Devils Garden
(Arches National Park)

excerpts from the book
Utah's Incredible Backcountry Trails
by David Day

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Distance: 7.6 miles (loop)

Walking time: 4 1/4 hours

Elevations: 280 ft. gain/loss
     Devils Garden Trailhead (start): 5,180 ft.
     Landscape Arch: 5,320 ft.
     Dark Angel: 5,460 ft.

Trail: Generally easy, well used trail

Season: Spring, summer, fall, winter. The trail is quite hot in summer, so carry plenty of water. For more information call the Visitor Center, Arches National Park, at (435) 259-8161.

Vicinity: Arches National Park, near Moab

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     If the strange and wonderful rock formations of southern Utah interest you, you will love this hike. Devils Garden contains eight of the best known sandstone arches in Arches National Park, including Landscape Arch, the park's longest span. The area is a particularly good place to study the life cycle of natural arches. You will see many spans of different ages as you wander through the jumbled canyons of stone. On the return portion of the loop you will pass through a giant maze of long vertical sandstone fins, all parallel to one another with narrow canyons between. These fins are the raw materials from which future arches are being made. In another million years, when all of the present arches are gone, there will be many new ones in these canyons to replace them. Some of the new arches might even be more spectacular than the present ones. Although we mortals are allowed only a fleeting glimpse of her current display, Nature is continually modifying and replacing her artwork.

     From the trailhead the path goes for only 0.3 mile before another spur trail leaves on the right to Pine Tree Arch and Tunnel Arch. Both Pine Tree and Tunnel are very young arches with relatively small openings surrounded by large masses of rock. They are not as impressive as some of the other arches, but as a prelude to the next arch-one of oldest-you should take the time to see them. The side trip to these two arches will extend your hike by about 0.6 mile.
     Continuing northward on the main trail for another 0.6 mile will bring you to another junction. You will be returning on the path to the right, so for now bear left toward Landscape Arch. Soon you will see a short loop trail on the left leading to this well known landmark.
     For most people, Landscape Arch is the high point of the Devils Garden hike. The arch is so improbably long and slender its span seems to defy the laws of physics. The slender ribbon of stone extends for some 300 feet from base to base, and rises 105 feet above the sandy desert floor. Landscape is a very old arch, definitely in the last stages of its existence, but how much longer will it endure? Maybe another century, maybe several, but certainly not more that a thousand years. Because of its size it is difficult to photograph Landscape Arch. But if you want to try plan to be there in the morning, and make sure you bring along a wide angle lens.
     From Landscape Arch the trail continues northward, past Wall Arch, to another short spur trail leading to Navajo and Partition Arches. Navajo Arch, on the western edge of Devils Garden, is the larger of the two. Visiting these two arches will add about 0.7 mile onto your hike.
     The main trail ends at Double O Arch, 2.2 miles from the trailhead. From here another short trail on the left goes to the base of the Dark Angel. Dark Angel is a sandstone monolith, about 150 feet high, that stands prominently on the edge of a long narrow bench overlooking Salt Valley. It commands a nice view across the valley of the Klondike Bluffs, on the western edge of the national park. The round trip to Dark Angel will add another 1.0 mile to your hike.
     When you are ready to return, you should turn north from Double O Arch, and take the loop trail that goes back through Fin Canyon. This trail is what the Park Service calls a “primitive trail”. It is not as well developed as the main Devils Garden Trail, but it is quite easy to follow and, in my opinion, it is the most interesting part of the hike. The trail wonders through an intriguing collection of thin stone fins, all aligned in a northwest-southeast direction. The fins were formed millions of years ago when the ground rose beneath a solid block of sandstone, causing it to fracture and separate into long, parallel vertical sheets. The existence of these large fins is the primary reason why so many arches have been formed in Arches National Park.
     After spending about a mile in Fin Canyon, the trail breaks out on the eastern side of Devils Garden and eventually meets the main trail again just east of Landscape Arch. From the junction it is an easy 0.9 mile walk back the trailhead.

 

The book includes more text, more photographs, and trail maps.

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If you are interested in a supplemental map of the Devils Garden area, we recommend:
Arches National Park (Trails Illustrated, map #211), or
Moab North (Trails Illustrated, map #500

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