Handstands Around the World

a former gymnast with a neverending case of wanderlust


A driving tour of Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, Arizona

If you’ve seen Forrest Gump, you’ve seen Monument Valley, at least from a distance.

But seeing it onscreen isn’t the same as being there in person. And I’d wanted to visit Monument Valley in person for a really long time!

Run Forrest Run
(Taken from Highway 163 north of Monument Valley)

From Canyon de Chelly, we headed north toward our final campground of the trip. Like so many other places we went on this roadtrip, Monument Valley is pretty remote. There is some phone service and a few amenities, but not a lot of camping options, and most of them are very expensive. However, my mom managed to find a more affordable (and truly stunning) campground through HipCamp, a website we’d never used before but which ended up working out pretty well.

Arrowhead Campground

Arrowhead Campground is a collection of 7 campsites on the owner’s land, located down a packed sandy road. When we inputted the campground name, my maps app took us to the wrong place; however, when we inputted the actual address, it got us there.

The owner and his adorable dog came out to greet us not long after we’d arrived, giving us the rundown on the available water and bathrooms and some ideas of what to do while in the area. But other than that, we were left to our own devices in the mostly-empty campground.

We found it funny that the rental RV in the site next to us was adorned with a scene from Monument Valley

The highlight of this campground is the scenery. This was definitely one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever pitched a tent, and watching the sunrise and sunset over Monument Valley was amazing.

Monument Valley sunset

It was so hot that we all struggled to sleep, but the upside was that we were all awake around midnight and took a few minutes to look up at the stars, which were plentiful due to the lack of light pollution.

Monument Valley sunrise
I dare you to find a prettier place to pitch a tent

We were up early the next morning for the drive through Monument Valley. This park is on Navajo land and is designated as a Tribal Park. Entry is $8 per person and the website mentions possible long wait times so we opted to get an early start, arriving at the entrance station just after the 7:00am opening. As it turned out, we could have slept in a bit (something we all would have relished after a sweltering night of poor sleep). On the other hand, we had the road and all the viewpoints basically to ourselves, which was nice.

Our first stop, beyond the entrance station, was the visitor center.

East and West Mitten and Merrick Butte
Merrick Butte and Monument Valley as seen from the Visitor Center

From here, we continued onto the 17-mile (27 km) lollipop loop drive through the towering red formations. The website also warns of the roughness of the road, and this part was accurate. We saw one person attempting to navigate it in their sedan, and I’m honestly not sure how far they made it. We didn’t have any issues with our Subaru, but it was definitely rough in a few sections. In wet weather, it may become impassable.

Monument Valley Road

They gave us a pamphlet at the entrance station that supposedly corresponded to the pullouts along the way, but the pamphlet was numbered and the pullouts weren’t, so it was difficult to tell what was what. Nonetheless, all the pullouts are obvious, and it’s worth stopping at all of them.

West Mitten Butte
Mitchell Mesa and The Three Sisters
Looking back toward the Mittens and Merrick Butte
The Thumb (note the red porta-potty on the lower right for scale)

The one downside to our early morning start was the lighting. You enter Monument Valley facing east, so the buttes are all backlit with very long shadows. Some of my photos didn’t really turn out.

Totem Pole

The Navajo name for Monument Valley is Tse’Bii’Ndzisgaii (tseh-beenh-dzis-guh-ee), which roughly translates to ‘the streaks that go around in the rocks.’ It’s easy to see the origin of this name.

On Google Maps this is called Artist Point but on the map we received at the entrance station it’s called the Navajo Code Talker Outpost
Monument Valley handstand
North Window Overlook

It only took us a couple hours to complete the visitor center and the loop drive, so this is a pretty quick stop. We had other plans for the rest of the day (more on that in the next post) and then headed back to our campsite for the final night of our trip.  

While the sandy landscape hadn’t been too problematic on our first night, the same could not be said for the second. Shortly before dinner, dry thunderstorms began to roll in and, with them, gusty winds. Unfortunately, wind + sand + tent camping is a truly awful combination. Despite having a full-coverage rainfly that was completely zipped up, this is what the inside of our tent looked like after the first round of heavy gusts.

