capitol reef national park Archives - șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online /tag/capitol-reef-national-park/ Live Bravely Mon, 03 Feb 2025 20:06:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png capitol reef national park Archives - șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online /tag/capitol-reef-national-park/ 32 32 Want to Wake Up in Utah Canyon Country? We Do, Too. /adventure-travel/destinations/north-america/ofland-escalante/ Fri, 31 Jan 2025 10:30:33 +0000 /?p=2695121 Want to Wake Up in Utah Canyon Country? We Do, Too.

This lodge is all about its spectacular location, within a national monument and between two national parks. It also has fire pits, free s’mores, and access to endless trails and rivers.

The post Want to Wake Up in Utah Canyon Country? We Do, Too. appeared first on șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online.

]]>
Want to Wake Up in Utah Canyon Country? We Do, Too.

Ever come across an incredible hotel that stops you mid-scroll and makes you think, Wow, wouldn’t it be something to stay there? We do, too—all the time. Welcome to Friday Fantasy, where we highlight amazing hotels, lodges, cabins, tents, campsites, and other places perched in perfect outdoor settings. Read on for the intel you need to book an upcoming adventure here. Or at least dream about it.

Ten feet overhead in a desert canyon in Utah, a jammed log spanned the gully, left by a recent flash flood. In the next passage in Harris Wash inÌęGrand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, southern Utah, our group gazed up at a tangled brown stripe of debris from the same flood, adorning a green cottonwood tree like Spanish moss.

DeMarco Williams and Meredith Holser in a canyon in Utah
Two visitors, DeMarco Williams and Meredith Holser, enter a passageway in Harris Wash, Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, southern Utah. (Photo: Alison Osius)

All our lives we marvel at nature’s power. Here we also appreciated the immovability of geology—rock walls—as our group of nine, all staying in the region atÌęthe complex, at first walked and then arduously wormed through a narrowing slot canyon. When the sides pinched down to only a foot wide, my friend DeMarco Williams, athletic and deep-chested, said from two feet ahead, “I don’t know if I can do this.” He was pinned.

Ofland Escalante, two miles from the town of Escalante, is situated amid the landscape of the national monument and between two national parks. (Video: Eric Vega)

I had it easier, being smaller. As a climber, I’ve been in squeeze chimneys before; they can be awful and claustrophobic, and you just want out, but have to make it happen.

DeMarco pressed on, and something gave, and he scraped through the constriction. I followed, ducking, and emerged into the light, where he waited smiling. At each obstacle, following canyoneering practices shown us by Rick Green, owner of the guiding outfit , one of us waited to help the next person.

wedged log canyon Utah desert
A well-wedged log 10 feet above the sandy floor attests to the power of a recent flash flood. (Photo: Alison Osius)

This trip last August was to the treasure that is Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, where friends and I all stayed two nights at Ofland Escalante, an ideal, central base located within the national monument and two miles west of the pioneer town of the same name. (Harris Wash was some 25 miles from town, with much of the drive on a washboard road.)

Not everyone in our group loved our several-hour canyoneering experience. Some cried, and some half-laughed, half-cried. But no one will forget it.

Looking for more great travel intel? Sign up for șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű’s .

Toward the end, having split into two groups (one with Amie Fortin of the same outfit), we all convened for lunch in a bowl among blunt buttresses that were once ancient sand dunes, the slickrock around us inscribed with fine criss-cross lines. Sage and grasses waved in the wind, with hardy piñon-juniper trees in clumps nearby. Paiute, Ute, and Navajo tribes once dwelled in this region. So did dinosaurs. We saw no one else all day.

Rick Green, owner of Excursions of Escalante
Lunchtime in a wide bowl: Rick Green, owner and guide at Excursions of Escalante, shares a laugh. The outfit offers slot-canyon hiking and canyoneering outings in the many canyons of the national monument. (Photo: Neil Tandy)

As we all looped back out of the canyon, we scrambled a little, but much of the return was just a quiet, reverent walk through washes and passages. Tracing the undulating wind- and water-sculpted walls, I peered into natural niches like little altars, holding swirls of sediment.

