Utah: Bryce Canyon National Park and Zion National Park – Cross Country USA Road Trip (Part 5)

Welcome back to Part 5 of our six week road trip across the United States! In this article, we explore two of Utah’s top natural wonders: Bryce Canyon National Park and Zion National Park.

A brief recap: we set out from our home in Raleigh in early June and made it back home toward the end of July. In total we spent over six weeks (46 nights!!) on the road and drove 8,200 miles. 

Along the way, we visited 14 national parks and a ton of other interesting places. It was quite a busy trip, since we stayed in 25 different airbnbs or hotels and spent more than 100 hours traveling in the van

To cover the whole trip, I am breaking up the trip summary into thirteen separate blog posts.

Here is a table of contents for our whole trip if you want to check out other parts of our journey:

  1. North Carolina to Kansas via West Virginia and St. Louis
  2. Colorado: Denver, Rocky Mountain National Park, and Frisco
  3. Colorado: Black Canyon of the Gunnison and Mesa Verde National Parks plus Ouray
  4. Utah: Arches National Park and Capitol Reef National Park
  5. Utah: Bryce Canyon National Park and Zion National Park
  6. Arizona: Glen Canyon Dam, the Grand Canyon, and Hoover Dam
  7. A Week in Las Vegas, Nevada
  8. California: Los Angeles and Long Beach
  9. California: Sequoia, Kings Canyon, and Yosemite National Parks
  10. Crossing the Desert in Nevada and Utah: Hawthorne and Bonneville Salt Flats
  11. Salt Lake City, Utah and Idaho Falls, Idaho
  12. Yellowstone National Park
  13. Mount Rushmore, Badlands National Park, and National Museum of the US Air Force

Join me for part 5 of our trip across the country as we explore two of Utah’s best natural attractions: Bryce Canyon National Park and Zion National Park!

 

 This map shows our starting point at the Rodeway Inn Bryce Canyon (A). We visited Bryce Canyon during the day (B). The next day we entered Zion National Park (D) through the East Gate (C). After Zion, we spent the night in Page, Arizona (E)

 

Bryce Canyon National Park 

After we left Capitol Reef National Park, we drove for 2.5 hours to our hotel for the next two nights. We stayed in the Rodeway Inn Bryce Canyon. It was located in the middle of nowhere about 15 minutes away from Panguitch, Utah and Bryce, Utah along the Utah Route 12 highway. 

We weren’t expecting the hotel to be much way out there in the middle of nowhere. It turns out it was pretty nice for the $56 per night per room price tag! The hotel was older but clean and in decent condition. I’m glad we got two rooms at this hotel instead of trying to squeeze the five of us into one room or suite.

The Rodeway Inn Panguitch was a nice reprieve from the $100+ per night per room places we stayed in close proximity to other national parks. Recreational lodging inflation was alive and well for us in the summer of 2021! 

 

Amazing landscapes throughout Bryce Canyon National Park

 

Exploring Bryce Canyon National Park

After a good night’s rest, we got up and headed out to Bryce Canyon National Park for another day of sightseeing. After a short 15 minute drive, we were entering the park gates. 

Bryce Canyon offers a shuttle bus to take you around to all the overlooks and trailheads. We decided to drive it ourselves so that we could maintain our own pace. 

As it turns out, parking was never an issue for us. Overall the park wasn’t that crowded. 

 

Easy parking to stop and check out the landmarks like the Natural Bridge

 

We also got lucky with the weather. It was slightly windy, partly cloudy, and drizzling a tiny bit with the temperature around 70 degrees. Perfect weather after many days of roasting in triple digit heat in the blazing sun. In fact it was cool enough that I had to bust out my lightweight windbreaker to keep comfy!

I really enjoyed Bryce Canyon. It’s one of the more unique parks we visited. The park’s main attractions are the hoodoos, or vertical columns of rock, protruding from the ground. Over the millennia, the water, wind, and ice eroded away the softer rock and left the harder stone of the hoodoos covering entire valleys and sloped hillsides in Bryce Canyon. 

 

Breath-taking views in Bryce Canyon National Park (Utah)

 

We spent most of our time driving around to the various overlooks and walking a bit at each one to check out the different vantage points.

 

Hiking in Bryce Canyon… A little bit

Near the end of our day in Bryce Canyon, we walked along the rim trail between Inspiration Point and Sunset Point. It’s a little over a mile round trip between these two points, but we turned back before we completed the full hike. Then we drove to Sunset Point to check out those overlooks. 

 

Our family is on the rim trail on the left side of the photo

 

We thought about doing the Navajo Loop Trail at Sunset Point. It’s a mere 1.3 miles in length but includes 550 feet of vertical elevation gain. Since we had so many days of back to back walking/hiking, we were tired. We decided to skip this trail and enjoy the scenic vistas from the rim of the cliff. I’d like to go back and do the Navajo Loop trail at a future point should we find ourselves back in central Utah. 

