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BEST Camp Spot in All of Moab? | Canyonlands Maze District

2.8K views· 217 likes· 23:50· Jan 22, 2026

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The Maze District of Canyonlands National Park is one of the most remote and least-visited areas in the lower 48 states. Due to its extreme isolation, difficult access, and limited services, the Maze is often overlooked, but it offers some of the most rugged and rewarding off-road trails in Utah. In Episode 2 of our Maze District adventure, we venture deep into Canyonlands in our Chevy Colorado ZR2s, carrying spare fuel and recovery gear as we leave camp at the Doll House Trail and head north up Flint Trail. This episode features technical rock crawling, remote overland travel, breathtaking desert views, and real-world off-road challenges as we experience what it truly takes to explore the Maze District by vehicle. If you’re interested in Utah overlanding, Colorado ZR2 off-road capability, Canyonlands 4x4 trails, or extreme remote travel, this series is for you. Check the Bouge RV Diesel Heater: https://www.bougerv.com/products/portable-diesel-outdoor-heater Subscribe for More Offroading, Overland, and ZR2 content ➡️https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkjK5XQ5pypY19ca5S89wnw?sub_confirmation=1⬅️ Follow Us on Social Media Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/outlandishoverland/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100087731377962

About This Video

Heat. Heat. Day two in the Maze District started at Dollhouse 1 with temps dipping into the 30s, and I was seriously glad we brought the new Bouge RV diesel heater. After running it two nights in a row, I’m convinced it’s one of the best values out there—sealed cap that actually clicks tight, internal baffling so the fuel isn’t sloshing on rough trails, zero leaks (huge), threaded exhaust (no hose clamps), and a Bluetooth app so I can control output from my phone. For remote trips where you’re already carrying extra fuel and recovery gear, reliable heat matters. From there we packed up and ran Dollhouse Trail back out—every obstacle, but in reverse. We hit ledges, a steep little double-waterfall, and a rock-stacked section where I was literally rolling off the stacked rocks and got some solid air. Once we popped out onto Flint Trail, it turned into a long climb with unreal shelf-road views, then switchbacks where the red rock and green vegetation honestly felt like getting dropped into Sedona. We ended the day at a camp that, after seeing it in person, is my new favorite campsite in the whole Moab area—breathtaking in a way the camera just can’t capture. Next morning was freezing with an epic sunrise, a quick detour to Cleopatra’s Chair, and one “spicy line” that was too spicy when I got high-centered—then a line adjustment, double lockers, and we were up and over with no problem.

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