Upper Red Cave Slot Canyon

Red Canyon, or as locals call it: Peek-a-boo, does not require any hiking to get to, but will require a 4 wheel drive. This is not the Peek-a-Boo slot canyon found in the Escalante area. Peek-a-Boo From where you parked you can see the slot canyon to the west. The canyon is usually dry and is only about.35 miles long. The Red Caves of Sand Wash is two different short slot canyons that are truly spectacular. They are a little difficult to get too but once there, they are gorgeous. They don't require any technical gear unless you would like to do two short rappels near the beginning of Lower Red Cave and one short rappel into the Upper Red Cave. Hotels near Lower Red Cave Slot Canyon; Hotels near Upper Red Cave Slot Canyon; Near Airports. Hotels near (LAS) McCarran Intl Airport; Hotels near (CDC) Cedar City Airport; All things to do in Orderville; Things to do near The Rock Stop. East Zion Shooting Experience; East Zion Experiences; Massage.Good for What Ails You; Red Hollow Slot Canyon. We were caught in a flash flood in one of Utah's most famous slot canyons. A great guide takes you through miles of sand and accompanies you on your hike through this slot canyon pointing out interesting things about the slot canyon. Then on the three hour trip He takes you past the Best Friends Animal Rescue facilities and more interesting places in Kanab Canyon.

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Slot Canyons > Zion National Park > Sand Wash (Red Cave)

Branched drainage beneath the Elkheart Cliffs, east of Zion NP; a sandy wash for most of its length, but forming two good slot sections through richly colored rocks. Both have obstructions and one needs ropes to descend fully but most can be seen by regular hiking, exiting and re-entering to avoid obstacles
Length: 2.1 miles to the end of Lower Red Cave, 2.4 to the end of Upper Red Cave, ca 8 miles round trip for a loop through the accessible parts of both canyons
Difficulty: Moderate to strenuous; dryfalls, pools and chokestones
Management: BLM. Access routes cross private land
Rocks: Navajo sandstone
Season: Spring, summer, fall
Trailhead:East side of US 89 near Mount Carmel Junction, beside a very short track leading to the Virgin River. This route (directly up Sand Wash) may be closed as it crosses private land; other options involve longer walks along tracks to the north or south
Rating (1-5):★★★★
The land east of Zion National Park and the Kolob Terrace is generally lower and the mountains less sheer, but the cliffs and mesas are made of the same Navajo sandstone - white at higher elevations and red lower down - and these too contain interesting slot canyons, though not as deep as the more well known gorges to the west, and without streams running through. Two of the best are the upper and lower forks of Sand Wash (known collectively as Red Cave), which is a short drainage beneath the Elkheart Cliffs, at the east side of Long Valley and opposite the tiny town of Mount Carmel Junction.
Both branches form slot canyons about half a mile long and less than a meter across in some places, with nice swirling red rocks quite similar to some of the canyons around Page, Lake Powell. The two forks may have chokestones and muddy pools, and the upper branch has several dryfalls of up to 10 feet making it harder to explore, but a lot can be seen without too much effort.

Topographic Map of Sand Wash



Photographs


16 views of Sand Wash (Red Cave).

Location


CanyonThe Elkheart Cliffs are the conspicuous red escarpment that borders US 89 to the north and east for 15 miles either side of Mount Carmel Junction, separated from the highway by several miles of sandy, bushy terrain. The two branches of Sand Wash/Red Cave start at the base of the cliffs, join a couple of miles south of Mount Carmel, then after a short distance the combined channel meets the east fork of the Virgin River.
There have traditionally been two ways to reach Red Cave, either by hiking up Sand Wash for 3 miles starting from US 89, or by walking along a rough track that leads close to the northern fork. The highway option is easiest though this does cross private property, and the route is currently (2020) not open. For this, vehicles should be parked at the east side of US 89, 0.5 miles north of Mount Carmel Junction, where a small track leads down to the river, which at this point is usually 6 inches deep though can be fast flowing and several feet deep after recent rains. The suggested parking area is just opposite the end of Sand Wash, so the route is simply down the track, across the river then up the wash to the junction of the two forks, then along either branch to the start of the narrows. There is a private residence on the north side of the wash, close to US 89, and several no trespassing notices are posted along the wash, but walking up the streambed was previously thought to be acceptable.

