Riverside Walk
Paved and level along the river to the mouth of the Narrows. Strollers and wheelchairs welcome. No permit.
Utah · Stamp 01 / 63
A canyon you walk into, not over. Carved by water, and still being carved.
The Virgin River looks like something you could step over without spilling your coffee. Ankle deep in places, unhurried, no wider than a two-lane road. And yet this modest little stream has done what no army of engineers could: it has sawed a slot half a mile deep into solid sandstone, and it is still sawing, grain by grain, as you read this sentence.
The arithmetic is almost rude. Give a patient thing enough time and it will humble a mountain. That is the secret of Zion, and it is why the place rearranges people. You do not stand back and admire this canyon from a scenic pullout. You walk down into it, the walls climbing as you go, the sky narrowing to a blue ribbon, until the river becomes the trail and there is nowhere left to walk but straight through the heart of the thing.
Come for the cathedral quiet. Stay for the fact that the water is winning. Read the story, trust the live data above for what is open today, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
These are the Temples of God, built without the use of human hands. A man can worship God among these great cathedrals as well as in any man-made church. This is Zion.Isaac Behunin · the settler who named the canyon, 1863
Six ways to spend your time, something for every kind of traveler, from the family with a stroller to the canyoneer with a wetsuit.
A one-mile trail to the view that ends up on every postcard, minus the crowd if you beat the sun.
Everyone · 1 hrWalk in the river between thousand-foot walls. Go as far as you like and turn around when it stops being fun.
The signature experienceSwitchbacks, a mile-long 1930 tunnel, and slickrock country on the far side. Worth it for the road alone.
Casual · road-trippersPaved, flat, and following the river. The one place you can pedal the canyon on your own wheels.
Families · e-bikesInside the park, walking distance to the shuttle and Springdale. Reserve early on Recreation.gov.
Campers · book aheadThe park's quiet northwest half, an hour up the interstate. Same red rock, a fraction of the people.
Baggers · the escapeAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and whether you need a permit before you set a boot down.
Paved and level along the river to the mouth of the Narrows. Strollers and wheelchairs welcome. No permit.
A tiered walk to pools and seep waterfalls under hanging gardens. A little uphill, big reward. No permit.
Short, a little exposed, and the best view-per-step in the park. Watch the drop-offs with kids. No permit.
Walk in the Virgin River itself. No permit for the day hike from the bottom, but check flow and flash-flood risk first.
Switchbacks, then a chained spine with sheer drops on both sides. A seasonal permit lottery is required for the final stretch.
A tube of blue-green pools carved through the rock. Wilderness permit and route-finding, rappels, and cold water skills required.
Permits via Recreation.gov · Angels Landing lottery, Subway & Narrows through-hike wilderness permits
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
The canyon floor belongs to them in the early hours. Watch the big radar ears swivel before the rest of the deer decides you are boring. Most active along the Pa'rus Trail and near the lodge lawns.
Gone from Zion by the 1950s, reintroduced in the 1970s, and now thriving on the slickrock. Scan the cliffs along the Zion–Mt. Carmel Highway. If a boulder moves, it is probably a bighorn.
One of the rarest birds on earth, with a nine-and-a-half-foot wingspan. Brought back from just 22 individuals worldwide. Look for the numbered wing tags soaring off Angels Landing and Kolob's cliffs.
Flocks patrol the campgrounds and river bottoms like they own the lease. In spring the males fan out and strut. Give them room; they are faster than they look.
The park's most confident resident and, statistically, its most dangerous animal, because people feed them and get bitten. Enjoy the audacity from a distance and keep the trail mix zipped.
Dives at over 240 mph off Zion's big walls. Some cliff routes close in spring to protect nesting pairs, which is the best possible reason to be told you cannot climb something.
A big-eyed cousin of the raccoon that works the canyon at night. Almost nobody sees one, which is exactly why spotting a ringtail becomes the story you tell for years.
That bleating you hear near the pools after rain is not a lost goat. It is a frog the size of your thumb, doing an impression of one. Listen for them in the Narrows and Emerald Pools.
Smaller than a grain of rice and found nowhere else on the planet, only in Zion's dripping hanging gardens. The whole species lives in a few wet walls of this one canyon.
The green (and in autumn, pure gold) ribbon tracing the Virgin River. Desert travelers once steered by cottonwoods because they only grow where there is water.
Flat-padded and patient, then suddenly extravagant: neon pink and yellow blooms in late spring. The fruit feeds everything from squirrels to bighorn.
Locals call it the Zion lily. Big white trumpets that open at dusk for the hawkmoths and wilt by mid-morning. Beautiful, and seriously poisonous, so admire and move on.
Twisted, half-dead-looking, and quietly ancient. Junipers here can live centuries by shutting down whole branches in drought. The blue "berries" are actually tiny cones.
Up on the plateaus and rims. Press your nose into the bark cracks of a big one on a warm day: vanilla and butterscotch. Every ranger's favorite party trick.
Delicate yellow flowers growing straight out of wet sandstone walls, fed by springwater that fell as rain a thousand years ago and has been seeping through the rock ever since.
Zion was Utah's first national park, protected in 1919. Locals had already been calling it Zion, a word meaning refuge, for half a century.
In the Narrows the walls climb over 1,000 feet while the canyon pinches to barely twenty feet wide. You can touch both sides at once.
Look up and you may see a California condor, one of the rarest birds on earth, with a wingspan wider than most people are tall.
The tiny Zion snail lives in the park's hanging gardens and absolutely nowhere else on the planet.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Zion deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
Two hours east, an amphitheater of hoodoos. A natural pairing with Zion.
Open Stamp 05 → The collectionSee the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn Zion into a road trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.