Bryce Canyon National Park celebrates 100 years with centennial events, Piano Guys concert

Utah officials are visiting the red-rock hoodoos at Bryce Canyon National Park this week, celebrating the park's centennial with speeches, presentations and a musical performance from Utah favorites The Piano Guys.

The Centennial celebration is slated for Thursday starting at 6 p.m., with various activities planned and visits from some of the state's biggest names, including Gov. Spencer Cox. The Piano Guys concert, scheduled to take place with the rim of the canyon as a backdrop, was already sold out as of Monday morning, but there were still tickets available for other activities. More information was available online at nps.gov/brca/planyourvisit/centennial.

Bryce Canyon and its iconic sandstone "amphitheater" became a national park on Feb. 25, 1928, five years after being set aside as a national monument. Named after Ebenezer Bryce, an early pioneer-era settler in the area, the park is best known for its spectacular views and "hoodoos", unique geological formations created by erosion and weathering.

Bryce Canyon National Park is celebrating its 100th anniversary throughout 2023. An archival ranger photo shows what the park looked like early on and how little has changed.
Bryce Canyon National Park is celebrating its 100th anniversary throughout 2023. An archival ranger photo shows what the park looked like early on and how little has changed.

A major draw for hiking, rock climbing, cross-country skiing and other activities, the park drew more than 2.3 million visitors last year. Visitation numbers have more than doubled over the last decade, according to the National Park Service.

“I think this is a landscape that many people still don’t realize even exists on the planet, much less in their own country,” Bryce Canyon visual information specialist and spokesman Peter Densmore said in a video on the park’s website. “Coming here and seeing that for themselves, I think you need a word at least as strong as magic to describe what that experience is like.”

Why is Bryce Canyon so famous?

Inspiration Point comes alive with color at sunrise at Bryce Canyon National Park.
Inspiration Point comes alive with color at sunrise at Bryce Canyon National Park.

Bryce Canyon has the highest concentration of hoodoos in the world. Hoodoos are rocky spires that have been sculpted by erosion over time. “Hoodoo comes from a Southern Paiute word, oo’doo, which describes something that is scary or inspires fear. This is connected to the Paiute legend of this area, which tells of the Legend People being turned to stone by the trickster god Coyote as punishment,” Densmore told USA TODAY.

The park also has some of the longest views on the continent. On especially clear days, he said visitors at Yovimpa Point can see Humphreys Peak in Arizona, 150 miles away across the Grand Canyon.

“Standing there at the southern edge of the plateau, one stands upon the top step of the Grand Staircase – a series of colorful cliffs linking the Grand Canyon to Bryce Canyon,” Densmore said. “This sequence contains one of the Earth’s most complete fossil records of the last 200 million years, including the last supercontinents, the first dinosaurs and flowering plants, and within Bryce Canyon’s Pink Cliffs the dawn of recent life.”

The park is also a stargazer's paradise with official International Dark Sky status. “The park’s clean air, high elevation and remote location combine to offer some of the nation’s darkest skies accessible by a paved road,” Densmore added. He noted the park has the “longest continually running astronomy program in the National Park Service,” going back to 1969.

What is unique about Bryce Canyon?

"Once snow covers the plateau and the hoodoos, the park becomes a very quiet place," said Bryce Canyon Visual Information Specialist Peter Densmore.
"Once snow covers the plateau and the hoodoos, the park becomes a very quiet place," said Bryce Canyon Visual Information Specialist Peter Densmore.

Bryce Canyon is the only national park with Utah Prairie Dogs.

It has three different climate zones.

And it’s not actually a canyon because it doesn’t have a river, but “rather an eroding plateau margin that retreats 1 to 4 feet a century – about the rate your fingernails grow,” according to Densmore.

What is the best time of year to visit Bryce Canyon in Utah?

Bryce Canyon National Park has some of the darkest skies in America.
Bryce Canyon National Park has some of the darkest skies in America.

“There’s truly not a bad time to visit Bryce Canyon National Park,” Densmore said. He called winter a “fantastic and blissfully quiet time to visit” as snow blankets the park’s red rocks.

“Personally, I really enjoy May after a winter in the park,” he said, noting that it can still snow into May, but that’s when overnight lows begin to stay above freezing. “The butterscotch fragrance of ponderosa pines and the songs of returning migratory birds are both in the air, and an array of often very small but dazzling wildflowers begin to reappear below.”

Summer and early fall are popular times to visit the park, which is one of the most visited national parks in the country.

Because it's so high up, Densmore said Bryce Canyon is typically 10 to 15 degrees cooler than nearby parks in the summer. But that elevation is also why he warns visitors to watch out for lightning strikes during monsoonal storms in July and August.

What Native tribes lived in Bryce Canyon?

From Yovimpa Point, Bryce Canyon visitors can see for miles and miles.
From Yovimpa Point, Bryce Canyon visitors can see for miles and miles.

According to the National Park Service, Fremont and Anasazi people lived near Bryce Canyon from around 200 to 1200 A.D., and Paiute Indians lived in the area starting at around 1200 A.D.

“All directions around this canyon, there were different Southern Paiute bands that aren't here today, but were here in the past and their descendants still live on,” Glendora Homer of the Kaibab Band of Paiute Indians said in a video on the park's website. “The Paiutes are still here.”

Hopi, Zuni, Ute and Navajo peoples are also connected to the land.

Where is Bryce Canyon located exactly?

Bryce Canyon National Park is located in Southern Utah, within a couple hours’ drive of both Zion National Park and Capitol Reef National Park.

They closest city is Cedar City, which is about an hour and a half away by car, though there are smaller towns nearby.

Travelers can fly into Cedar City Regional Airport, connecting through Salt Lake City. Driving from Salt Lake City takes about four hours. Another option is to fly into Harry Reid international Airport in Las Vegas, also about four hours away, and take a road trip that includes other parks.

Can you just drive through Bryce Canyon?

Visitors can see Bryce Amphitheater and nine overlooks, along the park’s main road, which stretches 18 miles and climbs over 1,100 feet from start to finish.

The park says it takes about two to three hours for a roundtrip, including stops to take in scenery. It recommends driving straight to the Rainbow and Yovimpa view points at the end of the road, then stopping at other outlooks on the way back.

USA TODAY contributed to this article.

This article originally appeared on St. George Spectrum & Daily News: Bryce Canyon National Park celebrates 100 years