A Wheelchair User’s Guide to Exploring Accessible Moab, Utah

Although Moab, Utah is in a relatively remote part of the United States, it is remarkably wheelchair accessible thanks to an amazing National Park system that keeps wheelchair users in mind. With accessible trails, paved pathways, and ample wheelchair parking spaces, people with physical disabilities and mobility limitations can soak in some of the most beautiful scenery the United States has to offer. Thanks to their proximity, you can visit both Arches National Park and Canyonland National Parks in the same day like I did. Here is a quick guide to exploring Moab, Utah as a wheelchair user.

(NOTE: This post was originally written in 2015 when I could still take a few steps with a cane/walker and place/remove my scooter into and out of a rental car with hand controls. This trip is only recommended for a wheelchair user with an accessible vehicle or companion who can assist with mobility aids.)

First up for me during my visit to Utah was Dead Horse Point State Park, a recommendation from a friend who used to live near Salt Lake City and is familiar with all things Utah. The park itself is pretty smawheelchair accessible dead horse state park moab utahll, and is only a few miles before you get to the entrance of Canyonlands National Park–my second destination, so it was already on the way. There are a few camping sites there, but the main draw of the park (from what I can gather) is the AMAZING view of the canyon at the end of the road. It was only a few miles’ drive to get there, and the entire large viewing area had a lot of paved sidewalks that covered roughly 180˚ of viewing area.

I really hated getting out of my car because taking my electric scooter out, putting it together, then taking it apart and putting it back into a sedan trunk with a lip (as opposed to my crossover with a flat trunk entry) can be a real pain in the butt. But canyons are a different animalwheelchair accessible canyonlands national park moab utah when it compares to the “windshield tour” that I had engaged in. Unlike Monument Valley where all the sights shoot up a thousand feet above the ground, canyons are, well…sunken. If I wanted to enjoy the view, I needed to get out of the car. And OMG was it worth it…

I visited the Grand Canyon about 15 years ago, and I had never (obviously) seen anything so overwhelming. This canyon came pretty darn close, if only because of the snow-capped mountains in the background that presented such a strange and sharp contrast. The Colorado River snaked very slowly along the bottom, which gave the impression that this canyon was the Grand’s little brother.

From Dead Horse Point I drove next door to Canyonlands National Park–which is wheelchair accessible canyonlands national park moab utahbasically a much larger version of the state park. Canyonlands actually has four different sectors, but they’re not connected so you have to enter each part of the park through entrances that are dozens of miles apart. The entrance I was using, called Islands in the Sky, has the longest driving loop (I think two entrances are only for campers and serious hikers). Fortunately, the lookout points and vehicle pullouts were abundant, and the views were clear enough of the canyons below that I didn’t have to get out of my car–which is really saying something because my selfie stick/monopod that I was using to elevate my phone for pictures died shortly after I entered the park.

Do you need a good selfie stick that doubles as a light-weight tripod with a remote? Here’s a great option, even for larger phones like mine! Eocean 40-Inch Selfie Stick Tripod, Extendable Selfie Stick with Wireless Remote and Tripod Stand

The road that goes through Canyonlands is almost like an island (thus the name, I suppose) surrounded on three sides by terraced canyons as far as the eye can see. The colwheelchair accessible arches national park moab utahors range from brown and deep red to light orange and tan. The tops of the canyons, like the road I was on, does not betray what lies below. It’s all straw-colored grasses and green shrubs, with the occasional juniper tree dotting the landscape. There are some rocky outcroppings here and there, but the surface-level landscape is more or less unremarkable. That’s what makes the canyon views, in my opinion, so jarring and breathtaking.

From there it was a 24-mile drive to Route 191, and a short 4-mile jaunt to Arches National Park. Let me start off by saying Arches was NOT what I expected. I got the park guide while going through the entrance gate, and I learned that it’s one of the world’s largest collections of natural arches. These arches are formed in sandstone sitting on top of a huge shifting salt flat. Over the millennia, rain nd wind and ice have done their work with the porous sandstone to form these arches. I expected to see a lot of them, given that the guides say there are plenty which are visible from the road. Two words, people: False and Advertising. I thinwheelchair accessible arches national park moab utahk I saw maybe five arches, and I drove every inch of that park that was drivable. It turns out you have to take hikes/walks of varying lengths and difficulty to see most of the arches.

But you know what? It didn’t matter one bit. Because Arches gave me even more surprises–the biggest variety of geological formations, terrain, and scenery that I’ve ever seen in the span of a short 15-mile drive. The spires and buttes are made of two different types of sandstone, so the color is split between the typical deep red and a light tan. Some of them looked like Monument Valley-type formations, and others looked like gigantic versions of my kids’ playdoh creations. The park has petrified sand dunes. Huh??? It has gray/brown/boring salt flats across the street from huge red spires in the forefront with the La Sal mountains in the background. Whaaa??? Disconcerting to say the least, and my head–and steering wheel–were on a swivel trying to capture it all in my brain’s and iPhone’s memory.

Moab itself is a small town accustomed to housing tourists and outdoor enthusiasts alike. I had no trouble finding a hotel with a wheelchair accessible room with a roll-in shower, and restaurants along the main road (many of which are chains) are accessible. Expect large crowds at the parks during peak summer season, which may significantly limit the availability of accessible parking spaces. I went during early November, which meant cooler weather but also no crowds or long lines at all. Moab is definitely an out-of-the-way destination, but completely worth the hassle for some of the best views in the entire world.

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