![]() Easy to combine with the Rosie Canyon Petroglyphs.Although it is not technical at all, it is a great experience to marvel at the history of the rocks we walk on here! Our vote is that this is one of nature’s perfect yoga/meditation spots! We frequently hear, “I can’t believe I’m walking in the very place the dinosaurs walked! This is so cool!”. The tracks lie in a beautiful sandstone wash where you will feel remote and quiet. This is one of the easier places to hike and see evidence of ancient life. We will drive up to within 20 yards of the first tracks.Near- Rosy Canyon turn off, Coral Pink Sand Dunes.The last two miles are on a deep sandy road.Private Tour Pricing: All tours are subject to 8.1% state sales tax, and 3% BLM land usage fee(subject to change) Of the options in the “Best of Kanab Southwest Tour”, Rosie Canyon is a must!.The short hike is in a wash with wonderful scenery in every direction. This particular spot is in a really pretty setting in a tiny box canyon. This panel is one of our absolute favorites! We love to show people the amazing rock art from centuries past in Rosie Canyon. We provide plenty of water, but always encourage guests to bring extra.We rank the overall hike a 2/10 difficulty, except that one section of 50 feet we’d rate about a 4.The hike is easy except at the end there is a little scramble to get up to the petroglyphs.10 minutes to the Moccasin Mountain Dinosaur tracks turn off.10-15 minutes from the Coral Pink Sand Dunes.About 40 minutes from Kanab including 2 miles of deep sand.The Big Outside helps your family get outdoors more. See all of my stories about hiking and backpacking in southern Utah, including “ The 12 Best Hikes in Utah’s National Parks” and “ The 10 Best Backpacking Trips in the Southwest,” and all of my stories about family adventures at The Big Outside.Īs long as you’re frittering away your time daydreaming, visit my Youtube page, where you’ll find many more videos from stories at this blog. Sign up now for my FREE email newsletter. Read my story about that trip, “ Playing the Memory Game in Utah’s Escalante, Capitol Reef, and Bryce Canyon,” which included backpacking Coyote Gulch in the Escalante it has many photos and tips on pulling off this adventure yourself. Click here to learn how I can help you plan your next trip. ![]() Click here for my e-guides to classic backpacking trips. Join The Big Outside to get full access to all of my blog’s stories. Click here to sign up for my FREE email newsletter. Hi, I’m Michael Lanza, creator of The Big Outside. Scroll down below the video to the link to my story about hiking Peek-a-Boo and Spooky and elsewhere in the Escalante and other Utah parks. ![]() Spring and fall are the seasons to explore these two classic Southwest desert slot canyons, which are beginner-friendly and can be linked up in an easy hike of just a few hours. “Wow, this is so cool!” “That’s amazing!” “Awesome!” We heard a lot of that when my friend Justin Hayes and I hiked Peek-a-Boo Gulch and Spooky Gulch in southern Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument with our kids. Send four kids age 10 to 12 through a tight slot canyon where they have to pull themselves over short pour-offs, duck through natural arches, and twist and contort their bodies to squeeze between wildly curved walls that frequently narrow to just inches wide, and they hardly stop gushing about it. ![]()
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