Jenny's Canyon - Snow Canyon State Park
"Jenny’s Canyon is fairly narrow and has amazing orange and red-colored rocks. It may seem quite small in size for people who had been in Zion, yet Jenny's Canyon exhibits a distinctive honeycomb-like texture of rocks that allow kids to climb and play hide-and-seek" [4Feet]: After the water hike in the Narrows, not only our thighs but also the whole body appeared to be exhausted. We had to take a nap for an hour in our car before continuing the afternoon activity. As Snow Canyon State Park seems to have more for us to explore, we went southwest back to St George (80 miles from Kanab). Jenny's Canyon could be considered the easiest slot canyon in Utah. The trail is only 0.25-mile long with little elevation. The canyon itself was not too deep, but there were plenty of crevices and caves to explore. Unlike the slot canyon in the Narrows, layers of stone in Jenny's Canyon on the sides are not smooth due to wind erosion rather than water. In fact, there were a lot of irregular cavities and characteristic arches and bridges. In the afternoon when daylight approached the end of the day, Jenny's Canyon may seem a bit "ghosty." The twilight sent a little light into the canyon making different layers of shadows on the surface of the walls, and those cavities on sides looked like goblins' eyes hidden in the darkness. We were joking that the only thing that Jenny's Canyon missing was a pile of human skulls. Later on, we learned that this slot canyon was named after a young girl, Jennifer Denise Patchett, that fell from one of the high cliffs to her death in 1994... 12/20/20