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The Longest Day Knows What It Is Doing

The Longest Day Knows What It Is Doing

Posted in: Nature, Outdoor adventures, Travel on June 16, 2026.

A Very Long Day

So the summer solstice is coming up this Sunday, June 21, which means Capitol Reef is about to get about as much daylight as it knows what to do with. Around here, that is a little under fifteen hours of sun.

Which sounds like a gift. And it is. But it is also Southern Utah in late June, so the gift comes wrapped in heat and a pretty firm reminder to use your head.

The trick is not to do more just because the day is longer. The trick is to do the day better.

Morning light on red sandstone cliffs in Capitol Reef country

The edges of a summer day are where Capitol Reef does some of its best work. Photo by Mario Castro via Unsplash.

Use The Edges

The National Park Service says summer months in Capitol Reef are hot, with temperatures near 100 degrees, and recommends carrying at least one gallon of water per person per day. It also recommends hiking early in the morning or late in the day. That is good advice. It is also the whole plan.

Start early. Take the Scenic Drive while the air is still reasonable. Walk Grand Wash or Capitol Gorge before the canyon walls start holding heat like an oven with opinions. If you want a shorter overlook, Sunset Point is only 0.4 mile one way, which makes it a pretty good evening candidate when the cliffs start catching the last light.

Then let the middle of the day be the middle of the day. Find shade. Drink water. Check the Capitol Reef conditions page. Eat something cold if you can manage it. There is no prize for proving you can out-stubborn June.

Red rock cliffs in Capitol Reef National Park glowing near sunset

June gives you a long evening. That is worth saving some energy for. Photo by Zoshua Colah via Unsplash.

A Few Practical Things

As of the park’s June 16 update, Capitol Reef is fully open. The park itself is open 24 hours a day, the Visitor Center is open 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and the Gifford House is open 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Scenic Drive, Grand Wash, Capitol Gorge, Pleasant Creek, and Goosenecks roads are all listed as 2WD right now.

The backcountry is a different animal. Notom-Bullfrog and Burr Trail are listed as high-clearance or 2WD depending on the section, Cathedral Valley is high-clearance country, and conditions can change fast if weather moves through. The park’s recorded line is 435-425-3791. Press 1, then 4 for road conditions, or 5 for the fruit hotline.

And watch the sky. Summer storms can put water through washes and narrow canyons in a hurry, sometimes from rain that fell somewhere else. If storms are threatening, save the slots and washes for another day. They will still be there. They are rocks. Waiting is one of their better skills.

The Reward

Do it right and a solstice day in Capitol Reef feels pretty generous. Morning light on the cliffs. A quiet stretch in the heat of the afternoon. Apricots ripening in Fruita. Then that long, slow evening when the red rock starts changing color and you remember why you put up with the thermometer in the first place.

Go early. Rest well. Go back out when the day starts to loosen its grip.

That is the summer plan. Simple enough, which is usually the best kind.

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