About the Author:
Jeffrey Steadman was born and raised in Utah, where he began exploring the outdoors shortly after leaving the womb. As a child he spent his summers exploring the canyons of the Wasatch Front on family hikes. These days he explores all that Utah has to offer in every season. He’s slept in snowcaves, been in a lightning and hailstorm at about 12,000 feet, and has been known to catch fish out of local streams with his bare hands. Jeffrey is an accomplished writer and enjoys introducing new campers to the outdoors through youth volunteer programs, classroom instruction, or planning giant camping trips with new friends. When he’s not in the backcountry, he enjoys cooking, gardening, photography, and spending time with family. He currently lives near Salt Lake City with his dog, Mountain Jane, a Wirehaired Pointing Griffon who just can’t get enough of camping.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
The pockmarked cobble walls of Maple Canyon plunge down and meet the ground as if they had thrown down the gauntlet and challenged you to climb them. Rock climbers from all over the state―and even the country―are answering that challenge and confirming that this is one of the best places in the world to climb cobblestone. By day they conquer cliffs, but by night they sleep at Maple Canyon Campground.
There are 13 sites in a string, just inside the Manti-La Sal National Forest boundary west of the farming town of Moroni. Only one small sign indicates the campground’s presence, a brown blur on UT 132 near Fountain Green. The first of these sites in Maple Canyon is designed to hold groups of up to 40 people. Sites 2 through 4 are individual sites strung along a spur off the main campground road and are probably the best sites in camp, privacy-wise. Because of the high canyon walls, sunshine is at a premium. Sites 5 through 9 give you the most minutes of sunshine each day, which is probably worth considering if you stay here during spring or fall. Sites 10 through 13 are located at the top of the campground, far away from the nine below them.
All of the sites at Maple Canyon can be reserved. If the group site isn’t being occupied, it is offered on a first-come, first-served basis at $15 per night. The other sites are also up for grabs when they’re not already spoken for, but it only takes a moment to make a reservation, so why risk it? The restrooms have recently been renovated, which is a welcome improvement from the old ones. They’re still vault toilets, but they’re sturdy and neat. Water isn’t available at camp, but there’s a small trickle of a stream that runs adjacent to the road where you can pump and purify. Bring plenty of your own water in case the stream is dry.
What’s not cobbled cliff walls or sandy light brown earth is probably a maple tree. There are a few evergreens to dot the landscape here and there, but most of the green comes from maple trees of every size. For being so close to the Sanpete Valley floor, the canyon is much greener than you’d expect. Maple Canyon makes rock climbers feel like kids in a candy store. The sheer number and variety of routes available are enough to earn this canyon a reputation as one of the world’s best places to climb. An entire book has been written about just this canyon, detailing the different areas to climb, but any gear shop around should be able to point the uninitiated in the right direction.
Difficulty levels range from beginner to hard-core routes for the most insane climbers. Among the most climbed are Engagement Alcove and the Schoolroom, although there are countless climbs known by many names in the area.
Ice climbing is also quite popular in Maple Canyon, but the conditions aren’t always favorable. Your best bet would be to hop online and find other climbers in the area who may have a recent report. The campground closes in the wintertime, but ice climbers spend the precious daylight hours tied to the sheer ice walls that form.
Rock climbing isn’t the only game in town. Take one of the trails that connect to the side canyons―one to the north and one to the south. They’re only short trails that take off right near the campground, but they will give you a hint of the real personality of the canyons of the San Pitch Mountains.
The San Pitch Mountains mark the border between Sanpete and Juab counties. Although they’re not too terribly tall, they do rise above the Sanpete Valley and offer convenient camping to residents on both sides. Trails and rough roads snake throughout the range. In fact, it’s possible to drive from Wales to Levan on Forest Service Road 101. Find the road by going back out to Westside Road and going south 4 miles to Wales, then turning right. Wales Canyon will lift you up over the ridge of the San Pitch Range, then the road will funnel you back down along Chicken Creek. I’m not much of a rock climber myself, but I still found Maple Canyon fascinating. Every texture, every color, and every little side canyon are so different, yet they somehow blend together to make it work.
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