Lodging in Canyonlands
There is no lodging inside Canyonlands. Instead, you need to look to the surrounding communities.
- By Kurt Repanshek - June 25th, 2024 5:17am
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Baked by time like some multi-layer geologic tort, Canyonlands National Park in southeastern Utah features a landscape cut by canyons, rumpled by upthrusts, dimpled by grabens, and even pockmarked, some believe, by ancient asteroids.
A kaleidoscope of tilted and carved geology laid down over the eons -- red and white Cedar Mesa sandstone, the grayish-green Morrison Formation, pinkish Entrada sandstone, tawny Navajo sandstone, just to name a few of the layers -- help make Canyonlands the most rugged national park in the Southwest, and quite possibly if you find yourself deep in the Maze, in the entire Lower 48.
But exploring the park’s 527 square miles (1,365 sq km) does not require you to hoist pack on your back and set off on a week’s journey. Well-maintained state, county, and national park roads help you easily negotiate Canyonlands and find yourself at overlooks and trailheads that show off a landscape both intoxicating in its beauty and mind-boggling in its geology and cultural imprints.
The Island in the Sky District offers views down into the ragged maw of the park, views that quickly explain how Canyonlands got its name, and offers short hikes to ancient granaries.
Set up camp in the Needles Campground in the Needles District and spend a morning hiking towards Chesler Park and the Creamsicle-hued minarets that quickly rise above you help put “geologic time” in context when you begin to wonder how long it took them to be whittled. Come sundown some of the country’s darkest night skies sparkle with pinpoints of light, as well as the occasional shooting star.
Head to the park’s Horseshoe Canyon Unit and a hike down into the canyon rewards you with the Great Gallery, a sprawling panel of prehistoric artwork that dates, perhaps, to 9,000 years B.C. "when Paleoindians hunted megafauna like mastodons and mammoths across the Southwest.”
Seeking adventure? The Colorado River offers mile-after-mile of white water as well as solitude in a redrock backcountry.
Of course, the gateway town of Moab with its many RV-friendly campgrounds, motels, restaurants, and shops can serve as a spoke for your exploration. Arches National Park, another Southwestern wonder not to be missed, is just 5 miles north of town. Canyonlands’ Island in the Sky District is 27 miles west of town, the Needles District rises 76 miles (122 km) to the southwest, and the Horseshoe Canyon Unit with its Great Gallery is a longer excursion, 101 miles (162.5 km), one way.
Traveler's Choice For: Hiking, white-water rafting, star-gazing, wildflowers, Native American history
There is no lodging inside Canyonlands. Instead, you need to look to the surrounding communities.
Getting wet in Canyonlands National Park usually involves a float trip down the Colorado River, but you also can paddle down the Green and end up in the park.
Canyonlands is quite accurately described by its name. It's a landscape cut by canyons, rumpled by upthrusts, dimpled by grabens, and even pockmarked, some believe, by asteroids. To explore its 527 (1,365 sq km) square miles, you'll need a good rig with good gas mileage, and preferably high ground clearance, for getting around Canyonlands entails a lot of traveling, some down roads that will swallow your average sedan.
You're far from being the first person to set foot in the landscape now called Canyonlands National Park. People have been visiting this region for more than 10,000 years.
From high heat in the middle of summer to the potential of zero degrees Fahrenheit (-17.8 degrees Celcius) some winter nights, Canyonlands offers a wide range of temperatures and seasons for park goers.
When it comes to camping in Canyonlands National Park, frontcountry sites are at a premium. Some appear ridiculously hard to land. That's why during most of the year you can't just arrive in the park at mid-day expecting to snag one.
Rugged as it seems, Canyonlands National Park has some great hikes -- both those that head off into the backcountry, and others that take you to interesting sights in the frontcountry.
Rock. In every direction you glance in Canyonlands National Park, your eye confronts rock. And whether it's twisted, contorted, or shattered rock, it's also more likely than not incredibly colorful.
This harsh landscape hides its wildlife well, except for the ubiquitous lizards scampering here and there.
This is where you can find things such as websites, helpful phone numbers, friends groups and cooperating associations, and, sometimes, books relating to the park.
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