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Before Europeans ‘discovered’ it, Paria Canyon was part of a route used by the indigenous Paiute people, to move between what is now southern Utah and northern Arizona.
As the last ice age came to an end, water runoff from ancient glaciers slowly cut deeper into the soft sandstone, bestowing Paria Canyon with a succession of bizarre and intriguing geological formations. This is Mother Nature at her most sublime and poetic, from the swirling patterns of the Wave at Coyote Buttes to the equally mesmerising red rock of the Paria amphitheatre.
As the water wore through the sandstone, the wind stripped the rock back to reveal changes in hue that have mesmerised visitors for millennia. The sun adds its final touch by glazing the shapes, as if a potter on peyote had shaped the whole canyon. Thus, when you canyoneer through Paria, you are bearing witness to 85 million years of outrageous geology.
If you intend to tackle it yourself, make like a cub scout and ‘be prepared’. Paria Canyon may be popular but it’s still extremely remote, contains little drinking water and is largely inaccessible — getting rescued from here is not simply a matter of dialling emergency on your mobile phone.
Paria Canyon’s extraordinary length means it’s packed with twists and turns that, while at times testing your physical dexterity, constantly leave you wide-eyed.
When you first enter the canyon, it’s little more than an unassuming desert streambed. Within a few hundred metres, you’re moving through the Navajo sandstone. It’s only after about 6km, when you enter the Narrows and are most at risk of getting caught in a flash flood, that suddenly you are moving between sheer walls of brightly coloured wind-streaked rock that stretch 150m straight up towards the deep blue sky. And so it begins.
A hike through Paria is all about the journey. Sure, you can’t wait to arrive at star attractions such as the confluence with Buckskin Gulch or the wide arms of Wrather Arch, but it’s the spaces, the moments in between, that carve themselves indelibly into your memory.
In parts you’ll be scrambling up and along steep, smooth sections of limestone, so bring ‘sticky’ footwear, such as rubber-soled hiking shoes. Also carry your own drinking water. Hooking up with an experienced local or hiking with a guide is also strongly recommended, as this is the only way you’ll discover many of the hidden gems that are all too easy to miss.
At all times, only 20 people are allowed to start the hike each day, 10 by prior booking and 10 by lottery chosen 24 hours earlier. During peak season, there are literally thousands of adventurers praying for one of the few hundred golden tickets available. If you really want to experience Paria in the sandstone flesh, you need to apply four months before you want to hike.
There are several campsites at the Whitehouse trailhead, just off Route 89, from where you can begin your adventure. Permits are required to hike Paria Canyon; get the latest information from the Bureau of Land Management. You must adhere to the ‘leave no trace’ policy, which means picking up any evidence you were there, including your poo, bagging it and carrying it out with you.
You don’t have to be in it to experience the beauty of Paria Canyon. Take a ride in a hot-air balloon and absorb the scenery as you float above this alien landscape. Or, make your way to one of the many strategically located lookouts, such as Paria View, where you might spot a majestic peregrine falcon.
The surrounding meadows are home to mule deer and elk. If you’re here just before the start of summer, you might get lucky and spy pronghorn antelopes heading to the forest, where they’ll give birth to the next generation of mythical-looking creatures that inhabit this untamed region.
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