Results 1 to 30 of 40

Thread: The Hiking/Trail Running/Backpacking Thread

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Quote Originally Posted by U-Ute View Post
    So, we got a bit crazy on saturday.

    We got up at 8am and drove 4 hours down to Kanarraville to do the Kanaraville Falls hike, then drove home that night. It is a unique hike through a slot canyon carved by the Kanaraville Creek. Quite a nice hike on a hot day.

    You walk about 1-1.5 miles on a trail along side the creek, and then walk right into the entrance to a slot canyon that was carved by the creek. From that point on you are walking in the river a-la The Narrows at Zion National Park. As you walk, you come across several falls you need to traverse. Some have ladders/ropes that have been placed by other hikers. Others you need to navigate using only what god gave you. We walked up to a point where there is a moss covered rock that doubles as a water slide. We spent some time there and then hiked back down.

    The walk along the river. The trail crosses the river at several locations along here, so you can also choose to walk into the river. Most people seem to walk along side on the way up and then drop all pretense on the way back down after spending an hour walking in the river.
    riverside_hike.jpg

    This is looking back at the entrance to the slot canyon from inside the canyon. The transition is abrupt as the trail goes up the canyon to the end and runs into this wall.
    slot_entrance_small.jpg

    These are the first major falls you come across while in the slot canyon. You can see the ladder that was fabricated by previous hikers. It is stable but slippery and so this ends up being quite a bottleneck later in the day. This picture was luck that there wasn't anyone else in it as there are a dozen or so people that just went up the ladder. On the way down later in the day, it was crowded with people waiting to both go up and down. I'd plan on spending a good 30 minutes in one direction or another while waiting for groups to traverse it. There are plenty of distractions around for kids so it wasn't too bad of a wait. At the top there is plenty of room so it is easy to keep the kids away from the edge.
    FirstFalls_Small.jpg

    The "natural water slide".
    slide_small.jpg

    The hike to the slide isn't that far, around 3.5-4 miles round trip, but the hiking in the river is slow. We expected to take about 3 hours round trip but it took us 4. There are more falls further up the river that we didn't get to since it took longer than expected and we needed to get back onto the road. The walk down is plenty long enough that you end up getting pretty dry in the summer sun, except for your shoes. You have to traverse the river a couple of times on the way down so it keeps your shoes nice and wet. So bring an extra pair to drive away in.
    I'm going to be down that direction this week/weekend. I've got smallish kids (5-11yos) and I think we've exhausted our kid friendly hike knowledge. Any recommendations for a similar hike that'd be okay for kids (I'll most likely be carrying the 5yo for most of whatever we do. She is weak and would be eaten by the wolves in the olden days).


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  2. #2
    Administrator U-Ute's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    Salt Lake City
    Posts
    5,526
    Quote Originally Posted by Rocker Ute View Post
    I'm going to be down that direction this week/weekend. I've got smallish kids (5-11yos) and I think we've exhausted our kid friendly hike knowledge. Any recommendations for a similar hike that'd be okay for kids (I'll most likely be carrying the 5yo for most of whatever we do. She is weak and would be eaten by the wolves in the olden days).


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    For what it is worth, my kids are 5 (6 in September), 9, and 10. We have done a number of hikes this summer so they are pretty good at it. The water does keep them distracted though.

    Off of the top of my head...

    There is one in Kolob Canyon called Taylor Creek that is pretty easy and beautiful. You have to pay for entrance into Zion to do it but you get the Kolob area to yourself. Most people go to the Springdale area. But you can also get into that area with this entrance fee if you want.

    Snow Canyon near St George is also pretty neat. The kids can play on the sand dunes. There is some lava tubes you can hike to. Very hot this time of year.

    Sand Hollow is a place where the kids can put their feet in the lake. Lots of bugs though.

    Cedar Breaks is amazing. I haven't done any hikes there but you need to get out and walk around to see the amazing views. Nice and cool this time of year.

  3. #3
    We're heading up to drive the Nebo loop tomorrow. Does anyone have suggestions on short hikes while we're up there? We have a 3 week old that is still nursing, so we can't handle anything very long.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by SavaUte View Post
    We're heading up to drive the Nebo loop tomorrow. Does anyone have suggestions on short hikes while we're up there? We have a 3 week old that is still nursing, so we can't handle anything very long.
    I haven't been on this personally, but this looks like it might be good. Short, but with a fun destination.

    http://www.hikinginutah.com/nebo-grotto.htm
    “To me there is no dishonor in being wrong and learning. There is dishonor in willful ignorance and there is dishonor in disrespect.” James Hatch, former Navy Seal and current Yale student.

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by SavaUte View Post
    We're heading up to drive the Nebo loop tomorrow. Does anyone have suggestions on short hikes while we're up there? We have a 3 week old that is still nursing, so we can't handle anything very long.
    There is a very short hike to the devils kitchen with a cool view.

  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by U-Ute View Post
    For what it is worth, my kids are 5 (6 in September), 9, and 10. We have done a number of hikes this summer so they are pretty good at it. The water does keep them distracted though.

    Off of the top of my head...

    There is one in Kolob Canyon called Taylor Creek that is pretty easy and beautiful. You have to pay for entrance into Zion to do it but you get the Kolob area to yourself. Most people go to the Springdale area. But you can also get into that area with this entrance fee if you want.

    Snow Canyon near St George is also pretty neat. The kids can play on the sand dunes. There is some lava tubes you can hike to. Very hot this time of year.

    Sand Hollow is a place where the kids can put their feet in the lake. Lots of bugs though.

    Cedar Breaks is amazing. I haven't done any hikes there but you need to get out and walk around to see the amazing views. Nice and cool this time of year.
    Great recommendations. We have done some of those, will do the others including Kanarraville. We did find a cool walk that is outside of Santa Clara / Ivins on Old Highway 91. There are a ton of petroglyphs you can check out and the kids had a blast for about 45 minutes just finding new mad hidden ones. I found one depicting a ship crossing the sea and one of an obvious messianic figure visiting people among rubble and a tree of light. Wonder what it means?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  7. #7
    Thanks for the recommendations. We did the short walk to devils kitchen (maybe 300 steps) and the Grotto.

    The grotto was pretty short as well. This is my wife doing it, she didn't even break a sweat, baby and all. Stare away in 3d. Its easiest if you zoom out (ctrl mouse wheel) to make it smaller to "get it" first, then slowly zoom back in to get it to the original size where you can see it.


Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •