
A plea of caution before you step off into this desert wonderland:
the desert soil is very fragile. In some spots you will be walking on
deep, soft sand; these sandy patches may be the result of wind gathering
the sand into one spot, but they may also be the result of too much human
interference. Where the sand is not loose, a crust of symbiotic micro-organisms
(cyanobacteria, moss, and fungus) holds the desert together, preventing the
sand from overwhelming the plants in the area and collecting moisture. This
cryptobiotic crust is fragile, and takes decades to recover from a
single footstep - stay on the paths and off of the crust. If you are for
some reason not on a path (or cannot find it), travel in the washes or on
the slickrock.
| Moab Fault | The first stop - a sign explaining the Moab Fault - is probably only of interest to those with a geological bent, though it also offers a long view back into the Moab area. |
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| Park Avenue | The second stop is a major one (as evidenced by the parking lot). You can see from your first view that the area is aptly named - Park Avenue. Walls of sandstone tower over the descending path; runoff from rainstorms has carved a fine wash between these impressive fins. A one mile path leads down to the far end of the Avenue - hikers can return via the path or arrange to be picked up at the far end. The trail is typical for the park - unimproved, with cairns (small piles of stone) marking the trail when it crosses over sandstone. |
| La Sal Mountains | The third stop provides a good view across the desert plateau to the La Sal Mountains. This pulloff also offers signs pointing out various formations in the area. |
| Courthouse Towers | As you wind your way down past several monoliths, you'll approach the stop at Courthouse Towers. This stop is also the bottom of the Park Avenue trail. The towers are monuments named for their tops, which resemble the jurors in a court. The Tower of Babel and the Organ form the southern monolith. Across the way are the Three Gossips - just past the end of Park Avenue - three (actually four, but one is behind the others) spires at the top of this monument appear to be figures facing one another. To the right of the Three Gossips is Sheep Rock. |
| Courthouse Wash | Courthouse Wash is a large - usually dry - riverbed. The parking lot here is for hikers wishing to follow the wash into the Petrified Sand Dunes all the way back to Moab. |
| Petrified Sand Dunes | The next stop on the road is a lookout over the Petrified Sand Dunes. These Navajo Sandstone formations are the remains of a great dune field; the lookout has views across to the Windows area of the park and the La Sal Mountains. |
| Balanced Rock | The road then goes for a ways without a major stop. Eventually, you'll approach the stop at Balanced Rock. There are a lot of balanced rocks in the desert, but this one seems somehow more impressive than most. It used to have a companion, but it fell over some years ago. There is a short, handicapped-accessible trail leading around the rock. |
| Windows Turnoff | A right turn just after Balanced Rock leads to the Garden of Eden and the Windows area of the park. This section of the park is densely packed with spires, hoodoos, and arches, and most of it is easily viewed from the car and viewpoints. Among the sites without pullouts are Ham Rock (look up - it's the one shaped like a half-ham) and Pothole Arch (marked with a sign - pothole arches are horizontal, caused by swirling water or whirlwinds drilling a hole through the rock). |
| Garden of Eden | A stop just after you turn into the Windows side road offers a view of the Garden of Eden. This is a jumble of spires and hoodoos, with some fin canyons thrown in for good measure. There are no trails here, just the overlook. |
| Cove of Caves | The road winds further along, and you come to a stop for Cove Arch viewpoint and the Cove of Caves. Geologically, this viewpoint is interesting because it shows the different stages of arch evolution. Photogenically, there isn't much to see at this stop and I usually pass it by. |
| The Windows | The end of the road leads to a massive parking
lot at The Windows. From here you can take two trails. A short (.2 mile round) trail leads to Double Arch. Double Arch is one of the more famous arches in the park, with its twin, angled arches; the trail leads through deep sand, but has been improved somewhat with retaining boards. The Windows trail leads (.2 miles) to North Window and then (another .1 mile) to South Window; the trail is of hard-packed dirt with wood retainer walls, and is largely uphill (very wide, shallow steps). These arches are solidly in the middle of a fin wall - hence the "window" appellation - and the ridge between them has given them a second nickname - The Spectacles. Also off of this trail is Turret Arch (a .1 mile side trail). A .3 mile "primitive trail" leads around the back of the arches and back to the parking lot between the two main trails; the primitive trail leads over rock, sand, and hard dirt. In the background of The Windows and Turret Arch is the La Sal Mountains - very scenic, especially at sunset. |
| Panorama Point | Your tour at this point will lead you back to the main road, and on towards the north end of the park. You'll come to a stop labelled Panorama Point, which has a view of the Cache Valley Wash, the Fiery Furnace, and the Colorado River canyons in the background. The best part of the view is probably the polychromatic hills, stained blue, black, and green from mineral stains and the cryptobiotic crust. |
| Delicate Arch Turnoff | A small side road leads out to Wolfe Ranch and the Delicate Arch parking lots. There are two stops, after which the road continues as a 4WD track. |
| Delicate Arch | The
Wolfe Ranch/Delicate Arch trail is 3.2 miles round-trip
from the parking lot.
