Wooden Shoe Canyon to Lost Canyon Loop Trail

Wooden Shoe Canyon to Lost Canyon Loop Trail

Trails
Last Updated: June 2026

Distance

8.7 mi

Elevation Gain

404 ft

Est. Time

4-6 hours

Route Type

Loop

Dogs Allowed

No

Best Season

Spring through fall (April–October)

Overview

About This Trail

This is not a casual loop. The Wooden Shoe to Lost Canyon circuit demands technical skill, sustained focus, and serious water discipline. You'll climb one fixed ladder, scramble over rough rock, and navigate dense vegetation in Lost Canyon—potentially very wet. Rewards: riparian wildlife habitats, two distinct canyon ecosystems, and the satisfaction of finishing terrain that separates the gritty from the casual.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Strenuous

Trail Highlights

Riparian wildlife habitats with bird and bighorn sheep viewing opportunities, diverse canyon ecosystems, technical ladder crossing, sustained rock scrambling challenge.

Insider Tips

• The ladder section is short but exposes your fear—test each rung before committing your full weight • Lost Canyon's wet vegetation is photogenic but slippery; slow your pace and expect your boots to be soaked • Don't stop at what feels like the top; continue to the actual junction before descending • Riparian wildlife concentrates at Wooden Shoe Canyon confluence—pause here to spot bighorn sheep and birds

Best Season to Hike

Spring through fall (April–October)

Hiking Tips

  • Carry 2L water minimum—aim for 1L per hour as NPS guidance states
  • Break in boots before departure; rough terrain shreds untested footwear
  • Test the ladder before committing full weight; no bailout option exists
  • Headlamp is mandatory—darkness falls fast in canyons
  • Traction devices essential in winter; skip if ice is present

Family Info

Not recommended for small children. The ladder crossing, steep terrain, rock scrambling, and exposure require close adult supervision and solid hiking experience. Recommend ages 10+ and comfortable with heights. Parents should assess their child's scrambling ability honestly before committing.

What Hikers Say

Hikers report the cumulative elevation gain is brutal—much greater than the listed 404 feet. The ladder and exposed sections demand focus and nerve. Most who finish say the technical challenge, wildlife payoff, and grit required justify the punishment.

ℹ️ Data Sources

Information is compiled from official sources, verified traveler reviews, and editorial research. Learn how YourNPGuide works →