Tag Archives: Canyonlands National Park
Rocks are so much more interesting than Brangelina!
This part of Utah – here at Utah’s Canyonlands – is what writer and environmentalist Edward Abbey called the “most arid, most hostile, most lonesome, most grim, bleak, barren, desolate and savage quarter of the state of Utah – the best part by far.”
It was another early alarm clock day as we set off for both Canyonlands National Park and neighbouring Dead Horse State Park, about a 35-minute drive from our campground in Moab. We wanted to beat any crowds and be there as close to sunrise as possible.
We pulled into the park before the Visitor Center was even open, so set up and cooked breakfast. We love this about the Roadtrek – we can cook, eat, clean up (and take short naps) ANYWHERE. The flexibility of the lifestyle is irresistible.
After brekkie, we watched the excellent short film at the Canyonlands Visitor Center, just to get an idea of what was ahead. We’ve been finding that the park intro films give us just the right amount of background about geology, wildlife, etc. to really help us appreciate our visit.
While the roads and trails at Arches National Park wove between dramatic red rock formations, Canyonlands is more about never-ending vistas and the expansive canyons in this part of the Colorado Plateau. Millions of years ago, this was an area of shallow seas, sedimentation, and uplift forming the current landscape when great blocks of rock fractured and were eroded into needles, spires and arches.
We were at one of the highlights – Mesa Arch – well before the crowds got there. That being said, Canyonlands has many fewer visitors than Arches, so there was nothing like a lineup of cars at the entry gates. In the final tally, it’s the remoteness of today’s two parks that would make them our top picks in the area.
We drove all the scenic drives, got out and took hundreds of photos, did a few hikes (the short Mesa Arch loop trail and the trail at Upheaval Dome as well as rim trails at most of the lookouts). The national parks are not particularly dog friendly – dogs are only allowed in parking lots and certain paved areas, so our hiking time was pretty limited.
From the pullouts and trails we could see the great, wide river canyons and the meandering, wide green water of the Colorado River. Canyonlands is the confluence of the Green River and the Colorado River. The area was largely unmapped until the expeditions of John Wesley Powell in the 1860s – the same explorer who mapped Grand Canyon.
We found ourselves comparing Canyonlands to Grand Canyon. In some ways, Canyonlands seems more “relatable”: They are similar in geology, but the canyons here are much wider and more expansive (not as deep though). Next time we come here we’ll put aside a full fay to take one of the jeep tours along the very bottom of the canyons – we could see a few at a distance, navigating the dirt roads. Seeing the canyons from the “bottom up” would be very cool.
Not far down the road from Canyonlands, we stopped at Dead Horse State Park. The view from the overlook at Dead Horse Point – of the gooseneck turn in the Colorado River – is on almost every Utah Tourism brochure. It’s also close to the spot where Thelma and Louise took that famous last ride over the cliff edge.
Dead Horse is like a long peninsula rising above the canyon far below. It’s said that in the late 1800s, cowboys would herd wild mustangs to Dead Horse Point, then lay brush and branches across the narrowest point called the Neck, essentially creating a natural corral.
The sun was setting and we decided we wanted to spend the night in this beautiful, remote spot. The park campgrounds were full, but we tried a dirt side road and found a very nice, small BLM site called Horsethief just north of the state park. Our hope was that the skies would clear and we’d be able to appreciate the pitch black and why Dead Horse and Canyonlands have both been designated as International Dark Sky Parks. Not so lucky . . . soon after we pulled in a light rain started to fall. No stars, but the high desert after a light rain smells so very special. Clean, renewed with hints of pinyon-pine and juniper.
Edward Abbey’s book, Desert Solitaire, is an environmentalist’s classic – a great read. It’s on our bookshelf at home but, oddly enough, the public library in Kingston doesn’t have it in its collection. Ditto for his other well-known book, The Monkey Wrench Gang. They both deserve much more ink and spotlight than the current Brangelina meltdown!
Words on the page
Our stories and articles appear in Canadian magazines and online.
Spring and fall, we load the van – with everything from guitars to laptops – toss in a thick bundle of maps, several notebooks and roll down the road. We meet great people, gather wonderful story material and then write, write, write. Browse the links to some of our pieces in print:
BIG TRIP #1: ROOTS OF AMERICAN MUSIC: 9,000 km through the Southeast U.S.
