Follow the paths where native people and pioneers walked. Gaze up at massive sandstone cliffs of cream, pink, and red that soar into a brilliant blue sky.   Experience wilderness in a narrow slot canyon.   Zion’s unique array of plants and animals will enchant you as you absorb the rich history of the past and enjoy the excitement of present day adventures.   Known for its sheer 2,000-foot cliffs and river-carved canyons, Zion deserves to be on every Utah travel agenda.   Zion is home to some of the most iconic views and trails in the National Park Service, and everyone seems to know it.   Overcrowding at this park is common.   It’s impossible to have a bad view in Zion.   The Lower Emerald Pool Trail is a paved path that leads to the gorgeous green waters of the Lower Emerald Pool and waterfalls.   Short and steep, the Weeping Rock Trail showcases Zion’s hanging gardens.   The 5 mile Angel’s Landing Trail is not for the faint of heart.   The trail has steep drop-offs, and there are sections where only a chain provides support as visitors pass in both directions.   The trail takes you to a peak in the middle of Zion Canyon.   The out-and-back trail includes 1,500 feet of elevation gain and takes roughly four hours to hike.   The Narrows is an unforgettable gorge with soaring walls, sandstone grottos, natural springs, and hanging gardens in the upper reaches of Zion Canyon.   Also consider hiking the 14 mile trail to Kolob Arch, one of the largest natural arches on earth.   There is no match for the soaring perspective on trails like Angels Landing and the Narrows, but you don’t have to hike to see why the park is so special.   The roadways leading through Zion provide ample viewing opportunities.   While its massive backcountry trail system can make for an incredible extended stay, the unbridled beauty from basically any spot in the park coupled with easy access makes Zion a perfect one-day trip.   However, if it’s your first visit, try to spend at least two or three nights and venture to both Zion Canyon and Kolob Canyons.











Bryce Canyon National Park is located in southern Utah on the eastern side of the Paunsaugunt Plateau in Garfield County.   Settlement of the area began in 1874.   Ebenezer Bryce moved from Pine Valley and settled a site near the mouth of Bryce Canyon in 1875.   Bryce used the now famous canyon as a cattle range, and it was given his name as early as 1876.   Despite the fragile nature of the environment, there are many miles of foot and horse trails below the rim.   A twenty-mile paved highway runs along the edge of the rim.   Bryce Canyon awaited promotion and development before its full tourism potential could be realized.   National Forest Supervisor JW Humphrey was transferred from the La Sal National Forest to the Powell National Forest in July 1915.   He was amazed at the beauty and grandeur of Bryce and resolved to do all he could to promote it and make it accessible.   He took visiting dignitaries to Bryce and secured funds for a passable road to the canyon rim.   In 1916 Arthur W Stevens of the Forest Service wrote an illustrated article for the Union Pacific railroad tourist magazine.   JW Humphrey wrote a similar article for the Rio Grande railroad.   These were the first descriptive articles published about Bryce Canyon.   In the meantime, moving pictures and postcards began circulating and Bryce began to attract visitors from all parts of the nation.   In 1919 the Utah state legislature asked Congress to create Bryce National Monument, which was done in 1923.   The Union Pacific railroad acquired a state school section on the rim and began developing campgrounds, cabins, a lodge, and improved access to the Canyon.   In 1928 Bryce Canyon was removed from Forest Service jurisdiction and made Bryce Canyon National Park.   Later 12,000 additional acres were added to create what is now a 37,277 acre park that attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors each year from throughout the world to marvel at its unique beauty.












Located just 5 miles north of Moab is Arches National Park, which contains the world’s largest concentration of natural sandstone arches.   Although over 2,000 arches are located within the park’s 76,518 acres, the park also contains an astounding variety of geological formations.   Colossal sandstone fins, massive balanced rocks, soaring pinnacles and spires dwarf visitors as they explore the park’s hiking trails.   A paved scenic drive takes visitors to many of the major viewpoints within the park.   There is one road that travels through Arches National Park and that is Arches Scenic Drive.   The best time to visit Arches National Park is in the spring and the fall when temperatures are mild.   However, while winter weather in Arches may not be the most predictable, the sheer lack of crowds makes it one of the best times of the year to visit.   Thankfully, despite its high altitude, the park rarely sees heavy snowfall and the entire park is accessible throughout the whole year.   The park is part of the Colorado Plateau with a high desert biosphere.   The Arches National Park lies on top of a salt bed which underwent extreme climate changes millions of years ago.   The debris from floods and ocean waters compressed into rock, pushing the earth upward into domes and down into hollow pockets.   Faults also occurred such as the park's Moab Fault, one of the most highly studied geologic zones in the country.   Vertical arches resulted from these conditions, and rock layers that weren't eroded away with time still stand today.   Petrified sand dunes can also be found here which indicate where ancient lakes covered the area.












