highs from 65 to 75

lake in Death Valley National Park
In Death Valley National Park, rains can create ephemeral lakes on the salt flats. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

It would be borderline crazy to visit Death Valley National Park in the summertime, but in early spring, the temperatures are chef鈥檚-kiss perfect. Visitors in spring may also have the huge bonus of seeing the wildflowers pop off, particularly in the lower elevations, in fields of desert gold, poppies, and verbena. If you鈥檙e really into hitting the park during peak flower power, watch the rangers鈥 on which wildflowers are blooming throughout spring and summer.

Also cool: the park is home to one of the world鈥檚 rarest fish, the Devils Hole pupfish, an endangered species found only in a water cavern in Devils Hole here. The pupfish are visible during the annual spring migration as they move within the hole seeking warmth from direct sunlight. Scientists counted 191 of them last April, the highest count in 25 years.

You don鈥檛 need to be a cyclist to enjoy Death Valley鈥攖here are plenty of hiking trails鈥攂ut two wheels is a hell of a way to explore this landscape, with 785 miles of roads open to bikes. Cruise through otherworldly terrain like salt flats, expansive sand dunes, and red-rock formations, before climbing into mountains of up to 11,000 feet.

starry skies at Death Valley National Park
Death Valley National Park is an International Dark Sky Park. Come see the skies. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Artist鈥檚 Drive, a paved nine-mile one-way loop, is the park鈥檚 signature ride. It climbs from below sea level to 880 feet above it, offering views of the surrounding moon-like white sands and mountains on the horizon. At the crest, you鈥檒l be surrounded by pink and tan hills, which narrow to canyon-like proportions on the fun downhill to finish the loop. To give you a sense of the terrain, parts of the Star Wars franchise were filmed off this road.

Where to Stay: If you鈥檙e looking for nice digs, will put you in the heart of the action, and with a pool (from $507 a night). is the best developed campground in the park, with 136 sites on the valley floor and mountain views. Book up to six months in advance (from $30 a night).

4. White Sands National Park, New Mexico

Best for Hiking and Sand Sledding

Average Temperatures in March and April: 70 to 80

Sand dunes at sunrise, White Sands National Park
Sunrise highlights the white sand dunes and far San Andres Mountains at White Sands National Park, New Mexico, established as a national monument in 1933 and receiving the further designation only in 2019. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

One of the newest national parks (established in 2019), White Sands isn鈥檛 huge, just 175,000 acres, but it protects half of the world鈥檚 largest gypsum-crystal field. The dunes roll through the Tularosa Basin like bright white waves, creating a landscape unlike anything else on this planet. You can see the San Andres Mountains on the horizon beyond the park, but it鈥檚 the sloping dunes that will mesmerize you.

father and daughter sled on Great Sand Dunes
If you walk up, you will be able to sled down. A father and daughter will remember the slide at Great Sand Dunes National Park, New Mexico. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

The eight-mile Dunes Drive scenic road delivers you into the center of the dunes from the comfort of an air-conditioned vehicle, and the road also accesses the park鈥檚 five different hiking trails. The Dune Life Nature Trail is an easy one-mile loop that serves as a good intro to the landscape. But if you really want to dig into the dunes, hike the five-mile , which traces the edge of an ancient lake that has been replaced by the waves of dunes. You鈥檒l climb and descend 60-foot sandy mounds throughout.

full moon night concert
Full-moon night concert, White Sands National Park, New Mexico (Photo: NPS)

If you can time it right, hit the park on a , when White Sands is open into the night, and ranger-led programs include guided hikes. And definitely bring a sled (or buy one in the park gift shop). The dunes at the are open to sledding, and the gypsum hills behave exactly like snow slopes.

Where to Stay: There is currently no camping inside the park: its backcountry campsites are closed for rehabilitation, with no timeline as to when they will be in service. The town of Alamogordo, 15 miles east of the park, has a variety of chain hotels.

 

 

5. Gulf Islands National Seashore, Florida and Mississippi

Best for Island Hopping, Swimming, Surfing, Fishing, Birdwatching

Average Temperatures in March and April: Low to mid 70s

white sand dunes and sunset sky at Gulf Islands National Seashore, Florida
White quartz sand dunes glow in the light of sunset along the Gulf of Mexico at Gulf Islands National Seashore, Santa Rosa County, Florida. With clear water and bright sand, the beach is excellent for swimming and fishing. (Photo: Marica van der Meer/Arterra/Universal Images Group/Getty)

A lot of people have discovered the Gulf Islands National Seashore. In 2023, visitation jumped 40 percent, from 5.7 million to 8.2 million people, making this unit the fifth-most-visited in the park service. People are showing up for the white-sand beaches on the mainland and for barrier islands that you can only reach by boat. The national seashore is made up of a series of parks, beaches, and islands, split between Florida and Mississippi, and all surrounded by clear, aqua-blue waters that are home to gopher tortoises, bottlenose dolphins, starfish, crabs鈥nd the 300 species of birds that migrate through the area.

The easiest island to reach is Ship, 12 miles off the coast and accessible by regular from Gulfport and Biloxi ($44 per person, round trip). Once you鈥檙e on the island, you can explore the historic fort, lounge on the beaches, or swim in the Gulf. The recreation area is fully developed with concessions and restrooms, so it鈥檚 a convenient getaway.

woman paddleboarding, Gulf Islands National Seashore
Liz Averill goes paddleboarding in the waters of the Gulf Islands National Seashore. Visitors also canoe, kayak, fish, and camp. (Photo: Graham Averill)

If you鈥檙e looking for something wilder, consider venturing to , an eight-mile-long barrier island protected as a federally designated Wilderness area, so there are no commercial ferries to the island and no facilities on the ground. But if you have your own boat or want to hire a charter (from $675 at ), you鈥檒l find an island ringed with sugar-white sand beaches and grassy dunes, while pine trees and lagoons pack the interior. Mind the occasional alligator.

pelican flies over Opal Beach, Gulf Island National Seashore
A brown pelican rides the air currents above Opal Beach, Gulf Island National Seashore, Navarre, Florida. The national seashore is known for its birdwatching. (Photo: Courtesy Owens/NPS)

Where to Stay: The campground, on the mainland near the town of Ocean Springs, sits inside a maritime forest, with marshes and fishing docks ($25 a night, book six months in advance). You鈥檙e also allowed to on the beach on a few of the barrier islands (Petit Bois, West Petit Bois, and Horn Island) inside the park, but stay off the dunes and any vegetation, don鈥檛 bring any mechanical devices (ie, no coolers with wheels), and be prepared for a true wilderness experience, as there are no facilities.

6. Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah and Arizona

Best for Boating, Swimming, Hiking

Average Temperatures in March and April: Highs from 60 to 69

smiling woman and friends packrafting in Glen Canyon
Lizzy Scully, left, packrafting guide, smiles while balancing, yes, a bike on her boat on a trip in Glen Canyon. On the right is Steve “Doom” Fassbinder. The two own Four Corners Guides, a multi-sport outfit based in Mancos, Colorado. (Photo: Graham Averill)

Glen Canyon protects the incredible 1.25 million acres of land and water where the Colorado River pours into Lake Powell. The blue water of the lake contrasts sharply with the red and pink sandstone walls that rise directly from the edge, and the lake has countless fingers and canyons to explore by boat.

The water levels of Powell are constantly shifting, and have generally been in decline the last 20 years. Check the park site鈥檚 to make sure the boat ramp or launch you have in mind is operational. The lake was low when I visited a few years ago on a biking and paddle trip, and we had to contend with some mud on the banks, but the place was no less stunning.

The Antelope Point ramp typically has the least boat traffic, so it鈥檚 conducive to use of kayaks or canoes. From there, you can head south on the lake for a mile and paddle into Antelope Canyon, a narrow slot canyon that鈥檚 also a no-wake (no motorboating) zone. Under normal water levels, you can follow the creek upstream for about a mile. offers rental kayaks (from $75 a day). You can also launch directly from the beaches at Lone Rock Beach and Stanton Creek and explore the lake surrounding those alcoves.

Camping on the banks of Glen Canyon
Cheers! Pretty hard to beat camp beers in Glen Canyon, Utah. (Photo: Graham Averill)

Off the water, an easy 1.25-mile hike leads to one of the overlooks at , where the Colorado River takes a drastic turn around a massive sandstone escarpment.

Where to Stay: All inside the recreation area are first-come, first-served. Lees Ferry Campground has 54 sites, potable water, and restrooms ($26 a night). Lone Rock Beach has primitive sites on a sandy beach right next to the water ($14 per night).

7. Grand Canyon Parashant National Monument, Arizona

Best for Overlanding, Hiking, and Seeking Solitude

Average Temperatures in March and April: High 50s to mid 60s

river canyon of Grand Canyon Parashant National Monument
Established in 2000, Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument is operated by the National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management. Once the land of the Southern Paiute and other groups, it contains burial sites, art panels, and other troves, also old mining and homestead sites and ruins. It offers solitude, camping, hiking, and dark skies. (Photo: Courtesy R. Seely/NPS)

The Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument is primitive. This Northern Arizona park has no facilities, no campgrounds, and no paved roads. Instead, visitors are treated to the sights of 1 million acres of expansive plateaus, rugged canyons, and Mojave Desert, all traversed by a series of unimproved dirt roads and hiking trails. In other words, this monument is ideal for self-contained overlanding. I spent three days cruising Grand Canyon-Parashant in a side-by-side with a rooftop tent, while hiking and biking at various spots throughout, and was as mesmerized by the solitude as the grandeur of the landscape.

overlanders camp at Grand Canyon Parashant
Overlanders converge at Grand Canyon Parashant National Monument, which is stacked with backcountry dirt roads and scenic viewpoints. (Photo: Graham Averill)

If you have a high-clearance 4WD vehicle, the monument is yours to explore. The park service details an 80-mile adventure to that cruises through a variety of terrain, from cattle fields to ponderosa forests, and ends on the north rim of the Grand Canyon. If you choose this route, you鈥檒l also have the chance to get out and stretch your legs on the Burnt Canyon Trail, an easy three-mile out-and-back on a grassy road bed that leads to a big view of the western edge of the Grand Canyon. On a clear day, you can see all the way to Mount Charleston, just outside of Las Vegas.

I took a roundabout, multi-day route to reach , with its long view into the Canyon, and an optional side hike down to the water. The last seven miles to Whitmore Point drop 1,500 feet over rocky, rutted terrain that was super fun to bomb on a mountain bike. The fastest way to this perch is a 50-mile traverse from Mount Trumbull Schoolhouse.

Where to Stay: Primitive camping is allowed throughout the monument, but if you鈥檙e looking for a bit of refinement in the midst of all this rugged adventure, the has hotel rooms and covered wagons on an inholding close to the northern rim of the Grand Canyon. It鈥檚 only accessible by a 70-mile dirt-road drive through the national monument or an airplane (the place has its own landing strip), but once you鈥檙e there, you鈥檒l be able to refuel your vehicle and have a damn fine dinner (starting at $172 a night).

Graham Averill is 黑料吃瓜网 magazine鈥檚 national-parks columnist. Every year, he agonizes over how to maximize his kids鈥 spring break, dragging them to campsites in Florida, beaches in South Carolina, and lakes all over the Southeast. He recently wrote about hiking in Joshua Tree National Park and his absolute favorite mountain town on the East Coast. His latest article is all about visiting national parks for free.

Graham Averill, author
Graham Averill on-site at Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument (Photo: Graham Averill Collection)

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Entry to These 20 National Parks Won鈥檛 Cost You a Dime /adventure-travel/national-parks/free-national-parks-2025/ Tue, 21 Jan 2025 10:30:05 +0000 /?p=2693056 Entry to These 20 National Parks Won鈥檛 Cost You a Dime

Most national parks have an entry fee, but not these. And they鈥檙e all awesome places to visit.

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Entry to These 20 National Parks Won鈥檛 Cost You a Dime

Many of America鈥檚 63 national parks charge an entrance fee, usually $30-$35 per vehicle or $15 if you鈥檙e walking or on a bike. Or you can get an for just $80. The fee covers you for seven days, and the money goes to a good cause: according to the NPS, 80 percent is used within the park, helping to improve trails, campsites, and roads, and 20 percent goes to other park sites. And there are six or so .

You can also have a national-park experience for free another way, by visiting one of the 20 national parks that don鈥檛 charge an entrance fee ever. Come and go as you please without dropping a dime. Many of them are among our least-visited national parks, which means you might have these landscapes to yourself.

