Distance:
10.4 miles
Walking
time: 6 hours
Elevations:
220 ft. gain/loss
Big Spring Canyon Trailhead:
4,940 ft.
Big Spring Canyon: 4,820
ft.
overlook point: 4,920
ft.
Trail:
Easy, well marked trail
Season:
Summer, spring, winter and fall. This hike is very
hot in the summer and cold in the winter. The best
times are during the spring and fall. For current
conditions call the Canyonlands National Park Headquarters
in Moab at (801) 259-7164.
Vicinity:
Canyonlands National Park, Needles District, near
Moab
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Canyonlands,
the largest of Utahs five national parks, is neatly
split into thirds by the intersection of the Green and
the Colorado Rivers. Both rivers have carved thousand-foot-deep
canyons through the high surrounding desert, and the
view of their confluence at the center of the park is
one of Canyonlands most impressive sights.
Both of the famous rivers
have now been largely tamed by a series of dams built
over the last sixty years, but from this prospective
one can still see the same wild scene that John Wesley
Powell saw during his historical voyage down the Green
and Colorado Rivers in 1869. In July of that year, while
his party was camped on the north side of the confluence,
Powell and one of his men climbed above the rivers to
a point just south of the present day overlook trail.
In the following passage, first printed in Scribners
Monthly in 1875, Powell describes what he saw:
"From
the north-west came the Green in a narrow, winding
gorge. From the north-east came the Grand [Colorado]
through a canyon that seemed, from where we stood,
bottomless.... Wherever we looked there was a wilderness
of rocks- deep gorges where the rivers are lost below
cliffs, and towers, and pinnacles, and ten thousand
strangely carved forms in every direction, and beyond
them mountains blending with the clouds."
(The Canyons of the Colorado, reprinted by
Outbooks, Golden, Colorado, 1981)
From
the trailhead the trail immediately drops into Big Spring
Canyon, and then climbs up the other side. This is really
the only strenuous part of the route, but it doesnt
last long. Big Spring Canyon is only 120 feet deep at
this point. After leaving Big Spring Canyon the trail
meanders pleasantly across the open desert for another
3.1 miles before crossing a jeep road at the northern
end of another shallow canyon called Devils Lane. After
another 0.7 mile the trail crosses the road again as
the road doubles back into Cyclone Canyon. At the point
where the trail meets the jeep road the second time
you will see another spur road branching off to the
west. The trail continues down this road.
After walking west on
the spur road for 0.6 miles you will come to a dead
end, where there is a small outhouse and a parking area
for jeeps. A Park Service sign points the way to the
trail that will lead you the last 0.5 mile to the overlook
point.
The
Colorado River
After seeing the rivers
from the overlook point, many hikers feel a great urge
to descend into the canyon to the shore of the Colorado.
There are at least two ways to do this. Three if you
include Powells route below the overlook point,
but I would hardly recommend his route. It is quite
exposed and requires some rock climbing skills. (Amazingly,
Powell did it with only one arm! He had lost his right
arm 7 years earlier in the Civil War.)
The easiest way to get
to the Colorado River is on the Lower Red Lake Canyon
Trail, which descends from Cyclone Canyon 3.5 miles
south of the overlook. To get there retrace your steps
back to the place where the trail leaves the road in
Cyclone Canyon. Then turn south and walk along the Cyclone
Canyon jeep road for a distance of 2.4 miles until you
see a sign marking the Lower Red Lake Canyon Trailhead
on the west side of the road. It is 4.0 miles from Cyclone
Canyon to the Colorado River along this trail. It is
also possible to walk upstream along the Colorado River
from the mouth of Lower Red Lake Canyon to the confluence,
a distance of 3.6 miles.
If you want to hike to
the Colorado via the Lower Red Lake Canyon Trail you
had better pack for at least two days. However, if you
have a four-wheel-drive vehicle you can easily visit
the Colorado River and the confluence overlook in one
day. A well-used jeep road from Elephant Hill to Cyclone
Canyon will give you access to both the Lower Red Lake
Canyon Trail and the Overlook Trail, allowing you to
see everything with only about nine miles of hiking.
(See page 204 for an explanation of how to get to Elephant
Hill.)
The other way to reach
the Colorado River involves a side trip of 2.0 miles
each way from the confluence overlook trail. If you
elect to follow this route, walk back to Cyclone Canyon
and turn north at the point where the trail leaves the
jeep road. Follow the Cyclone Canyon jeep road north
for 0.5 mile. The road starts out heading almost due
north, and then swings around to the east. Just after
the turn to the east you will see the beginning of a
drainage that heads off in a northwesterly direction
towards the river. You can follow this drainage all
the way to the Colorado River. The route involves about
1.5 miles of off-trail hiking, but many hikers have
gone before you and the way is clearly marked by cairns.
The route becomes very steep as you approach the river
and some scrambling is necessary, but the danger is
minimal if you are careful to follow the cairns. Once
you reach the Colorado it is another 0.9 mile walk downstream
to the confluence itself.
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