Colorado National Monument

Colorado National Monument

Things To Do

Getting Around

Rim Rock Drive

A 23-mile scenic drive will lead you along the rim of a colorful panorama of deep, sheer-sided canyons, and high rock towers. Wayside exhibits at pullouts along the drive provide information about the natural and human history of the park. Allow 45 minutes of driving time, plus additional time for walking, photography, or stopping at pullouts.

For those who would like to explore the monument by foot, there are fourteen hiking trails and routes that range from short and relatively flat to long and steep. There is also a self-guided nature trail near the visitor center.

Bicycling the Rim Rock Drive is also a popular (and challenging) pastime. It has challenged many of the world's strongest riders, but yields to the most casual of recreational cyclists. Whether you decide to ride the entire circuit or only a part of it will depend on how fit you are.

For the grand loop, start wherever you wish and go either way around the circuit that includes the entire Rim Rock Drive and other rural/suburban roads. The aggregate climb for a complete trip is 2300 vertical feet, due primarily to the steeper grades just inside either entrance. Allow three hours. Cyclists are required to ride single file only. Please use bicycle lights in the tunnels.

For an easier 10-mile ride, start at the visitor center and ride to Artists Point and return. Off-road mountain biking is not permitted in the monument, but several adjoining areas are ideal for it.

Scenic Vistas

Impressive views of canyons and the surrounding landscape are found throughout Colorado National Monument and provide visitors with outstanding examples of the park's geology. Long, clear vistas combined with the extraordinary natural scenery enhance and accentuate the visitor's enjoyment of the natural resources of Colorado National Monument and the surrounding region. Overlooks and visitor facilities have been provided for visitors specifically for this purpose.

However, in some areas, views from the Rim Rock Drive are restricted by road cuts, natural rock outcrops and the presence of pinyon-juniper forest. Increasingly, human intrusions such as residential developments are visible on the boundary of the monument and from some viewpoints within the monument. Utility lines are visible from some parts of the monument, and National Park Service (NPS) owned telephone lines and park facilities provide visitors and staff necessary telephone and electrical services. Communication antennas and electric transmissions lines outside of the monument on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) lands are also visible from portions of the Rim Rock Drive and other points within the monument.

In the winter months visitors to the monument may have their view of the valley impaired by the presence of inversions. Inversions are characterized by cold, heavy air trapped near the valley surface by warmer, lighter air above. In some cases inversions cause a build-up of particulates by reducing air-flow thus limiting the necessary air mixing that provides unobstructed views.

Regardless of the impacts of human developments near the park, Colorado National Monument provides many spectacular and breathtaking views for the out of town visitor as well as the local Grand Valley resident to enjoy.