Looking for more great travel intel? Sign up for 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 .

These are the 20 national parks that are free to visit every day. If you’re wondering whether these are good ones, they鈥檙e not鈥攖hey鈥檙e great ones.

1. Biscayne National Park, Florida

scuba diver, coral and fish, Biscayne National Park
Biscayne National Park, as viewed from below the surface. You can see reefs and shipwrecks, and the park contains 600 species of fish. (Photo: Courtesy Shaun Wolfe/NPS)

A coastal park located in south Florida where the mainland transitions to the Keys, Biscayne National Park is a collection of islands, mangroves, coral reefs, and open water that鈥檚 largely inaccessible except by boat. While entering the park doesn鈥檛 cost a thing, if you鈥檙e bringing a boat and want to anchor at certain areas, expect a $25 docking fee on weekends and holidays.

Best Time to Visit: Summer is hot and buggy (with temps in the 90s and mosquitoes), and hurricanes are possible in the fall. Shoot for winter, when temps hover in the mid 70s and the storms and bugs are dormant.

boat on Biscayne Bay
NPS boat trawls along in Biscayne National Park, Florida. (Photo: Courtesy Matt Matt Johnson/NPS)

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Biscayne Bay is known for its shipwrecks, and the Mandalay, a schooner that sank in the 鈥60s, is one of the top sites, as the hull sits in shallow enough water to be seen by snorkelers as well as divers. This wreck is part of the which includes five others. Don鈥檛 want to spend your time underwater? Head to Boca Chita Key, also part of the park, a 32-acre island with camping ($25 a night, first-come, first-served), hiking, and a lighthouse. The half-mile trail that circumnavigates the small island leads to its beaches.

2. Channel Islands National Park, California

hikers on Santa Rosa, Channel Islands National Park, California
Hikers wind along a scenic route above the cliffs of Santa Rosa, Channel Islands National Park, California. (Photo: Graham Averill)

Channel Islands National Park encompasses five rugged islands in the Pacific Ocean about 30 miles off the coast of Los Angeles. If you ever wondered what Southern California would look like without the development and traffic, this is it. The park is full of remote beaches, steep cliffs, expansive meadows, and pristine forests.

Best Time to Visit: Summer, as the water and air temps are both in the 70s, a little cooler than most of Southern California but still warm, so you can make the most of those beaches scattered throughout the park.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: I hit Channel Islands last summer as part of a seven-day adventure cruise, but the easiest way (compared to arriving via seaplane or private boat) to reach the park is by ferry, with (day trips from $96). Get dropped off on Santa Rosa Island and hike the 12-mile out-and-back to Skunk Point, a prominent peninsula with sand dunes and cliffs jutting into the Pacific. You鈥檒l pass rare Torrey pines, a gnarled-looking, wind-twisted type of tree only found on the Channel Islands and in La Jolla on the mainland, and have copious views of the ocean and island along the way.

Or book a sea-kayaking tour with and paddle to sea caves and gaze at natural rock arches (from $145 per person).

3. Congaree National Park, South Carolina

raised boardwalk Congaree National Park
The Boardwalk Loop Trail at Congaree National Park, South Carolina, amid cypress trees and floodplain waters (Photo: Mark C. Stevens/Getty)

You could say Congaree National Park is a swamp, and you wouldn鈥檛 be wrong, but the word doesn鈥檛 do the place justice. The 26,692-acre Congaree holds the largest intact old-growth bottom-wood forest in the South, boasting trophy-sized loblolly pines and cypress that rise straight from the water. The same forest has one of the tallest canopies in the eastern United States, with an average tree height of more than 100 feet.

Best Time to Visit: Avoid summer because of the sweltering heat and bugs. Winter and spring are fine, but you might as well show up in the fall when the weather is perfect, the rivers are full from seasonal rains, and the hardwoods, like tupelos and sweet gums, are popping with color.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Most of the fun in Congaree is water-based, so bring a canoe or paddle board and slowly make your way through the , a 15-mile marked 鈥減ath鈥 that winds through old-growth cypress. The current is mellow enough to paddle up or downstream, so you don鈥檛 need a shuttle.

4. Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio

Cuyahoga Valley National Park Towpath, Cuyahoga Valley National Park
Friends walk the Canal Towpath, Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio, to the backdrop of gorgeous autumn colors. (Photo: Courtesy Victoria Stauffenberg/NPS)

An oasis of public land sandwiched between the bustling cities of Cleveland and Akron, Cuyahoga Valley holds 33,000 acres of forest and historic farmland surrounding the Cuyahoga River. What the park lacks in towering peaks or grand vistas, it makes up for in waterways, waterfalls, and cultural significance; you can ride your bike beside the Ohio and Erie Canal, which connected the Ohio River with Lake Erie, key to the country鈥檚 western expansion during the early 1800s.

Best Time to Visit: It鈥檚 a four-season park (although winters can be cold and snowy), and I could make an argument for every season. Fall brings bright foliage, and spring is mild and uncrowded, but show up in summer and you can take advantage of the many farmers鈥 markets in and around the park. The Cuyahoga Valley is still a very active agricultural hub of the Midwest.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: You have to bike at least a section of the , a 100-mile crushed-gravel trail that follows the Ohio and Erie Canal. Roughly 20 miles of the Towpath sit inside the park, passing through small towns and meadows full of wildflowers, like trillium and bloodroot, with deer and foxes along the way.

5. Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve, Alaska

Arrigetch Peaks, Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve, Alaska.
Alpenglow in the remote and magnificent Arrigetch Peaks, Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve, Alaska (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Want remote wilderness? Go to Alaska, then keep heading north into the Brooks Range, and you鈥檒l find Gates of the Arctic, a 13,000-square-mile expanse of mountains and river valleys north of the Arctic Circle. There are no roads in Gates of the Arctic, nor a visitor center or gift shop, nor even established trails. Just herds of caribou, the glow of the northern lights, and several federally designated Wild and Scenic Rivers winding through the tundra.

Best Time to Visit: Hands down, summer has the warmest temps, as well as rivers that are full from snowmelt and a landscape that comes alive as everything from wildflowers to grizzly bears makes the most of the sunshine. There鈥檚 plenty of that, too; you鈥檙e so far north, you can expect daylight for up to a month at a time in the summer.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Try, if you can, to see this park from the hull of a boat. Consider paddling the Noatak, a sinuous river that鈥檚 carved a broad valley through the Brooks Range. You鈥檇 plan for a 10-day canoe-camping trip, with mostly calm water and a few stretches of class II rapids on the 60-mile section inside the park. You鈥檒l float past meadows full of alpine sunflowers and snow buttercups, fish for arctic char, and keep an eye out for grizzlies, wolves, and Dall sheep ( from $8,900).

6. Gateway Arch National Park, Missouri

Gateway Arch and grounds at sunrise
Gateway Arch National Park, Missouri, commemorates St. Louis and Thomas Jefferson for their roles in the United States鈥 westward expansion, and Dred and Harriet Scott, enslaved persons who sued for their freedom in the Old Courthouse in 1946. (Photo: Courtesy Sue Ford/NPS)

Gateway Arch isn鈥檛 like other national parks on this list. It鈥檚 an urban park, located in St. Louis, that was originally set aside to commemorate the cultural significance of our country鈥檚 push westward. It鈥檚 only 91 acres, tucked into the banks of the Mississippi River, and has the 630-foot Gateway Arch as its centerpiece. Fun fact: this is the tallest arch in the U.S. Inside the park are five miles of paved trails for walking and running along the Mississippi.

Best Time to Visit: Show up in fall or spring, when the weather is mild and the crowds are minimal.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Really, ride the tram to the top of the arch. The journey takes you through the structure鈥檚 hollow legs and ends at a viewing platform with a panorama of the Mississippi River and its many bridges below. The only catch? The ride will cost you $19.

7. Great Basin National Park, Nevada

Wheeler Peak, Nevada
Wheeler Peak on the way up the Summit Trail, Great Basin National Park, Nevada. The Great Basin for which the park is named extends from the Sierra Nevada Range in California to parts of Utah and Oregon. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

It takes some effort to reach Great Basin National Park, in eastern Nevada roughly 285 miles north of Las Vegas, but once you鈥檙e there, you won鈥檛 need to contend with crowds. Only 140,000 people a year venture to Great Basin, compared to 14 million visitors for Great Smoky Mountains National Park听in 2023. Yet Great Basin has towering 13,000-foot peaks; groves of shimmering aspen as well as old-growth bristlecone pines, which are believed to be the oldest known tree species in the world; and a fascinating system of caves to explore.

Best Time to Visit: Much of the park can be inaccessible during winter, when the 12-mile Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive, which ascends from 6,700 to 10,180 feet in elevation, is unplowed but open to skiers and snowshoers, and there are various other winter closures. So going between late spring and early fall is your best bet. Late summer will give you the best chance for snow-free trails.


Signature 黑料吃瓜网: The cave tours are popular, but I say hike to the top of 13,063-foot Wheeler Peak, where views of the Great Basin Desert, the only 鈥渃old鈥 desert in America鈥攖he precipitation comes from snow鈥攕tretch in every direction for 100 miles on a clear day. It鈥檚 a 6.1-mile that gains 3,000 feet, much of which is above tree line, so take it slowly if you鈥檙e coming from sea level. Interested in something milder? Hike the 2.7-mile , which brings you to the edges of Teresa and Stella Lakes, both pools surrounded by evergreens.

8. Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee

A woman hiker on summit of Mt. LeConte, Great Smoky Mountains National Park
A hiker takes in the view on a summer day from high on Mt. LeConte, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee. (Photo: Billy McDonald/Getty)

This is the most popular national park in the country, with, as said above, some 14 million visitors annually. Fortunately, there are 500,000 acres of mountains in Great Smoky Mountains National Park听for all those people to explore, with more than 900 miles of trail that access 6,000-foot peaks, pristine trout streams, and historic farming valleys.

Best Time to Visit: There鈥檚 no bad time to hit GSMNP. The foliage goes nuts come fall, winter can bring snow and solitude, and spring is budding with renewed life鈥ut I like summer in the Smokies. Sure, some parts of the park are crowded, but the temperatures are perfect for splashing in the waterfalls and swimming holes.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Most visitors stick to the scenic Newfound Gap Road and its short nature trails, but I recommend hiking the 11-mile out-and-back up to LeConte Lodge, a backcountry inn on top of the 6,000-foot peak of the same name. Some sections of the trail are so exposed you use cables for safety, and you鈥檒l pass through Alum Cave, a rock overhang with a long-range view into the park. If you can鈥檛 score overnight reservations at the lodge, purchase a sack lunch from the kitchen for a picnic in some quiet spot with a view before heading back down to the trailhead.

9. Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas

An aerial view shows Hot Springs Bathhouse Row, Hot Springs National Park, Garland County, Arkansas, in summer amid the region’s green hills. Video courtesy Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism

Forget rugged cliffs or backcountry lakes. Hot Springs National Park protects a small town that was built on top of thermal springs that attracted travelers for centuries before the area ever became a national park. Today, you鈥檒l find two brick bathhouses for soaking your weary muscles and public fountains where you can fill a jug with natural spring water for drinking.

Best Time to Visit: The weather in the park is generally mild, so it鈥檚 a popular destination year round, but winter feels like the right time to sit in a tub of hot water.

mountain biker smiles on Pullman Trail, Hot Springs National Park, Ouachita National Forest
If you want to get out of the water….A mountain biker has some fun on Pullman Trail, Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas. (Photo: Courtesy Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism)

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Can relaxing be an adventure? Who cares? When in Hot Springs National Park, you sit in hot water. The Buckstaff Bathhouse has small private tubs, while the has a series of larger, Roman-style pools for group bathing as well. A man-made steam cave captures the radiant heat from the 143-degree water (from $25 per person). You can also hike the trails here and are welcome to bike on any of the paved roads and the Pullman Trail.

10.听 Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska

the rugged Mount Stellar, Alaska
Mount Steller, part of the Aleutian Range, looms over Hallo Bay, Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Katmai National Park is surely best known for its live bear cams, where you can watch massive brown bears fish for salmon from the comfort of your office chair. But this 4-million-acre park in Southern Alaska is more than just an internet sensation; it鈥檚 a playground of lakes, rivers, and mountains, with an active volcano.