Carved-out canyons. Sheer drop-offs. Body-wide footpaths slicing through red rock.   Exploring Canyonlands National Park is touring with an edge.   The whole park is a redrock woodcut engraved by wind’s and water’s big, slow chisels.   The Green and Colorado Rivers trisect the Colorado Plateau, etching Canyonlands into distinct districts.   The mesas you see at Island in the Sky look like a mountain range lopped off by a broadsword.   The Maze is gorges, gorgeously gouged. Needles is a pincushion, pointy-sides-out.   Chopped buttes, scored sediment and carved petroglyphs.   Lots of sculpting, scraping and dividing asunder.   Island in the Sky is the most accessible district in the park, nearest to a major city (Moab) and boasting a paved scenic drive with views of the surround buttes, fins and water-carved canyons, as well as numerous hikes.   The Needles is less accessible, requiring more time, more strenuous hiking and four-wheel drive or boat ride to reach its secret corners, but it provides incredible backcountry approaches into some of the most dazzling landscape on earth.   But even the Needles feels like a roadside B&B compared to the remoteness of The Maze, the isolated district west of the Green River.   The Maze offers challenging backpacking, off-roading and hiking for seasoned explorers.   If you’re feeling the life aquatic, you can also book a river trip on the Green or Colorado and see the whole thing from a boat.












Capitol Reef National Park encompasses the Waterpocket Fold, a warp in the Earth's crust that is 65 million years old.   It is the largest exposed monocline in North America.   In this fold, newer and older layers of earth folded over each other.   The park is filled with brilliantly colored sandstone cliffs, gleaming white domes, and contrasting layers of stone and earth.   The area was named for a line of white domes and cliffs of Navajo Sandstone, each of which looks somewhat like the United States Capitol building, that run from the Fremont River to Pleasant Creek on the Waterpocket Fold.   The fold forms a north-to-south barrier that has barely been breached by roads.   Early settlers referred to parallel impassable ridges as "reefs", from which the park gets the second half of its name.   State Route 24 cuts through the park traveling east and west between Canyonlands National Park and Bryce Canyon National Park, but few other paved roads invade the rugged landscape.   The park is filled with canyons, cliffs, towers, domes, and arches.   The Fremont River has cut canyons through parts of the Waterpocket Fold, but most of the park is arid desert.












Encompassing over 1.25 million acres, Glen Canyon National Recreation Area offers unparalleled opportunities for water-based & backcountry recreation.   The recreation area stretches for hundreds of miles from Lees Ferry in Arizona to the Orange Cliffs of southern Utah, encompassing scenic vistas, geologic wonders, and a vast panorama of human history.   Lake Powell is only 13% of the National Recreation Area, but one of the largest man-made lakes in North America.   At full pool it is 186 miles long, has 1960 miles ofshoreline, over 96 major side canyons, and a capacity of 27 million acre-feet.   Its maximum depth (at Glen Canyon Dam) is 561 feet.   Glen Canyon National Recreation Area is graced with scenic views, unique geology and evidence of 10,000 years of human history.   As the water level gets lower, the re-emergence of rock formations is drawing sightseers after being submerged under Lake Powell for some 50 years.

Lake Powell is located in South Central Utah.   The Green River, Escalante River, and the San Juan River join the Colorado River in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area to form the reservoir.   With nearly 2,000 miles of shoreline, endless sunshine, warm water, perfect weather, and some of the most spectacular scenery in the west, Lake Powell is the ultimate playground.   At 186 miles long Lake Powell is longer than the entire west coast of the U.S.   Lake Powell covers an impressive amount of territory across the American West.   There are 96 major canyons, some of which are 15 to 20 miles in length.   It's no wonder Lake Powell is a national recreational destination of choice.   The lake Area plays host to a myriad of plants and wildlife through a complex ecosystem that spans 1.2 million acres of the Colorado Plateau.










