Plan with
Confidence
Path Type
Point to Point
Hermit Trail is a real gem that most Grand Canyon visitors never experience. This trail starts out quite steep, but levels out for a few miles in the broad side canyon known as Waldron Basin. it then makes a long traverse through the redrock Supai Formation layers with expanding views of the Inner Gorge unfolding ahead. The trail pitches very sharply downward at the Cathedral Stairs, a series of rocky switchbacks through the Redwall Limestone that drop to the Tonto Platform.Hermit Trail then tees into West Tonto Trail, where a left turn leads toward Hermit Creek (A right turn goes to Monument Creek, where's another backcountry campsite that you could reserve a permit for instead). The mostly flat Tonto Trail winds around to the canyon of Hermit Creek, where the Lower Hermit Trail branches off near the Hermit Creek campsites. This is the typical location for backpackers to stay, but another zone is located farther down the creek at Hermit Rapid.The trail to the rapid is essentially the creek bed, so it's rocky but not too steep. The small creek flows through pools, waterfalls, and enchanting narrows on its way to the river. Once at Hermit Rapid, hikers will find a cobbly sandbar and a view of the thundering Hermit Rapid. With luck, you may see a raft trip rolling through the huge waves.Hermit Trail mileages (one-way):Santa Maria Spring and resthouse - 2.2 miles.Lookout Point - 5.5 miles.Tonto Trail junction - 7 miles.Hermit Creek Camp - 8.2 miles.Colorado River at Hermit Rapid - 9.7 miles.
About 100 years ago, Hermit Trail was actually one of the main routes people used to get into the Grand Canyon. A lodge thrived at Hermit Creek before Phantom Ranch was built. Guests could hike the hermit trail, ride mules, or even take an aerial tramway that was engineered at some point to reach the lodge. The tramway and buildings have long since been dismantled, and some of the trail was reworked to make it more natural . In places the old cobbled trail still exists, and you can find evidence of century-old development near Hermit Creek.
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