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Canyon Country Voyage Tips and guide

You can check the original Wikivoyage article Here

Canyon Country is a region in the state of Utah in the United States of America. It is a wild, sparsely populated area along the southern boundary of the state, with an extraordinary concentration of national parks (referred to as "The Big 5") and monuments offering scenic opportunities galore and an inexhaustible array of hiking trails and canyoneering routes. It includes the counties of Kane, Garfield, San Juan, Wayne, and Grand.

Cities

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Map
Map of Canyon Country

Remote, vast, lonely, and beautiful landscapes dominate Utah's southeast.
  • 37.08-111.6581 Big Water — a middle of nowhere hamlet with a Libertarian and polygamist history, by the southwest end of Glen Canyon.
  • 37.901-111.4252 Boulder Boulder, Utah on Wikipedia — a pretty cowboy town west of Capitol Reef National Park that is right by some of the most spectacularly beautiful stretches of highway in the world.
  • 37.624-109.4783 Blanding — a small gateway town to Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (south) and Natural Bridges and Bears Ears National Monuments (west).
  • 37.523611-112.6630524 Duck Creek Village
  • 37.77-111.6025 Escalante Escalante, Utah on Wikipedia — a small town on the northern border of in Grand Staircase with some good eatin', located near beautiful canyons.
  • 38.371-110.7136 Hanksville — you know you're nowhere when you arrive to Hanksville, far to the east of Capitol Reef, where you can refuel, eat, sleep, and get on your desert way.
  • 37.036-112.5317 Kanab — the only real desert town for miles in the Vermilion cliffs and the only piece of civilization south of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument; on the way south to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, east to wild canyoneering opportunities, or northwest to Zion National Park.
  • 37.165-109.8658 Mexican Hat — a small village about 20 miles north of Monument Valley.
  • 38.573-109.559 Moab — a desert tourist hub for visitors to Arches National Park and Canyonlands National Park and a good place to buy gear or rent an ATV, also a mountain bike "cult spot".
  • 37.869-109.34210 Monticello — a very small town north of Blanding which boasts the region's sole Mormon Temple.
  • 37.224-112.68111 Mount Carmel Junction — an often overlooked junction town east of Zion, near some very beautiful wilderness lands.
  • 37.823-112.43612 Panguitch — a small town that is the largest in Garfield County and is surrounded by spectacular, mountainous National Forests.
  • 38.983-109.70613 Thompson Springs — a small town that is home to the Sego Canyon Pictographs and Petroglyphs.
  • 38.299-111.41814 Torrey — a small tourist town at the entrance to Capitol Reef National Park.

Other destinations

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There's a reason why they call it Canyon Country.
  • 38.683-109.5671NOT EXISTING IMAGE Arches National Park, Moab — Contains hundreds of sandstone arches, including the famous Delicate Arch, an icon of Utah. Like the nearby Canyonlands, it's one of the more popular National Parks, despite being a long way from major cities.
  • 37.62961-109.86762 Bears Ears National Monument, west of Blanding — a pair of buttes, rock climbing, and Native American history.
  • 37.628-112.1683 Bryce Canyon National Park, near Panguitch — A geological amphitheater with hundreds of tall red rock hoodoos that make up a spectacular landscape in the midst of a pine forest.
  • 38.167-109.764 Canyonlands National Park, Moab — A maze of dramatic red rock canyons and mesas carved by the Colorado and Green Rivers. It is the meeting point of these two rivers, and therefore some excellent views of the canyons are possible.
  • 38.2-111.1675 Capitol Reef National Park, near Torrey — A wonderland of red rock features including monoliths, arches, gorges, and sandstone domes.
  • 37.034-112.7186 Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park, between Mount Carmel Junction and Kanab — Piles of coral pink sand blew through between the Moquith Mountains and Moccasin Mountain; offers recreation for both motorized and non-motorized users.
  • 36.994-111.4877 Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, north of Page, Arizona — a vast canyon in deep red rock country, filled with North America's largest man made lake, Lake Powell.
  • 37.1747-109.92698 Goosenecks State Park, Mexican Hat — Overlooking the tight turns - goosenecks - of the San Juan River.
  • 37.4-111.6839 Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument — Deep sandstone canyons, impressive waterfalls and acres of road-less wilderness.named
  • 37.5006-112.00110 Kodachrome Basin State Park, Cannonville — Multi-hued standstone layers of sedimentary stone spires.
  • 37.601-110.01411 Natural Bridges National Monument, west of Blanding — A set of spectacular natural bridges, including the second and third largest natural bridges in the world, carved from sandstone.
  • 37.26-109.29212 Navajo Nation, Montezuma Creek — Lies primarily within neighboring Arizona but extends into this region.
  • 37.077-110.96413 Rainbow Bridge National Monument Rainbow Bridge National Monument on Wikipedia accessible through Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, south of Blanding and northwest of Page, Arizona — The world's highest natural bridge, carved from red sandstone in a canyon just off Lake Powell.
  • 37.228-112.87814 Zion National Park, Kanab along boundry of Canyon Country and the Dixie (southwest) region — Contains the spectacular Zion Canyon, with its sheer sandstone cliffs and dramatic rock towers, as well as beautiful red rock desert country.

Understand

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Get in

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By plane

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The nearest major airports are in Las Vegas, Nevada, and Salt Lake City. Minor airports in Page, Arizona and Moab.

By car

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Highways I-15 (connecting Salt Lake City and St. George and US-70 (intersecting with I-15 on the west and leading into Colorado on the east) flank the region on the west and north, respectively. Few highways actually lead into this region because of its rugged topography, and most of the ones that do (e.g. US 191 and state roads 24, 95, 72 and 12) are reached from I-70 or from similarly minor highways on the east side. Access from the south is very limited owing to the impassable Grand Canyon just across the Arizona state line.

Get around

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Drive. If there was ever an area that justifies having a 4-wheel-drive, high-clearance vehicle, this is it, but don't make the mistake of believing that an "urban" 4WD will suffice to get you everywhere you want to go. Many of the "roads" in this area, particularly in Canyonlands and Grand Staircase-Escalante, are almost unimaginably rough. Know your limits as a driver, and those of your vehicle, before venturing into the boonies here.

Pay attention to the weather. It can be hot in the summer, often exceeding 100 °F (38 °C), and late summer monsoon season brings violent thunderstorms which often cause flash floods. Winters are cold, with daytime highs often around freezing 32 °F (0 °C) and lows towards 0 °F (−18 °C); even small amounts of snow or ice can make roads impassable.

Go next

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This region travel guide to Canyon Country is an outline and may need more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. If there are Cities and Other destinations listed, they may not all be at usable status or there may not be a valid regional structure and a "Get in" section describing all of the typical ways to get here. Please plunge forward and help it grow!


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