Best Time to Visit: Show up in July when the temps approach 70, and the brown bears are actively hunting for fish.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Try to get a campsite or lodge room at the float-plane accessible (make reservations starting January 5, $18 per campsite per night) on the edge of Naknek Lake, and hike the 1.2-mile out and back to Brooks Falls, where the park鈥檚 most popular bear cam catches grizzlies poking around the water for salmon. Don鈥檛 worry, the hike ends at an overlook a safe distance from the action.

11. Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska

Three Hole Point, Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska
Water and mountains surround the aptly named Three Hole Point, Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

The heart of Kenai Fjords is the Harding Icefield, a 700-square-mile sheet of ice that has shaped Alaska鈥檚 Kenai Peninsula by leaving glaciers and carving fjords. Visitors to the park have 600,000 acres of fjords to paddle, many trails to hike, and innumerable icy crevices to explore, with 听options available.

Best Time to Visit: Technically, Kenai Fjords is open year round, but winters are cold and snowy, and the only way into the park is by fat bike, XC skis, or dogsled. Show up from June through August and the trails are open to hikers, the roads are clear, and wildlife is most visible, as animals actively look for food.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: This is your chance to explore a glacier in all its shrinking glory. A paved road leads to the edge of Exit Glacier, which forms the tail end of the Harding Icefield. From here a system of trails explores the valley carved by the glacier, offering a variety of views. Hike the 8.2-mile out-and-back , a strenuous climb through cottonwood forests and meadows, then above a tree line ridge that stops at the edge of the massive expanse of ice.

12. Kobuk Valley National Park, Alaska

Kobuk Valley is one of the least-visited units of the national-park system (just over 17,000 people made the trip in 2023), but that鈥檚 more a reflection of the park鈥檚 location north of the Arctic Circle than its landscape, which is a mix of rivers and sand dunes that are populated by a hell of a lot of caribou traveling along the Kobuk River. No roads lead into Kobuk Valley, so most visitors arrive via . The other option would be a very long paddle in.

Best Time to Visit: Shoot for June or July, when you鈥檒l enjoy nearly 24 hours of light every day, blooming wildflowers like the herbaceous locoweed, and temperatures in the mid 60s. Or show up in August when the caribou begin their migration through the park.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: With no established trails or campgrounds inside the park, you need to be self-sufficient. Most people show up to camp in the 25-square-mile Great Kobuk Sand Dunes, or paddle and fish for salmon and whitefish along the 61 miles of the Kobuk River within the park鈥檚 borders. Either way, keep an eye out for caribou, which look like lean reindeer.

13. Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Alaska

Three people above Turquoise Lake, Lake Clark
Laughs, snacks, and a rainbow above Turquoise Lake, Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Alaska.听Zara Kanold-Tso sits in the foreground, with her parents, Judy Tso on the left and Patrick Kanold to the right. (Photo: Amy Cyr)

Much like Kobuk Valley, Lake Clark has no roads leading into the park and is typically accessed by small plane. But make the effort and you鈥檒l see 4 million acres of quintessential Alaskan terrain with 10,000-foot peaks, backcountry lakes, glaciers, and wild rivers, all about 100 miles southwest of Anchorage.

Best Time to Visit: It鈥檚 Alaska, so summer will give you the longest days and warmest weather of the year. The brown bears are active too, filling up on salmon running up the rivers, so it can be a once-in-a-lifetime thrill seeing them (from a safe distance).

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Catch a to Crescent Lake and spend your time on a boat, fishing for sockeye salmon, which fill the lake in July during their annual migration, or lake trout. Bring your binoculars too, as the lake is a hub for brown-bear activity during the summer.

14. Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky

flower-like formation in Mammoth Cave
See marvels like this delicate-looking gypsum flower, found in the New Discovery section of Mammoth Cave, Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. (Photo: Courtesy homas DiGiovannangelo/NPS)

Most national parks wow you with what鈥檚 above ground, but Mammoth Cave鈥檚 secret sauce lies beneath the dirt; the park protects the largest cave system in the world, with more than 400 miles of mapped passages.

Best Time to Visit: Mammoth might be the truest year-round park in the system, as the temperature in the caves is a consistent 54 degrees through every season. But visit in the fall and the hardwoods above ground are bursting with color.

boating on Green River, Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky
Kayaks wait on a gravel bar along the Green River, Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. (Photo: Courtesy Ashley Decker/NPS)

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: The landscape offers plenty to do above ground, from paddling the Green River to mountain biking the park鈥檚 20 miles of singletrack, but you鈥檙e here for the caves. The Historic Cave Tour is the classic introduction, a two-hour guided adventure that hits the biggest rooms and tight channels alike ($24 per person). Or if you鈥檙e feeling adventurous, sign up for a Wild Cave Tour and crawl through tight passages that lead to lesser-seen rooms over 5.5 miles of exploration ($79 per person).

15. National Park of American Samoa

Tutuila, Pola Islands, American Samoa
The Tutuila coastline, Pola Islands, National Park of American Samoa (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Looking for something remote and tropical? American Samoa is a collection of seven islands located 2,600 miles south of Hawaii. National Park of American Samoa protects pieces of four of those islands, boasting tropical rainforests, steep peaks, remote beaches, and access to the surrounding ocean and coral reefs.

Best Time to Visit: It鈥檚 warm year round in American Samoa, but winter can be rainy. The dry season runs from June to September, offering the best chances of good weather for hiking and clear water for snorkeling.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Tutuila, the largest island of Samoa, is loaded with hiking trails that lead through rainforests to dramatic viewpoints over the coast. If I ever get to go, I鈥檓 visiting Ofu Island, which has a remote shoreline with pink sand that has been called the most beautiful beach in the world. The is amazing too, as the water is clear, the coral reefs are close to shore and packed with colorful fish, and the area hosts more than 950 species of fish.

16. New River Gorge National Park and Preserve, West Virginia

New River Gorge and famous bridge
The rafting, climbing, hiking, and biking are all primo at the New River Gorge, West Virginia. Here boaters glide beneath the bridges of the New. The higher one, at nearly a mile long, is the longest steel span in our hemisphere. (Photo: Jay Young/)

New River Gorge National Park packs an adventurous punch in its svelte 73,000 acres, protecting 53 miles of the class IV New River and the steep, rocky gorge around it. Rock climbing, mountain biking, whitewater rafting鈥ou can do it all inside this relatively small park.

Best Time to Visit: Summer brings the warmest weather for rafting, but if you鈥檙e looking to climb, show up in the fall when the humidity dissipates, temps drop, and the leaves pop.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: It鈥檚 hard to pick just one here, but rafting the New has to top the list. The river drops 750 feet inside the park鈥檚 boundaries, unraveling in a series of III-IV wave trains, drops, and big pillows. A number of outfitters , from half-day milder water options to two-day overnight adventures.

17. North Cascades National Park, Washington

Winchester Lookout, North Cascades National Park
The Winchester Mountain Lookout on Mount Baker provides a view of the Picket Range, one of the most rugged mountain chains in the continental U.S., in North Cascades National Park, Washington. (Photo: Javaris Johnson/ Snipezart)

North Cascades might be close enough to Seattle for a day trip, but this landscape is a world removed from the bustling city, with high alpine terrain full of evergreen forests, craggy peaks, backcountry lakes, and more than 300 glaciers鈥搕he largest collection in any park outside of Alaska.

Best Time to Visit: Late June to late September has the most user-friendly weather and the best chances for snow-free trails.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Take on , a steep 9.4-mile hike from the edge of Ross Lake that passes through meadows toward sweeping views from a historic lookout tower that Jack Kerouac once lived in while working as a fire scout. On the horizon are the craggy, fin-like Hozomeen Peak and a portion of the Ross Lake National Recreation Area.

18. Virgin Islands National Park, Virgin Islands

Saloman Beach, Virgin Islands National Park
Looking west from Saloman Bay beach, Virgin Islands National Park. This white-sand beach with its aqua waters is accessible only by trail. (Photo: Courtesy Anne Finney/NPS)

Protecting two-thirds of the island of St. John, Virgin Islands National Park is packed with beaches, lush mountains, and tropical rainforests. Visitors will split their time between water activities, lounging on beaches, and hiking through the hills.

Best Time to Visit: Summer can be hot and rainy and fall brings hurricanes, but winter in the Virgin Islands is delightful, with temps in the 80s and minimal rainfall.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: Explore Salomon and Honeymoon Bay, dueling white-sand beaches separated by a rocky point. Snorkelers have colonies of coral reefs teeming with tropical fish to explore. Or go for a swim in Brown Bay, from a beach that鈥檚 only accessible by boat or a 1.5-mile hike on Brown Bay Trail.

19. Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota

starlight and the aurora borealis, Voyageurs National Park
The northern lights dance and shimmer over Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota. (Photo: Courtesy Dimse/NPS)

Situated on the Canadian border in Northern Minnesota, the 218,055-acre Voyageurs National Park is known for its series of lakes interconnected by 60 miles of canoe trails. Moose and wolves thrive inside the park, which is also a good spot for seeing the northern lights.

Best Time to Visit: Visitor centers and tour operators open in June and the lakes are busiest in the summer, but September brings changing colors and fewer crowds. The season ends quickly, though, and October can feel more like winter than fall.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: People visit Voyageurs to canoe and fish the lakes for walleye and northern pike. The larger lakes can be busy with motorboat traffic, but the smaller interior lakes are linked by a series of marked canoe trails and backcountry campsites. Paddle the 13-mile Chain of Lakes trail, which traverses four small lakes on the Kabetogama Peninsula via small creeks and short portages. Each lake has a campsite, and the park service stages boats for use by those with camping .

20. Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota

woman in helmet explores Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota.
A caver gazes upon stalactites in Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

One of the oldest national parks in our system, established in 1903 by Theodore Roosevelt, the 33,000-acre Wind Cave protects a landscape in transition, where the Great Plains give way to the Black Hills. Above ground, the park boasts broad swaths of grassland occupied by herds of bison and elk, but underneath that bounty of wildlife are 143 miles of mapped cave passages.

Best time to Visit: Summer is hot and thunderstorms with hail are common, while winter brings snow and sub-freezing temps. Hit Wind Cave in the shoulder seasons (spring or fall) for mild weather and to see active wildlife.

Signature 黑料吃瓜网: The only way to explore the caves is on a . The Natural Entrance tour is a good family-friendly option, as visitors experience the winding opening of the cave system before exploring some of the larger interior passages, known for walls that look like honeycombs. If you want more of an adventure, sign up for the Wild Cave tour, which will have you crawling through smaller, undeveloped passages deep down in the system ($17 per person).

Graham Averill is 黑料吃瓜网 magazine鈥檚 national-parks columnist. Based in Asheville, North Carolina, he is fortunate enough to live within a few hours of three free national parks. He recently wrote about the best hikes in Joshua Tree National Park, his favorite mountain town, and the national park he chose as the most adventurous.

author photo graham averill
Graham Averill, author (Photo: Liz Averill)

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The Best 黑料吃瓜网s in Every U.S. National Park /collection/best-adventure-national-park/ Fri, 10 Jan 2025 22:57:05 +0000 /?post_type=collection&p=2693569 The Best 黑料吃瓜网s in Every U.S. National Park

Our national parks are called America鈥檚 Best Idea for a reason. Here's how to have the most epic adventures in the most beautiful parks in the U.S.

The post The Best 黑料吃瓜网s in Every U.S. National Park appeared first on 黑料吃瓜网 Online.

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The Best 黑料吃瓜网s in Every U.S. National Park

The post The Best 黑料吃瓜网s in Every U.S. National Park appeared first on 黑料吃瓜网 Online.

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Timed-Entry Reservations Return to Our National Parks This Year. Here’s the Scoop. /adventure-travel/national-parks/national-parks-reservations-2025/ Mon, 06 Jan 2025 10:00:08 +0000 /?p=2692072 Timed-Entry Reservations Return to Our National Parks This Year. Here's the Scoop.

Timed-entry reservations are back. Our national parks columnist reveals how to get into these popular parks.

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Timed-Entry Reservations Return to Our National Parks This Year. Here's the Scoop.

Our family trip to Maui was full of surfing, waterfall treks, and snorkeling with turtles. Catching the sunrise from the top of the 10,023-foot volcano in Haleakala National Park was supposed to be the crowning jewel. Some say it鈥檚 the greatest sunrise in the world. I wouldn鈥檛 know, though, because I forgot to make reservations two months in advance of the trip, and the only way you can see the sunrise from Haleakala is with a timed-entry permit.

These mandatory timed-entry reservations in national parks have become a hot topic the last few years. During the pandemic, when visitation to national parks soared, a few parks鈥攕tarting with Arches in 2022鈥攔esponded by implementing the reservation systems, which require all visitors to get permits for specific entry times during the busy season. Since then, other park units have implemented similar systems.

