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Arches National Park

You can see the park’s rock formations from your tent at Under Canvas Moab. The iconic Delicate Arch is a mustsee, but so is Landscape Arch, the world’s longest rock span.

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Bryce Canyon National Park

A visit to Utah’s smallest national park is complete with a stay at Under Canvas Bryce Canyon, new for 2022— only 15 minutes from the world’s highest concentrations of crimsoncolored hoodoos.

Capitol Reef National Park

Take the drive to Capitol Reef National Park, a hidden treasure filled with rugged back-country and scenic overlooks, before embarking on the famous Highway 12 journey—arguably the most scenic section of the 122-mile All-American Road known as the “Journey Through Time Scenic Byway.”

Zion National Park

Appreciate the scale of the sheer red cliffs formed by the Virgin River from the Canyon Overlook Trail along the Zion-Mount Carmel Highway.

LAKE POWELL-GRAND STAIRCASE AND HORESHOE BEND

From the tents at our camp you can see Lake Powell, soaring cliffs, buttes, towers, and other desert rock geology. Sights you don’t want to miss here are the Vermilion Cliffs, Horseshoe Bend, and Under Canvas Lake Powell-Grand Staircase’s on-site Elephant Slot Canyon.

Grand Canyon National Park

More than 6,000 feet deep and up to 18 miles wide, the canyon is truly grand. From the South Rim side, you can drop down into it from several trailheads, going from the piñon and juniper forest on the rim to other, ancient worlds of rock—stepping further back in geologic time with every foot you descend.

Monument Valley

From the canyon rim, it’s several hours to the Navajo Nation’s Monument Valley (Tse’Bii’Ndzisgaii in Navajo). The sandstone towers and formations here are as stunning in person as they look in the dozens of Western movies filmed in the valley.

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