challenging
4–8 hours
Participants should be in good physical condition with some experience in strenuous activity.
Join Get In The Wild Adventures for an adrenaline-fueled canyoneering trip through stunning limestone gorges. With expert guides and jaw-dropping scenery, this challenge is perfect for thrill-seekers looking for their next big feat.
Full-Day Tour
Overview
Come and explore one of America’s most beautiful and amazing wilderness areas; a vast and extraordinary landscape of sweeping slickrock, beautifully sculpted sandstone cliffs and narrow twisting canyons that have challenged and amazed wilderness adventurers since the late 1800’s. Our adventures through this explorer’s paradise take us through some of the last known places to be mapped in the United States. Travelling through this region provides a feeling of remoteness, ruggedness and awe that are unmatched in the modern world. For many, their first experience in canyon country is transformational in nature. It becomes an intrinsic part of their heart and soul that serves to draw them back time and time again.
Robbers Roost / Dirty Devil Wilderness:
In the heart of the Colorado Plateau, just southeast of Hanksville Utah, lies one of the truly undiscovered gems of North America. The Dirty Devil River winds for over ninety miles through a labyrinth of red-rock canyons surrounded by some of the most rugged and remote wilderness landscapes of the American Southwest. Over thousands of millennia this small desert stream has carved a wilderness paradise that has been home to an interesting variety of inhabitants. The Fremont Indians lived in the canyons for over 800 years—from A.D. 500 to A.D. 1300. Signs of their presence can be observed throughout the region in the form of pictograph panels, granaries and chiseled moqui steps. More recent inhabitants include bands of outlaws from the late 1800’s—most notoriously Butch Cassidy and the Wildbunch Gang. The maze of wild and remote canyons provided an ideal hideout for these fugitives and wild-west outlaws.
Goblin Valley State Park
Hidden amongst the spectacular hoodos and mesas of Goblin Valley State park lies a truly fantastic canyoneering adventure. Following a short and fun scramble through the Valley of the Goblins, we enter a beautiful slot canyon that disappears into a dark and mysterious chasm in the Earth. It is here that we put on our canyoneering gear and rappel into this spectacular and awe-inspiring chamber that resembles a gothic cathedral. The Goblins Lair and Chamber of the Basalisk is truly an unforgettable canyoneering adventure and like most of our trips is suitable for the entire family.
Capitol Reef National Park:
For those unfamiliar with the park, it is characterized by colorful sandstone formations, cliffs, canyons, ridges, buttes and monoliths. It’s most stunning geologic feature is a 100 mile long warp in the Earth’s crust known as the Waterpocket Fold. This 65 million year old fold is the largest exposed monocline in the North America. It is comprised of younger and older layers of the Earth’s crust which were folded over each other in an S-shape. This striking geologic feature was probably caused by the same collision of continental plates that created the Rocky Mountains. It has weathered and eroded over melinnea to expose a fascinating amalgam of brilliantly colored sandstone cliffs and canyons, gleaming white domes and contrasting layers of intricately shaped rock and sand.
The Maze District - Horseshoe Canyon:
The Horseshoe Canyon complex of Canyonlands National Park is a vast, remote, rugged and beautiful canyon system with some of the most exquisite Barrier Style rock art in the U.S. You can spend days exploring this incredibly expansive area and the Indian rock art and artifacts hidden within its myriad of canyons. The most well-known and recognizable of these is the Great Gallery. Lesser known sites within the 35 mile long canyon include Cowboy and Walters caves which contain some of the richest and oldest paleontological remains on the Colorado Plateau.
Ensure you have a harness, helmet, and sturdy shoes for safety and comfort.
Weather can affect water flow and safety, so plan accordingly.
Bring plenty of water, especially during hot months.
Wear quick-drying clothes suited for water activities.
The canyon has served as a corridor for indigenous tribes and early explorers, who carved their stories into the landscape over centuries.
The trip emphasizes minimal impact, with strict protocols to protect the canyon’s fragile ecosystem.
Necessary for rappelling and safety during navigation.
Protects against falling debris and bumps.
Keeps you comfortable during water passages and climbing.
Sturdy shoes with good grip for climbing and walking.