Grand Junction is your new destination for hiking, biking, dining and drinking

The cool of dawn may be ...

Joshua Berman, Special to The Denver Post

The cool of dawn may be the best time to hike Monument Canyon Loop in Colorado National Monument. The trail is a 4.7-mile, two-hour tour with views of stunning rock formations. It is home to bighorn sheep but you are more likely to see lizards and bees amid the red rock spires. (2022) (Joshua Berman, Special to The Denver Post)

The sun’s first light struck the walls of Wedding Canyon in Colorado National Monument as if they’d been splashed with a bucket of orange paint. I smile-squinted as I climbed higher into the desert, enjoying the air’s  momentary coolness. It would grow unbearably hot, but in this moment, the temperature was perfect.

Grand Junction, a city of 65,000, is named for the joining of the Colorado and Gunnison rivers, and is growing as a destination for travelers – and not just for hikers and bikers. For example, I’d heard of Mesa County’s many wineries (30 at last count), but I knew nothing of the many craft beer options in town until my last trip west. I’ve spent the night at the Grand Junction KOA, but until this last visit I’d never stayed in one of its newer hotels. I’ve driven part of Rim Rock Drive in Colorado National Monument, but never hiked any deeper in the park than a couple of scenic viewpoints. It was time to change all that.

I’ve always considered Colorado National Monument, near the border with Utah, just south of Interstate 70, to be one of Colorado’s best-kept secrets. It is a veritable “mini-Grand Canyon” that you can see from the highway but which most people don’t give a second and more prolonged glance. It’s time to stop thinking of this area as a pit stop on the way to or from Moab. It’s time to dig a little deeper – in both the national monument and Grand Junction, itself.

This is how I found myself drinking in that dawn sunshine, approaching the top of Wedding Canyon. The Monument Canyon Loop is a 4.7-mile, two-hour tour, which I hiked early to beat the heat and the crowds. I saw signs of the bighorn sheep that live along this loop, but none showed themselves. I saw lizards and bees and red rock spires and other stunning formations. Then I drove 15 minutes to Grand Junction and went straight to Octopus Coffee, locally famous for its breakfast burritos, house-baked pastries, Cuban breves, and a “happy hiker” sticker, which I slapped on my coffee mug.

The kids in your travel party ...

Joshua Berman, Special to The Denver Post

The kids in your travel party might especially enjoy Eureka! Science Museum in Grand Junction, with its interactive displays. (Joshua Berman, Special to The Denver Post)

My options for the rest of the day included a self-guided tour of the city’s 115 art sculptures and murals, tee time at one of three year-round golf courses, or a day of mountain biking or off-road adventures. There is even a botanic garden worth exploring. There are also a few air-conditioned museums in town – a great option if you have kids with you (Museum of the West or Eureka! Science Museum in Grand Junction and the Dinosaur Journey Museum in Fruita). If you have a dinosaur-obsessed kid with you, plan to hike the 1.5-mile Trail Through Time. Or, I could head back to Hotel Maverick, a modern four-story affair on the edge of the Colorado Mesa University campus, where I could soak in the hot tub or enjoy coffee and a slow, post-hike morning. I went for the latter.

Food + Wine Magazine recently pronounced Grand Junction and the surrounding area “the new Sonoma with its charming vineyards and stellar dining.” I would add to that, “and its burgeoning beer scene.” Brewery options include the Handlebar Tap House, especially popular with mountain bikers, with a patio, rooftop seating, full burger menu, and 24 rotating beers on tap (plus Peach Street Distillery cocktails and Colorado canned wines). There’s also Ramblebine Brewery, known for its sours, but also for its God Hammer Red and the Hellyah Blonde. One more backyard beer garden of note is Foam & Folly Brewery & Taproom, also with an ample indoor, art-adorned space.

In the Devil's Kitchen restaurant on ...

Provided by the Hotel Maverick

In the Devil’s Kitchen restaurant on the hotel’s fourth floor, which offers sweeping views of the campus below from its floor-to-ceiling windows and patio, culinary students spend a 16-week semester learning the ins and outs of both front-of-house and back-of-house roles. (Provided by Hotel Maverick)

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