Here comes the sand, duh-dun-duh-duh

The weather forecast was predicting continued storms and strong winds for the next few hours and, to be completely honest, we were all exhausted and so sick of the desert heat by this point in the trip, so we decided it was time to pack up and find a hotel.

Goosenecks State Park was the perfect place to stop for a scenic dinner

With sand still in our noses and mouths and ears, we pulled into a hotel in Moab three hours later to find a gentleman we’d seen earlier at Monument Valley checking in as well, though in his case it was due to a lack of air conditioning in his camper.

And that was it.

Our roadtrip in the desert had come to a hot, sweaty, sandy end. Emphasis on the penultimate word of that sentence, because despite our best efforts to shake everything off before we packed it up, a truly incredible amount of sand made its way home with us. In fact, the next day I was doing laundry and when I went to clean the lint trap in the dryer, I found it coated in a layer of sand.

And when we were trying to clean up our gear, our vacuum cleaner decided it had reached the end of its life and started spewing smoke, leaving us with sandy air mattresses and a living room that smelled like burnt rubber.

Three weeks later, as I sit down to start writing this post, we have a new vacuum cleaner and I think we’ve finally gotten rid of all the sand.


Up next: a wrap-up of our southwestern roadtrip


The Important Stuff:

  • Getting there: the entrance station to Monument Valley Tribal Park is on Monument Valley Road, located off Highway 163 near the Utah/Arizona border. With Verizon, we had enough phone service to use our maps app, and it got us there without issue.

  • Fees and passes: entrance to the park is $8/person and is good for the entire day.

  • Where to stay: there are a handful of small campgrounds, a lodge inside the tribal park, and a lodge a few miles to the west, but overall there aren’t too many options. You could also just spend a couple hours in Monument Valley as you’re passing by and spend the night elsewhere. Moab is about 2.5 hours north and the Grand Canyon is about 4 hours southwest.

  • What to do: without hiring a guide, the only options are one hike (Wildcat Trail, 3.8 miles/6.1 km roundtrip) and driving the loop road. With a guide, there are longer driving tours, horseback riding, and other hiking opportunities.

  • Other: note that while Arizona does not observe daylight savings time, the Navajo Reservation does. If you’re arriving from southern or western Arizona, you will lose an hour when you cross onto the reservation. If you’re arriving from Colorado, New Mexico, or Utah, there will be no time change.

46 responses to “A driving tour of Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, Arizona”

  1. Although I’ve been through the four corners many times, I’ve never stayed there, so haven’t seen those dramatic sunrises and sunsets. So dramatic.

    1. Perhaps a return trip is in order!

  2. Your photos are stunning, despite your mention of backlighting. I didn’t know about the campground there, would be tempted to stay in it for the sunrises, sunsets, and solitude (if not for the sand 😊).

    1. Thanks, Tanja! If you find a non-windy (and not so hot) time to stay there I imagine it would be the perfect camping experience.

  3. Absolutely stunning, and I totally recognize the first pic from Forrest Gump!

    1. The pullout is actually called “Forrest Gump View” or something like that!

      1. I would have played “Running on Empty” while driving that stretch!

  4. MY GOSH this is a beautiful area. My coworker just went here over the summer. He also has a fun photo inspired by Forrest Gump. I think I need to get into the desert soon, I’ve been doing a lot of green traveling. Which I adore, but I forget how beautiful the desert can be.

    1. The desert really is its own kind of beautiful! Just don’t go in July hahah

  5. Great write-up and photographs. We have done the drive and I am hoping to go back to that area very soon. I’m thinking of staying in Mexican Hat.

    1. Thank you! We drove right past Mexican Hat. Definitely pop out to Goosenecks State Park when you go by, it’s near Mexican Hat and so worth a quick stop. I imagine sunrise or sunset photos from there could be quite stunning.