The alternative approach is from Tait Lane in Mount Carmel, parking a short distance south at the Historic Rock Church along US 89; the walk is along the lane, through a gate, past a farm, barn and corral, then continuing on a lesser track that initially heads north, up a slope, before turning south, to the rim of the north fork of Sand Wash (after another mile), shortly downstream of the narrows. The hike crosses private land near the start, and all visitors need to stop at the house to ask permission from the owner.
The slot canyons themselves are on BLM land so once in the vicinity there are no restrictions for hiking or camping, apart from two weeks each year when the area is used for deer hunting.
The two branches of Red Cave can be visited as a loop hike in either direction though walking up the lower fork and down the upper fork is best, and this is the hike described below.


Route Description


The right fork (Lower Sand Wash) becomes a slot canyon quite abruptly, where the wash emerges from a narrow opening in red cliffs, 2 miles from the junction with the upper fork. Right from the start the canyon is deep and enclosed, damp, gloomy and cold, since the dark red walls rise up and overhang above, blocking most of the sunlight. But after only a short distance, progress is blocked by a dryfall of 15 feet, which can only be passed by walking back to the start, up the slope on the south side, following a faint path above the canyon for about 5 minutes then back down into the narrows. Downstream, the canyon closes in quickly with boulders and small drops preceding a larger drop, and this section is just one of five good stretches of narrows, separated by more open parts of about equal length - total distance over half a mile. All the slot parts have a few chokestones above small pools, requiring climbs of 4 to 6 feet; nothing too difficult. The rock walls are dark red, or lighter orange in places, quite smooth, curving, crossed by thin strata, and most of the passages catch the sunlight quite well, making for good photographs, and in the upper part of the canyon, several patches of dark green moss provide a nice color contrast. Floods bring large amounts of sand through this canyon, as well as boulders, so conditions and hence ease of exploration can vary.

Piles of sand at the entrance to the upper fork of Sand Wash

After the final slot, the canyon is now rather shallow, and higher cliffs rise up not far ahead. The shorter slot of the north fork of Sand Wash is due north on the other side of a low ridge, and to get there involves walking cross country for 2 miles, so a topographic map is needed. The route is up the side of the canyon until the land flattens out, then through woodland, down and up maybe a dozen small gullies and one larger drainage, eventually meeting a sandy jeep track; along here for about half a mile, to shortly before a small rocky plateau, then down the sand/slickrock slope on the right to the target canyon. This has 2 upper forks, separated by a narrow but steep ridge, with both branches dropping over several dryfalls, joining to form a deep slot canyon that has further sheer drops into pools, some of which require ropes to descend. For those not suitably equipped, it is easy enough to walk at rim level and descend to the base of the cliffs that mark the end of the canyon, then re-enter at the lower end. Like the end of lower Red Cave, this part is dark and wet, liable to have cold pools several feet deep, beneath vertical walls that curve together high above, making the passages rather shadowy, and less good for photos. From the end of the slot it is about 2.5 miles down the wash to the junction with Lower Sand Wash, and then 1 mile back to the highway.
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Echo Canyon
Hidden Canyon
Kanarra Creek
Keyhole Canyon
Kolob Creek
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Misery Canyon
North Creek, Left Fork
Orderville Canyon
Parunuweap Canyon
Pine Creek
Poverty Wash
Red Canyon (Peek-a-Boo Canyon)
Red Hollow & Spring Hollow
Spring Creek
Taylor Creek, Middle Fork
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