The Lodge

Closed each winter but slated to reopen March 12, Ofland Escalante is located just off Highway 12. Opened in 2021 on the site of an old RV park and drive-in movie theater, the place was in recent years, per the website, a “luxury RV park” known as Yonder Escalante. In May 2023 the new owners added “deluxe” cabins, and last year renamed the place (“Ofland” is for “of the land”). Ofland has varying services and prices, and brings people together in communal spaces.Ìę

deluxe cabin with deck and driveway at Ofland Escalante
A Deluxe Cabin has a deck with chairs and a table, and walls of windows.ÌęThese cabins have private baths, but the others have shared ones labeled “spa quality,” with towels and blow dryers. (Photo: Alison Osius)

The place offers four types of accommodations. I bunked in a Deluxe Cabin, simple and boxy with floor-to-ceiling windows, able to sleep up to four people. Also available are vintage Airstreams, tiny cabins, and campsites.

The central common area draws visitors with a fire pit, picnic tables, complimentary hot drinks, and shelves of books, board games, and cards. Our crew brought over s’mores supplies from our rooms and gathered at the tables for spirited rounds of Uno.

common area at Ofland Escalante has drinks and fire pit
Visitors come and go under the central pavilion all evening, for the fire pit, s’mores, Uno, and old books. (Photo: Alison Osius)

On Ofland Escalante’s 22-acre grounds, you can still enjoy the vintage outdoor “drive-in” theater, where you watch from inside one of nine in-situ classic cars. Other property diversions include a hot tub and swimming pool.

map of scenic highway 12 in southern Utah
Map showing scenic highway 12 and the region (Photo: Courtesy Ofland Escalante)

But the big deal is the place’s location amid the wonders of the Utah desert. The nearby town of Escalante is on the northern border of the 1.87-million-acre Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, and just off the 123-mile-long U of scenic highway 12, which runs between Panguich, 67 miles west of the town, and Torrey, 65 miles north of it. Escalante sits between two national parks, about 50 miles east of Bryce Canyon and 67 southwest of Capitol Reef. Highway 12 links them all.

șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Intel

canyoneering Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument
Meredith Holser sees the light while waiting for a slightly stuck companion. Canyoneering practice means passing backpacks forward out of narrow sections, and also, one person at a time, waiting to offer help to a companion reaching an obstacle such as a wall, jammed chockstone, or tree or stump. (Photo: Alison Osius)

Escalante (and Ofland Escalante) are in road-trip reach of five national parks, four state parks, another national monument, and the vast Dixie National Forest, all boasting a myriad of .

You’re also in the high-elevation desert here. The town of Escalante is set at 5,800 feet, and the surrounding area rises to about 8,600 feet, while reaches 9,000 feet. So ascend gradually and, while you are outside and exerting, pay attention to your water intake.

hoodoos in amphitheatre in Bryce Canyon National Park
Bryce Canyon National Park, southern Utah, has one of the world’s largest collections of hoodoos, slender spires created by eons of erosion. Ofland Escalante is only two miles from the historic town of Escalante, 48 miles (an hour) from Bryce Canyon.Ìę (Photo: Courtesy The Nomadic People)

Escalante is famous for its slot canyons, and Excursions of Escalante can take you out, set up rappels, and use their guides’ situational experience to avoid dangerous floods. The outfitters gave us packs, helmets, and water bottles, but you should arrive wearing good trail shoes and clothes that take being abraded.

 

A little on-site commentary from a canyon in Harris Wash, the Utah desert (Video: Neil Tandy)

A Utah friend tells me that , a 6.7-mile out-and-back starting 19 miles northeast of Escalante, is her favorite hike ever. It has birdwatching—for hawks and ravens, and she once saw a condor—and “a little of everything” else, from steep sections to sandy patches and a 125-foot waterfall.

two hikers examine petrified rock at Escalante Petrified Forest State Park
Michelle Forsgren of Southwest șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Tours and Chris Outhier, visiting from Phoenix, examine a multicolored chunk at Escalante Petrified Forest State Park. You can see the ancient tree bark and tree rings clearly.Ìę(Photo: Alison Osius)

For me, a dark-horse favorite was also . We hiked the Rainbow section (and added a few other loops), where we saw petrified wood in scattered chunks, from wastebasket- to coffee-table size, with hues of sulphur yellow and iron red but also deep blues and violet. The starts on an uphill past a tram-size balanced rock overlooking Wide Hollow Reservoir, where you can camp, swim, or .

