Slot Canyons Near Kodachrome

Kodachrome Basin State Park has a campground with cabins, and tent and RV campsites. Available amenities include modern restrooms, showers, a picnic pavilion, and a convenience store. There is a visitor center near the park entrance. Kodachrome Basin State Park is open year-round and requires an entrance fee for day-use. Kodachrome Basin State Park is a lesser known park in Southern Utah. It has some of the most breathtaking geological formations that could rival any in the world. In this comprehensive guide, I will show you how to get there, where to stay, what to do and so much more. This is technically a slot canyon, but rather wide. Easy walking, easy to get to from the Skutumpah Road (there is a small sign by the road). Looks like a spot that ranchers would have used to pen cattle. When we went into Lick, the sun was going down and we saw a large.

NEAR SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO – I’m hiking through the Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument, less than an hour from Santa Fe. Above me are swooping, surging, curving walls that bend and bulge in wild patterns of pale sand and dusty orange. There’s a tiny sliver of robin’s-egg-blue sky slipping through an overhead crack in the canyon walls.
I step through a narrow gap in the rock and stroll into a wider opening with sweet-smelling evergreens and tiny plants clinging to life in the harsh desert climate. Suddenly a small monarch butterfly slides past my ear. I look up as it dances on the wind and spot a pair of hawks riding invisible thermals high overhead.
I stop and take stock of my surroundings for a minute. I listen to the quiet tune the wind is playing as it slices through the pale canyon walls and jot down some thoughts in my notepad.

The beginning of the trail into the Kasha-Kutuwe slot canyon reveals amazing rock formations. JIM BYERS PHOTO

I’d come to New Mexico at the behest of Brand USA, which helps promote USA tourism in Canada and other countries around the world. They’d asked me to help them promote one of the 50 states that doesn’t get as much easy PR as, say, Hawaii or New York.
I’ve visited upwards of 40 states in my life, yet somehow had never set foot in New Mexico. But I love the desert and the way the light changes from hour to hour and how animals learn to burrow into the ground to survive the heat and how plants learn to absorb what little moisture they can find. So I choose New Mexico and the folks at Brand USA and New Mexico Tourism put together an itinerary for me.
I had an image of Santa Fe, which I quite enjoyed for both the wonderful art and the terrific food (more on green chile cheeseburgers and the city’s Margarita Trail in another, later posting). And I had fun roaming around Albuquerque, where I stayed at a lovely Sheraton Hotel with nice mountain views, spacious rooms and a great top-floor lounge, had a wonderful meal and checked out the charms of the Old Town, including a cool rattlesnake museum. (More on Albuquerque in a later post, as well).

Near

A hiker at Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rock National Monument. JIM BYERS PHOTO

Kodachrome

But I’d never heard of Kasha-Katuwe. Nor had I heard of the Puye Cliffs area, with its native American cliff dwellings carved into the side of beautiful hills north of Santa Fe.
Both turned out to be highlights of my trip to a wonderful state.
Kasha-Katuwe was particularly inspiring. After paying a modest, $5 parking fee and driving to a small lot, you start off with a relatively easy hike up a path that follows a slight incline past desert shrubs and cactus. After just a few minutes you’re at the edge of the slot canyon, which practically calls your name and sends an official, embossed invitation, so strong is the lure to explore once you reach the opening.
You’ll pass gorgeous canyon walls and peer up at large “tent rocks” that look like the ones you see in photos of Capadoccia, Turkey. To me, some of them look like the chimney vents in the buildings designed by artist Antoni Gaudi in Barcelona.
Most of the path is reasonably wide but on a couple of occasions you have to step in a ribbon of sand that’s perhaps a few inches wide and have only a little bit of elbow room. It’s no trouble for me, but a Chicago Bears’ defensive lineman might find it a tight fit here and there.

Park

A slot canyon at Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument. JIM BYERS PHOTO

After maybe a half hour you have to scramble up a bit of a slope and then some steps in the rock face someone has kindly created. They say there’s a magical view from a lookout high on the bluffs, but I wasn’t wearing the proper shoes and couldn’t make the last five or ten minutes of the hike. Still, I was inordinately happy sitting in the warm April sun. checking out the canyon walls and tent rocks that have been bleached by endless eons of merciless sun and unceasing winds.
If you go, I strongly suggest bringing LOTS of water (especially if it’s warm), sunscreen, layers of clothing and a walking stick. Also, don’t be a goof like me and show up in sandals. Even the sturdy ones I had were no match for the scrabbly, loose rock on the hills at the end of the hike. Bring good, unworn hiking shoes if you plan to take this hike. And you should.

The Puye Cliffs area offers fine views of the surrounding plains and hills of northwest New Mexico. JIM BYERS PHOTO

State

The Puye Cliff Dwellings are another wonderful spot near Santa Fe. I grabbed a tour with a local native American woman who explained the history of the area and talked about the lifestyle of the inhabitants.
Puye, she explains, means “where the rabbits gather” in her native tongue. The area used to be covered with jackrabbits and cottontails. It’s also close to a good stream, which is an important reason that natives settled in the region.
It’s believe that folks began living here around 900 AD. Most inhabitants left around 1500 or 1600 due to drought, and probably the presence of the Spanish.
We learn that there are 19 native nations within the state of New Mexico, including hers. Her people speak a language called Tewa and live in what is called the Santa Clara Pueblo.
We examine the ruins of clifftop dwellings and also clamber into a hollowed-out chamber below the surface, where folks could stay warm in winter and cool in summer and where male elders would gather to discuss important issues.

Slot

Puye Cliffs offers up marvellous views of cliff dwellings near Santa Fe. JIM BYERS PHOTO

Slot Canyon Near Kodachrome Basin

Our guide shows us broken pieces of pottery that litter the clifftop.
“When my people left here they broke the potter into shards to return the clay to mother earth. My mother does the same thing when a piece of pottery she’s making doesn’t come out right. Then she uses the pieces in her next pots to continue the cycle.”
If you clamber down some stairs carved into the rock you can find the cliff dwellings, small rooms carved out of the living rock. I spot telltale signs of smoke and fire on the walls and petroglyphs etched into the stone. I admire the views of distant mountains and rolling plains and try to imagine what life was like here 500 years ago.
I climb back in my car for the drive back to Albuquerque, stopping often to admire towering formations of stone and exposed slashes of bright orange rock. I can feel the history all around me; the sun and the wind and the pockmarked, ageless stone.
This is a place I won’t forget.

Slot Canyon Near Kodachrome State Park

IF YOU GO: The Sheraton Uptown Albuquerque makes a fine place to stay, with great rooms and a good location near restaurants and shopping.

MORE INFORMATION: https://www.visittheusa.ca/, https://www.newmexico.org/

Slot Canyons Near Kodachrome Basin

NOTE: THIS TRIP WAS SPONSORED BY BRAND USA, ALONG WITH MARRIOTT HOTELS AND AMERICAN AIRLINES. Canadians can fly direct to Albuquerque on American from Phoenix and many other U.S. airports.