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Under-the-Rim Trail - 3 members in 7 triplogs have rated this an average 4 ( 1 to 5 best )
7 triplogs
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May 03 2025
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 Guides 16
 Routes 81
 Photos 1,269
 Triplogs 1,145

51 male
 Joined Apr 30 2008
 Tucson, AZ
Bryce Canyon National Park TrailsSouthwest, UT
Southwest, UT
Hiking avatar May 03 2025
azdesertfatherTriplogs 1,145
Hiking7.41 Miles 1,473 AEG
Hiking7.41 Miles   3 Hrs   31 Mns   2.19 mph
1,473 ft AEG      8 Mns Break18 LBS Pack
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Started at Sunset Point, a clockwise loop on Rim Trail to Sunrise Point, then Queen’s Garden Trail to Tropic Trail to Peekaboo Loop Trail to Peekaboo Loop Connector Trail to Under the Rim Trail back to Rim Trail at Sunset Point.
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"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
 
Jun 05 2021
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 Guides 38
 Routes 182
 Photos 1,602
 Triplogs 232

40 male
 Joined Dec 09 2014
 Gilbert, AZ
Under-the-Rim Loop, UT 
Under-the-Rim Loop, UT
 
Hiking avatar Jun 05 2021
jacobemerickTriplogs 232
Hiking35.68 Miles 6,689 AEG
Hiking35.68 Miles   14 Hrs   51 Mns   3.03 mph
6,689 ft AEG   3 Hrs   4 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Wanted to stretch the legs and see some new terrain. Friend suggested Bryce Canyon, so drove up on Friday afternoon and set up a hammock just outside the park entrance for a few hours of sleep.

Road Walk
Parked at Farview Point (~10.5 mile) at 3 and headed south. Didn't see a single car on the road and spent much of the walk with no light, enjoying the epic starry skies above. Reached Rainbow Point in 2 hours and treated myself to a quick breakfast as the eastern horizon reddened up.

Under-the-Rim
After a bit of confusion between Bristlecone and connectors in the mostly-dark forest I found the trail and began the steady drop through a burn area. Trail started in great shape, only a few deadfall, and the northern views of the 'rim' were fantastic in the early light. Some cool construction looping around the sandy slopes. At the bottom the forest came back, giant pines and all, and I was further wowed by the area.

The rest of the trail is a roller coaster, about 13 sandy ridges between 100' and 500'. They were pretty crushing - enough of a climb to get the heart pumping, not enough to gain momentum. The campsites were neat, well-signed areas for food storage & prep far from the tent areas, and less than 5 miles between each one. Between the sandy slogs, numerous campsites, and great forest & views, I soon got the hint that a better way to explore this trail would be a leisurely multi-day outing. Yet I was here with no reservation and a daypack, so I pushed on.

Trail maintenance varied a bit. There was deadfall and some overgrowth, and most of the creeks had significant washout sections. The tread was also solid, well-trod reroutes to avoid deadfall, and cairns were built up near the creeks to aid navigation. Either this is still 'early in the season' or the park might be letting this one go a little for a 'rustic' experience.

Views up at the rim were always great. There were few hoodoos that define the northern end of the park, it was mostly pretty colors and sharp cliffs. One area that particularly stood up was after a long, hot climb near Whiteman connector, through an exposed burn area, where I hit a saddle and got an epic view down into Mud Canyon. Amazing. Took a few long breaks to gaze around, watered up at Yellow Canyon, chatted with a few backpackers. Some sprinkles and thunder. Eventually reached the climb out, chugged some water, and powered up to Bryce Point. That final stretch through Hat Shop is fantastical.

Peekaboo / Navajo
Wanted to hike through some of the more 'traditional' terrain, plus get some easy water at Sunset Point, so I headed down Peekaboo. Trail is wide and wasn't that crowded, and the creativity the designers used to wind around the ridges was super cool. Wall of Windows & Cathedral were particularly jaw-dropping. Paused at the bottom to polish off my water before connecting with Navajo, which was more narrow and crowded, so I pushed quick up the switchbacks to finish it off. Wall Street area was interesting but better to look at (from Peekaboo) than to hike through IMO. Reached Sunset Point around 5pm and decided to skip Fairyland Loop.

Road Walk pt 2
Took Rim Trail to Inspiration, bike path to road, then started south on the road. This wasn't a good idea. There was a lot more traffic during the daytime, no shoulder to speak of, and no nearby path. If I could make it the few miles to Swamp Canyon then I planned on dropping back down to Under-the-Rim and scooping back up Whiteman. However, after a mile one of the park rangers drove up to me and offered a ride (likely to avoid a pedestrian - vehicle collision) and I happily jumped in. Along the way she pointed out the Mammoth Fire to the west, whose smoke had been drifting over the park most of the afternoon. Got back to the Jeep with a few hours of daylight left and, while it felt sacrilegious to leave so soon, started on the long drive back to PHX.