Please do not pocket any pieces of petrified wood. Things in the desert are supposed to stay there. Besides, I’ve , and taking one only brings you ill luck.

Choice Rooms

tiny cabins and vintage Airstream trailers at Ofland Escalante
Tiny cabins on the left abut the fleet of vintage Airstream trailers at Ofland Escalante. (Photo: Courtesy The Nomadic People)

My Deluxe Cabin’s outside shower was heaven. The water was plenty hot, and I could gaze out at the sky and the surrounding scrub-covered dun bluffs.

The Deluxe Cabins (from $259 per night) are the most cushy places, the only ones with private bathrooms and their own driveways. Each has a kitchenette and Wi-Fi, a deck with picnic table, and a queen bed and pull-out sofa such that it can sleep up to four. From the cabins it’s a five-minute walk to the main lodge. ADA cabins are available as well, and the lodge has golf carts for transport around the property.

Ofland Escalante Cabins
Ofland offers these tiny cabins and open fire pit, with a sheltered fire pit a few steps away in the central pavilion or common area. (Photo: Courtesy Kim and Nash Finley)

Other options include vintage Airstreams ($175 per night), which sleep up to three people, and tiny cabins ($169), located just paces from the common area. The cabins have front decks and the Airstreams step out to picnic tables and fire pits. Both use shared bathrooms with amenities and open-air showers.

interior of an Airstream at Ofland Escalante
Feeling nostalgic? You can walk back in time into a vintage Airstream. (Photo: Courtesy The Nomadic People)

Ofland also has five campsites (from $99, per night). Each comes with a picnic table, grill, fire pit, filtered-water hookup, power, and bathroom access.

Eat and Drink

Pop over to the on-site food truck, prepare your own meals in your kitchenette, or go out for dinner at in the delightfully small and funky town of Escalante. 4th West offers 30 types of beers; burgers, paninis, and nice spicy tacos; a pool table, where my friends played half the night; and a nice local vibe. The evening was cool, so we skipped the outdoor seating, but in warm temps it would be wonderful to enjoy the view from there over dinner.

guest sits at Kiva Koffeehouse patio
Michelle Forsgren enjoys the patio at the Kiva Koffeehouse, with its views of the Escalante River Canyon and surrounding striated rock buttresses. (Photo: Alison Osius)

, 14 miles east of town and located within the national monument, is a magical-looking complex overlooking the startlingly green forest lining the Escalante River. It offers vegetarian-friendly Southwest fare, indoor and outdoor seating, and lodging.

Thirteen miles farther north is in the town of Boulder. The place, which has a devoted following, features ethically sourced ingredients and its own organic garden. The owners practice Buddhist principles and are committed to social responsibility.

At the end of Highway 12, in the town of Torrey, is the family-owned Wild Rabbit Cafe, with an on-site coffee roaster, and vegan and vegetarian options.

When to Go

Ofland Escalante is open mid-March through October. Spring and fall will have you cozying up around the fire pits, and maybe hitting the hot tub. Summer is bound to put you in the swimming pool. All indoor accommodations have heat and A/C.

How to Get There

classic view of Long Canyon
A dusting of snow accentuates the lines of Long Canyon, a hiking destination in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, east of Boulder, Utah. (Photo: Devaki Murch)

The small Bryce Canyon Airport is just four miles north of Bryce Canyon National Park, 48 miles from Escalante. Most visitors and rent a car for the amazing 294-mile drive south and back with its section on Highway 12.