 

The steep section of trail. A series of a dozen or more switchbacks descending hundreds of feet to the valley below.

 

As the day drew to a close, we hit the road for the short 15 minute drive back to our hotel. 

 

Bryce Canyon was a favorite for me. Those steep canyons between the tall hoodoos were cool!

 

Zion National Park

We departed our hotel near Panguitch, Utah and headed south toward Zion National Park. It’s about a one hour drive to the eastern Zion Park entrance gate. From the eastern entrance, it’s another 30 minutes drive west to get to the main parking lot for Zion. 

Once we cleared the eastern gate, the wonders of Zion began! So many beautiful rock formations along both sides of the road the whole way in. We were planning on exiting the park through the same route, so we postponed exploration at the overlooks along the entrance road till we exited the park later in the day.

 

Along the drive into Zion National Park.

 

Encountering difficulties within Zion

Eventually we passed through a tunnel then a series of switchbacks that brought us down to the canyon floor and the central part of Zion. At this point we encountered some horrific traffic congestion. We knew Zion would be busy but the road construction made the traffic jams even worse. 

 

Traffic backed up for a mile on the switchback road in the valley below. At least the view was nice while we waited!

 

We persevered and eventually made it to the parking lot after an extra 30 minutes of waiting in traffic. At least the views from the traffic jam were pretty! 

Let’s talk for a minute about setting proper expectations. I was fully expecting Zion to be a complete clusterf*#k based on everything I read/saw. Traffic congestion, impossible to find parking, long lines for shuttles, crowds everywhere, low water levels in the rivers and waterfalls.  So I showed up expecting problems. 

I’d say the park “met expectations” in that regard. It’s still worth visiting in general, but I’d suggest visiting other parks during the summer because it was so crowded. Unless you like Disney World. In that case, enjoy the park during peak summer season. It’ll be just as hot and crowded but without the humidity (and high price tags!). 

We searched for parking for a long time, then waited in line for the bathrooms, then waited in line for the shuttle, then waited for the shuttle to drop us off at the lodge in the middle of the shuttle loop. 

 

Exploring the main central section of Zion National Park

Once we got off the shuttle, we scrambled to find an unoccupied bench. We enjoyed our picnic lunch in the shade and shortly set out for a quick hike to the Lower Emerald Pool and waterfall. 

 

We were very fortunate to snag an empty bench in the shade in the central part of Zion.

 

The trail was extremely packed with people. Almost like we were on a guided tour. 

Eventually we made it to the falls. Or more accurately, “the dribbles”. The flow rate over the lip of the falls couldn’t have been more than what we get from our bathroom sink. There was no Emerald Pool to speak of. Basically just a small puddle of murky water.  

 

Emerald Pools lower “falls”. Not much of a waterfall when we visited!

 

At least the Virgin River that runs along the trail had some water in it. That was probably the most scenic part of the hike. 

 

Virgin River as it runs through Zion National Park.

 

We headed back toward the lodge to refill our water and use the restrooms. We waited in line for the bathrooms. Then we waited in line for quite a while for the shuttle bus to the next stop to arrive.

One major theme of our visit to Zion was “waiting”. 

As the shuttle bus pulled out of the parking lot and headed left, I quickly realized that this wasn’t taking us to the next stop in the park. Instead, we apparently got on the shuttle headed back toward the main parking lot.

We were going in the wrong direction. It would have been nice if they announced before they departed that the bus was southbound/heading back toward the parking lot. And there was no way to get off the bus. The next (and only) stop was the main parking lot! 

Mrs. Root of Good and I quickly discussed this mistake. We really didn’t feel like spending another 30-60 minutes riding the bus and waiting in line just to get to another hour in the park before they close for the day.

We accepted our mistaken bus ride as a sign that it was time for us to move on. 

Zion wasn’t a total bummer though. As we exited the park through the eastern entrance, we stopped at several overlooks and scrambled up, down and around the rocks and had a generally good time. The sun dipped lower in the sky and the heat of the day started to dissipate. We had a better time once we got away from all the crowds (and away from all the waiting in line!). 

 

The slope wasn’t too steep so we were able to climb up the side and relax on our way out of the Zion park

 

Checkerboard Mesa

 

Thoughts on Zion National Park

Am I glad I visited? Yes. 

Will I ever again visit in summer when they don’t cap the number of entrants? Unlikely. 

They have been capping the number of admissions per day in highly popular parks like Yosemite and Rocky Mountain National Park. There has been talk of doing that in Zion and I hope they do exactly that. 

