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Slot Canyons
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Smith Fork Canyon


Slot Canyons > North Lake Powell > Smith Fork Canyon
Lower end of the Smith Fork narrows
Shallow slot
Pool in a side canyon

Smith Fork Canyon

Good narrows in a secluded, rarely visited drainage leading to Lake Powell. Six east-side tributaries also form short slots, some very testing to explore

Length: 5.5 miles to the end of the narrows, ca 7.5 miles to Lake Powell (less 3 miles if driving to the end of the track)

Difficulty: Easy to moderate in the main canyon - several obstructions to climb over

Management: BLM, NPS (Glen Canyon NRA)

Rocks: Navajo sandstone

Season: Spring, summer, fall

Trailhead: Dirt track beside Hansen Creek, or towards the east end of the track

Rating (1-5): ★★★★★
Pinterest
Another classic Lake Powell slot canyon, Smith Fork contains lengthy stretches of pretty narrows including one section that is especially deep and enclosed, plus several extremely tight tributaries. The canyon has a great wilderness setting, lying amidst an open expanse of rolling sandy desert beneath the tall peaks of the Little Rockies near Bullfrog Marina, though the immediate surroundings are slickrock domes and slopes made of the familiar Navajo sandstone. The lower end opens out into a cliff-bound, cottonwood-lined wash and eventually meets the lake, many meters below its original level, after long patches of quicksand, mud and driftwood.


Map


Topographic map of Smith Fork Canyon.

Dirt track across Hansen Creek
The dirt track across Hansen Creek

Location


Smith Fork drains the southern slopes of Mount Ellsworth a few miles east of Bullfrog Marina and UT 276, and can be reached either by walking cross country from the highway or, if road conditions allow, by driving along one of several dirt tracks that cross the flat land around the canyon, in particular the first side track on the east after the crossing of Hansen Creek (about 2 miles south), which is 4 miles north of the Glen Canyon NRA boundary. There are plenty of good, free campsites hereabouts, including one a short distance along this track, a little way past a Utah highways depot. The left branch of the track crosses the creek - a point that may stop non-4WD vehicles - then bears east and later northeast towards a promontory called Danish Knoll. Turning right at a T-junction, the canyon is reached in another mile.

Photographs


17 views of Smith Fork Canyon.

Pebbles and sand
Pebbles and sand in Smith Fork Canyon


Narrow side canyon
Narrow side canyon - first tributary below the rockfall

Smith Fork Canyon Route Description


The full length of Smith Fork is around 15 miles though the upper reaches are shallow, and the most interesting part begins below a rockfall 3 miles from the high water mark of Lake Powell. The rockfall marks the point below which entry to Smith Fork, on the west side at least, is made difficult as the walls are generally too high and sheer, so the first objective is to head towards the canyon above the fall, descending perhaps along a small ravine just north of a distinctive rounded Navajo dome (marked 4140T on the topo map). Ahead, stretching away to the north and east lies a large area of more slickrock, crossed by several likely looking slot canyons though these are not very deep.

The main canyon is at first only a few meters wide and deep, already mostly vertical sided but not particularly notable until after the rock fall - this is a staged drop over three big boulders. The first two are simple to climb over while the lowest requires a jump of about 6 feet into mud, or maybe a pool, then after this the next easy exit back west is not until below the end of the narrows, quite close to the lake.

The rockfall
The rockfall, just upstream of the narrows

Tributary Slot Canyons


The canyon is now significantly deeper with only occasional routes out, via small tributaries on the east side, and offers mostly easy walking on a flat level floor of sand and small stones, with no vegetation. Occasional chokestones provide minor obstacles. The first east-side tributary is reached quite soon, and has similar forms and textures to Brimstone Gulch or Egypt 3, though shallower - it is just 18 inches wide in places, angled away from vertical, and is formed by dark rocks with knobbly inclusions and thin black bands running parallel to the streamway. It soon forks and opens out at the junction allowing egress to the slickrock above. The left branch begins with a nice small-scale swirling channel then deepens and for some distance forms another very narrow slot, sometimes requiring sideways movement to follow, always quite straight and with a base of pebbles or bare rock that often narrows to a sharp point and may harbor a few pools. A few small troublesome chokestones block the way, and these become more frequent further upstream. This passage remains about the same depth all along and while quite unusual, is not particularly photogenic. The right fork of the side canyon is too narrow to follow properly, is also quite long and a little less deep.

Tributary slot
Tributary slot - first side canyon below the rockfall

Curvy formation, Smith Fork
Curvy formation in a tributary slot

The Deepest Narrows


The main canyon continues south and is joined by another very narrow branch on the left, also not negotiable at ground level. Not far beyond the drainage turns west, deepens, and curves round a 180° bend - the best part of the slot, with colorful striated rocks, wavy walls and deep passages. They also have mud and pools, and are quite dark, rarely illuminated by sunlight. This part opens out into a graceful passageway with smooth walls streaked by desert varnish, which soon widens further, enough for sandbanks to form at either side while trees, reeds and grass start growing, all nourished by a small stream that begins to flow, and also creates patches of quicksand.

Trees near Lake Powell
Trees near Lake Powell

Lake Powell


The next side canyon on the left becomes very dark and overhanging, a bit like Tunnel Slot in the Harris Wash drainage, then quite soon ends at a pool beneath an impassable dryfall and narrow crack above. A short distance further down the main channel is the original high water mark of Lake Powell at 3,700 feet elevation, though now the lake is long departed. There is one more tributary of passing interest, also on the left, above a deep pool and small waterfall, but this gains height quickly and disappears amongst the slickrock mounds above the rim. The lake waters begin around this junction, amidst more quicksand, smelly mud and thick mats of driftwood - although not very scenic at this point, the canyon system as a whole is one of the best in the Lake Powell region.

Return Route


The easiest way back is to regress a little way up canyon, climb a diagonal slope strewn with small, dark pebbles of petrified wood, head west cross-country to intersect one of the dirt tracks near the canyon edge, then walk along here back towards UT 276.

Pool and dryfall
Pool and dryfall - third tributary canyon on the east side


Lake Powell at the lower end of Smith Fork
Lake Powell, at the lower end of Smith Fork

Nearby Slot Canyons

Bullfrog Bay Canyon

East Sevenmile Canyon

Maidenwater Canyon

Maidenwater Canyon, North

North Trachyte Point Canyon

Swett Creek

Trachyte Creek

Trachyte Point Canyon

Trail Canyon


Smith Fork - Similar Hikes


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Sheets Gulch
Sheets Gulch

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Trail Canyon
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Tributaries of Poison Spring Canyon
Poison Spring Canyon

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