Zion After Dark is a two-hour evening stargazing experience that meets at the Guacamole Trailhead just outside Virgin, Utah, in the shadow of Zion National Park. On clear nights the program turns a desert clearing into a classroom of constellations, telescope views, and a warming campfire for s'mores.
The session begins shortly after sunset; guides let your eyes adjust while recounting the stories and science behind the bright points overhead. With a professional telescope you'll inspect lunar craters, star clusters, and, when conditions allow, deep-sky objects beyond the Milky Way. Guides balance myth and astronomy, pointing out seasonal constellations, the Milky Way's band, and how the dark-sky conditions here reveal far more than in urban areas.
What makes this offering special is the setting: Virgin sits at the edge of Zion's towering Navajo Sandstone walls and broad desert sky, a combination that produces remarkably dark skies and dramatic silhouettes. The Guacamole Trailhead gathering spot gives unobstructed horizons, and the small group limit — up to 15 people — keeps the night intimate, so conversations and telescope time feel personal rather than rushed. A campfire and s'mores complete the ritual, a simple reminder that the desert cools fast after sunset.
This is not a technical outing; it’s built for anyone aged five and up who can handle a short evening walk and a chilly desert night. The guide-led format makes it perfect for families, photographers chasing stars, or first-time stargazers seeking context for the constellations. Expect two hours of guided constellation viewing, telescope time, and a cozy campfire.
Practical notes: arrive with a warm layer and closed-toe shoes, bring a flashlight with a red filter if you have one, and silence phones to preserve night vision. Check weather and moon phase when booking — a full moon will wash out faint objects but still offers excellent lunar viewing through a telescope. Because the experience is outdoors and relies on clear skies, cancellation or rescheduling can happen for clouds or high winds.
Zion After Dark connects visitors to the night landscape in a way that daytime trails cannot. It highlights why dark-sky stewardship matters, and it offers a low-effort, high-reward way to extend your Zion visit into the night. Whether you come for the moon-shot through the telescope or the quiet arc of the Milky Way overhead, this two-hour program delivers a memorable desert night that lingers long after the embers die.
Guides also explain simple ways to reduce light pollution, and families will appreciate the approachable mix of storytelling and science. Reservations through the provided booking link are recommended on summer nights when space fills fast; winter sessions reward hardy stargazers with crystalline clarity and fewer crowds. Bring a thermos. Enjoy.