I recently spent a lot of time studying national-park visitor comments online, and the reservation system was the second-most frequent complaint. But you know what was the most frequent complaint among national-park visitors? Overcrowding in parks, which leads to traffic jams and a lack of parking, not to mention more pressure on the natural resources.

woman hiker enters Big Meadows, Shenandoah National Park
A hiker in the high-elevation Big Meadows, the largest open area in Shenandoah National Park and a magnet for hiking, camping, and stargazing. You do not need reservations to enter this national park, but do to hike up its signature peak, Old Rag. (Photo: Courtesy Delaware North)

The National Park System has implemented these systems as a direct response. If you鈥檝e sat in near standstill traffic in Yosemite, or waited for your turn to take a photo in Glacier, then you know something has to be done to mitigate the crowds.

I鈥檓 notoriously bad at making reservations for dinner a week in advance, let alone for a vacation three months down the road, so I get user frustration with the new system. But until some bright mind comes up with a better way to handle millions of people wanting to hike to Bear Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park, I think we鈥檙e all going to have to get used to planning certain national park experiences well in advance.

Here鈥檚 a look at the nine national parks that will require advance reservations for entry or on certain popular hikes in 2025.

1. Glacier National Park

bighorn sheep, lake, Glacier National Park
A bighorn sheep, one of the abundant forms of wildlife in Glacier National Park. Mountain goats, bears, pikas, wolves, beavers, and elk also reside here.听(Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Glacier National Park is bringing back last year鈥檚 timed-entry vehicle-reservation pilot project for the popular west side of Going-To-The-Sun Road and the North Fork area. The reservations will be required from June 13 to September 28, 2025, daily between 7 A.M. and 3 P.M.

Going-To-The-Sun Road, which is only open during the warm months, usually mid June through September, is a 50-mile-long paved byway that cuts through the center of the park, delivering visitors to the most popular trailheads. West Glacier, near Whitefish, is the western entrance of the road, and St. Mary Visitor Center is the gateway to the eastern edge of the park.

How to Get a Glacier National Park Reservation: You can make reservations starting on February 12 on on a rolling basis, 120 days in advance of desired visitation dates, starting at 8 A.M. MST. Any remaining vehicle reservations will be available at 7 P.M. MDT for next-day entry for dates throughout the season starting on June 12, 2025. Reservations require a $2 processing fee.

In 2025, visitors can still access the park at the East Entrance of Going-To-The-Sun Road without a reservation, but entry might be restricted at certain times without advance notice if the road becomes too congested. You can visit the beautiful Two Medicine Valley, also on the east side of the park and with its own entrance, without a reservation. If you lack a reservation and don鈥檛 want to trek 100 miles to the east side of the park, vehicles can drive Going-To-The-Sun Road from the western entrance as far as Apgar Village, which is two miles inside the park鈥檚 west entrance.

Backup Plan: If you have a reservation for lodging, camping, transportation, or a commercial activity, you can access the park within the intended service area of Going-To-The-Sun Road without making a timed-entry reservation as long as you can show proof of that booking.

If you don鈥檛 have a reservation, you can enter the park before 7 A.M. or after 3 P.M. Or take your chances and enter the park through the eastern entrance of Going-To-The-Sun Road, remembering that access might be restricted due to overcrowding on the road. Better yet, head to the east side of the park to Two Medicine Valley, which is full of trails leading to ice-blue backcountry lakes and towering peaks. The 9.6-mile hike to passes waterfalls and ends on the shore of the lake, which is flanked by the Continental Divide.

2. Arches National Park

Sandstone towers in the Park Avenue trail in Arches National Park, Utah
Park Avenue, lined by steep walls and spires, leads into the Courthouse Towers area, Arches National Park. (Photo: Debra Book Barrows)

Arches is bringing back its previous timed-entry reservation pilot program from 2022 to be used from April 1 to October 31, 2025, although this year you will not need reservations between July 7 and August 27. The program is a continuation of a reservation system that began as a direct response to Arches鈥 increased popularity; the park had seen a 73 percent rise in visitation from 2011 to 2021. Timed entry reservations will be required between 7 A.M. and 4 P.M. daily.

How to Get an Arches National Park Reservation: Reservations are released three months in advance in monthly blocks, so April reservations open on January 2, May reservations open February 1, June reservations open March 1, and so on. Tickets can be reserved at at 8 A.M. MST beginning January 2. Beginning March 31, additional next-day tickets will be released at 7 P.M. MST each evening. Cost for booking a reservation is $2. No tickets will be available at the park visitor center. Once you have a reservation, you鈥檒l have a dedicated one-hour window to enter the park.

Backup Plan: You don鈥檛 need a reservation if you have camping, tour, or special-use permits.

You can also enter the park before 7 A.M. or after 4 P.M. without a reservation. Canyonlands National Park is only 27 miles southwest of Arches, and makes for a superb alternative if you can鈥檛 get inside Arches.

3. Rocky Mountain National Park

bridge glacier gorge trail
Crossing a bridge on the Glacier Gorge Trail, Rocky Mountain National Park (Photo: Courtesy Holiday Inn Estes Park)

Rocky Mountain National Park has a two-tiered reservation system that, frankly, has confused a lot of people in the past couple of years. Still, it proved effective for mitigating crowds, so the park is bringing it back for 2025. Reservations will be required beginning May 23 through Oct. 14 or Oct 20 depending on the specific reservation you get.

Two types of reservations are available: one is a permit for the Bear Lake Road Corridor, which will also include access to the rest of the park, with reservations required from 5 A.M to 6 P.M.. The other is a permit for what is known as 鈥渢he rest of the park,鈥 excluding this corridor, with reservations needed from 9 A.M. to 2 P.M. daily. Bear Lake Road reservations are required from May 23 to October 20, but 鈥渢he rest of the park鈥 reservations are only necessary from May 23 to October 14. Why the distinction? The Bear Lake Road area is the most popular section of the park thanks to its collection of picturesque lakes and relatively easy hikes.

How to Get a Rocky Mountain National Park Reservation: You can get reservations through one month in advance, so reservations for June (and the last week of May) will be released at 8 A.M. MST on May 1. Reservations for July will be released June 1 at 8 A.M. MST. The park will also hold 40 percent of the permits for next-day reservations, releasing those at 7 P.M. MST the night before. The only cost for a reservation is a $2 process fee. Visitors with a reservation will have a dedicated two-hour window to enter the park.

Back Up Plan: The Bear Lake corridor is awesome, and the deeper you go on the trails in that area, the better it gets. But Rocky Mountain is a big park, and with the 鈥渞est of the park鈥 reservation window so narrow (9 A.M. to 2 P.M.) there鈥檚 plenty of time to enter the park before or after those hours and still experience the iconic landscape. Driving Trail Ridge Road, the highest paved road in the U.S., topping out at 12,183 feet, is memorable all on its own. But I say set your alarm for an early wake up so you can hit the park before 9 A.M. and head to the Long鈥檚 Peak Trailhead for the 8.4-mile hike to Chasm Lake, a calm pool at the base of Long鈥檚 Peak where you鈥檒l see a picture perfect view of the mountain鈥檚 1,000-foot granite walls.

4. Zion National Park

Zion National Park view of cliffs
The sandstone monoliths of the Temples and Towers of the Virgin, Zion National Park, rise 3,000 above the valley. (Photo: Courtesy Rebecca Alfafara/NPS)

You don鈥檛 need reservations to enter Zion National Park in 2025, but you will to hike to Angels Landing. The extremely popular hike leads to one of the most photogenic spots in the entire park: a narrow, rocky perch hovering 1,500 feet above the Virgin River. Reservations are required year round and released in a seasonal lottery beginning two months in advance of your intended hike. Next-day permits are also released, on the day before your intended hike.

How to Get a Reservation to Hike to Angels Landing: All reservations are released on . You鈥檒l enter the lottery and pick seven ranked days and times when you want to tackle Angels Landing. You can register for up to six people in the lottery. If you win the lottery, permits are issued on the 25th of the month that you registered.

Lottery-permit applications are $6 and if you score a reservation, the cost is another $3 per hiker. The park also releases last-minute permits for next-day hikers. The lottery opens at 12 MST and closes at 3pm MST each day. The same fees apply. The confirmation email from recreation.gov serves as your permit.

Backup Plan: Getting a reservation is the only way you can hike to the end of Angels Landing, but no permit is necessary to hike the up to Scout Lookout, a 4.5-mile out and back that encompasses most of the same trail, missing only the final push along the knife-edge ridge to Angels Landing. But you鈥檒l still get to hike along the Virgin River and through the breezy Refrigerator Canyon, and end with a great view of Zion Canyon from Scout Lookout.

5. Shenandoah National Park

mountaintop view, Shenandoah National Park
Skyland seen from Stony Man, Shenandoah National Park (Photo: Courtesy Delaware North)

No reservations are necessary to enter Shenandoah National Park, but you do need a permit to hike any of the several routes up the park鈥檚 signature peak, Old Rag, which is topped by a granite outcropping with a 360-degree view. After a two-year pilot program, Shenandoah National Park has made the Old Rag day-use permit system permanent. You鈥檒l need a day-use ticket from March 1 to November 30. A limit of 800 permits are allotted each day.

How to Get a Permit to Hike Old Rag: Every member in your hiking party needs a permit. Tickets are $2, purchased at . Half of the tickets are released 30 days in advance on a rolling basis and the other half are open for grabs five days in advance. The permits are good from 12 A.M. to 11:59 P.M. of the date of your hike.

Backup Plan: Old Rag isn鈥檛 the only summit inside Shenandoah. The 3,514-foot Mary鈥檚 Rock, which requires no permit (only Old Rag does), is topped by a granite outcropping with a gorgeous view west into the pastoral Shenandoah Valley. You can reach the summit via a variety of trails, from an easy 1.5-mile out and back to an arduous that includes a slice of the Appalachian Trail.

6. Haleakala National Park

sunset at Haleakala National Park
The author and family lacked a reservation to catch the sunrise at the 10,023-foot volcano in Haleakala National Park on Maui, but sunset wasn’t bad. Either way, wear warm clothes. (Photo: Graham Averill Collection)

You don鈥檛 need a reservation to enter Haleakala National Park, a 33,265-acre gem on the island of Maui, but if you want to see the sunrise from the summit of its central 10,023-foot active volcano, you鈥檒l need to plan ahead and get a permit. Reservations are necessary to enter the Summit District of the park from 3 A.M. to 7 A.M. daily. The system has been in place since 2017 because catching the sunrise from the top of this volcano is supposedly a transcendent experience.

How to Get a Reservation to See the Sunrise on Haleakala: Reservations can be made on up to 60 days in advance of your desired day. All permits are released at 7 A.M. HST daily on a rolling basis. For those with less foresight, 50 permits are released 48 hours in advance on a rolling basis, but don鈥檛 count on scoring one: only 150 cars are allowed into the park during sunrise each day. You can only get one sunrise reservation per three-day period.

Backup Plan: I tried to get last-minute reservations for sunrise on my recent family trip to Maui but had no luck. Instead, we showed up for sunset. Was it as transcendent as a sunrise? I can鈥檛 compare the two, but it was gorgeous and we didn鈥檛 have to wake up at 2 A.M. to drive into the park. If you鈥檙e dead set on experiencing the sunrise but can鈥檛 get an advance reservation, consider booking a couple of nights in the Summit District鈥檚 Each booking comes with a sunrise permit. Snag a campsite up to 30 days in advance. Sites are $5 per night, with a three-night maximum.

Hiking the Summit District is a delight even if you can鈥檛 catch a sunrise. My family spent our time poking around easy trails, but the is an 11-mile point-to-point that drops through the volcano鈥檚 crater, traveling through rust-red and black lava rock terrain that many describe as otherworldly.

7. Yosemite National Park

woman kayaking in Yosemite National Park, view of Half Dome
Kayaking the Merced River, with Half Dome behind, in Yosemite Valley (Photo: Jim Thomsen)

For the last couple of years, Yosemite has gone back and forth with timed-entry reservations: mandating and enforcing them, then taking the system away, then bringing it back. In 2024, the park introduced a Peak Hours Plus system for spring, summer, and fall that required reservations from 5 A.M. to 4 P.M.