Crowning the Grand Staircase, Cedar Breaks sits at over 10,000 feet and looks down into a half-mile deep geologic amphitheater. Come wander among timeless bristlecone pines, stand in lush meadows of wildflower, ponder crystal-clear night skies and experience the richness of our subalpine forest. Hidden within the mountains above Cedar City is the brilliant geology and vibrant environment of Cedar Breaks National Monument. The geologic amphitheater is home to great hiking trails, ancient trees, high elevation camping, and over-the-top views along the circle of painted cliffs. Cedar Breaks’ majestic amphitheater is a three-mile-long cirque made up of eroding limestone, shale, and sandstone. Situated on the western edge of the Markagunt Plateau, the raised area of earth located in southern Utah between Interstate 15 and Highway 89, the monument sits entirely above 10,000 feet. The Amphitheater is like a naturally formed coliseum that plunges 2,000 feet below taking your eyes for a colorful ride through arches, towers, hoodoos, and canyons.








Timpanogos Cave National Monument is located in American Fork Canyon in Utah’s Wasatch Range. It’s home to an extensive cave system that’s made up of three linked and spectacularly decorated caverns. Helictites, stalactites, stalagmites, calcite crusts, draperies and frostwork are just a few of the many dazzling formations found in the chambers of one of the most popular caves in Utah.









Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument is a phenomenal landscape.   Sun-drenched Utah backcountry spreads out well beyond the visible horizon from the road.   Depending on where you stand, Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument has been quietly doing its thing for over 50 million years.   But it’s relatively new to us humans.   It was the last part of the lower 48 United States to get cartographed, and once people started poking around they realized they were dealing with an un-spent wealth of ancient and modern science and culture.   The Escalante Canyons area is the most popular area of the monument, especially among hikers.   Active waterfalls, arches, riparian oases, sculpted slickrock and narrow canyons.   The Grand Staircase area is more remote and less visited.   It is spectacular and contains the most extensive network of slot canyons in Utah.   It is surrounded by National Parks that is part of the Grand Staircase.   To the north is Bryce Canyon and Capitol Reef, to the east is Glen Canyon and Canyonlands, to the west is Zion National Park, and it stretches into Arizona to the Grand Canyon.

The Vermilion Cliffs, Pink Cliffs, and White Cliffs are the three steps up in the five-step Grand Staircase of the Colorado Plateau in southern Utah.   This remote and unspoiled 280,000 acre monument is a geologic treasure with some of the most spectacular trails and views in the world.   The monument contains many diverse landscapes, including the Paria Plateau, Vermilion Cliffs, Pink Cliffs, White Cliffs, Coyote Buttes, and Paria Canyon.   The monument borders Kaibab National Forest to the west and Glen Canyon National Recreation Area to the east.   The monument includes the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness.   Elevations range from 3,100 to 7,100 feet.   The monument is also home to a growing number of endangered California condors.   Each year, condors hatched and raised in a captive breeding program are released in the monument.   The Vermilion Cliffs are steep eroded escarpments consisting primarily of sandstone, siltstone, limestone, and shale which rise as much as 3,000 feet above their bases.   These sedimentary rocks have been deeply eroded for millions of years, exposing hundreds of layers of richly colored rock strata. Mesas, buttes, and large tablelands are interspersed with steep canyons.

The Wahweep hoodoos and contrastingly colored sandstone of the Paria Rimrocks have become relatively well known.   The soft entrada sandstone bedrock here is variously grey, light brown, very pale green or pure white in color and forms hoodoos ranging in shape from broad and short to tall, slender and tapering, topped either by dark sandstone blocks or unusual boulders of purple conglomerate, composed of small pebbles bonded together.   There are several little slot canyons along Wahweap Creek, formed by minor tributaries on the east side.














The Flaming Gorge NRA is located in the northeast corner of Utah between Green River and Rock Springs, Wyoming and extends into the Uintah Mountains towards Vernal, Utah.   The area is a mixture of climate, topography, and recreation opportunities well suited to a variety of summer and winter interests.   With 43 campgrounds spread over nearly 91 water-miles with a whopping 360 miles of shore line plus countless mountain retreats.   There is plenty of room for everyone and inforgettable views.   Rising 502 feet above bedrock, Flaming Gorge Dam impounds waters of the Green River to form the reservoir.   At full elevation of 6,045 feet, it has a surface area of 42,020 acres.   Within the Ashley National Forest, the forest is thick with evergreen trees, pinyon pines, and junipers that grow down to the clear blue waters of the reservoir.   The lake is famous for its trophy trout fishing and for the beautiful red rock mountains rising around it.   Below the lake, the Green River is renowned for river rafting.   Flaming Gorge might be the West's most spectacular reservoir.   Flaming Gorge National Recreation area is an all-encompassing outdoor recreation destination.   With more than 200,000 acres of land and water.   Beautiful any time of day, the Red Canyon Overlook lives up to its name as the canyon walls catch the fire of the intense morning light.











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