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Points of Interest
Cascade Falls
A lake that disappears underground and reappears as a waterfall
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About
Cascade Falls is one of the more unusual water features in southern Utah: Navajo Lake has no visible outlet, and its water instead sinks underground and travels through a lava tube before pouring out of a cave partway up a sandstone cliff. What you see at the overlook is that same water dropping the final stretch down the cliff face into the forest below. The trail is an easy 1.2-mile round trip with less than 150 feet of elevation gain, gravel-surfaced with benches along the way, making it one of the more approachable hikes in the Duck Creek Village area.
Good to know
- Trail runs through Dixie National Forest, contouring along a cliff line with views toward the Markagunt Plateau and, on clear days, toward Zion
- Best flow is spring through early summer, once snowmelt clears the access road — typically late May into October
- A viewing platform sits near the base; do not climb into the cave itself, as oxygen levels there drop suddenly and without warning
- Dogs are generally permitted, consistent with Forest Service rules rather than National Park restrictions
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