{"id":2469912,"date":"2020-07-05T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2020-07-05T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/uncategorized\/62-parks-traveler-arches\/"},"modified":"2022-05-12T13:24:49","modified_gmt":"2022-05-12T19:24:49","slug":"62-parks-traveler-arches","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/adventure-travel\/national-parks\/62-parks-traveler-arches\/","title":{"rendered":"Channeling Edward Abbey in Arches National Park"},"content":{"rendered":"
62 Parks Traveler<\/a>\u00a0started with a simple goal: to visit every U.S. national park in one year. Avid backpacker and public-lands nerd\u00a0Emily Pennington<\/a>\u00a0saved up, built out a tiny van to travel and live in, and hit the road. The parks as we know them are rapidly changing, and she\u00a0wanted to see them before it\u2019s too late.<\/em><\/p>\n Pennington has returned to traveling and is committed to following CDC guidelines during the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure the safety of herself and others. She\u2019s visiting new parks as they open and closely adhering to best safety practices.<\/i><\/p>\n Desert Solitaire<\/em> is a book that should pass through the hands of anyone looking to visit Arches National Park. The 1968 tome chronicles Edward Abbey\u2019s time as a park ranger\u00a0when the area was a national monument, just as interstate highways, paved roads, and developed campgrounds began to threaten this once desolate Utah wonderland of rocks. (Though the book has recently come under fire<\/a> for its callous\u00a0male perspective, it offers an in-depth look at a wilderness area in flux.)<\/p>\n Like any good, overachieving tourist, I read it from cover to cover in advance of my trip to Arches, but nothing in its 336 pages could have prepared me for what I found when I ventured inside the park.<\/p>\n I arrived before 9 A.M. and\u00a0was shocked to find that the visitor center\u2019s parking lot was already full of cars. Hot damn,\u00a0I thought to myself, I\u2019d better get a move on.\u00a0I hopped into my van and boogied over to the end of the main road to hike one of the longest trails in the park\u2014the eight-mile Devils Garden Primitive Loop.<\/p>\n When I got there, I was dismayed to find that this parking area was also already spilling over with vehicles. Families of five were crawling around on nearby boulders, and the incessant buzzing of RV generators sent my nerves to war.<\/p>\n Call me Edward Crabby.<\/p>\n
\n