Natural AttractionBlack Canyon of the Gunnison National Park Sign
2,700 ft deep slot canyon; base as narrow as 40 ft, carved in 2-billion-year-old rocks.

From the rim at Devil's Lookout Overlook, the view drops straight into the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, where dark Precambrian gneiss and schist walls plunge toward the river far below. Those somber, shadow-holding walls are the product of one relentless engine: the Gunnison River grinding downward through some of the hardest rock in Colorado. Earning the view takes a short commitment - the walk to the overlook is 607 yards on an unpaved trail. Pack water, watch your footing, and give the edge the respect a river-cut chasm deserves.
Scenic Overlook
Short walk required - 607 yards on an unpaved trail
Canyon rim viewpoint over the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, reached by a 607-yard unpaved trail; designated by NPS as a Scenic View/Photo Spot.
The Black Canyon's steep, dark walls of ancient gneiss and schist dropping toward the Gunnison River - the erosional engine that cut this entire chasm.
The canyon exposes Precambrian gneiss and schist - among the oldest rock visible in Colorado - carved by the Gunnison River.
This is a canyon rim overlook - the hazard is gravity. Stay behind the edge and keep children in hand. The 607-yard approach trail is unpaved, so footing can be loose. Park guidance: stay 100 yards from bears and 25 yards from other wildlife.
- Budget time for the approach - the walk to the overlook is 607 yards on an unpaved trail, so wear shoes with real tread. - Stay behind the overlook edge; this is a river-cut canyon rim and the drop-offs are unforgiving. - Bring your camera - NPS lists this spot as a Scenic View/Photo Spot. - Keep at least 25 yards from wildlife (100 yards from bears), per park guidance.
The canyon exposes Precambrian gneiss and schist - among the oldest rock visible in Colorado - carved by the Gunnison River.
The canyon walls expose Precambrian metamorphic basement rock - gneiss and schist - a window into some of the oldest crust visible in Colorado, incised by the Gunnison River.
From the overlook's trailhead pullout, the walk to the overlook is 607 yards on an unpaved trail. GPS: 38.5742335497, -107.705083463.
The overlook itself, at the end of the 607-yard unpaved trail.
NPS classifies this site as a Scenic View/Photo Spot - the rim-edge canyon view is the shot.
The rim-edge viewpoint at the end of the trail; NPS lists the site as a Scenic View/Photo Spot.
Other rim viewpoints in the park include Chasm View Overlook, Painted Wall Overlook, Kneeling Camel Overlook, Balanced Rock Overlook, and Narrows Overlook.
- The 607-yard unpaved approach filters out drive-up crowds - a little effort typically buys a quieter rim experience. - Study the canyon walls for the banded texture of gneiss - that layering records metamorphism deep in the crust long before the river arrived. - The site is open to the public per NPS; pair it with neighboring viewpoints like Chasm View Overlook or Painted Wall Overlook for a fuller rim tour.
Not a drive-up view: the walk to the overlook is 607 yards on an unpaved trail. Surface is dirt/gravel rather than pavement.
Kids can handle the 607-yard walk, but the payoff is an exposed canyon rim - hold hands near the edge and keep everyone behind any barriers.
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It's a commitment but not a hike: 607 yards on an unpaved trail. Wear shoes with tread for the dirt surface and take it slow - the destination is a canyon rim.
If you want a quieter rim moment, yes. The 607-yard approach thins the crowds, and NPS designates the site as a Scenic View/Photo Spot for good reason.
The walk itself is kid-manageable, but the overlook sits on a canyon rim with serious drop-offs. Hold hands near the edge and keep children close at all times.
No separate permit - it's open to the public and covered by the park entrance fee: $30 per private vehicle (7-day pass), $25 per motorcycle, or $15 per person on foot or bike.
No - NPS states the walk to the overlook is 607 yards on an unpaved trail, so expect a natural dirt surface rather than pavement.
A rim-edge view into the Black Canyon of the Gunnison: dark walls of Precambrian gneiss and schist cut by the Gunnison River, the erosional engine behind the whole canyon.
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