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Hitchhiking from Moab to Denver

Original Post
A Z · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jun 2017 · Points: 0

Gonna be hitchhiking from Moab to Denver at the end of the month after climbing at the creek. Has anybody taken this route before? What was your experience like? 

Post Trip Report:

Alright, here is my trip report! After sending the only route worth climbing in the creek (Annunaki - 5.11a), we went to Joes Valley so that is my starting point. 

Ride #1 - Huntington to Price (20.7 miles / 21 minutes) - Shawn & Tiffany. Wait Time - 5 Minutes

I started on 4/26 at 9:00am from the town of Huntington. Within 5 minutes of waiting, I got picked up from a nice couple - Shawn & Tiffany. They were headed to Salt Lake City to see some family and we talked about them downsizing houses, van life, climbing, etc. They were a nice couple and I got to ride in a brand Toyota Tundra. They seemed surprised that I had a job and were very interested in what I was trying to accomplish. They dropped me off by the Sinclair's at the front of town in Price. 

Ride #2 - Price to Wellington (8.2 miles / 10 minutes) - James. Wait Time - 45 Minutes

I got dropped off at the Sinclair's at the beginning of town which was a rough spot since a lot of people were driving straight through and not onto highway 191 to Wellington. I positioned myself in-front of the on ramp with good distance so cars had time to stop. I thumbed it for about 15 minutes before noticing a guy walking towards me from the distance. He walked by and I said "hi" and he asked where I was going, I said Wellington and then he said I could just walk there - 6 miles. I said I was trying to get to Denver by EOD so I needed a ride. He kept on walking and then disappeared. He came back about 30 minutes later and then asked if I wanted a ride, I said hell yes as I had now been waiting about 45 minutes. He said follow me and we walked to his "house".. As we walked there, he started talking about how if there's a day and night and 365 days then there should be 13 months and how the government was stealing time from us and not paying us for this 13th month. I quite enjoyed this and then we walked into the front gate of what looked like to be an abandoned house with trash all over. He said, "sorry for the mess, the car's just out back" and we walked to the back of the house. I was quite gripped at this point but decided to follow him anyway... lo and behold, there was two broken down looking cars and we hopped into a Mercury Sable. He drove me 10 minutes to Wellington and I asked him about his life and why he was in Price. He stated he lived there all of his life and that the last decade he was taking care of his dad before he passed. Dropped me off at the Chevron outside of Wellington and said goodbye. Nice guy!

Ride #3 - Wellington to Crescent Junction (74.9 miles / 1 hour, 7 minutes) - Alexander. Wait Time - 15 Minutes

After saying peace to James, I pissed in the Chevron and then walked across from the gas station across the road to get the best position possible for traffic heading East on 191. After waiting 15 minutes, I noticed a semi-truck coming out of the gas station onto the shoulder where I was standing. The truck stopped and then the driver waived at me and I opened the door, he said, "no hablo ingles" and then I jumped in. After using some broken spanglish and busting out google translate, we talked about where we were both headed. He said he was taking a truck full of pollo to El Paso and I was going to Denver so stopping at Crescent Junction would be perfect. He offered me drinks/snacks and I did the same with what I had in my pack. He called his wife and they had a long conversation filled with a lot of laughter. After our initial discussion about logistics, we didn't talk much and jammed out to some Spanish music for the ride. He was very nice and even tried radioing ahead to see if a trucker at crescent junction could take me the remainder of the way to Denver. I was jazzed to get a semi-truck ride as I thought that was no longer possible for insurance reasons. 

Ride #4 - Crescent Junction to Grand Junction (81 miles / 1 hour, 9 minutes) - Ken. Wait Time - 25 Minutes

Once I got dropped off at Crescent Junction, I went into the Alien gas station and took another piss (I was chugging water). I walked by some climbers and said, "you guys headed to Denver?", they looked at me confusingly and said "Not that far.", I got the hint so I fucked off. I looked around and found the on ramp for I70 East, I once again positioned myself advantageously and started thumbing it. After 25 minutes of listening to some music and waiting, a sporty looking red Lexus LC stopped and the window rolled down, "Need a ride?!" said Ken. I jumped into the car and we took off. Ken was heading back to Grand Junction from a car show in Moab. He was retired and lost his wife a fews year back. He made his money in the printing business before digital was a thing. He also talked about how he would hitchhike back in the 1970's and how he had not picked someone up in a while. We talked about the economy, trump, cars, love, and motorcycles. We got his Lexus up to 120mph and avoided a few tickets with his in car radar. He gave me some dating advice and then dropped me off at the Taco Bell on the outskirts of Grand Junction. His parting words were "Thanks for the company and have a nice life!". Ken is the man. 

