Moab and dispersed camping in Klondike Bluffs

Moab museum in the downtown.
Moab downtown. 

We went back to Utah and arrived to the famous Moab. 

The small city screams mountain biking, off road travel, and the super crowded Arches National Park - this excessive crowding reminds me of the warnings of Edward Abbey in his Desert Solitaire. 

Paved bike trail in Moab.
Moab bike trail. 

Hotel logo design in Moab.
Action packed design here. 

We went to the visitor center of Moab and got lunch in town - also ice cream. 

Colorado River through Moab, Utah.
Colorado River through Moab. 

In the afternoon, we grabbed a camping spot in BLM land and planned our visit to Arches National Park for the next day. 

Our BLM dispersed campsite.
Our lonely campsite. 

Our dispersed campsite from the near rocks.
View of our site from the rocks. 

We have to be at the park before 7 am or would need to buy sort of a $2 permit through the famous or infamous - depending on who you ask - Recreation.org. 

They adopted this system to somehow control and limit the excessive amount of visitors.

View to the west of our campsite near Moab.
View from our campsite. 

Why everybody wants to go know to Arches? 

In the times of Edward Abbey, the place was mostly empty. But being the spot with the most concentration of natural arches in the entire world combined with Instagram and YouTube brought an avalanche of folks. 

Anyway, good for the local touristic economy. 

Sunset in Utah.
Beautiful sunset in Utah. 

(Posted from the phone.)

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