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For Total Seclusion — and Luxury — Escape to Camp Sarika in Utah

Editor’s Note: Travel might be complicated right now, but use our inspirational trip ideas to plan ahead for your next bucket-list adventure. Those who choose to travel are strongly encouraged to check local government restrictions, rules, and safety measures related to COVID-19 and take personal comfort levels and health conditions into consideration before departure.

Iexpected the more obvious elements of desert life—the dry heat, the dust—but not the silence. As I scanned the landscape of tanned mesas and buttes from my private deck, it felt to me as if a pair of invisible hands was cupping my ears. The stillness of this sunbaked slice of southern Utah was like nothing I’d ever experienced. The quiet was broken only by the cry of a bird of prey, somewhere out there.

I had found exactly what I was looking for: a pandemic-era getaway that would bring me close to nature and as far from other humans as possible.

There are plenty of high-end American escapes that achieve a similar out-in-the-wilderness effect—Colorado’s Dunton Hot Springs and Montana’s Resort at Paws Up come to mind—but few are as unabashedly luxurious as the recently opened Camp Sarika, the newest resort from Aman hotels.

For Total Seclusion — and Luxury — Escape to Camp Sarika in Utah
Outdoor dining at Camp Sarika. | CREDIT: KYLE RM JOHNSON

This is the luxury group’s second effort in the Utah desert. Camp Sarika is the sister property of the 34-suite Amangiri, one of the most strikingly designed—and expensive—resorts on the planet. Amangiri’s Brutalist-style, low-rise design, juxtaposed with the stark landscape that rises up around it, has lured A-list celebrities and other jet-setters since 2009. (Kylie Jenner and the Biebers are among the recent visitors.) The hotel is perhaps best known for its Instagram-famous swimming pool, where ice-blue water wraps around a 165 million-year-old rock escarpment—a sight that resembles Horseshoe Bend, the photogenic oxbow in the Colorado River that’s half an hour from the resort.

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Pair of photos showing the pool at Amangiri resort, and a guest tent at Camp Sarika, both in Utah
From left: The pool at Amangiri; a guest pavilion at Camp Sarika. | CREDIT: KYLE RM JOHNSON

But Camp Sarika, Aman’s first tented resort in North America, is something entirely different, even if it’s only a five-minute chauffeured drive or an easy 30-minute hike from Amangiri. At first glance, the camp’s 10 stand-alone pavilions, which are designed to blend in to the landscape, give the illusion of luxury safari tents, with their massive canvas roofs. They are, in fact, one- and two-bedroom villas, built from concrete and thus comfortable for year-round use in the desert environment. The camp’s main building, which opens onto a large lap pool, is home to the sole restaurant, a pair of spa treatment rooms, and a glass sculpture, Wahweap, by Maya Lin that depicts Lake Mead and Lake Powell.

A plate of elk from Aman Resorts in Utah
Mole-rubbed elk in Camp Sarika’s dining room.
| Credit: Kyle RM Johnson

Though the resort’s July 2020 debut was planned well before the onset of the pandemic, its design was coincidentally prescient. After months of staying home, I was glad for all the personal space. Each of the pavilions is at least 100 yards from the next, and the fantastic Southwestern, vegetable-driven cuisine can be delivered to your bedroom or patio if you prefer to avoid the dining room. All of the villas have private plunge pools with views of the surrounding desert.

Pair of photos from Camp Sarika in Utah, including the roaring fireplace inside the lounge area, and a marshmallow being roasted on a campfire
From left: Camp Sarika’s main lodge; each of Camp Sarika’s 10 villas has a firepit, where guests can celebrate the day’s adventures. | CREDIT: KYLE RM JOHNSON

For all the en suite comforts, the best thing about Camp Sarika is the location itself. The resort offers a multitude of outdoor activities—many of which can be done without leaving the 600-acre grounds. One hot, clear morning, I hiked to Broken Arrow Cave with a guide, Kyle Davis, who showed me petroglyphs and other ancient artifacts, such as arrowheads and pottery shards, some roughly 8,000 years old. (Both Archaic hunter-gatherers and, centuries later, Pueblo peoples inhabited these lands.) That afternoon, we barreled through the rust-colored terrain on a hair-raising UTV ride to the top of Studhorse Mesa, where we had a sweeping view of Lake Powell.

Another day was dedicated to conquering the via ferrata, a climbing course consisting of ropes and metal rungs driven into cliffsides. My guide, Christian Seamans, calmed my nerves and a few silent prayers stilled my jittery hands. The payoff was worth it. I got to see a panorama of hoodoos, buttes, and cracked ocher earth that stretched out all the way to Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument, just visible in the distance. It was among the most frightening yet exhilarating experiences of my life. (Beyond the Aman preserve, some of America’s most iconic national parks, including Arches, Bryce Canyon, Grand Canyon, and Zion, are also close at hand.)

Scenes from the Utah wilderness, including a climber on a via ferrata, and the view from inside Broken Arrow Cave
From left: Guide Abbey Hess on the via ferrata; the view from Broken Arrow Cave, on Aman’s private reserve. | CREDIT: KYLE RM JOHNSON

How to Book

Camp Sarika is a four-hour drive from Las Vegas or five hours from Phoenix. Contour Airlines operates flights from Phoenix to Page, Arizona, about 20 minutes from the camp. Visit aman.com; villas from $3,500 per night, all-inclusive.

A version of this story first appeared in the May 2021 issue of  Editor Aztravel under the headline At Home in the Desert

Written by Hien Ngo

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