Don’t Miss

Hike to the 100 Hands Pictograph Panel, actually site of three major rock-art panels, via a family-friendly 1.2-mile round-trip off Highway 12, starting from the Escalante River Trailhead 14 miles east of Escalante. Ancient petroglyphs—sheep, deer, a snake—are visible just five minutes along the trail. The trail contours up to an alcove where you see the 100 Hands (more like 160 Hands) panel, and beyond that is the Shaman and Hunter panel, with a bowhunting scene and collection of shaman figures wearing headpieces.

Forty miles beyond Escalante, stop and get out at the Homestead Overlook, at 9,600 feet elevation, to see the tableau of the Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument, the Kaiparowits Plateau, and the Waterpocket Fold of Capitol Reef National Park, with their oceanic deposits and sedimentary layers, red and gold desert against the bumpy skyline of the Henry Mountains. Descending, you pass the Fishaven Reservoir and may see some sandhill cranes, before winding through the treed hamlet of Boulder, volcanic rocks and basalt scattered along the roadway.

Details

Price: From $99

Address: 2020 UT-12
Escalante, UT 84726

Alison Osius is a senior editor in travel at șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű magazine and șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online. She is a longtime climber and a former editor at Climbing and Rock and Ice magazines. She’s recently written about seeing the Utah desert from a lodge made of glass sky domes; hiking the memorial Storm King Trail, scene of one of our country’s greatest firefighting tragedies; and how to approach traveling to altitude (which starts with: paying attention). Oh, and if you were wondering, here are 8 simple rules for visiting your friends in mountain and waterfront towns.

Alison Osius in Harris Wash, Utah desert
The author in a passage in Harris Wash, Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (Photo: Alison Osius Collection)

The post Want to Wake Up in Utah Canyon Country? We Do, Too. appeared first on șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online.

]]>
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

“The trees aren’t as big as everyone says” and “I've seen better in video games.” Our national-parks columnist rounded up some scathing reviews of America's Best Idea.

The post The Worst National-Parks Reviews of the Year appeared first on șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online.

]]>
The Worst National-Parks Reviews of the Year

Described as “America’s best idea,” the National Park System was established in large part to protect the nation’s most precious landscapes, from the deepest canyons to the tallest peaks. Some of the parks are so dang beautiful, they’ve 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,ÌęI 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 șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű’s .

I learned a few things in the process. I learnedÌęthat a lot of people don’t 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’s fascination with nature in general (to this person, Joshua TreeÌęis 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: “Not a memorable place to go.”

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

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)Ìę

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.

⭐ “This is the Walmart of national parks.” —Google Maps

⭐ “A 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
[S]ummer might not be a good time to visit here because beers (sic) or other wild animals could hide in trees and bushes.”—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.

⭐ “Haven’t gone yet, will go soon, sounds hot tho.”—Google Maps

⭐ “Don’t go, nothing to see
.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 
 test yourself or your car AC.”—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.

⭐ “Can’t grille, can’t smoke, can’t drink, can’t play loud music…who wants to just sit on sand.”—GŽÇŽÇČ”±ô±đ Maps

4. Redwood National and State Parks, California

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

⭐ “California sucks so I don’t know why I was surprised when I was very disappointed. The trees aren’t as big as everyone says and they’re not red either, terrible name. The National park should just sell the land and turn the trees into paper.”—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.

⭐ “It’s just a load of big stones. If you go make sure to take a packed lunch and drinks, you’ll certainly thank me.” —TripAdvisor

6. New River Gorge National Park, West Virginia

New River Gorge
Nothing to do in the New? So claims one commenter. JustÌęrafting, 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


⭐⭐⭐ “If you hike or like white water rafting, this is a great place. Otherwise, not much else to do.”—Google Maps

7. Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida

I haven’t visited Dry Tortugas yet, but it’s 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.

⭐ “I 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”—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)Ìę

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


⭐ “The 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.”—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.

⭐ “No cocodrilos.

no crocodiles seen

money is lost.”—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.

⭐ “They 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.”—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’ll have an idea of the scenery within Grand Teton National Park. Meh.

⭐ “I’ve seen better in video games smh. Mother nature better step it up.”—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’s 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.

⭐⭐ “A road that is truly too long and winding
I’m still recovering from the tiredness and motion sickness of the 5 hours driving around tight curves.”—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’s 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’t take enough of his money.