Ride #5 - Grand Junction to Palisade (10.4 miles / 12 minutes) - Denise. Wait Time - 20 Minutes

After slamming a Crunchwrap supreme at Taco Bell, I was eager to get back at it so I posted up on the on ramp to I70 East. This spot was the worst as there was two roundabouts that then merged into a single lane on ramp that was up a steep uphill so cars had to speed up. I waited here 20 minutes and then a lady named Denise stopped with cars behind her (sorry), I sprinted and hopped into her car and we were off. She was on her lunch break and we talked about what I did for work, her son in the military, and how Palisade had cheaper weed than Grand Junction. She dropped me off at the Golden Gate gas station at the edge of town and then we said bye. Very nice lady and talked about how she used to hitchhike back in the day.  

Ride #6 - Palisade to Golden (232 miles / 3 hours and 57 minutes) - Lindsay. Wait Time - 1 hour

Once again, I positioned myself on the onramp to I70 East and started waiting. I stood here for about 25 minutes and then a guy in a blue FJ cruiser stopped but said he was only going 10 minutes into the canyon so I passed on that ride. At this point in the day, it was around 3pm or 3:30pm so I was really hoping to get a final ride to Denver. I waited another 10 minutes and then two younger girls in a beat up ride asked me where I was going, I said "Denver" and then they said they were headed the other direction. Denise passed going back the other direction to Grand Junction and she honked her horn and I waived. I was very grateful to not be stuck at the last location. I stood there baking in the sun and started contemplating where I would illegally camp if I didn't get picked up. I played some music and then waited another 25 minutes.. Finally, a white Subaru Outback pulled over and a purple haired lady named Lindsay picked me up. Upon rolling her window down, she had one hand on the steering wheel and the other hand on a massive ice cream cone. I walked over to the passenger side and we started moving a mound of stuff out of the passenger seat. She was driving from California to Boulder after finishing up a pet house sitting gig and was now going to see her parents in Boulder. She said she had to stop in Glenwood Springs for a kayak and I agreed that was ok and I would help-out with sticking it on the roof. We took off and talked about basically everything.. I was exhausted after the 4 hour drive but very grateful she picked me up. We got the kayak and then she dropped me off in Golden (final destination). She was figuring things out after having her two kids leave the house. She was also contemplating breaking up with her boyfriend because he wouldn't leave Minnesota. 

That's it. I got back to Golden around 7:30pm and then ordered a celebratory pizza and cannoli. 

I don't write often so this probably reads like shit (Sorry.). 

Thumbs Up!

trailridge · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Apr 2012 · Points: 20
A Z wrote:

Going be hitchhiking from Moab to Denver at the end of the month after climbing at the creek. Has anybody taken this route before? What was your experience like? 

You will be probably be the first to the travel that route.  Moab to Denver is rarley taken, adventure packed route. Full of bandits and high mountain passes riddled with avalanches.  

Climbing Weasel · · Massachusetts · Joined May 2022 · Points: 0

That is a trip report I would like to read. Watch out for serial killers.

Cherokee Nunes · · Unknown Hometown · Joined May 2015 · Points: 0

Its been called an R rated route. X, if you go by way of Colorado Springs!

Stiles · · the Mountains · Joined May 2003 · Points: 845

Hitchhiking blows.  Its gonna be a struggle.

Let the stories commence!

Jiggs Casey · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2024 · Points: 5
Stiles wrote:

Hitchhiking blows.  Its gonna be a struggle.

Let the stories commence!

I’ve hitched about 7,000 miles in the US spread across three different trips and probably a dozen or so states and found it to be fun (often type 2) and certainly adventurous. You’re right that it’s often not easy; I’ve waited overnight for a ride several times, and if I wait less than four hours that’s pretty decent. Never had any negative experiences with anyone who picked me up.

Marc801 C · · Sandy, Utah · Joined Feb 2014 · Points: 65

Does hitchhiking still work in 2025? Esp. long distances?

Chris Gardner · · Golden, CO · Joined Jul 2019 · Points: 6

I bet if you hung around the creek campgrounds enough that you'd find a climber driving that exact route within a couple days of when you want to go.

Jiggs Casey · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2024 · Points: 5
Marc801 C wrote:

Does hitchhiking still work in 2025? Esp. long distances?

Yes, see my post above lol.

Charles Vernon · · Colorado megalopolis · Joined Jan 2001 · Points: 2,749

I hitchhiked from Moab to Denver about 20 years ago. I figured some nice outdoorsy types from the front range would help me out. It took about three rides up the River Roadwith a variety of interesting folks to get to I-70. Then I got a ride in a pickup truck with a beefy former big rig driver who regaled me with tales of crashing his rig, losing his CDL, having his methy wife put out a hit on him, etc. etc. All while tailgating, weaving in and out of traffic, the works. We got to Denver fast. I told him he could drop me wherever and I'd catch a bus to my final destination. He refused and insisted on driving us straight to the Player's Club, a fine establishment sandwiched between auto body shops on Federal Blvd. As soon as we parked, I grabbed my bag and began sprinting up the road. I didn't look back. There's always been a very small part of me that regrets not going in with him, though.