The park hasn鈥檛 announced its plans for 2025 yet. But we do know that you鈥檒l need reservations from February 8 to February 23 on weekends because of the mass appeal of Horsetail Falls, which at that time of year glows when sunlight hits it. You need an even if you don鈥檛 want to see Horsetail Falls. We鈥檒l update this article with 驰辞蝉别尘颈迟别鈥檚 2025 plans when they are released.

How to Get a Reservation to See Horsetail Falls: Half of the reservations for the February Horsetail Falls were released in November of 2024. The other half will be released two days in advance of the target weekends at 8 A.M. PT on recreation.gov. So if you鈥檙e trying to get tickets for February 23, you can get reservations on February 21 at 8 A.M.. There鈥檚 a $2 reservation fee.

Backup Plan: If you want to see Horsetail Falls in its winter glory on a weekend, you need to score a reservation. There鈥檚 no way into Yosemite on a February weekend without that permit. Or you can hit the park on weekdays in February when no reservations are required.

If you make it inside the park in February and are looking for something else to do, head to the Bridge Pass Ski Area, which offers downhill skiing and is a hub of groomed and ungroomed cross-country trails. The is a 8.3-mile ski through meadows with a dramatic view into Yosemite Valley.

8. Acadia National Park

Monument Cove, Acadia National Park (Photo: Sardius Stalker/NPS)

Acadia National Park did not require entrance reservations in 2024, but did require reservations for visitors wanting to drive Cadillac Summit Road from May 22 to October 27. The park has not announced its reservation plans for 2025, although Cadillac Summit Road permits are expected to be part of the management plan again.

How to Get a Cadillac Summit Road Permit: Last year, permits were required to drive the road from sunrise until sunset. The park released 30 percent of the permits 90 days in advance on on a rolling basis, while 70 percent of permits were released at 10 A.M. EST two days prior to desired dates. There was a $6 processing fee regardless of when you get the reservation.

People watch the sun rise from Cadillac Mountain, Acadia National Park
Visitors convene to see the sunrise from the top of Cadillac Mountain, Acadia National Park. (Photo: Courtesy Kent Miller/NPS)

Backup Plan: You鈥檒l need to score a reservation if you want to drive to the top of Cadillac Mountain during the day time, but that鈥檚 not the only good view inside Acadia. Check out Great Head, a 145-foot tall summit with a dramatic view of Acadia鈥檚 beaches and coast, via this adventurous .

9. Mount Rainier National Park

Mount Rainier Washington State
The 14,410-foot Mount Rainier, an active volcano, is the most glaciated peak in the contiguous United States and the centerpiece of Mount Rainier National Park. (Photo: Javaris Johnson/ Snipezart)

Mount Rainier is the latest park to enter the timed-entry reservation game, introducing a pilot permit system last year for vehicles accessing the park via either the Paradise Corridor and Sunrise Corridor. Reservations were needed daily from 7 A.M. to 3 P.M. from May 24 through September 2 for the Paradise Corridor and July 3 to September 2 for the Sunrise Corridor. The park is still evaluating the results of that pilot program and has not yet announced plans for 2025. We鈥檒l update this article when information is available.

How to Get a Reservation to Mount Rainier National Park: Advance reservations are made available on , and a small amount of next-day reservations are issued at 7 P.M. PT the day before on a rolling basis. A $2 processing fee is required for each reservation.

 

Dewey Lake, Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
Dewey Lake as seen from the 3.5-mile Naches Peak Loop Trail, Mount Rainier National Park (Photo: Courtesy Ivie Metzen/NPS)

Backup Plan: If you can鈥檛 score a reservation, try entering the park before 7 A.M. or after 3 P.M. Also, visitors with camping, lodging, or wilderness permits don鈥檛 need a timed-entry reservation. Also, if you enter Sunrise Corridor on foot or bicycle, you don鈥檛 need a reservation. If you鈥檙e , State Route 410 (Sunrise Road) climbs 3,650 feet in 20 miles from the park boundary to Sunrise, an overlook sitting at 6,400 feet in elevation that offers a big view of snowcapped Rainier and the surrounding valley.

Graham Averill is 黑料吃瓜网 magazine鈥檚 national parks columnist. He still regrets not scoring reservations for the sunrise in Haleakala National Park, and knows he needs to be better at planning ahead for such adventures. He recently wrote about the year鈥檚 (best) worst national park reviews; surviving a hurricane in his hometown of Asheville, North Carolina; and his choice for the country’s best state for adventures.

author photo graham averill
Our national parks columnist, Graham Averill听(Photo: Liz Averill)

 

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The Worst National-Parks Reviews of the Year /adventure-travel/national-parks/worst-national-parks-reviews-2024/ Sun, 22 Dec 2024 10:00:27 +0000 /?p=2691163 The Worst National-Parks Reviews of the Year

鈥淭he trees aren鈥檛 as big as everyone says鈥 and 鈥淚've seen better in video games.鈥 Our national-parks columnist rounded up some scathing reviews of America's Best Idea.

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The Worst National-Parks Reviews of the Year

Described as 鈥淎merica鈥檚 best idea,鈥 the National Park System was established in large part to protect the nation鈥檚 most precious landscapes, from the deepest canyons to the tallest peaks. Some of the parks are so dang beautiful, they鈥檝e been known to make people contemplate their own existence.

But not everyone traveling to a national park is moved to existential enlightenment. Some visitors come away angry, frustrated, or disappointed, and they turn to the internet to express themselves. Recently, for my annual end-of-year wrap up of the worst national-parks reviews,听I spent an unhealthy amount of time perusing visitor comments on national parks on Google Maps, Yelp, and TripAdvisor to find the best of them.

Looking for more great travel intel? Sign up for 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 .

I learned a few things in the process. I learned听that a lot of people don鈥檛 like the timed entry and reservation systems that many parks have put in place to combat overcrowding. Like, a lot of people; I saw thousands of complaints on that topic. Also, the general lack of parking gets people fired up.

Lost Horse Valley, Joshua Tree National Park, Southern California
Lost Horse Valley, Joshua Tree National Park, Southern California showcases the iconic trees that give the area its name. This valley is also an International Dark Sky Park. (Photo: Courtesy Brad Sutton/NPS)

I discovered some really interesting and funny one-star (out of a possible five stars) reviews that spanned quite a spectrum, from someone complaining about the weather (apparently Canyonlands is too hot and sunny) or questioning humanity鈥檚 fascination with nature in general (to this person, Joshua Tree听is just a load of big stones).

Here are my favorite bad national-park reviews of 2024. As ever, we nod to , grandmaster collector of such information, which, as autumn lit up the multitude of colors in the national forest of Vermont, noted this doozy: 鈥淣ot a memorable place to go.鈥

(Note: Some reviews below were edited for brevity, but I left spelling errors and grammar mistakes intact.)听

1. Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee

Great Smoky Mountains National Park
The serene Cataloochee and Balsam areas in Great Smoky Mountains National Park are habitat for elk herds, and the higher-elevation overlooks here offer visitors cool summer temperatures. (Photo: Courtesy Victoria Stauffenberg/NPS)听

Great Smoky Mountains National Park protects 500,000 acres of mountains, rivers and historic farmland that is widely recognized as the most biodiverse landscape in North America. But not everyone loves it.

猸 鈥淭his is the Walmart of national parks.鈥 鈥Google Maps

猸 鈥淎 terrible experience! This national park is the largest and most popular park in the middle of the United States and famous for their beers (sic). Every staff of the park told us that beers (sic) were everywhere. However, this park was really disappointing that I did not see any beer (sic). I only saw many turkeys and one fox鈥S]ummer might not be a good time to visit here because beers (sic) or other wild animals could hide in trees and bushes.鈥濃Google Maps

2. Death Valley National Park, California and Nevada

Horseback riding in the Oasis resort area in Death Valley National Park. Death Valley looks out on starry skies and the Panamint Mountains. (Photo: Courtesy Xanterra Travel Collection)

This 3.4 million-acre park, straddling California and Nevada, is known for its deep canyons, salt flats, and ghost towns. The first commenter reviewed it without ever having been there.

猸 鈥淗aven’t gone yet, will go soon, sounds hot tho.鈥濃Google Maps

猸 鈥淒on’t go, nothing to see鈥.The rock formation is not that great, quite dusty, hot, etc. Feels like an open pit mine. The only use case I can see is if you want to 鈥 test yourself or your car AC.鈥濃Google Maps

3. Indiana Dunes National Park, Indiana

Indiana Dunes National Park
A scenic spot at Lake View Beach on Lake Michigan in Indiana Dunes National Park. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Designated a national park in 2019, Indiana Dunes protects dunes and forest on the edge of Lake Michigan, all less than 50 miles from downtown Chicago. But apparently the park has some policies on parties.

猸 鈥淐an’t grille, can’t smoke, can’t drink, can’t play loud music…who wants to just sit on sand.鈥鈥擥辞辞驳濒别 Maps

4. Redwood National and State Parks, California

This collection of state and federally protected parks houses the world鈥檚 tallest trees, with landscapes spanning from rugged coastlines to thick interior woodlands. Tree color may be a subjective thing.

猸 鈥淐alifornia sucks so I don鈥檛 know why I was surprised when I was very disappointed. The trees aren鈥檛 as big as everyone says and they鈥檙e not red either, terrible name. The National park should just sell the land and turn the trees into paper.鈥濃Google Maps

5. Joshua Tree National Park, California

hiker looks out over Lost Valley, Joshua Tree
A hiker scrambles up onto a boulder for a big view across Hidden Valley, Joshua Tree National Park. (Photo: Courtesy Hannah Schwalbe/NPS)

One of my personal favorite units in the park system, Joshua Tree is home to gorgeous desert landscapes full of boulders that attract climbers and gawkers alike.

猸 鈥淚t鈥檚 just a load of big stones. If you go make sure to take a packed lunch and drinks, you鈥檒l certainly thank me.鈥 鈥TripAdvisor

6. New River Gorge National Park, West Virginia

New River Gorge
Nothing to do in the New? So claims one commenter. Just听rafting, hiking, biking, climbing, etc. (Photo: Jason Young/)

The newest unit to be granted full park status, New River Gorge is a multi-adventure playground with world-class paddling, rock climbing, hiking, and mountain biking. Other than that鈥

猸猸猸 鈥淚f you hike or like white water rafting, this is a great place. Otherwise, not much else to do.鈥濃Google Maps

7. Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida

I haven鈥檛 visited Dry Tortugas yet, but it鈥檚 on my list because these islands west of the Florida Keys offer some of the most remote spits of land in America, with beautiful snorkeling and paddling. Some feel waterlogged though.

猸 鈥淚 paid full price for only 1% of land??? Park is literally 99% water….. my shoes got wet too like what????? More like the NOT dry Tortugas鈥濃Google Maps

8. Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado

Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado, with budding trees in the foreground and peaks behind
Cottonwoods in the spring at Great Sand Dunes National Park, with the contrast of a snow-laden Cleveland Peak in the Sangre de Cristo Range in the distance. (Photo: Patrick Myers/NPS)听

Couple the tallest sand dunes in North America with long-range views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains and you鈥檝e got鈥

猸 鈥淭he only reason people go here is to buy a piece of fudge or a T-shirt. That’s about it. This is literally a dumping area for the fine sand used to make volleyball courts. The funniest thing to do here is simply people watching. They act like they never seen dirt before.鈥濃Google Maps

9. Everglades National Park, Florida

Great Egret in Everglades National Park, Florida
Great Egret in Everglades National Park. But what if someone was hoping to see crocodiles? (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Everglades protects the largest wilderness east of the Mississippi. This review is close to being a haiku.

猸 鈥淣o cocodrilos.

no crocodiles seen

money is lost.鈥濃Google Maps

10. Mount Rainier National Park, Washington

This national park encompasses the 14,000-foot peak Mount Rainier, which also happens to be an active volcano. The duality of the situation is driving one visitor crazy.

猸 鈥淭hey market this place as a beautiful mountain paradise full of pastoral hikes and woodland creatures but at the same time remind you it is ready to kill you and your entire family and surrounding towns without a moment’s hesitation. Come here if you want to be gaslit by a mountain.鈥濃Yelp

11. Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming

Grand Teton, Grand Teton National Park
Blue skies, snow, and the famous spiky silhouette of the Teton Range, Grand Teton National Park (Photo: Eric Hobday)

Picture alpine lakes set beneath craggy, 13,000-foot peaks, and you鈥檒l have an idea of the scenery within Grand Teton National Park. Meh.