⭐ “THIS PLACE SHOULD NOT BE A NP. It’s beyond mids and a waste of taxpayers money. Doesn’t even have a fee station to support itself
Protect the land no doubt but either charge everyone that comes through or make it a monument.”—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.

⭐ “What 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.”—Yelp

15. Theodore Roosevelt National Park, North Dakota

North Dakota’s 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’s unsurprising that one visitor mixed it up with a different park.

⭐ “Maybe I missed it but I didn’t see his face in any of the cliffs or mountains. Probably erosion. Time for a touch up.”—GŽÇŽÇČ”±ô±đ 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.Ìę(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?

⭐ “Water bubbling out of the ground. Wow.”—Google Maps

⭐ “Same thing (e.g. geysers) everywhere. I got bored the second day.”—GŽÇŽÇČ”±ô±đ Maps

17. Yosemite National Park, California

łÛŽÇČő±đłŸŸ±łÙ±đ’s granite peaks, valleys, and mountains might have captivated Ansel Adams, but nobody ever mentions how uncomfortable nature is, do they?

⭐ “All the hikes are uphill, and you’re practically climbing cliffs. I got soaked by several incredibly large waterfalls just by standing at the bottom.”—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 “the land of stone and light,” Badlands holds 224,000 acres of vast prairie and striking geological formations that seemingly rise out of nowhere. That didn’t satisfy this reviewer.

⭐ “Not enough mountain.” —Google

Ìę19. 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.

⭐ “JK. It’s the best spot in CO. I went one star so that everyone stays away and keeps it this way!”—GŽÇŽÇČ”±ô±đ Ìę

Graham Averill is șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű magazine’s national parks columnist. He has complained about many ridiculous things during his life, but never once looked at the Teton Range and thought “video games are cooler than that.” See also his recent articles on ten years’ 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)

The post The Worst National-Parks Reviews of the Year appeared first on șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online.

]]>
The 10 Best Hikes in Utah’s National Parks /adventure-travel/destinations/north-america/utah-national-parks-best-hikes/ Wed, 20 Nov 2024 11:00:15 +0000 /?p=2685531 The 10 Best Hikes in Utah’s National Parks

Our national parks columnist reveals his all-time favorite treks in Arches, Canyonlands, Zion, Bryce Canyon, and Capitol Reef for both beginner and advanced adventurers

The post The 10 Best Hikes in Utah’s National Parks appeared first on șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online.

]]>
The 10 Best Hikes in Utah’s National Parks

Utah is stacked when it comes to outdoor adventure. Not only does the state have some of the country’s most badass skiing and mountain biking, but it also boasts the nation’s third most national parks in any state, which include some of the world’s best hiking trails.

These protected meccas—Arches, Bryce Canyon, Canyonlands, Capitol Reef, and Zion, known as the Mighty Five—capture unique and stunning landscapes that represent the desert at its absolute finest, from striking sandstone arches to isolated slot canyons to lush oases. And over the years, I’ve been fortunate enough to visit all of Utah’s national parks. Some, during my explorations as a nascent single dude traveling in a diesel VW Jetta with pink bumpers looking for adventure (true story), and others later in life with my wife and kids in tow.

Do I have a favorite? Absolutely. Arches. Wait, Bryce. Definitely Bryce. Or, actually Zion. Okay
 truth be told, I can’t pick one. They’re all breathtaking for different reasons, and for me, that’s an impossible task.

I did however pick my two favorite hikes in each park—one for beginners and one for the more adventurous—that you absolutely can’t miss when you go. Especially if you’re a first-timer to Utah’s national parks, consider these hiking trails the ultimate primer. And if you keep coming back as I do, maybe you’ll discover which park you like best. (Good luck with that.)

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.

Destinations Newsletter

Want more of șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű’s Travel stories?

