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Delicate arch hike7/28/2023 The hike is brutally hot in the summer, with temperatures often exceeding 100 degrees F. Spring and fall are the best seasons to hike to the arch. This is a very popular trail and the area around the arch can get quite crowded. No matter what time of day you choose to hike to the arch you will not be alone. If time and energy permit on the return trip, the 0.25 miles hike to see the petroglyphs is highly recommended.įor the best views, visit the arch in the early morning or around sunset. When you are done marveling at this amazing work of Mother Nature, retrace your steps to the trailhead. Knobs and fins decorate the sandstone ridge rising along the bowl’s northern rim. Multi-hued sandstone whorls surround a small basin. Directly to the south of the arch a steep cliff plummets over 400-ft to the desert floor. Work your way around the bowl and stand beneath the abutments of the arch to appreciate the size of this incredible span, which measures 45-ft. Red rock cliffs tower above the Cache Valley to the south. The La Sal Mountains, typically covered in snow during the spring, frame the view to the east. Just beyond Frame Arch the cliff ends, revealing stunning views of Delicate Arch straddling the southern rim of a huge sandstone bowl. So far the cliff rising to the south of the trail effectively blocks any views of Delicate Arch. As you reached the end of the exposed section look up to see a window, dubbed Frame Arch, in the cliff face above the trail. (People with a fear of height might be uncomfortable on this short, exposed section of the trail.) To the north, below the trail, are bizarrely sculpted sandstone formations. Follow the trail along the ledge for about 500-ft. Scattered Utah Junipers and desert shrubs grow amid small pockets of soil in the sandstone crevasses.Īt 1.3 miles the trail curves to the east and soon makes a short steep climb to a wide ledge chiseled out of the side of a cliff. The grade moderates at 1.1 miles as the trail curves to the north, following an ascending traverse across a sandstone bench. As you climb enjoy views of the red rock ridges and sandstone formations rising above scrub covered mesas to the south. Upon reaching the slickrock follow rock cairns up the moderately steep rock face. Just beyond the second junction the trail ascends a pair of switchback to climb over a small hill and then resumes its easy traverse across the rolling landscape.Īt 0.6 miles the trail ascends, on moderate grades, a scrub covered hillside that leads to a slickrock slope. Reach a second junction with the Petroglyph trail heading left at 0.2 miles. The trail to Delicate Arch continues straight ahead on easy grades through desert scrub. The panel, depicting images of horses, hunters and big horn sheep, are believed to be drawn by Ute and/or Paiute Indians that once roamed the Salt Wash drainage. To the left (northwest) is the Petroglyph trail, a short trail leading to a small panel of petroglyphs on a rock face. Just beyond the bridge is a trail junction. Our trail continues straight ahead, crossing a footbridge over Salt Wash at 0.1 miles. In 140 yards arrive at a spur trail branching left (north) to the Wolfe Cabin, the home of James Wesley Wolfe and his family between 18. Follow the broad dirt trail as it heads northeast. The path to Delicate Arch starts on the northeast side of the trailhead parking area (see driving directions).
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