Distance:
9.0 miles (loop)
Walking
time: 5 1/4 hours
Elevations:
360 ft. gain/loss
Squaw Flat Trailhead
(start): 5,120 ft.
Lost Canyon: 5,100 ft.
highest point: 5,460
ft.
Trail:
Well marked trail through the bottoms of two desert
canyons. Some wading may be necessary in wet years.
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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This
loop hike passes through two sandstone canyons near
Squaw Flat Campground in the Needles District of Canyonlands
National Park. The parallel canyons are only about a
half mile apart, but they are very different in character.
Squaw Canyon is dry and generally uninteresting, while
Lost Canyon is deeper and has a surprising amount of
water and vegetation.
Because of its water,
Lost Canyon was well known to the cowboys who lived
and worked in Canyonlands during the first half of this
century. Even when other sources of water had given
way to the dry summer heat, their livestock could always
depend on finding a pool or two of the life-giving liquid
in the green recesses of Lost Canyon. Today, one of
the most interesting attractions of the canyon is an
old cowboy camp that was used by cattlemen during the
1920s. The historic site still contains an old table,
some pots and pans, old bottles and cans, and other
implements. The camp is not hard to find, but it requires
a 2.4 mile detour downstream from the main trail.
After
leaving Squaw Flat Campground the trail proceeds southward
for about 200 feet, then splits. Turn left at the fork,
following the sign to Lost Canyon and Squaw Canyon.
The path winds across the flat desert country for another
mile before reaching a trail junction in Squaw Canyon
Wash, where the loop through the two canyons begins.
It doesnt make much difference which direction
you take around the loop, but I will describe a clockwise
direction here.
After passing Squaw Canyon
Wash the trail continues for about 1.0 mile before dropping
into the mouth of a small, unnamed canyon. It then winds
along the sandy bottom of the small canyon for another
0.8 mile, finally intersecting a large wash. A Park
Service sign at this point will tell you that you have
reached Lost Canyon. The trail up Lost Canyon turns
right at the sign and heads south.
Before following the trail
up Lost Canyon you should consider a side trip to the
cowboy camp historic site described earlier. This option
will add 2.4 miles to the length of the hike. The cowboy
camp is downstream (left) from the Lost Canyon trail
junction, so to get there you will have to leave the
trail at the junction. Although there is no trail the
route is not difficult; just turn north and follow the
sandy bottom of the Lost Canyon streambed for 35-40
minutes (1.2 miles). You will come to a large pool of
water with a sandstone alcove, partially hidden by trees,
just a few feet above the left shore. The historic camp
is in that alcove.
What tales the walls of the
sheltered camp would tell if they could talk. We can
only image the interesting characters that must have
gathered here in days past, and the yarns they must
have exchanged to pass the lonely nights. Over the years
a collection of artifacts accumulated in the cowboys
home away from home, and today, three-fourths of a century
later, these simple treasures offer a priceless window
through which visitors can view the past. Enjoy their
presence, but please dont be tempted to remove
anything. These treasures are far more interesting in
the context of the camp than they would be in your drawer
at home. Also, refrain from the urge to add your name
to the signatures the old cowboys scratched onto the
walls of the alcove. These cowboyglyphs indicate that
the camp was occupied at least as early as 1920, but
it was probably used much earlier than that.
Back on the trail, the
path continues from the Lost Canyon trail junction up
Lost Canyon for a distance of 2.0 miles before climbing
out the north side of the canyon onto the ridge above.
From there the route drops back down to the bottom of
Squaw Canyon and proceeds for another 1.9 miles to the
beginning of the loop. From there it is an easy 1.0
mile walk back to the Squaw Flat Trailhead.
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