tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8786764158320829279.post4599490080760737460..comments2024-03-26T12:44:30.308-07:00Comments on Blue Heron Blast: Catch a waveBlue Heronhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13516946085702606491noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8786764158320829279.post-7691952561499358672018-06-30T16:59:26.359-07:002018-06-30T16:59:26.359-07:00Getting permission to access Coyote Buttes and Par...Getting permission to access Coyote Buttes and Paria Plateau is much easier than it used to be and hence less private. When I first went, access was so strict you had to make your reservation a year in advance (and they even told you what kind of shoes you had to wear on site) but then you had the place all to yourself for 24 hrs. Now they are allowing bigger groups and not making you jump through as many hoops to get access. Luckily, the adjacent slot canyons like Buckskin Gulch are offer easier access from the parking areas, but actually see less foot traffic (and they photograph beautifully). Miss the old days when these sites were still well-kept secrets. Remember when the indian village of Supai’s waterfalls in the Grand Canyon were still so hard to get to you wouldn’t see a tourist within 60 miles (and you could trade a bottle of wine for a place to camp and the use of an indian pony for the week)? Now there is a hotel, coffee shop, and a regular helicopter shuttle for the well-heeled touristas.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com