Night sky and landscape photographer in Seattle, Washington
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Journal

Valley of Fire

Our winter trip this year was to Zion National Park, which is a few hours northeast of Las Vegas, so we found it convenient to fly in there and drive up to Zion. On the way, the drive passes a number of interesting places, one of which is Valley of Fire State Park, so we opted to stop there and do some hiking on our way back to Vegas.

Valley of Fire is about an hour northeast of Las Vegas, and features really interesting Navajo sandstone with sandy slot canyons and some pretty interesting views. We had actually been there in July of last year, but with temperatures hovering around 110F, we stayed in the car with the air conditioner running! This time, however, the temperatures were a cool 50F, which was perfect for a long hike.

We decided to make a loop hike starting at the Fire Wave, which is a sandstone formation that looks like the famous Wave in Kanab, Utah, just on a smaller scale. From there, we took the Seven Wonders Trail clockwise through the northern part of the park, passing through Pink Canyon first, a very colorful slot canyon. The trail then took us across the road through Kaolin slot canyon before rejoining the White Domes Loop trail, where we passed through another slot canyon (White Domes). Finally, the trail looped back north and cut across the bend in the road to return us to our car. The whole journey took a few hours, mostly because we stopped for lunch and for pictures.

Valley of Fire, Fire Wave - Curves at Fire Wave-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Fire Wave - Hiker ascending sandstone slopes under sun-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Fire Wave - Woman hiking through sagebrush-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Kaolin Slot Canyon - Colorful patterns in sandstone-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Kaolin Slot Canyon - Lines and stripe patterns in sandstone-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Pink Canyon - Rainbow colored patterns in sandstone-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Pink Canyon - Sun above curve in slot canyon-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Pink Canyon - Close up of wave patterns-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Pink Canyon - Small striped feature close up-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, White Domes Slot Canyon - Woman hiking through slot-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Kaolin Slot Canyon - Sun peeking behind a sandstone pillar-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, White Domes Slot Canyon - Entering the slot, vertical-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Fire Wave - Sandstone alcove in black and white-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, Pink Canyon - Pink and yellow rocks near slot canyon entrance-20200201.jpg
Valley of Fire, White Domes Slot Canyon - End of slot lit by sun, horizontal-20200201.jpg

I highly recommend Valley of Fire, and in particular getting away from the road. Lots of people drive through the park without venturing very far from their car. On our hike, we saw nobody from the time we left Fire Wave until we rejoined the White Domes trail. It was a refreshing experience that really let us see the character of the park. Just don’t go in the summer though!

Jack Nichols