Moab Life
Moab has been written up in hundreds of magazines, newspapers and books including Outside Magazine, Backpacker, Sunset, Conde Nast, National Geographic, Time, Cooking Light, Shape and many more. The area is so diverse, there’s a story for every interest and every style.
Choose your Passion:
- River Rafting & Kayaking
- Mountain Biking
- Road Riding
- 4-wheel driving
- Motorcycling & ATV riding
- Hiking & Backpacking
- Horseback riding
- Golfing
- Fishing & Hunting
- Cross Country Skiing
- Snowmobiling
- Lounging, Swimming
- Star Gazing
- Sun Worshiping
- Camping, RVing
- Exploring for Anasazi Ruins
- Arches and other wonders of the Colorado Plateau
- Boating and Water Skiing on Lake Powell (3 hour drive)
Moab’s history is old and diverse.
Dinosaur tracks create ‘pot holes’ in the sandstone
that only a close eye can discern. Ancient bones are still found and
displayed in museums, sold in rock shops and chiseled into eccentric
jewelry.
The Anasazi Indians farmed the valley floors for hundreds of years
leaving beautiful traces of petroglyphs and pictographs along the
natural sandstone walls that fence-in the valley. Walk by them on the
golf course, drive past them on local roads, bike past the decorative
walls as pedal meets track.
The Ranchers found their way to the Colorado River valleys from all
directions. These pioneers were looking for a homestead to build a new
life. None expected to ‘land’ in Moab permanently but situation and
happenstance stranded them in this extreme and mesmerizing country.
From the harshness grew a bond between fellow ranchers that supported
their survival. Western hospitality and Western friendliness still
define the people of Moab.
The Miners found gold in Miner’s Basin in the late 1800s and mining
continued into the 1980s when uranium was the mineral that brought
wealth to Grand County. Prospecting this impassable country became a
test of resolve and they built incredible roads that teeter along
rockfaces and chisel through impenetrable rock walls creating mazes and
narrow corridors that today brings challenges to jeepers, motorcyclists
and mountain bikers.
The Outlaws of the West used these hidden canyons to elude posses and
bounty hunters. They squeezed through secret passages in the canyons
bringing them to the safety of a small oasis hidden within the canyon
walls and fed by ancient spring water. There were the famous ones like
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Flat Nosed Curry, & Matt
Warner, just to name a few. Many people in today’s Moab and Grand
County are descendents of these outlaws and proud of it.
The Moab of today is diverse, innovative and dedicated to classic small
town values. We work here, play here, and recreate on these great
lands. We offer a Lifestyle that no other place in the world can match.
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