The Narrows canyon in Zion National Park, with turquoise water flowing between towering sandstone walls

Photographing The Narrows in Zion National Park

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T+H

The Cadillac, Pointed Towards Zion

We made it to the sunrise set, stumbled back to the strip at 11am, ate a cheeseburger at 4pm, and somewhere in that haze decided we were done with EDC. By morning, we checked out and pointed the rental Cadillac towards Zion. We had a Sony a6300, a wide angle we were testing, and waterproof boots; not our ideal kit for photographing the Narrows in Zion, but gear matters less than showing up.

Timing

The slot canyon light is best early; softer, more directional, and the crowd hasn’t arrived yet. By mid-morning the canyon fills up and both the light and the compositions get harder.

Position

Go past where the crowd thins. Shoot upstream, not downstream. Get low, almost to water level, and let the canyon walls do the work.

Gear

Dry bag is non-negotiable. A small tripod + ND filter opens up slow shutter options for smoothing the water or waiting out people. Trekking poles if the water is above knee height as the current is real.

Conditions

The Narrows closes when the Virgin River hits 150 CFS; spring runoff makes that likely from March through May. Summer and fall are the optimal seasons. Check the NPS flow data and the weather forecast before you go. Any chance of rain in the forecast, don’t go.

The Narrows canyon in Zion National Park, with turquoise water flowing between towering sandstone walls

Field Notes

The Narrows, Zion National Park

Camera

Sony A6300

Lens

Sony E 10-18 f/4 OSS

Settings

f/8 · 1/30s · ISO 640

Support

Manfrotto Pixi Mini, water level

In the Field

Tilt screen was essential for composing this low without guesswork.

In Post

Shadow recovery in the canyon walls, preserving the warm/cool contrast between sandstone and water.