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When June Finally Cools Off

When June Finally Cools Off

Posted in: Nature, Outdoor adventures, Travel on June 9, 2026.

The Second Half Of The Day

So here’s one of the better tricks for visiting Capitol Reef in June: don’t spend the whole day trying to beat the sun at its own game. The sun is very good at that game. Instead, get your hiking and wandering done early, take the hot hours seriously, and save a little energy for the evening.

Because June evenings in Capitol Reef can be pretty hard to beat.

The park is open 24 hours a day, which is useful information if you are the sort of person who likes red cliffs at sunset, cool air after a warm afternoon, or stars. And if you are not that sort of person yet, Capitol Reef may change your mind. It has a way of doing that.

A dark night sky over red sandstone country in Southern Utah

Capitol Reef after dark is not just the park with the lights off. It is its own thing. Photo by Kelly vanDellen via Shutterstock.

Look Up For A Minute

Capitol Reef was designated an International Dark Sky Park in 2015, and the National Park Service says the park still offers some of the best night-sky viewing opportunities in the western national parks. That is the official version. The unofficial version is simpler: go stand somewhere dark and look up.

That is usually enough.

There is a Heritage StarFest coming later this year too, on September 11 and 12, hosted by Capitol Reef National Park and the Entrada Institute. That is worth putting on a calendar if you like telescopes, ranger programs, and people who can point at a sky full of stars and actually know what they are pointing at (a skill we admire, since our own method is mostly “that bright one over there”).

But you do not have to wait until September to enjoy the dark. Summer nights are already doing the work. The cliffs hold the last light for a while, the heat finally loosens its grip, and the sky starts filling in above you.

Sunset light on red rock cliffs in Capitol Reef country

Start with sunset if you want. The stars will handle the next part. Photo by Nature’s Charm via Shutterstock.

Make It Easy On Yourself

The practical stuff still matters. Bring a flashlight or headlamp, but use it carefully so you are not ruining your own night vision (or anybody else’s). Bring water, because Southern Utah does not stop being dry just because the sun went down. And if you are driving anywhere outside the main paved areas, check the park conditions page first. As of the park’s latest update, the Scenic Drive, Grand Wash, and Capitol Gorge roads are listed as passable for standard two-wheel-drive vehicles, while some backcountry roads still need high clearance or four-wheel drive.

The Visitor Center is open daily from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. right now, and the Gifford House is open from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., so your daytime planning is pretty straightforward. Morning for the park. Afternoon for shade. Evening for the show overhead.

A Good Way To End The Day

We’ve said it before, but Capitol Reef is not just a checklist park. You do not have to conquer it. Sometimes the best thing you can do is sit still long enough for the place to start changing around you.

So take the morning hike. Get the pie if the Gifford House still has what you want. Drink more water than seems necessary. Then, when the day finally starts to settle down, go outside and look up.

Worth it.

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