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History
MYSTERY CANYON
(We used a short description written by Mowry and Jeffries, September 1978. This is an update due to changes in the route). SUMMARY
The best time to do this is after periods of long dry weather. You wouldn't want to be in this canyon during rainy weather. It took us 9+1/2 hours to complete the route, and we hiked and set up the rapples fairly fast. You start this route at Weeping Rock and finished at the Temple of Sinawava, so make ride arrangements as necessary. The upper end of this route requires some route finding and a safe demeanor on steep, loose slopes. It can be very hot and sunny in this area. The end of this route requires setting up rappels on slippery rocks under cool or wet conditions. At one point you have to detach from rappel rope in the water and swim a cold pool. This could be repeated several times if there is water in the potholes. You complete the hike in the Zion Narrows where you have about a 1/4 mile hike to the Gateway to the Narrows trail. THE ROUTE: From Weeping Rock hike toward Observation Point. Take the East Mesa trail about 1 mile to where it nears the head of Mystery Canyon. Find a route to the edge, then pick a descent route that roughly follows the drainage bottom and avoids the small ledges. As you get down in the canyon you reach a series of small drops (8'-15') all of which we by-passed to the right. About 100 yards from where the canyon turns West you enter the Narrows and make the first of 12 rappels. RAPPEL #1 has 2 bolts on the right for an anchor and is about 70'
At this point we left the Narrows. A shortways on is 2 short dropoffs with 1 bolt on the right wall. We bypassed these by traversing to the right and going back down in a brushy gully. RAPPEL #8 was from a bolt in the wash bottom and was a 30' low angle rappel Soon you come to an amazing rock slide blocking the canyon. It is probably 200' high and contains a lot of loose rock which is difficult to climb up. To get to the rockslide you may have to swim up to 75 yards if the lake is full. It sometimes contains a lot of stagnant, slimy water. If you're lucky and timed your hike right, it may be dry. RAPPEL #9 was from a bolt on a boulder and down about 125' into a pool that forms the start of Mystery Springs.
Walk downstream to the Gateway trail then on to the Temple parking lot. You've made it! PDF scan of black book pages (730 kb)
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