It’s a great park overall with lots of potential. For us, the crowds, long lines everywhere and high heat worsened the experience inside the main section of the park. 

Once we got out of the park, we headed east through some beautiful desert landscapes. It was about a two hour drive to Page, Arizona where we stayed in an Airbnb for two nights. We arrived right as the sun was setting (which seemed to happen an awful lot on our trip!). 

 

Summary

Our family of five visited Bryce Canyon National Park and Zion National Park in Utah in the summer of 2021. The most impressive part of Bryce Canyon was the strange looking hoodoos, or stone pillars that protrude from the hillsides and valley floors throughout the park. The vibrant orange coloring added to the amazingly unique scenery. 

Once we got to Zion National Park, we continued to be amazed at the sheer stone cliff faces and smooth rock inclines. The most popular section of the park in the center proved to be very crowded, so our experience wasn’t as enjoyable as it could have been. Overall, it’s a very pretty scenic National Park, but one best visited off season once the crowds and high heat dissipate. 

 

Do you prefer a vacation where you see a lot of things? Or a slower paced itinerary with more rest and relaxation?

 


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9 comments

  1. Thank you for the write up. We are heading to Bryce and Zion in March. I’m hoping going at that time will avoid the crowds. I know that we will avoid the heat! Love the vacation updates. Looking forward to the next installment.

  2. My wife and I did a lot of hiking in four or five of the Utah parks in a similar vacation, including a scary one up Angel’s Landing in Zion. It wasn’t crowded at but that trail has a chain you can hold on the most dangerous section. When you meet a hiker going the other way one of you has to let go of the chain and stand right on the edge of a sheer 1,000 foot cliff while they pass you. It was unnerving because if they stumble or just bump into you, you could easily die! That part was terrifying.

  3. I visited Zion NP in January a few years ago and it was nice – not crowded and even a little snow.
    Have not been to Bryce Canyon yet – it is on my list.
    I really like the national parks – especially in the off season.
    Good luck with your future travels.

  4. Wow, Bryce Canyon looks amazing! I wonder if Bryce is named after that canyon because his parents conceived him there 😀 (either way, I’m going to traumatize him by needling him about it) Those views do look pretty sexy. This means we need to go visit sometime.

    Good to know about Zion national park. Usually the big hyped up attractions are always not worth it. I hate crowds.

    1. Haha best theory ever.
      Zion was amazing when I visited in 2018. Doing the Angels Landing hike all the way to the to end is totally worth it if you ever get a second, less crowded, chance.

  5. We just visited Zion and I had myself girded for pain, but it just didn’t play out for us the way it did for you. We were trying to avoid crowds, but we had to drive in to the main visitor’s center on a Friday (weekend oh no!) to pick up a hike permit. Entering from the east we hit no traffic slowdowns other than waiting at the tunnel a few minutes as they let a camper go through.

    We didn’t plan to shuttle because of the long lines I expected, but … that also didn’t happen! We walked right on at the visitor’s center and rode all the way up to Temple of Sinawava (the last stop). The shuttle was standing-room-only for a few stops, but not so bad. We, completely unplanned, did a couple of hours at The Narrows. Shuttling back was super-chill.

    All of that is to say maybe the 2020-2021 National Park influx has cooled off? They might be running more shuttles as well? Or maybe we just got super lucky with our timing. I did want to register a comment, though, in case it helps reduce anxiety for anyone who is planning to visit yet this summer. We’re thankful that we didn’t hit the Disney lines that you hit! (Especially after visiting hot, hot Disney World in late June OMG.)

    1. Oh, and as for the Zion hype? I think it met the hype for us.

      We didn’t do Angels because we wouldn’t do it with kids, and my wife has a healthy fear of heights. To be honest, I’m not sure if I want to do it either. We did The Subway and it was an all-timer of an amazing experience, though a very painful hike (took us 10+ hours, 8+ active hiking) that is strenuous and technical. The Narrows are breathtaking, but we could only do the beginning. It’s super-crowded in the beginning, which is not so enjoyable. We would like to go back when we can spend more like 6-8 hours going up and back.

      Canyon Overlook was breathtaking, and pretty easy. We wanted to do Observation Point, but The Subway took a lot of our long-hike energy, and we had other places (Grand Canyon, Bryce Canyon, Horseshoe Canyon) that we wanted to see. We would also like to do a hike or two in Kolob Canyon, which is on the northwest side of the park.

      All of that is to say: DO plan a Zion trip. If you’re anxious about the Disney possibilities, try to plan it during a shoulder season. It’s beautiful.

    2. This is great news! I think now that it’s 2022 and most of the world is reopened, all the US tourists can go overseas like we used to (and like our family is doing right now!).

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