猸 鈥淚’ve seen better in video games smh. Mother nature better step it up.鈥濃Google Maps

12. Sequoia National Park, California

giant sequoia trees, Sequoia National Park
Lookers marvel at the giant sequoias, the oldest trees in the world. They grow only on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada, between 4,000 and 8,000 feet above sea level, and can live to be over 3,000 feet. (Photo: Courtesy Delaware North)

California鈥檚 jointly managed Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks are famous for their groves of giant Sequoia trees, a species that only grows on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada mountains. The drive in to reach them is irking some visitors.

猸猸 鈥淎 road that is truly too long and winding鈥’m still recovering from the tiredness and motion sickness of the 5 hours driving around tight curves.鈥濃TripAdvisor

13. Capitol Reef National Park, Utah

The Castle formation, Capitol Reef National Park
Erosion carved the moat feature around this sandstone tower, the Castle, high above Sulphur Creek in Capitol Reef National Park. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

I recently decided that Capitol Reef is the country鈥檚 most underrated park for adventure. It has arches, canyons, domes, rock climbing, and gravel rides galore. One reviewer seems to be upset that the park didn鈥檛 take enough of his money.

猸 鈥淭HIS PLACE SHOULD NOT BE A NP. It鈥檚 beyond mids and a waste of taxpayers money. Doesn鈥檛 even have a fee station to support itself鈥rotect the land no doubt but either charge everyone that comes through or make it a monument.鈥濃Google Maps

14. Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado

Rocky Mountain National Park is one of the most visited parks in the country, with more than 4 million people clamoring to experience it annually. The park is so popular that management deemed a timed-entry system necessary to mitigate crowds. A visitor was not psyched.

猸 鈥淲hat kind of communist came up with this system and why? I thought I lived in America, land of the free …. For all the Americans that didn’t even protest at all, thanks for nothing.鈥濃Yelp

15. Theodore Roosevelt National Park, North Dakota

North Dakota鈥檚 Theodore Roosevelt National Park is one of the lesser-visited of our national parks, shown in the annual listings as attracting 750,862 visitors, when each in the top five attracts over 4 million (and Great Smoky Mountains NP receives over 13 million). So maybe it鈥檚 unsurprising that one visitor mixed it up with a different park.

猸 鈥淢aybe I missed it but I didn鈥檛 see his face in any of the cliffs or mountains. Probably erosion. Time for a touch up.鈥鈥擥辞辞驳濒别 Maps

16. Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho

Yellowstone National Park
Yellowstone, the Old Faithful geyser, and the historic Old Faithful Inn don’t impress everyone.听(Photo: Courtesy Delaware North)

Is there a landscape more dynamic than what you find inside Yellowstone National Park, where water boils and shoots into the sky like the fountains in Las Vegas?

猸 鈥淲ater bubbling out of the ground. Wow.鈥濃Google Maps

猸 鈥淪ame thing (e.g. geysers) everywhere. I got bored the second day.鈥鈥擥辞辞驳濒别 Maps

17. Yosemite National Park, California

驰辞蝉别尘颈迟别鈥檚 granite peaks, valleys, and mountains might have captivated Ansel Adams, but nobody ever mentions how uncomfortable nature is, do they?

猸 鈥淎ll the hikes are uphill, and you’re practically climbing cliffs. I got soaked by several incredibly large waterfalls just by standing at the bottom.鈥濃Google Maps

18. Badlands National Park, South Dakota

Badlands National Park, South Dakota
Badlands National Park in South Dakota is a place of color and contrast. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

Dubbed 鈥渢he land of stone and light,鈥 Badlands holds 224,000 acres of vast prairie and striking geological formations that seemingly rise out of nowhere. That didn’t satisfy this reviewer.

猸 鈥淣ot enough mountain.鈥 鈥Google

听19. Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, Colorado

Black canyon of the Gunnison, Colorado
The deep Black Canyon of the Gunnison, though formidable and not for everyone, has fishing, rafting, camping, hiking, and hard climbing. (Photo: Courtesy )

This national park is known for its deep, steep gorge and rugged terrain, and it has a savvy reviewer who wants it all to himself.

猸 鈥淛K. It鈥檚 the best spot in CO. I went one star so that everyone stays away and keeps it this way!鈥鈥擥辞辞驳濒别

Graham Averill is 黑料吃瓜网 magazine鈥檚 national parks columnist. He has complained about many ridiculous things during his life, but never once looked at the Teton Range and thought 鈥渧ideo games are cooler than that.鈥 See also his recent articles on ten years鈥 worth of awful reviews on the revered Grand Canyon, or what makes the perfect mountain town, loving surfing and surf towns, and why he plays golf two days a week and thinks about it even more.

Author photo of Graham Averill on the Grand Teton, Wyoming
The author on a hard approach hike heading up to climb the Grand Teton. He admits he thought about complaining about the weather that day. (Photo: Graham Averill Collection)

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First Look: Suunto Wing and Sonic Headphones /adventure-travel/national-parks/first-look-suunto-wing-and-sonic-headphones/ Wed, 18 Dec 2024 18:51:50 +0000 /?p=2692158 First Look: Suunto Wing and Sonic Headphones

Want to listen to your hype playlist on the move without compromising safety? These headphones are for you.

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First Look: Suunto Wing and Sonic Headphones

Your personalized playlist can be the key to achieving faster splits, pushing through longer distances, or simply setting the right vibe to match your mantra. Whatever role it plays for you, it shouldn鈥檛 compromise your safety on the trail or pavement. You can still enjoy music or podcasts while staying in tune with your surroundings鈥攜ou just need the right headphones.

The and headphones feature an open-ear design, letting you enjoy your mix without completely shutting out the world. Instead of traditional earbuds that sit inside your ear canal, the Wing and Sonic rest just in front of your ear and transmit soundwaves via your jawbone. The result? Crisp, clear sound. And your music stays your secret, meaning no one will overhear your guilty-pleasure tracks on repeat.

Suunto Wing Headphones

The Suunto Wing is the premium choice for those who want to recreate safety and stay connected. With built-in adjustable LED lights for low-light safety, up to ten hours of battery life (and more than 20 hours while using the included portable power bank), and an IP67 rating for sweat and water resistance, the Wing will keep your head in the game with your favorite beats even through the long, dark, or damp miles.

For a true hands-free wearing experience, the Wing comes with Head Movement Control so you can skip a song or answer an incoming call with the simple shake or nod of your head鈥攏o button-pushing required.

The Suunto Wing has an IP67 rating for sweat and water resistance.
The Suunto Wing has an IP67 rating for sweat and water resistance. (Photo: Suunto)

Suunto Sonic Headphones

Weighing in at just over an ounce, the Suunto Sonic is the lightweight, budget-friendly option that doesn鈥檛 compromise on sound quality. Plus, the control buttons make navigating your playlist a breeze: You can skip to your favorite song or pause incoming sound with a single, convenient multiuse button and adjust volume without fumbling to find your phone.

With up to ten hours of battery life, the Sonic is perfect for all your long-distance runs, hikes, or rides. Need a quick power boost? A full charge takes just one hour, and three hours of playtime requires only five minutes鈥攋uice up during a five-minute pre-workout stretch.

Suunto Sonic
The Suunto Sonic is the lightweight, budget-friendly option that doesn鈥檛 compromise on sound quality. (Photo: Suunto)


Pioneering exploration has been in Suunto鈥檚 DNA since 1936, when Finnish orienteer Tuomas Vohlonen set out to create a more accurate compass and subsequently invented a new method for manufacturing liquid鈥恌illed compasses. Today, Suunto is at the forefront of design and innovation for sports watches, dive computers, compasses, and digital services used by adventurers all over the globe. Learn more at .

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The Grand Canyon Is One of Our Most Beloved National Parks. These Reviewers Beg to Differ. /adventure-travel/national-parks/worst-visitor-reviews-grand-canyon/ Sun, 08 Dec 2024 11:00:55 +0000 /?p=2690198 The Grand Canyon Is One of Our Most Beloved National Parks. These Reviewers Beg to Differ.

鈥淪een better鈥: A decade鈥檚 worth of bad visitor reviews of the Grand Canyon

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The Grand Canyon Is One of Our Most Beloved National Parks. These Reviewers Beg to Differ.

The Grand Canyon is stunning. At 黑料吃瓜网, we鈥檙e in love with that giant ditch, and chances are, you are, too. This river canyon, measuring 278 miles long, roughly 10 miles wide, and in places more than a mile deep, is unlike anything else in the country. Artists paint pictures of it. Musicians write songs about it. Scientists read the history of North America in the layers of its rock walls. The Grand Canyon is one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World, with other standouts like Mount Everest and the aurora borealis.

Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
Grand Canyon National Park from the South Rim, near Mather and Yavapai Points. The view shows some of the immensity and the many hues of the 278-mile canyon. (Photo: Michael Kirsh/Unsplash)

I鈥檝e been fortunate enough to explore the Grand Canyon a handful of times, trekking from rim to river within the national park and exploring lesser known aspects beyond park boundaries. The beauty and sheer volume of the ditch gets me every time. Some people are moved by the quiet of the landscape or the depth, which can be awesome in the literal sense of the word, but personally, I鈥檓 struck by the time it took the Colorado River to carve through all those layers of rock.

We鈥檙e talking about 6 million years of slow, steady work, which seems like forever, but that timeframe is just a blink when you stack it up against the two-billion-year-old layers of rock inside the canyon. Staring into the Grand Canyon is like staring at time itself. How can you not ponder the brevity of your own time on this planet here?

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But not everyone is impressed. Lately, on a notion, I dug into online reviews of our most famous river gorge and found a decade鈥檚 worth of angsty complaints, with people moaning about everything from the weather to the lack of trees.

boating in the Grand Canyon, Arizona
Rafting through the Grand Canyon is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Izzy Allen takes it all in. (Photo: Nyima Ming)

Here, and always with a nod to the classic , are the (best) worst reviews of the Grand Canyon, one of the most magnificent natural landmarks in the world:

猸 鈥淎 great example of uncontrolled erosion leaving a dangerous and ugly scar on an otherwise beautiful forest. The park service personnel were nice and friendly, however. We probably need a dam to stop erosion and refill this hole.鈥 鈥Yelp

猸 鈥淚 would really love help understandin[sic] what is so grand about a canyon.鈥濃Yelp

Viewpoint Grand Canyon
The canyon originated some two billion years ago, when igneous and metamorphic rock formed, and sedimentary rock piled onto them. Some 70 to 30 million years ago, the region uplifted into a plateau, and, five or six million years ago, the Colorado River began its slow swath. Rainy Adkins, Charlie Barta, and Owen Khan look out from a hike on the upper end of the Grand. (Photo: Nyima Ming)

猸 鈥淲ent to the Grand Canyon this past week and let me tell YOU it’s a big ole waste o[sic] time! There was dirt EVERYWHERE and the hiking trail was too long! Also where are the vending machines?? And nowhere to charge my phone! It’s way too deep to even see the bottom! 鈥rand Canyon more like grand blandyon.” 鈥Yelp

猸 鈥淭here is nothing there! It looks like California’s drought that I am dreading of. Easy place to commit murder. Just push the dude over the cliff.鈥 鈥Yelp

猸 鈥淥nce you have been to Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon is a joke, and I’m an Arizona native. There are no animals, no greenery, no clear blue streams… just a muddy river, rock, and sheer cliffs. You’ll go 鈥榦oh鈥 and 鈥榓hh鈥 for 30 seconds.鈥濃Yelp

猸 鈥淚 have been to Yellowstone twice, with buffalo herds walking near my car, an entire elk herd passing me when I went hiking, bald eagles so big I thought it was Jurassic Park, bears twice, and even a wolf trying to steal a baby buffalo and the standoff among a herd. And at the Grand Canyon? A hole. A very, very large hole.”鈥Yelp

three rafts on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, Arizona
Deep in the Grand, Andrew Greenshields, Charlie Barta, and Owen Khan enjoying the geology and light on the Colorado River. (Photo: Nyima Ming)

猸 鈥淸P]retty much all of the really awesome things you could potentially do in the Grand Canyon are basically off-limits for a day tripper:

  • Hike down to the Colorado River. You need a minimum of two days. Yes, people have done it in one day before, but many have also died trying, and the park service does everything short of an outright ban to discourage anyone from attempting it [too quickly], for good reason.
  • Raft down the Colorado River with spectacular canyon walls towering over you on either side. You need a minimum of seven days.
  • Follow a stream down a narrow side canyon and see waterfalls and springs. This is a multi-day backpack from the rim or accessed from the river during a rafting trip (see above).