This park is spectacular. It really beat me up, though, and I'm not sure if the elevation or the sand was the bigger factor. A North-to-South backpack over a few days, complete with a shuttle plan, is preferable, and I can't wait to take my kids up here.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Hat Shop  Iron Spring

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water less than maxwater less than max Iron Spring Quart per minute Quart per minute
Steady flow, lots of sludgy mud below.

dry Peekaboo Canyon Dry Dry

water 1 out of 5water less than maxwater less than maxwater less than max Swamp Canyon Pools to trickle Pools to trickle
(didn't actually check, two different backpacking groups verified that the water was there)

water 1 out of 5water 2 out of 5water 3 out of 5water less than max Yellow Spring Gallon per minute Gallon per minute
Steady flow out and down the creek, good taste.
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Nov 08 2016
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 Routes 39
 Photos 353
 Triplogs 128

37 male
 Joined Sep 30 2015
 Carrboro, NC
Under-the-Rim TrailSouthwest, UT
Southwest, UT
Hiking avatar Nov 08 2016
afrankieTriplogs 128
Hiking4.00 Miles 1,436 AEG
Hiking4.00 Miles
1,436 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
This is just for the 2 miles of the "under the rim" hike, which take you to the Hat Shop. Not rating the hike, considering how little of the trail this represents. The hike is all relative - it's Bryce, so of course it's going to be amazing. But, make sure you spend your time doing the Queen's Garden/Navajo figure 8 loop before doing this hike. Do this hike for a view of the Grand Staircase, which seems to open up from this perspective compared to farther north in the park, but the actual Hat Shop feature is very anti-climatic. The hike to this point is straight down, straight up.
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Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment.
Evan Hardin

Footloose adventures are documented instagram @afrankie8.
 
Apr 11 2015
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 Photos 99
 Triplogs 872

male
 Joined Mar 18 2012
 Goodyear, AZ
Under-the-Rim TrailSouthwest, UT
Southwest, UT
Hiking avatar Apr 11 2015
MikeSTriplogs 872
Hiking28.90 Miles 5,170 AEG
Hiking28.90 Miles   9 Hrs   23 Mns   3.91 mph
5,170 ft AEG   2 Hrs    Break
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Partners none no partners
Had a great time exploring Bryce Canyon by doing the Under the Rim trail. Statically similar to GC R2R but more difficult because 1) doing it in mid April, the first 12 miles has large sections covered by snow and ice, if you slip you fall until a tree impales you. 2) Large sections of the trail have been washed away by monsoons storm so route finding is difficult in parts. We added 3 extra miles getting lost multiple times trying to find the trail. 3) Unreliable water, I had called ahead on Tuesday to asked water sources and was told there was water by NPS at a point half way through the hike that did not have water. We found water 4 miles later but we were getting nervous. Overall though a great hike with great views. Whereas with a R2R hike you would see 100s of people, we saw 2 all day.
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  5 archives
May 25 2014
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 Routes 29
 Photos 1,548
 Triplogs 1,802

49 male
 Joined Jan 25 2009
 Phoenix, AZ
Bryce Canyon National Park TrailsSouthwest, UT
Southwest, UT
Hiking avatar May 25 2014
Dave1Triplogs 1,802
Hiking16.04 Miles 1,800 AEG
Hiking16.04 Miles
1,800 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Partners none no partners
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Sep 02 2012
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 Guides 6
 Photos 346
 Triplogs 225

69 male
 Joined May 13 2002
 Tempe, AZ
Under-the-Rim TrailSouthwest, UT
Southwest, UT
Hiking avatar Sep 02 2012
hikeazTriplogs 225
Hiking9.00 Miles
Hiking9.00 Miles   4 Hrs      2.25 mph
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
We hiked, I guess, what one would call the center section of this trail, using the Ponderosa(start)and Swamp Point(exit) trails as access. This trail gives you an alternate to the crowds of Bryce (Navajo/Peek-a Boo/Fairyland) - in fact, we saw just one lone backpacker over the whole length - and this was Labor Day weekend!
There has been a flash through some of the area and some burn as well - but just for 1 to 1.5 miles of the hike. It adds a different perspective to view Bryce's interesting rock spires/geology from down below.
There are no shuttles between these trailheads, although there IS one that runs all the way out to Rainbow Point - so one could start there and hike out one of the connectors and hitch back out to the main part of Bryce; or, potentially the other way around. Note that there are just two trips out to Rainbow Point daily (one morning and one afternoon). The tourist vehicle traffic along the road is plentiful, so hitching a ride (although technicaly verboten)is generally a matter of moments.
Note: No dogs are allowed below the Rim in Bryce.
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Moderate
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"The censorship method ... is that of handing the job over to some frail and erring mortal man, and making him omnipotent on the assumption that his official status will make him infallible and omniscient."
George Bernard Shaw
 
May 26 1992
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 Routes 36
 Photos 2,658
 Triplogs 1,347

67 male
 Joined Jul 28 2004
 Scottsdale, AZ
Bristlecone LoopSouthwest, UT
Southwest, UT
Hiking avatar May 26 1992
mazatzalTriplogs 1,347
Hiking2.00 Miles 300 AEG
Hiking2.00 Miles
300 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Partners none no partners
We drove the length of Bryce to see all the views. At Rainbow point we did a short Bristlecone loop and on the way back we stopped at Bryce Pt and did a short out n back on Under the Rim.
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  2 archives
average hiking speed 2.22 mph

WARNING! Hiking and outdoor related sports can be dangerous. Be responsible and prepare for the trip. Study the area you are entering and plan accordingly. Dress for the current and unexpected weather changes. Take plenty of water. Never go alone. Make an itinerary with your plan(s), route(s), destination(s) and expected return time. Give your itinerary to trusted family and/or friends.

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