Arches National Park

two kids approaching landscape arch in arches national park, utah
The author’s two kiddos, Cooper and Addison (both four at the time), approach the Landscape Arch on the Primitive Loop in Arches National Park—one of the most popular NPS destinations in the U.S. (Photo: Graham Averill)

As the name suggests, Arches is loaded with more than 2,000 rainbow-like curved sandstone features within its borders—the highest concentration of such outcroppings in the United States. You’ll also find colorful cliffs, towering pinnacles, and balancing rocks that combine for a red rock landscape like no other.

Best Beginner Hike: Park Avenue

woman standing on sandstone outcroppings in arches national park, utah
The author’s wife, Liz, stands amongst the sandstone outcroppings in Arches (Photo: Graham Averill)

Yes, the national park is named Arches, but takes you through the center of towering cliffs and spires, so tall they’re reminiscent of New York City’s skyscrapers. It’s popular, and can get crowded, but it’s a must-do when you’re in Arches. The 2-mile out and back takes you through the middle of the park’s signature outcroppings, including Tower of Babel, a distinctive, freestanding fin that is part of the larger group of Courthouse Towers. (Some people shuttle themselves via two cars and make it a mile-long point to point.)

Best Advanced Hike: Primitive Loop Trail

dad and two kids exploring an arch off of primitive loop in arches national park
The author and his two kids, Cooper and Addison, exploring one of the arches off of Primitive Loop (Photo: Liz Averill)

The 7.9-mile , the park’s longest maintained trail, accesses a handful of distinctive sandstone features in the Devil’s Garden area and delivers the desert solitude you probably crave after navigating crowds at the park’s entrance. Its landscape-to-arches bang for buck, combined with the opportunity to ditch the masses, make this my favorite trail inside the park. Spur trails lead to Landscape Arch, which at 306-feet across, makes it the longest stone arch in North America. You’ll also be able to see Double O Arch, Private Arch, and the weird Dark Angel, a black sandstone spike emerging from the sand.

Pro Tip: Arches now requires to enter the park (get them up to three months in advance) between April 1 and October 31. But show up after 4 P.M. and you can enter the park without advanced notice. Just bring a headlamp in case your hike goes longer than expected.

Canyonlands National Park

Two women backpacking on a trail through The Needles section in Canyonlands National Park, Utah
The Needles section in southeast Canyonlands National Park was named for its colorful spires of cedar mesa sandstone. The area is roughly a 90-minute drive from Moab. (Photo: Cavan Images/Getty)

At 337,598 acres, Canyonlands is the largest national park in Utah, with three distinct regions; the day-hike-friendly Needles, Island in the Sky (which covers a plateau between the Colorado and Green Rivers), and the super remote Maze. The Needles has the most developed trails for hikers, as well as some of the park’s signature canyons and spires.

Best Beginner Hike: Mesa Arch

family enjoying the view through Mesa Arch in Canyonlands National Park
The author’s family enjoying the panoramic vistas through Mesa Arch in Canyonlands (Photo: Graham Averill)

This .5-mile in the easy-to-access Island in the Sky District, delivers hikers to a 27-foot arch that’s perched on the edge of a cliff more than 1,000 feet above Buck Canyon. Peer through the arch and you can see some of Canyonland’s signature features, including the massive monoliths of Washer Woman and Monster Tower, as well as the La Sal Mountains beyond the park.

Best Advanced Hike: Chesler Park Loop

Man looking at Druid Arch at sunset, Canyonlands National Park, Utah
Druid Arch is just one breathtaking stop along the Chester Park Loop in Canyonlands (Photo: Sierralara/Getty)

Hike some of the best scenery in The Needles District on this that delivers the slot canyons and arches most hikers come to the area to see. The tread is slickrock and sandy washes as you combine four trails (Elephant Hill, Druid Arch, Joint Trail, and Chesler Park), which will have you squeezing through boulders and scrambling through stone notches. Chesler Park itself is a circular valley surrounded by towering sandstone spires.

Pro Tips: First, try to time your visit to Mesa Arch for sunrise, when the red rock cliffs framed by the structure are set aglow by the emerging daylight. Second, there are no reliable water sources on the Chesler Loop hike, so make sure you bring plenty for a full day in the desert.