  6. What a beautiful place, it’s like mars!! That campsite is something special, though I’m sorry you had a rubbish night’s sleep. Having the viewpoints to yourself must have been special 🙂

    1. Everything about it was so great up until the wind. It was so quiet and peaceful!

  7. Yes I don’t think you will find better campsites than that. The area is absolutely stunning 😍.

    1. It really is, it was pretty amazing!

  8. This looks like such a gorgeous place to camp, and what an interesting landscape as well.

    1. Definitely worth a visit!

  9. These are iconic landscapes that really make it worth braving the sandy winds to see them.

    1. It was absolutely worth it! And at least we got to spend one night there before the wind chased us out.

  10. You have gotten some absolutely incredible pictures of this incredible area. And with a sunset too is just magic 🙂

    1. Thank you!

  11. Not a bad view or photo amongst those, with the exception of the sandy sleeping bags! A stunning place

    1. Yes, the sandy sleeping bags were not fun to clean up!

  12. Stunning shots of the sunset and of the towering rock formations in Monument Valley. Camping in the wind is generally not fun to begin with, but add sand into the mix, yikes! I couldn’t help but laugh about how your vacuum cleaner then died. Go figure!

    1. Yeah, it was unfortunate timing. It was many years old, though, and cheap, so I guess it was time.

  13. I love Monument Valley. We stayed at the View Hotel and I think we ran the walking path around the Mittens the next morning. Lots of people were driving the lollipop road (even into the evening), which we could see from our balcony, but we had the Bobbie attached to the car and were only there for an evening and an overnight, so we didn’t have time to unhitch and drive the road. I know we’ll be back there with Bobbie 2.0, and I really want to stay longer. I’m going to note that campground you stayed in.

    1. I wish we’d stayed at the hotel, but we just didn’t even consider it. At least we could stop there and see the view from the balcony. I definitely wouldn’t want to drive that road with a trailer, but your truck would (obviously) have no issues, and I’d imagine it shouldn’t be too hard to get the trailer out to that campground either. Hopefully you have less wind during your trip!

      1. Unless I’m flying a kite or stranded at sea in a sailboat, I’ll always vote for less wind. (I accidentally mistyped “wind” as “wine.” Needless to say, I fixed it immediately!)

  14. On my bucket list for sure! And the sand… I remember your IG stories about it!! Hopefully the new vacuum was up for the challenge.

    1. The new vacuum has been great haha!

      1. Honestly, I was excited when I got a vacuum for Christmas one year. The joys of being an adult…

  15. looks absolutely beautiful. When I plan our Utah trip we will travel through here on the way.

    1. Definitely do, it’s worth the stop!

  16. I’ve heard of Monument Valley, but never went. But it’s absolutely stunning, and golden hour is when the landscape truly shines! Sand is a pain: once it’s in, it’s impossible to get off! I’ll have to make it back out to that part of the US to visit (along with Moab, which I haven’t been to, either)! Thanks for sharing, Diana!

    1. Moab isn’t too far away, so this could absolutely be combined easily into the same trip!

  17. You are right Diana, the scenery of the area is just sunning and I regret we did not have time to stop here on our 2018 trip. Ughhh, sand in the tent, sleeping bacg and up your nose. A good thing there was not a heavy rain or flash flooding. The sandy roads could quickly become undriveable. Happy Wednesday. Allan

    1. Oh no! Well, I guess you’ll just have to come back down this way sometime and make a stop through Monument Valley. And yes, the one good thing about vacationing when we did is that it wasn’t monsoon season yet so we didn’t have to worry about rain. I think it rained for maybe 5 minutes the whole trip, and it was just a sprinkle.

  18. There is just something mesmerising about a desert landscape punctuated by red sandstone formations, slender pinnacles and massive buttes, especially as it is as iconic as the Monument Valley, Diana! It is one of those unusual parks that can cast a spell on their visitors with their stunning landscapes and breathtaking views. And I can’t really argue with you – that is one super scenic spot to pitch your tent. Thanks for sharing, and have a good day 🙂 Aiva xx

    1. There really is, Aiva. It’s just so amazing that these buttes formed the way they did!

  19. Such cool scenery! I was thinking during the first pictures of the tent how awful some wind would be haha. I really hate sand so I can only imagine it all over after this trip!

    1. Hahah yeah, I can confirm it is an awful combination. It was not fun, and we were very glad to be done with it.

  20. So many stunning views with those great pinnacles. And what a sunset from your campground! Are you still cleaning out the sand? 😊

    1. You know, I think we finally got it all haha! The last thing was the car, and it took about 10 minutes with the heavy duty car wash vacuum to get all the sand out of the interior.

  21. Fabulous scenery

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