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Grotto Canyon Hike

Where:

  • Grotto Canyon

 

When:

  • October 22, 2022

 

Who:

  • Ed, Stephanie, Cody, Jackson, Erin

 

Trailhead:

  • from Calgary, take highway 1 and turn off at the Seebee exit onto Highway 1X for a couple of km, and turn left (west) onto 1A of the hamlet of Exshaw for 3 km
  • from Canmore, take the 1A east for 13 km (10 minutes), and the parking lot is on the left-hand side
  • the Grotto Creek parking lot is on the right (north) side of the highway beside Grotto pond
  • a 10-minute drive from Canmore and 45 minutes from Calgary
  • the trailhead starts on the west side of the parking lot at the large Grotto Creek Trail sign
  • you take a path for a km through the trees along the edge of the Baymag 2 plant (processing plant for magnesium-carbonate), before turning right (marked with flagging tape) to follow Grotto Creek up the limestone walled canyon

 

 

Degree of difficulty:

  • 250 meters elevation gain
  • 6 km round trip to the cave/hoodoos and back
  • the hike took us 2 hours at a very leisurely pace
  • the creekbed was rocky and covered with the first snowfall of the year
  • there is not much elevation, so it’s a relatively easy hike other than the tricky footing through the creekbed in the canyon

 

 

Interesting notes:

  • partway up the creekbed just before the bend, on the left-hand side, are some Hopi pictographs (painted in ochre) that are estimated to be 500 to 1300 years old
  • the Hopi (meaning peaceful people) tribe is now based in Arizona, and one of the most visible pictographs is of their symbolic flute player
  • there are 200 climbing routes along the Grotto Canyon hike
  • just around the bend, there is an Inukshuk Garden, and a little further along are some hoodoos and a cave in the sandstone on the left wall of the valley
  • the hike is wedged between Grotto Mountain to the west and Mount Fable to the east
  • members of the Palliser Expedition named the area Grotto in 1858 after discovering the cave tucked into the mountain, which they described as having a large stream leading to a clear pool and green mossy bank
  • Mt. Fable was named by the first ascent party in reference to a story about heavy bush causing a prior attempt to fail, which they considered a fable