Bryce Canyon National Park

man hiking along navajo trail in bryce canyon national park
Bryce Canyon National Park famously has the most hoodoos in the world, with 12 amphitheaters featuring these bizarre rock formations (Photo: Ed Freeman/Getty)

Hoodoos are a trip. These tall, stone spires look like huge versions of the drip castles you made as a kid on the beach, and Bryce Canyon National Park is full of them, as well as deep canyons, surprisingly lush forests, and elevations that top out at 9,100 feet.

Best Beginner Hike: The Rim Trail

fairland point trail in Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah
The offshoot leading to Fairyland Point, the northernmost outlook along The Rim Trail of the Paunsagunt Plateau (Photo: Ascent/PKS Media Inc./Getty)

The traces the edge of Bryce Canyon for 5.5 miles, connecting two popular overlooks, Bryce Point and Fairyland Point. A run by the park service hits multiple overlooks and access points along the Rim Trail, making it easy to treat this as a point-to-point, and there are three overlooks and trailheads along the way, so you can tailor the distance to your own ability. Do the whole thing and you’ll only gain 200 feet of elevation, while the views into the canyon offer peeks of the park’s grandiose canyons and spires, including the appropriately-named Thor’s Hammer.

Best Advanced Hike: Under-the-Rim Trail

inspiration point in bryce canyon national park in utah
Inspiration Point overlooks the Under-the-Rim Trail, a longer hike in Bryce Canyon that provides access to the portions of the park located below the lip of the Paunsaugunt Plateau (Photo: Rebecca L. Latson/Getty)

At 23 miles, you’ll need at least a couple of days to complete this point-to-point highlight reel of Bryce Canyon. But you’ll be glad you dedicated the extra time, as boasts serious backcountry goods, including views of towering orange cliffs, clusters of the park’s signature hoodoos, and even forests of ponderosa pines and aspens. It’s not an easy stroll as you’ll gain 5,500 feet along the way, but primitive backcountry campsites enable you to break it up into a multi-day effort.

Pro Tip: Bryce has a free park shuttle, but it doesn’t access Rainbow Point Trailhead, so you’ll need to hire a shuttle (, from $15 per person) or have two cars complete Under-the-Rim Trail, or if you’re planning to hike the entire Rim Trail.

Zion National Park

Hiking the Zion Narrows in Zion National Park
Hiking slot canyons in Zion National Park is not for the inexperienced as these areas can be prone to flash flooding (Photo: Jordan Siemens/Getty)

To say Zion protects a desert landscape would be too simple of a description. The 148,733-acre park actually encompasses an area where three distinct ecosystems, the Mojave Desert, the Colorado Plateau, and the Great Basin come together. The result is terrain that’s rich with canyons, lush river valleys, and soaring peaks. It’s also one of the most popular national parks in the entire country, with five million visitors last year.

Best Beginner Hike: Emerald Pools Trail

a landscape of Zion National Park taken from the hiking trail to Emerald Pools during autumn
Zion is stunning in the fall, and you can catch the desert’s changing colors along the hiking trail to Emerald Pools (Photo: Ash Lindsey Photography/Getty)

There are three Emerald Pools in Zion, each of which is an actual oasis in the middle of the desert, located on different tiers of a stream, tucked into the base of a massive, sandstone amphitheater. The Lower Emerald Pool, which is actually a couple of separate pools fed by a small waterfall that tumbles over an alcove, is wheelchair accessible via a 1.2-mile . The Middle and Upper Emerald Pools are a little tougher to reach; a 2.5-mile loop accesses all three, but Upper is worth the effort, as the pool sits at the base of a massive sandstone wall. Show up in spring and all of the pools could be fed by seasonal waterfalls.

Best Advanced Hike: Orderville Canyon

Waterfall in Orderville Canyon, Zion National Park
Orderville Canyon in Zion has skinny slots of its own, and though you’ll be climbing through cascades like these, you’ll also be battling less crowds than the famed Narrows hike (Photo: George Peters/Getty)

Yes, The Narrows is the park’s most lauded hike, but offers a similar experience over more technical terrain that keeps the masses away. The first few miles are easy going, but as you descend deeper into Orderville, the canyon narrows and becomes a tangle of boulders you have to climb and repel over, interspersed with springs and waterfalls. It’s a 12-mile point to point through a lush playground that should take a full day, and you will need technical skills and gear to tackle it safely. You’ll also need a ($10 per person). (If you’re not comfortable with canyoneering, hire a guide. Commercial guides can’t lead you through canyons inside the national park, but they can take you through similar canyons outside of the park’s boundaries.)