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| Delicate Arch Viewpoint | The Delicate Arch Viewpoint trail has a decent view of the arch - perched alone on top of a sandstone swell - but the view is pretty distant. On the bright side, it is a reasonable walk on a handicapped-accessible trail. If you are not planning on the difficult hike up to the Arch itself, this trail is a must - Delicate Arch is the symbol of the park, one of the Utah state symbols, and (for 2002) the picture on the National Park Pass (in short, it is very famous). |
| Salt Valley Overlook | Moving on down the main road, you come to a pulloff for the Salt Valley Overlook. There isn't a lot to see here aside from the desert valley of the Salt Valley Wash. |
| Fiery Furnace | Shortly after the Salt Valley Overlook, you come to the turnoff for Fiery Furnace. This area of the park is largely uncharted - no trail maps exist of the maze of fin canyons and spires here, no GPS signals reach the depths of the canyons, and there are no marked trails. Much of the area is solid sandstone, and most of the rest is soft sand which is occasionally wiped clean by runoff from thunderstorms. So why is this parking lot here? The park offers guided tours in the warmer months of the year, and you can get a permit to walk through the area if you desire. I highly recommend the guided tour; it was about 3 hours of adventurous exploration - hidden arches, narrow canyons, and good information. The tour is not for those with a fear of heights or closed in spaces; there were several walks across narrow ledges and several sections where you shuffle and chimney through narrow canyon slots. Additionally, I do not recommend going it alone - the tour guide indicated it took him six runs just to memorize the tour route... Ironically, this is probably the coolest section of the park during the summer - the fins place their shadows across the entire area. |
| Sand Dune & Broken Arches | The next stretch of road contains several pulloffs for arch views. The first is for Sand Dune Arch and Broken Arch. This trail in deep, soft sand goes .5 mile (one-way). At .2 miles, the trail splits; the right side enters an even sandier fin canyon which leads up to Sand Dune Arch. True to its name, the arch sits in a large accumulation of sand. A favorite of kids, but brutal for such a short path in hot weather due to the sand. Back on the main path, another .3 miles will take you out to Broken Arch (which is also visible in the distance long before you go that far...). |
| Salt Valley Road | Just down the road from Sand Dune Arch is a gravel and dirt track leading into Salt Valley. I have driven the road to the main Tower Arch trailhead, but have not gone further; the road was rough, with sections of packed sand, and others of large gravel. Several high-clearance 4WD tracks lead off from the general area of the trailhead parking area; one goes back to Balanced Rock, and another leads to a closer trailhead for Tower Arch. |
| Klondike Bluffs | The Tower Arch trail is 3.7 miles round-trip.
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| Skyline Arch | Back on the main road, another small pulloff on the right marks the trailhead to Skyline Arch. The arch is visible from the roadside, but the trail leads up into the fin canyons for a closeup view (and a view into Fiery Furnace, or so I am told). |
| Devil's Garden | The main road ends finally at
Devil's Garden. A picnic area and campground occupy the area to
the South of the parking lot, and the Devil's Garden trail leads off
to the North. The Devil's Garden trail is a 7+ mile (round trip)
variety pack.
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