45°F
weather icon Cloudy
Ad 320x50 | 728x90 | 1200x70

Get satisfaction and great views at Bowl of Fire

Ask any local nature lover if he has visited the Bowl of Fire, and the answer will usually be, “Of course!” But many of those answers are incorrect because people confuse it with the similarly named Valley of Fire State Park. While both are must-sees for anyone who can do both and involve similar terrain, the Bowl of Fire is a completely different experience because it is accessible only by hiking. That means on most days, you’ll likely have the place to yourself. And you’ll always have the satisfaction of knowing you got there on your own two feet and will power.

The Bowl of Fire lies in a remote area off Northshore Road in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area. This time of year, driving along that road to the trailhead, as well as hiking into the bowl, will let you see many blooming wildflowers, including orange desert globe mallow, blue Mojave aster, purple phacelia and white desert primrose.

Elevation at the trailhead is 1,933 feet, and from the parking area to the Bowl of Fire itself is a moderate 2.25 miles, with minimum elevation gain. From the parking area, head northwest toward the prominent limestone ridge. There is only a faint unmarked trail there, so you will have to do some route finding. On the north side of the ridge you will most likely find a somewhat more obvious path; just follow that path west. Once around this small formation you will be able to see the red rock sandstone outcropping – the Bowl of Fire, which will be your destination.

In this area you will hike through a plant community dominated by creosote bush and black brush, our desert standards, comforting yet not too colorful. With any cooperation from Mother Nature, right now you might see a few beavertail cactus blooms, the color of raspberry sherbet. Or you might see barrel cactus flowers, which start out yellow and deepen to orange later in spring.

As you head west, you will cross the rough gravel Callville Wash North Road. This is a lawful motorized route into the area but should be attempted only in four-wheel-drive vehicles with good off-road tires. Also designated by the Lake Mead NRA as Approved Backcountry Road 94, its entrance lies near mile marker 16 of Northshore Road.

Once you cross the gravel road, head toward the outcropping. You will have to drop into the main drainage there and walk upstream. After 100 yards or so, all easy progress will be blocked, but with a short rock scramble, you are up and have arrived at the Bowl of Fire.

The route you take to explore the area is up to you. You will find small arches, windows, overhangs and holes in the sandstone. In the distant past, these rocks were sand dunes. Over time, they turned to stone and were shaped by complex uplifting, faulting and erosion. The vibrant red and orange coloring results from oxidized iron in the rock.

There are many places in the outcropping where you can easily climb up and take in views of the surrounding landscape. Be careful where you place your feet and hands, though, as rattlesnakes are out and about this time of year. Recently in the park I ran into a Mojave green rattlesnake, one of the most venomous snake in the United States.

Deborah Wall is the author of “Great Hikes, A Cerca Country Guide” and “Base Camp Las Vegas: Hiking the Southwestern States,” published by Stephens Press. She can be reached at deborabus@aol.com.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
 
Zion makes for a chill winter getaway

Zion National Park is one of our favorite landscapes any time of year, but in winter its stark mountains, stripped of summer foliage, will be all the more breathtaking.

Blythe Intaglios make for compelling day trip

The Blythe Intaglios are so large that they were not noticeable to non-Indigenous people until 1932. That year, pilot George Palmer spotted them while flying from Las Vegas to Blythe, California.