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10 under the radar Utah adventures

10 under the radar Utah adventures

(Courtesy of Robert Hirschi)


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Here’s the scenario. You’ve lived in Utah your entire life, yet you’ve never been to, nor even heard of, Bonneville Seabase. Or House on Fire. Or Gilgal’s Sculpture Garden (who’s sculptures?) With literally thousands of places to visit in Utah, you can’t be expected to have seen all of them, right? Well, at least not until now. So, get out your handy Utah adventure list and add these to it, because it’s time to get schooled.

Here are 10 uniquely Utah sights. Ten points for each one you’ve seen, two points for each one you’ve heard of and five points for each one you start making plans to visit.

10. BONNEVILLE SEABASE // Grantsville

Near the southern point of the Great Salt Lake sits a weirdly natural inland sea. Spring water rising through the salty bed of the ancient Lake Bonneville reaches the same salinity as the ocean. Add some species of ocean fish and you have a perfect little snorkeling/SCUBA sanctuary, 600 miles from the coast.

9. HOMESTEAD CRATER // Midway

“Here’s what I’m thinking: geothermal spring.”

“Uh huh.”

“With hot-tub temperature sapphire-blue water.”

“Okay.”

“Inside an adorable mini volcano.”

“I mean, yeah, it sounds great, but where would that even happen?”

“Just like in the middle of a Swiss hamlet in Utah, maybe?”

8. CASCADE SPRINGS // near Midway

Crystal clear spring water flowing down terraced pools in a mountain forest. One of those places so naturally beautiful you couldn’t possibly paint it without your painting looking cheesy.

Courtesy of Utah.com
Courtesy of Utah.com

7. FIFTH WATER HOT SPRINGS // Spanish Fork

This is the last natural spring on the list, we swear. This one makes you earn your soak with a 2.3-mile hike up Diamond Fork Canyon that gains 700 feet. Worth it — especially with the three waterfalls you’ll find as a bonus. It’s on the way from the Wasatch Front to Moab, too, if that means anything to you.

6. SAND BOARDING AT CORAL PINK SAND DUNES // Kanab

No further description needed. Get onboard. (Ha!)

Photo credit: Utah Division of Parks and Recreation
Photo credit: Utah Division of Parks and Recreation

5. HOUSE ON FIRE // near Blanding

One of the more popular* and easier to access* of the thousands of Ancestral Puebloan ruins in Cedar Mesa. The area is remote but the hike itself is short and flat.

(* These are relative terms for places in Bears Ears.)

4. PAROWAN GAP PETROGLYPHS // Parowan

The permanent collection in a 1,000-year-old art gallery. Park, walk and ponder the signs made by civilizations that explored Utah before you.

3. SINGING CANYON // Boulder

You spent $10k at audio engineering and you’ve still got nothing on Mother Nature’s ear for acoustics. Hike a couple minutes on the flat trail off Burr Trail Road and stop when you hear sound the way it was meant to be heard. If you’re lucky someone talented will be there making a joyful noise.

Courtesy of Utah.com
Courtesy of Utah.com

2. VALLEY OF THE GODS // Mexican Hat

In Greece the Gods live on Mount Olympus. In Utah they prefer the valley. While you’re in the neighborhood visiting House on Fire, stop by this mini-Monument Valley. If you happen to be there during the hot air balloon festival, lucky you, you just stumbled into the divine.

1. GILGAL SCULPTURE GARDEN // Salt Lake City

Most of the sights above are secret because they’re in some remote part of Utah. This one’s hiding in the middle of a city block in downtown Salt Lake City. A devout Mormon named Thomas Child, Jr., created deeply personal and mystical sculptures that draw on Mormon theology but resist easy interpretation. Like a sphinx with the head of Joseph Smith, for instance.

Photo credit: Robert Hirschi
Photo credit: Robert Hirschi

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