Distance: 8.6 miles
Walking time: 5 1/4 hours
Elevations: 950 ft. loss/gain
Fairyland Trailhead (start): 7,760
ft.
Fairyland Canyon: 7,150 ft.
Rim Trail: 8,100 ft.
Trail: Excellent, well marked trail
Season: Summer to mid-fall. The trail is covered
with snow during the winter months. Also the road to Fairyland
Point is used as a cross-country ski trail in the winter. For
current conditions call the Visitor Center, Bryce Canyon National
Park, at (801) 834-5322.
Vicinity: Bryce Canyon National Park
The area below the rim of Bryce
Canyon National Park is a fantasyland of strange and wonderful
geologic formations. Stone spires and pinnacles with fanciful
names like the Chinese Wall and Seal Castle
surround the trails, making them delightful places to hike. The
Fairyland Loop Trail provides a particularly fine opportunity
to examine some of these natural sculptures and, as it is somewhat
of the beaten path, it is not as crowded as other trails in the
park.
The stone sculptures of Bryce Canyon,
whimsically called hoodoos, have been eroded from
a thick layer of soft sedimentary rock called the Claron Formation
that was deposited in Utah some 60 million years ago. As the canyon
rim erodes, new hoodoos are formed. They begin first as tall thin
fins, then serrate to form pinnacles and spires. The colors are
caused primarily by iron and manganese impurities in the rock
that oxidize into colorful hues of red, pink, orange, yellow,
and purple. The carving action is still continuing, and it is
estimated that today the rim of Bryce Canyon is receding at the
rate of about one foot in 65 years. In another hundred thousand
years it will have receded by a third of a mile, and a whole new
display of artwork will be ready for viewing in natures
gallery.
The trail descends immediately
from Fairyland Point, winding down the north side of Boat Mesa
for a distance of 1.5 miles to Fairyland Canyon, the lowest point
on the hike. From there the trail turns south and west, following
the contour of the land and climbing slightly for another 2.5
miles until it reaches the Tower Bridge trail junction. Tower
Bridge is at the end of a short, well marked trail that branches
off to the left. It is only 0.2 miles from the main trail, and
it makes a nice lunch stop. From the Tower Bridge trail junction
the path starts its climb back to the canyon rim. It winds to
the west, with Campbell Canyon on the right and the Chinese Wall
on the left, finally arriving at the canyon rim 1.5 miles later
after a climb of 770 feet.
At the top of the rim the trail
intersects the Rim Trail. Turn right here and walk along the rim
for 2.7 miles back to the Fairyland Point parking lot.
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