Pro Tip: Zion has a that begins at the Visitor Center and delivers you to popular trailheads, but you need to show up early to get a parking spot. During summer, the first shuttle leaves the Visitor Center at 6 A.M. Be on it.

Capitol Reef National Park

the iconic Hickman Bridge in Capitol Reef National Park
The iconic Hickman Bridge in Capitol Reef National Park sits over 300 feet above the Fremont River and Highway 24 (Photo: Peter Unger/Getty)

Natural arches and bridges, singular rock pillars, canyons
 the 241,904-acre Capitol Reef is home to all of the highlights you’d expect from a national park in the desert of Utah. All of these features are a result of the Waterpocket Fold, a 100-mile long “wrinkle” in the earth’s crust made by an uplift of an underlying fault about 15 million years ago, which caused massive cliffs to rise and eventually erode into domes, towers, canyons, arches, and monoliths that are found throughout this park. Cool, right?

Best Beginner Hike: Grand Wash

The author geeks out at the captivating cliff faces along the Grand Wash Trail, inside Capitol Reef
The author geeks out at the captivating cliff faces along the Grand Wash Trail, inside Capitol Reef (Photo: Graham Averill)

gives you a taste of the narrow canyons that people go ape over, but via a flat hike that’s easy to follow and super family friendly. The entire hike is a 4.4-mile out and back, but if you start on the Highway 24 trailhead, you enter the canyon early, with 200-foot vertical rock walls on either side of you, and can turn back when you’ve seen enough. After hiking a half mile over sandy terrain, the canyon begins to shrink and soon you’ll hit the narrows, which has slot canyon vibes without getting so tight it causes claustrophobia (the walls are about 20-feet apart at their slimmest point). The tan, sandstone walls are pockmarked with holes and small caves, and even offer shade in the morning and late afternoon.

Best Advanced Hike: Sheets Gulch Slot Canyon

slot canyon in Capitol Reef National Park, Utah
Capitol Reef’s Sheets Gulch Slot Canyon can be done as a long day hike. Carry a topographical map as the trail is unmarked, save for a few cairns. (Photo: Jonzimm221991/Getty)

Capitol Reef has a bevy of canyons to explore, but might be the best non-technical option. There’s no official trail through the narrow gorge, which can be found 12.7 miles south of Highway 24 on the paved Notom-Bullfrog Road, but the occasional cairn and obvious route through narrow, sandstone walls make this journey relatively straightforward to navigate. (Bring a map, regardless.) While you won’t need ropes, you’ll need to muscle up and over several chockstones and wade through the occasional pool to keep moving forward, but that’s half the fun. It’s a 9-mile point to point, but most hikers turn around when the canyon begins to open back up, roughly 6.5 miles from the trailhead, making it a long, 13-mile all-day adventure.

Pro Tip: Bring a 4WD rig. The hikes I mention here are accessible via paved roads, but if you have a high clearance, 4WD vehicle, the entire backcountry of Capitol Reef becomes your oyster, and you’ll have options for free, primitive camping and an easier time getting into the remote Cathedral Valley—a backcountry district of the park where you can find a cluster of sandstone monoliths.

man inside Grand Wash enjoying the shade
The author inside Grand Wash on his most recent trek to Utah, enjoying the shade that the tall canyon walls provide (Photo: Graham Averill)

Graham Averill is șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű magazine’s national parks columnist. He’s fresh off of a trip to Utah, where he was able to hike portions of Capitol Reef National Park and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. He also just survived Hurricane Helene at his home in Asheville, North Carolina and wrote about it, and ranked the best national parks in the nation for fall foliage.

The post The 10 Best Hikes in Utah’s National Parks appeared first on șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű Online.

]]>