- Road Tunes: A Six-Week Odyssey Following the Scenic Music Trails of the Southeast U.S., CAA Magazine. Road Tunes
- A Moment in Time, CAA website. A Moment in Time
- Great Music Trails of the American Southeast: The Journey Begins, Zoomer
- Travelling the Crooked Road Music Trail, Zoomer
- Walking, Strumming and Singing in the Footsteps of History, Zoomer
- New Orleans: Sensory Overload, Zoomer
- Great Music Trails: Bayou Cajun Country, Zoomer
- Great Music Trails: Louisiana’s Prairie, Zoomer
- Feeling the Blues in the Mississippi Delta, Zoomer
- Tennessee: Two Cities, Two Histories, Zoomer
- Kentucky: Where North and South Overlap, Zoomer
- Virginia’s Crooked Road is a journey through America’s musical roots, Canadian Traveller. Crooked Road
- Sunshine Bound, CAA website
- The Soundtrack to America, Canadian Traveller
- Soul Survivors, Doctor’s Review
- Music Cities, Dreamscapes
BIG TRIP #2: TUNES, RUINS & STARS: 13,000 km across the American Southwest
- A Canadian’s Guide to Arizona, Canadian Traveller.
- Flavours of the Southwest, Taste. Flavours of the Southwest
- A Grand Finale | Flagstaff, Arizona, CAA website. A Grand Finale | Flagstaff Arizona
- Where Ancient Cultures Thrive, Doctor’s Review
- The King Lives On, CAA website
- The Mississippi Delta: Drawn by the Blues, Zoomer
- Elvis Was Here.PDF, Zoomer
- Discovering Southern New Mexico, Zoomer
- Off the Beaten Path: Southeast Arizona, Zoomer
- True West: True Tucson, Zoomer
- Eight Things You Didn’t Know About Phoenix, Zoomer
- Often Overlooked – Arizona’s Four Corners, Zoomer
- All About Albuquerque, Zoomer
- The Mystery of Chaco Canyon, Zoomer
- Colorado Cliff Dwellings of Mesa Verde, Zoomer
- Exploring America’s Southwest, West of the City
- Food, Glorious US Food, Canadian Traveller
- Arizona – A Warm Welcome, A Canadian’s Guide to Arizona
- Arizona – Hot in the City, A Canadian’s Guide to Arizona
- Arizona – Pick Your Own Desert, A Canadian’s Guide to Arizona
- Arizona – Living in the Lap of Luxury, A Canadian’s Guide to Arizona
- Centennial views, Doctor’s Review
BIG TRIP #3: HUGGING THE ATLANTIC COASTLINE; MUSIC INLAND: 7,064 km
- North Carolina’s Outer Banks, Zoomer
- Sunshine Bound, CAA website
- Outer Banks: Sky, Sea & Sand, Zoomer
- Pirates of the Carolinas, Doctor’s Review
- South Carolina’s Coastline Cities, Zoomer
- Beaufort and the Beautiful Sea Islands, Zoomer
- Strolling in Savannah, Zoomer
- The Soundtrack to America, Canadian Traveller
- Cumberland Island National Seashore, Zoomer
- Soul Survivors, Doctor’s Review
- Georgia on my mind: Athens, Macon & Augusta, Zoomer
- North Carolina’s Appalachia: Steeped in Music, Zoomer
- Our last loop: Virginia’s Crooked Road, Zoomer
- Eat Your Way to Florida, CAA
- North Carolina’s Outer Banks, Canadian RVing
BIG TRIP #4: ROCK & ROLL: 10,950 km exploring western U.S. National Parks
- South Dakota’s Badlands Aren’t Bad At All, Zoomer
- The Enduring Legacy of Black Hills National Forest, Zoomer
- The Western Flair of Northern Wyoming, Zoomer
- The Hillsides and Grasslands of Yellowstone National Park, Zoomer
- Yellowstone & Grand Teton: Visiting Two Beautiful National Parks, Zoomer
- 3 Reasons Why Utah is a Road Tripper’s Dream, Zoomer
- The Scenic Soaks and Wildlife of Colorado, Zoomer
- A World of Rocks at Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, Zoomer
- A Holiday Trip to Seneca Falls, NY, CAA
- Colorado – Dreamscapes 2017, Dreamscapes
- Finding America’s Musical Roots in the Midwest, Zoomer
MISCELLANEOUS
- Dairy queens, Doctor’s Review
- Vermont Cheese Trail, Taste
- Rediscover Freedom In an RV, 2015 Travel Guide to Canada
- Cozy Up To Canada’s Natural Side, 2015 Travel Guide to Canada
- Rediscover Freedom in an RV, Dreamscapes
- Road Tripping the Blues Across Mississippi, Canadian RVing
- The Natural Beauty of the Thousand Islands, Canadian RVing
- Campsites We Love, Southbound
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Exploring The Small-Town Charms of New Brunswick’s Bay of Fundy, Zoomer
- One Perfect Week in PEI, Canadian RVing
- U.S. Civil Rights Trail , Canadian RVing
- Prince Edward Island: A Community Built Around Food, Zoomer
- Nibbling Along the Vermont Cheese Trail, Canadian RVing
- Florida wild landscapes, Canadian RVing