A Z · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jun 2017 · Points: 0
Climbing Weasel wrote:

That is a trip report I would like to read. Watch out for serial killers.

I AM THE DANGER. I’ll follow up afterwards or you’ll see a Netflix doc of how i got ruthlessly murdered. 

ZT G · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Dec 2020 · Points: 50

I’ve hitchhiked a good bit thru the southwest us and Alaska. Always good times. Enjoy it man sounds fun. I too have never had a bad ride 

Long Ranger · · Boulder, CO · Joined Jan 2014 · Points: 669

The worst hitchhiking experiences I've had were within spitting distances of National Parks. The tourons are most certainly convinced you'll murder them. Maybe a little different when it's next to a climbing destination. I'd leave a note on the message board -- cover all your bases.

Hank Caylor · · Livin' in the Junk! · Joined Dec 2003 · Points: 643

Denver to Moab is almost all Interestate(I-70) and hitchiking on any Interestate is against the law. You could play the on-ramp/off-ramp game maybe, or take a fucken bus maybe?

WF WF51 · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Oct 2020 · Points: 0

Consider: The ICE people have a quota to fill. 

Jiggs Casey · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2024 · Points: 5
Hank Caylor wrote:

Denver to Moab is almost all Interestate(I-70) and hitchiking on any Interestate is against the law. You could play the on-ramp/off-ramp game maybe, or take a fucken bus maybe?

Correct, but on ramps are legal. The uniform vehicle code states that pedestrians are not allowed in the roadway, but roadway is defined as the portion of the road ordinarily intended for vehicle travel, so sidewalks, shoulders, and berms are legal.

Marc801 C · · Sandy, Utah · Joined Feb 2014 · Points: 65
Jiggs Casey wrote:

Correct, but on ramps are legal. The uniform vehicle code states that pedestrians are not allowed in the roadway, but roadway is defined as the portion of the road ordinarily intended for vehicle travel, so sidewalks, shoulders, and berms are legal.

From: https://hitchwiki.org/en/index.php?title=United_States_of_America&mobileaction=toggle_view_desktop

Overview of hitchhiking laws by state:
Green: Hitchhiking legal while on the shoulder of the road
Yellow: Hitchhiking legal while off the traveled portion of the road, stay in the grass to be safe.
Red: Hitchhiking is completely illegal.
Gray: Specific laws, check the respective state article

Jiggs Casey · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2024 · Points: 5
Marc801 C wrote:

From: https://hitchwiki.org/en/index.php?title=United_States_of_America&mobileaction=toggle_view_desktop

Overview of hitchhiking laws by state:
Green: Hitchhiking legal while on the shoulder of the road
Yellow: Hitchhiking legal while off the traveled portion of the road, stay in the grass to be safe.
Red: Hitchhiking is completely illegal.
Gray: Specific laws, check the respective state article

Fun, I’ve hitched successfully in three of those red colored states. New Jersey was the only time a motorist was a dick to me (naturally), someone threw a half full soda cup at me but missed.

trailridge · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Apr 2012 · Points: 20
Marc801 C wrote:

From: https://hitchwiki.org/en/index.php?title=United_States_of_America&mobileaction=toggle_view_desktop

Overview of hitchhiking laws by state:
Green: Hitchhiking legal while on the shoulder of the road
Yellow: Hitchhiking legal while off the traveled portion of the road, stay in the grass to be safe.
Red: Hitchhiking is completely illegal.
Gray: Specific laws, check the respective state article

Bringing alcohol into the the state is also illegal. Utah is a backwards state. If you are not breaking the law you are not paying attention. Although multiple wives does sound fun but alot of work. 

TheBirdman Friedman · · Eldorado Springs, Colorado · Joined Jan 2010 · Points: 65

It's a virtual guarantee if you're in the Creek for any amount of time, you will find someone to give you a ride back to Denver. Unless you're hell bent on sticking out your thumb, just make friends during your time there at the crags and campgrounds. 75%+ of climbers in the creek are coming from the Front Range. 

Jake Neem · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Dec 2020 · Points: 10
trailridge wrote:

Bringing alcohol into the the state is also illegal. Utah is a backwards state. 

Only if you're bringing in more than 9 Liters.

Perhaps I'm prude but I think that's a bit much for most outings to the creek pasture anyway... 

Guideline #1: Don't be a jerk.

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