Fayetteville Trail

Fayetteville Trail

Trails
Last Updated: July 2026

Distance

3.96 mi

Est. Time

2–3 hours one-way at steady pace, depending on creek crossing conditions and individual fitness; add time for high-water reconnaissance

Route Type

One-way between two trailheads (Wolf Creek to Kaymoor Top, or vice versa); can be extended into loops via connected trails

Best Season

Spring (April–May) and fall (September–October) for stable weather, lower humidity, and reliable parking rotation; winter possible but icing risk; summer viable only for early starters with heat tolerance

Overview

About This Trail

This is a lung-buster connector through New River Gorge: moderate-to-strenuous terrain with unrelenting elevation change and a mandatory creek crossing that demands respect. The physical toll is real—steep ups and downs, rooted forest floor, and exposed ridges with limited shade in summer. The payoff: gorge vistas, direct access to Long Point, connections to seven other trail systems, and genuine solitude if you time it right. One-way distance and limited parking mean this hike demands tactical planning.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Moderate to Strenuous (Lung-buster with technical sections)

Trail Highlights

Access to Long Point hiking and scenic gorge perspectives from multiple elevations. Direct connector to seven other named trails (Kaymoor, Bridge, Park Loop, Timber Ridge, Long Point, Butcher Branch, Kaymoor Miners, Craig Branch) enabling extended loop-hike options within the Fayetteville–Lansing trail complex.

Insider Tips

• The parking war zone at Wolf Creek is real—miss the 6 AM window and you'll loop to Kaymoor Top or reschedule. Kaymoor Top (via Gatewood Road, ~2 miles from Fayetteville town center) offers slightly better parking rotation. • Don't rely on creek refill alone—bring full water capacity (2+ liters). Treat via filter or bring purification tablets; mountain streams host Giardia. • The gorge creates wind tunnels and temperature inversions—layer aggressively. Shadows drop temps 10–15°F, and wind can accelerate heat loss. • False junctions are common where overgrown spur trails branch off—trust your map and the marked connectors to named trails. • Bikers and hikers share this trail—be audible and yield to oncoming bikes on narrow sections.

Best Season to Hike

Spring (April–May) and fall (September–October) for stable weather, lower humidity, and reliable parking rotation; winter possible but icing risk; summer viable only for early starters with heat tolerance

Hiking Tips

  • Tighten your boots—rooted, uneven terrain demands ankle support and aggressive traction.
  • Carry 2+ liters of water; the creek crossing provides a refill opportunity, but test water level first.
  • Start before sunrise to beat parking scarcity and midday heat exposure.
  • Trekking poles are not optional—they save your knees on the sustained descent.
  • Mark your turn-around time; gorge shadows cut light fast, and cell service is unreliable.
  • Scout the creek crossing before committing your full weight; high water is a hard stop.

Family Info

Strenuous for young children; creek crossing requires close supervision and solid balance. Sustained elevation swings challenge kids under age 12. Better suited for teenagers and adults with proven hiking fitness. Very young hikers should consider shorter, lower-gradient Fayetteville-area alternatives like Canyon Rim Boardwalk.

What Hikers Say

Hikers report relentless elevation gain and a technical creek crossing that demands respect—not a casual stroll. The payoff is consistent gorge views, access to a broader network of named trails, and authentic Appalachian forest solitude if you time it right. The parking crunch is real, but early starts solve it. Solid hike for anyone seeking real work with genuine reward.

ℹ️ Data Sources
🏞️ National Park Service 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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