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The greatest concentration of arches outside of Utah with a scramble through the final arch.


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Map Key

16.4

Miles

26.4

KM

Out and Back

5,713' 1,741 m

High

4,506' 1,373 m

Low

2,587' 789 m

Up

2,588' 789 m

Down

6%

Avg Grade (3°)

59%

Max Grade (30°)

Dogs Leashed

Features Cave · Views · Wildlife

Backcountry camping restrictions from the BLM - "NOTE: Overnight camping is prohibited in and around the arches, along the cherry stem road (last 1.5 miles of access road), and the parking area at the trailhead. Use of firepans and/or stoves may be prohibited during high fire danger periods." Check with the BLM regarding fire restrictions if you plan on camping out.

Overview

This route links up some of the best canyon country wilderness in the Grand Valley. The second greatest concentration of arches outside of Arches National Park, singletrack that weaves along the cliff edge for miles and an abundance of solitude. You might see some horses on the lower trail sections, but the trail is generally wide enough for you to allow them to pass safely.

Need to Know

Bring plenty of water as there are zero reliable sources and no water at the trailhead. Avoid this trail if rain is imminent. Flash floods and sticky mud are inevitable in wet conditions.

Description

Starting from the Pollock Bench Trailhead, follow signage for the trail Pollock Bench Trail - P1 as it climbs up out of the parking lot. Around 1.6 miles there will be a junction, head left to enjoy the P1 - Pollock Bench Trail while cruising downhill. At the top of the next climb you'll reach a junction with the Flume Canyon Trail network. Stay right to reach the spectacular section along the edge of the canyon's rim. After a couple of miles on the edge you'll reach a junction heading uphill to the right for horses, stay to the left along the canyon edge until you reach the next junction which should have signs directing you to go left onto the Rattlesnake Canyon Arches Trail - R1.

Once on the main trail, it is well marked with signposts, cairns and a well-worn track as it weaves in and out of washes, and over sandstone slick rock. After a long and loose climb up to the beginning of the long traverse, around mile 6 you'll come to a junction with the Upper Rattlesnake Arches Trail (note that for a shorter/easier hike, you can simply loop back to the start on the P1 - Pollack Bench Trail at this point). Go right, cruising over flat ground as you reach the final sandstone cliff formation. When you round the final corner, start looking up and left to see the arches. You'll pass by a number of smaller arches, finally arriving at Rattlesnake Arch (the main event). Continue another quarter of a mile to the final arch (Cedar Arch). Here there will be a sign indicating you have reached the end of the trail. You can either turn around here, or scramble through the arch via some steep chopped steps (Class 3/4) and join the Upper Rattlesnake Arches Trail.

If you choose to scramble, go through the arch and head right to get on a doubletrack trail. At the first junction you reach, head left and down off the top of the mesa back to the trail you came up earlier. Retrace your steps all the way back to the junction with the P1 - Pollock Bench Trail. Take a left to join the P1 - Pollock Bench Trail, stay left at the next junction to avoid the horse cut-off, and then enjoy the smooth trail as it winds across the mesa top through grasses and cacti. Back at the first junction of the day, stay left to head back to the parking lot.

Flora & Fauna

Lots of standard high desert pinyon-juniper ecology, desert bighorn, and prime mountain lion terrain.

Contacts

Shared By:

Andrew Walters

Trail Ratings

  4.8 from 30 votes

#1

in Fruita

#329

Overall
  4.8 from 30 votes
5 Star
83%
4 Star
14%
3 Star
3%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%
Recommended Route Rankings

#1

in Fruita

#70

in Colorado

#329

Overall
92 Views Last Month
19,360 Since Jul 14, 2015
Difficult Difficult

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5%
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Photos

Rattlesnake Arch #Nomad_Dave for size reference. Nature is beautiful and part of who we are but also unforgiving and deadly, so take care of yourself out there.
Oct 27, 2019 near Loma, CO
Cedar arch (or First Arch). The scramble goes up the middle.
Nov 1, 2015 near Loma, CO
Rattlesnake Arch
Nov 1, 2015 near Loma, CO
Mid January at 1am
May 21, 2023 near Loma, CO
Span from above
Nov 20, 2015 near Loma, CO
Rattlesnake Canyon
Nov 1, 2015 near Loma, CO
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Current Trail Conditions

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Check-Ins

Apr 23, 2023
Kevin Johnston
May 7, 2021
Paul Shin
Nice hike with good scenery. No water. Lots of trails that spiderweb through the canyon so watch the GPS. 17.4mi — 4h 48m
Apr 10, 2021
Rachel Solorio
Bring GPS and lots of water. The grades at mile 6 and 6.3 are extremely steep and sketchy with heavy packs. 13.5mi
Nov 26, 2020
Bret Line
Spectacular hike! 16.8mi — 6h 05m
Aug 15, 2020
Michelle Kariotis Wersching
We went in August & it was flippin HOT. Bring more water than you think AND you need high clearance to get to the TH. HUGE Boulders 6mi — 5h 00m
May 24, 2020
Jenn Tilton
be careful, dont get lost 16.4mi — 7h 00m
May 4, 2020
Paul Burgeson
May 12, 2019
Owen Braley
No shade 23mi
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