Distance:
9.0 miles (loop)
Walking
time: 6 hours
Elevations:
1,390 ft. loss/gain
Murphy Trailhead (start):
6,190 ft.
Murphy Hogback: 5,200
ft.
Murphy Wash: 4,800 ft.
Trail:
Good trail most of the way, but very steep and rocky
for a half mile at the beginning and end.
Season:
Spring, summer, fall, winter. Canyonlands is very
hot in the summertime and receives some snow in the
winter. The best seasons for this hike are spring
and fall. For current conditions call the Canyonlands
National Park Headquarters in Moab at (801) 259-7164.
Vicinity:
Canyonlands National Park, Island in the Sky District,
near Moab
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Hiking
the Murphy Trail is an excellent way to gain an appreciation
for the wild beauty and expanse of Canyonlands National
Park. It is also a good way to sample some of the history
of Canyonlands. The trail was built during World War
One by the Murphy brothers, who grazed cattle in the
area from 1917 until about 1920. The area on and below
the Island in the Sky Mesa was used extensively for
winter grazing by local cattle ranchers during the first
half of this century, and many remnants of their occupation
can still be seen.
The Island in the Sky
district was also an active exploration area for uranium
prospectors during the 1950s. Uranium ore is often found
in the Chinle geologic formation above the White Rim
Plateau, and during the nuclear energy craze of the
1950s prospectors came from all over the country to
try their luck in Canyonlands. There are no active mines
in the area now, but if you stand just about anywhere
on the rim of Island in the Sky and gaze down into the
canyon you can see parts of the old roads and trails
built by the miners.
When the area became a
national park in 1964 prospecting was no longer allowed,
but 4-wheeling and bicycling on some of the old roads
has become very popular. In particular, the 100-mile-long
4-wheel drive White Rim Road, which circles the Island
in the Sky has become one of the parks best known attractions.
The middle 1.4 miles of this hike, connecting Murphy
Hogback to Murphy Wash, is along the White Rim Road.
From
the parking area on Murphy Point the trail proceeds
for 0.6 mile to the edge of the rim before plunging
downward through a fault in the Wingate Sandstone. When
you first look over the edge you may wonder how on earth
anyone could get down there. But, miraculously, there
is a way. The trail switchbacks down a series of ledges
near the top, then finds a debris-scattered slope for
the rest of the route. Near the bottom there is one
exciting part where the Murphy brothers built a wooden
bridge across a ten-foot gap in the trail. The logs
in the bridge are close to a hundred years old now,
but they still seem sturdy enough.
When the trail reaches
the bottom of the cliff it splits, with the left fork
heading down Murphy Wash and the right fork going out
onto Murphy Hogback. If it is still early in the day
I suggest you turn right here and take the Murphy Hogback
Trail, but if it is near noon you should go down Murphy
Wash first. The reason for this is that the most beautiful
part of the hike is along the Hogback, and you should
save this portion for when the sun is lower in the sky.
If the sun is directly overhead the geology of the shadowless
canyons is not as interesting. From a practical point
of view it doesnt really matter which fork you
take. The trails are joined at the other end by the
White Rim Road, and the loop can be walked in either
direction. I will assume here, however, that you choose
to proceed via the Hogback trail.
The views from Murphy
Hogback are so impressive that, upon reaching the White
Rim Road, many hikers choose to return the same way.
The Soda Springs Basin lies below you on the northwest
side, with the photogenic towers of the Organ Rock Formation
reaching up along the shores of the Green River. The
river makes a huge meander into the basin, circling
around another famous formation known as the Turks Head.
And farther to the south, across the hidden recesses
of the Colorado River, are the pinnacles of the Canyonlands
Needles District. It is an immense 360 degree panorama.
Many of the same features can more easily be seen from
the viewpoints above the rim, but it is not quite the
same up there. Down on the Hogback you get the feeling
that you are more than just an observer. You are somehow
a part of it all.
Once you reach the White
Rim Road turn left and walk southeast along the road
for 1.4 miles until you see a sign marking the beginning
of the Murphy Wash Trail. Murphy Wash is interesting
in a less dramatic way. The sandy wash is more protected
and receives more water that the exposed Hogback; hence
the plant life is quite different there. Soon after
leaving the road you will pass by a small spring which,
as the animal tracks attest, attracts a good deal of
canyon wildlife. As you near the top of the wash you
will pass by an old corral, one of many left by the
ranchers who worked the area. Finally, 2.6 miles after
leaving White Rim Road, the trail climbs out of Murphy
Wash and rejoins the original trail for the climb back
to the rim.
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