鈥淚 just don’t understand why they won’t build a road, aerial tramway, elevator, or SOMETHING that gives easier access to the canyon’s depths?鈥 鈥Yelp

猸 猸 鈥淒ude seriously it鈥檚 just a big hole in the ground and it鈥檚 all dirt. No shade trees, nothing interesting at all. Honestly, the desert is all just dirt so that was no surprise but the way everybody talks about the Grand Canyon I thought there鈥檇 be some stuff to do there鈥. Oh yeah that鈥檚 right鈥ou can walk around on the dirt and look at the giant gaping hole in the ground and take pictures of the dirt. Big whoop.鈥 鈥TripAdvisor

The Grand Canyon is one of the few landforms on the planet visible from outer space. (Photo: Courtesy )听

猸 鈥淚t was pretty cool I guess, the canyon. A bit much though. Maybe less canyon next time would be better if you guys can fix that.鈥濃TripAdvisor

猸 鈥淒on’t go in early October. We was[sic] expecting sunshine like in las vegas where we was[sic] staying. We got there we had rain. You could not actually see the canyon. Was covered in fog so a wasted journey.鈥濃 Google Maps

猸 鈥淕rand Canyon? More like average canyon. Seen better.鈥 鈥Google Maps

猸 鈥淣ot that big, bad weather, bad food, too many people. Also why would they put so many trees everywhere. Terrible design, just terrible.鈥 鈥Google Maps

猸 鈥淲ORST wonder of the world! 鈥. Only a big hole in the ground.鈥濃Google Maps

Grand Canyon, Arizona
“Only a big hole in the ground.” Well, when you look at it that way… (Photo: Courtesy )

猸 鈥淰ery underwhelming experience. Totaly [sic] an overrated location. Cluster of ugly looking rocks and a gorge that runs for miles. Boring is an understatement. Don’t waste your time visiting.鈥濃TripAdvisor

猸 鈥淣ot much different from pictures. Besides, the views are about the same everywhere鈥he only reason to go to GCNP is to be[sic] see one of the Seven Wonders in the world. But after gazing at the canyon for 3 minutes from the rim, you have seen it all.鈥 鈥TripAdvisor

猸 No lift, no real chapel, no real movie theatre… You really know how to make a hole in the ground a hole in the ground.鈥 鈥TripAdvisor

猸 鈥淟ook, don鈥檛 get me wrong, the views were ok. However, I just find it unacceptable that in this day and age wifi was non-existent. I had lots of good photos but was unable to Snapchat them!鈥濃TripAdvisor

猸 鈥淚 guess I was seeking some sort of deep existential revelation that so many of my friends experienced, but I got nothing. I planned on spending a few days here but left after five hours.鈥 鈥TripAdvisor


From the author: Despite what you may have gathered above, the Bright Angel Trail was one of the greatest hiking experiences of my life. I do agree with the reviewer above that you don鈥檛 want to try it it one day. For most, that is folly or worse. But as for the hike itself, it鈥檚 a panoply of views all the way, and it opened my eyes to what space could be.


Graham Averill is 黑料吃瓜网 magazine鈥檚 national-parks columnist. He鈥檚 visited the Grand Canyon many times and never had an existential revelation there, either. But that鈥檚 probably his fault, not the canyon鈥檚. He鈥檚 also never left a bad review on TripAdvisor or Yelp. Graham recently covered 鈥The 9 Wildest Golf Courses in America,鈥 听鈥9 Most Underrated National Parks for Incredible Fall Foliage,鈥 and 鈥8 Surf Towns Where You Can Learn the Sport and the Culture.鈥 His essay 鈥This Is What It鈥檚 Like to Live in Asheville After Hurricane Helene鈥 was an on-the-ground account of experiencing the life-changing natural disaster.

Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument
The author in Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument (Photo: Graham Averill)

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Why Did It Take Me Forever to Get to Capitol Reef? And What Other National-Park Gems Have I Been Missing? /adventure-travel/national-parks/capitol-reef-national-park/ Mon, 28 Oct 2024 12:00:20 +0000 /?p=2685378 Why Did It Take Me Forever to Get to Capitol Reef? And What Other National-Park Gems Have I Been Missing?

Surrounded by more famous destinations, this area is often overlooked. Yet it is one of the wildest and most beautiful units in the national-park system.

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Why Did It Take Me Forever to Get to Capitol Reef? And What Other National-Park Gems Have I Been Missing?

There鈥檚 a solid chance you鈥檝e never heard of Capitol Reef National Park. Or maybe you鈥檝e heard of the park, but as a destination it hasn鈥檛 cracked your top-ten bucket list, so you鈥檝e never made the long trek to Southern Utah to experience its goods. I was in that same boat myself until last month.

I鈥檝e criss-crossed Utah countless times in the last 30 years, hitting every other national park in the state, but I only recently had the joy of gazing out at my surroundings in Capitol Reef. Two days knocking out short day hikes throughout the park left me craving more.

The problem, which is also a blessing, is location. Surrounded by more famous destinations, Capitol Reef is often overlooked. Sure, people trek from all over the world to Utah on national-park road trips, but the vast majority are visiting Arches and Zion. Maybe Canyonlands or Bryce if they can squeeze in an extra day. Yet Capitol Reef is beautiful, and it might be the most adventurous unit in the entire national-park system.

Capitol Reef orchards
Settlers in Fruita in the 1880s planted thousands of fruit trees in the Fremont River Valley. Those family orchards are preserved, with U-Pick sections for visitors today. (Photo: Courtesy Jacob Frank/NPS)

If you鈥檝e heard of Capitol Reef at all, it鈥檚 probably because of its orchards, which are pretty damn cool. Starting in the late 1800s, settlers from the Church of Latter-Day Saints planted thousands of apple, cherry, peach, and pear trees in the Fremont River Valley, which is now within the boundaries of the national park. Many of those historic orchards are still thriving within the park鈥檚 boundaries, and the National Park Service is working on an to keep the fruit blooming for years to come. You can even pick fruit from orchards with U-Pick signs and self-pay stations.

But listen, there鈥檚 a lot more to Capitol Reef.

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more.

黑料吃瓜网 Intel

two hikers in Capitol Reef National Park
Capitol Gorge Trail is accessible and moderate, taking you deep into the canyon to historic historic inscriptions and “tanks” that collect rainwater. (Photo: Courtesy Jacob W. Frank/NPS)

The park covers 241,904 acres of prime slickrock desert, encompassing the Waterpocket Fold, a nearly 100-mile-long uplift that has eroded into a cornucopia of cliffs, arches, natural bridges, and monoliths. The landscape is so remote and so rugged that the Waterpocket Fold area was the in the continental U.S. Today that landscape still feels remote and adventurous.

鈥淭his was the spot that made me fall in love with Utah,鈥 says Mike Hinkle, owner of Capitol Reef 黑料吃瓜网 Company, who moved to the area to work as a guide more than two decades ago. 鈥淧eople say it鈥檚 in the middle of nowhere, but the landscape is unique, and it doesn鈥檛 feel like Disneyland. You鈥檙e not waiting in line to get on the shuttle. You鈥檙e not sharing a trail with 1,000 other people. You鈥檙e out there.鈥

aerial view of the Waterpocket Fold, Capitol Reef National Park
The Waterpocket Fold, a wrinkle or warp in the earth, is the defining geologic formation of Capitol Reef National Park, creating a dramatic array of canyons, cliffs, and natural bridges. This “monocline” runs 90 miles from Thousand Lake Mountain to Lake Powell. (Photo: Courtesy )

Capitol Reef is 60 miles long and six miles wide, bigger than Zion and Arches combined but with a fraction of the visitors. The park is divided into three distinct sections.

  • Most visitors stick to the central portion of the park, the Fruita Historic District, where Highway 24 offers easy access to the Visitor Center, day hikes, and a front-country campground.
  • Cathedral Valley occupies the northern section of the park, where mostly unmaintained dirt roads lead to domes and backcountry campsites.
  • The southern part of the park, the Waterpocket District, is just as remote, full of dirt roads and narrow canyons and long hikes where you have to huff across miles of desert for grand views.
Sulphur Creek, Capitol Reef
The cottonwoods along Sulphur Creek turn yellow in fall. This creek in the Waterpocket District of the park has created a deep canyon with scenic narrows and waterfalls. (Photo: Courtesy Shauna Cotrell/NPS)

It is a park that delivers both for those who want a scenic drive/short hikes and backcountry-seekers, with a diversity of adventure that ranges from backcountry bike rides to roadside trad climbs.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a mix of the same rock you see in Zion and Arches,鈥 Hinkle says. 鈥淐apitol Reef has its arches and cliffs and waterways that make it the same kind of rock features, but because it sees less people, we can actually guide technical adventures here.鈥

formations of Capitol Reef National Park
The Golden Throne is another jewel of the park, and one of the tallest formations at 7,042 feet. Most trails in Capitol Reef begin at around 5,000, so visitors may feel the altitude. (Photo: Zoltan G. Levay/NPS)

Here are the best ways to explore Capitol Reef National Park.

Day Hikes in Capitol Reef National Park

You can access the majority of front-country day hikes along Highway 24, which runs through the middle of the park and the Fruita Historic District. Here are three gems you can hit without driving on dirt to reach the trailheads.

Hikers at Cassidy Arch, Capitol Reef National Parkl
If Capitol Reef National Park has a signature trail, it is the hike leading to Cassidy Arch, which looms 400 feet above the Scenic Drive and the Grand Wash Trail. An individual is visible rappelling from the left side in a canyoneering descent. 听(Photo: Courtesy Capitol Reef 黑料吃瓜网 Guides)

Cassidy Arch Trail

If the park has a signature trail, it鈥檚 , a 3.4-mile out-and-back to the celebrated stone arch, which forms a 125-foot-long bridge on the edge of a cliff high at the top of the Grand Wash Canyon. It鈥檚 classic desert scenery, skirting the edge of red sandstone cliffs and crossing acres of slickrock.

Grand Wash Trail

Starting from the same trailhead as Cassidy Arch, the gives day hikers a taste of the slot-canyon landscape without the common inherent dangers of mandatory rappels and flash-flood potential. The three-mile out-and-back meanders through a canyon with 200-foot walls that gradually narrow as you hike towards the center of the gorge. The hiking is flat and sandy, and after a mile, you鈥檒l reach the skinniest point of the canyon, roughly 20 feet wide, a slot canyon but not constricted. This trail is an easy yo-yo hike that鈥檚 great for families with small children.

hiker in Capitol Reef National Park
The author in the narrowest part of the Grand Wash Trail, Capitol Reef National Park (Photo: Graham Averill)

Hickman Natural Bridge

This 2.1-mile passes through stands of junipers and cottonwoods as well as clusters of sand dunes, and lets you see the remnants of a granary built by the Fremont people, an indigenous culture that predates the Navajo and Ute. The crescendo is the sandstone Hickman Bridge, 125 feet tall and 133 feet across.

Hickman Bridge arch, Capitol Reef National Park
Hiking out to the 125-foot tall Hickman Bridge takes you through stands of junipers and cottonwoods and past the remains of a granary built by the original Fremont People. (Photo: Courtesy NPS)

This is a moderate hike, gaining just under 500 feet in elevation, but if you want more, add on the , which branches off from Hickman Natural Bridge Trail near the trailhead on Highway 24. It鈥檚 a 1,100-foot climb over 1.3 miles to the Rim Overlook, where you can stand on the edge of a cliff and peer 1,000 feet into the valley below.

Bike Rides in Capitol Reef National Park

Capitol Reef Scenic Drive
The paved 7.9-mile Scenic Drive is a beautiful option for biking. Or go off onto the unpaved roads.听(Photo: Courtesy Nathan Gross/NPS)

Capitol Reef is a biker鈥檚 dream. Highway 24 and the eight-mile Scenic Drive passing through dramatic rock formations offer mellow options for road cyclists and e-bikers, but if you really want to see the park on two wheels, hit the system of unpaved roads that traverse the backcountry, offering stellar views and solitude.

For truly hardy bikepackers, the burly 70-mile loop through the delivers you into some of the most remote corners of the park. It鈥檚 full of steep climbs and sandy or muddy wash crossings that can be tough to navigate with skinny tires, so I鈥檇 opt for a fat-tire mountain bike for this one. Also, there鈥檚 no water along the route, so you鈥檒l need to carry enough for two to three days. But if you鈥檙e prepared, you鈥檒l have this broad valley, which is loaded with towering sandstone outcroppings that reminded the original explorers of massive churches, to yourself. There are also six primitive campsites at the Cathedral Valley Campground (first come/first serve, free) roughly halfway through the loop, letting you break up the 70 miles into two days.


Canyoneering in Capitol Reef National Park

Guided canyoneering trips are prohibited inside Arches and Zion National Parks, but not here. Professional outfitters with commercial permits are allowed to guide rock climbing and canyoneering trips within Capitol Reef National Park. Unless you have the proper equipment and experience (flash floods are a concern in tight canyons that can drain water from even small storms), go with a guide.

two people canyoneering in Capitol Reef
Capitol Reef is known for fantastic canyoneering for all ranges of abilities. Here participants down climb in a side fork of Cohab Canyon. For many canyoneering adventures, it is advisable to go with a guide to manage the risks of rappelling or flooding. (Photo: Courtesy Capitol Reef 黑料吃瓜网 Guides)

Cassidy Arch Canyon

This is the most dramatic canyon within the park. It鈥檚 also one of the more technical, with eight rappels (more rappelling than hiking) on the journey through the sandstone subway. The adventure starts with a 150-foot drop through Cassidy Arch itself. It鈥檚 an airy descent as you lower from the sunny edge of the arch into the shadows of the canyon below. The rappels get shorter as you descend through the canyon, but you鈥檒l drop through the center of two other natural bridges along the way. offers full-day trips through Cassidy ($300 for the first person, $125 per additional person).

A rappel in a slot canyon just outside the park amid wind- and water-sculpted sandstone walls. Canyoneering can range from hiking to scrambling onto jammed logs or around chockstones, and navigating constrictions. (Photo: Courtesy Capitol Reef 黑料吃瓜网 Guides)

For those looking for a self-guided canyoneering adventure with easy access, venture into , a 9.5-mile point-to-point starting at the Chimney Rock Trailhead on Highway 24 and running to where Highway 24 crosses the Fremont River. It鈥檚 not an official trail and the route is unmarked, but you鈥檒l find cairns along the way. Nor is it a technical descent, as the dry falls that need to be negotiated have bypass trails, removing the need for ropes. It is an adventurous hike, though, with scrambling, some narrow slot sections, and a mandatory crossing of the Fremont River towards the end of the journey. Carry plenty of water and only attempt this trek if that description sounds like something you can handle.

Sheets Gulch

offers a more remote nine-mile trek through narrow, textured Navajo sandstone walls before opening up to banks of Douglas firs. It鈥檚 an out-and-back, so make sure you turn around with plenty of daylight left.

In case you want to spend a couple of days exploring Capitol Reef鈥檚 signature narrow passages, two other popular slot canyons, Burro Wash and Cottonwood Wash, are located in the same area.

view into Capitol Reef National Park from Panorama Point
A view from Panorama Point, an overlook just off Highway 24 looking east into the park. Established in 1971, Capitol Reef National Park covers 241,904 acres of desert in south-central Utah, surrounding the formations of the Waterpocket Fold uplift.听 (Photo: Graham Averill)

Rock Climbs in Capitol Reef National Park

For decades, climbers mostly neglected Capitol Reef, but in the last few years the sandstone cliffs and boulders have received more attention, though they are still not as busy as Southern Utah hotspots like Bears Ears National Monument. You鈥檒l find crack climbs on steep Wingate sandstone cliffs and collections of sandstone boulders both inside and outside of the park鈥檚 boundaries.

You need a day-use permit (free), which you can get at a self-serve kiosk at the Visitor Center, to climb or boulder within the park. Also, using white chalk is prohibited (use tan chalk instead), and first ascentionists can only use traditional removable protection in the rock rather than placing bolts for sport climbs. No climbing within 100 feet of rock art or prehistoric structures, nor on any arches or natural bridges.

Summers are hot, so consider Capitol Reef a fall-through-spring climbing destination. The approaches can be long, too, so bring water regardless of the season.

The Fruita Area, which is accessed by Highway 24 shortly after entering the park from the west, has the largest concentration of established climbs and boulders. Most of the established climbs are tough (5.10 or harder) but the unfortunately-named is a moderate trad 5.8 up a 50-foot wall via a wide crack that鈥檚 close to the road (bring hand-sized cams). Hundreds of established and potential boulder problems exist in the Grand Wash area of Fruita. (V2) is the classic, up a 15-foot sandstone rock via a sit start to pockets and jugs, with a walk-off topout.

Grab a copy of if you鈥檙e looking for other options.

Where to Stay in Capitol Reef National Park

Fruita Campground
The oasis of Fruita Campground is seen from from the Cohab Canyon Trail, a popular hike (1.7 miles one way) through sandstone walls and small slot canyons, with panoramic views towards Johnson Mesa and Fremont River Gorge. (Photo: Courtesy Chris Roundtree/NPS)

Capitol Reef has one of the coolest campgrounds in the park system: the 71-site Fruita Campground near the Fremont River Valley sits in an actual desert oasis surrounded by fruit trees planted by the Mormon pioneers of the 1880s. The facility can handle everything from tents to RVs, though there are no sewage, water, or electrical hookups (from at $25 a night, and make your up to six months in advance).

I found dispersed camping outside the western border of the park on Fishlake National Forest just off Highway 24 near the town of Torrey. The camping is free, but there are no facilities.

Head down Highway 12 towards Boulder, Utah, and you鈥檒l find developed campgrounds in Dixie National Forest at Singletree Campground and Pleasant Creek Campground. Capitol Reef has an 听with locations of alternative camping options surrounding the park.

The gateway town of Torrey has plenty of hotel solutions as well. is the closest to the park鈥檚 western entrance, with accommodations that range from Conestoga wagons to hotel suites (from $119).

Where to Eat in Capitol Reef National Park

Temple Of The Sun in Capitol Reef Park
A timeless place. The Temple of the Sun in Cathedral Valley is shown with the Milky Way above. Like the formations that give Arches National Park its name, this monolith is formed of Entrada Sandstone from the Jurassic period. (Photo: Courtesy Imma Barrera/NPS)

Torrey (pop. 257), which sits just outside the park鈥檚 western border, may be small, but it has plenty of restaurants to keep you satisfied. The Wild Rabbit Cafe has great coffee and breakfast (I like the burrito) that uses local eggs. Hunt and Gather is more of a fine dining option, using as many local ingredients as possible. Head to the next town over (Bicknell) for Curry Pizza, which melds Indian cuisine with pizza.

I left the area marveling at its wonders, while I wondered why the hell it took me so long to come here.

Graham Averill is 黑料吃瓜网 magazine鈥檚 national-parks columnist. Visiting Capitol Reef for the first time, and falling in love with it, makes him wonder what other hidden gems he鈥檚 been missing within the park system.

Graham Averill hikes in Capitol Reef National Park
The author, Graham Averill, at Capitol Reef National Park (Photo: Graham Averill Collection)

Want more of 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 travel stories? .

For more by this author, see:

The 10 Best Bike Towns in America, Ranked

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Faster, Farther, Funner /adventure-travel/national-parks/faster-farther-funner/ Fri, 13 Sep 2024 14:12:47 +0000 /?p=2678094 Faster, Farther, Funner

Follow the lead of these light-footed adventurers, and reap the rewards

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Faster, Farther, Funner

If a little bit of nature is good, a lot is great. That鈥檚 the time-tested math behind the urge to charge ahead and see more when you鈥檙e out hiking, running, and scrambling. Stay nimble, and good things will follow. You don鈥檛 have to be an FKT-chasing zealot to embrace a light-footed, fun-loving spirit. Just ask these two adventure chasers, who inspire all of us to go outside, play hard, and care for the planet and each other. Learn from them below, and find out how their shoes align with their mission.

 

The Wanderer: Emi Matsushima

Mission: Inspire Others to Live Authentically

Everyone should get a chance to reinvent themselves. That鈥檚 the lesson wants to share.

The daughter of a German mother and Japanese father, Matsushima鈥攚ho鈥檚 now a photographer and outdoor industry model鈥攇rew up in half a dozen countries. By the fourth grade, she鈥檇 attended school in four different languages.

Matsushima moved back to Japan at age 16 and fell into modeling. For a while it was fun, but it didn鈥檛 stay that way. 鈥淚 developed all these complexes,鈥 she says. 鈥淏y the time I was 29, that turned into dieting and losing weight.鈥 Matsushima developed body image issues. Agents stopped booking her. Her mental health deteriorated.

In 2018, she finally broke free and quit. Two years later, she moved to California鈥攋ust before the pandemic hit. With the world on pause, Matsushima started exploring the outdoors, climbing mountains, and taking timeless photographs鈥攁ll things she鈥檇 loved as a kid. Suddenly, she couldn鈥檛 get enough and embarked on an endless quest to see more, do more, experience more.

 

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鈥淚 find a sense of calm outdoors,鈥 Matsushima says. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also a place of action鈥攐f self-discovery and self-expression.鈥

She fell back in love with movement鈥攁nd with her body. She started a new career in outdoor lifestyle modeling. Climbing, hiking, and photography have become staples in her life. 鈥淚 used to feel like I was chasing something, but now I feel like I鈥檝e finally found balance,鈥 Matsushima says. 鈥淎t 37, I feel like I have this reinvented version of myself.鈥 And she鈥檚 living proof that anyone can do the same.

Tested:

鈥淔or me, being fast and light means flexibility and spontaneity,鈥 says Matsushima. 鈥淚鈥檓 all about chasing your curiosity and learning to adapt along the way. This can be used for urban exploration, hiking trails, or navigating through diverse landscapes鈥擨 feel like they really mold to whatever your adventure might be. They鈥檙e super light and agile, but they have such a solid grip.鈥

Consciously Created

Building anything authentic and sustainable鈥攁nything that will stand the test of time鈥攕tarts with intention. Intention to apply a planet- and people-first philosophy that acts as a north star for any endeavor, from making art to designing products. KEEN calls it 鈥攁 way of reimagining how gear gets made so it supports both humanity and the environment from start to finish. Here鈥檚 how that approach resulted in the , a fast-and-light-and-fun shoe that鈥檚 free of forever chemicals.

 

The Runner: Abi LaFleur

Mission: Make Everyone Feel Welcome Outdoors

For years, Abi LaFleur refused to run. A successful adventure photographer, she had always been active outdoors, but she laughed at the idea of running. She never expected that, one day, running would transform her life. Everything changed a few years ago when her long-term relationship became abusive and dissolved. LaFleur found herself diagnosed with PTSD and her self-confidence nearly shattered.

鈥淪omething had chemically altered inside of me, but I couldn鈥檛 understand it,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 had panic attacks.鈥 Then a friend asked her if she wanted to train for a 50-mile trail race. LaFleur rolled her eyes鈥攗ntil she saw photos of the trail. The scenery caught her photographer鈥檚 eye, and she started training. One day, LaFleur was on a high alpine trail and suddenly realized: her mind was blessedly empty. No flashbacks. She finally felt free. Running helped her find the confidence that she had lost.

LaFleur ran that 50-miler鈥攁nd then went on to run more. Today, the mountains remain her greatest source of , for both her professional work and her personal goals. One of those goals: improving the visibility of historically marginalized groups outside through her timeless art.

鈥淲hen I first started in the outdoor industry, there weren鈥檛 a lot of people in the industry or in outdoor media who looked like me,鈥 says LaFleur, who was raised in Florence, Colorado, by her Mexican-Spanish-Indigenous mother and grandparents. (Her father鈥檚 side is French-Polish.) Since then, LaFleur has used her camera to capture the stories and personalities of a diverse range of subjects.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 always been part of my work,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 want people to know there鈥檚 space for everyone here.鈥

Tested: KEEN Zionic

鈥淚 loved chasing my dogs around when wearing the . They鈥檙e waterproof鈥攊deal for walking through snowmelt and for creek crossings. I really like how lightweight they are, but they still have plenty of cushion and are super grippy. And like all of KEEN鈥檚 shoes鈥攖hey鈥檙e free of forever chemicals. Plus, I鈥檓 loving this tangerine color!鈥


KEEN is a shoemaker with purpose. Family owned and values-led for more than 20 years, KEEN has been consciously making unapologetically comfortable, innovative footwear that lasts and using its business to do good. In 2003, KEEN started a revolution with the introduction of the original hybrid sandal, the Newport. As a revolutionary, thoughtful shoemaker, KEEN is determined to reduce the impact of how it makes shoes. The brand has been PFAS-free since 2018 and envisions a shoe industry that has a net-positive impact on lives. To get there, KEEN is sharing its sustainable innovations to do more good together. Learn more at.

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