Hike to Fall Colors

Hike to Fall Colors

Trails
Last Updated: July 2026

Distance

5.5 mi

Elevation Gain

1,200 ft

Est. Time

2 to 6 hours depending on route choice and hiking pace

Route Type

Variable: loops and out-and-back options across four distinct park areas

Dogs Allowed

No

Best Season

Fall

Overview

About This Trail

Witness rare fall foliage in the high desert—a seasonal spectacle from mid-October through early November when maples and aspens ignite against evergreen pines. This is not one trail but a series of short and long hikes across four distinct park areas (McKittrick Canyon, Frijole Ranch, Pine Springs, Dog Canyon), each offering routes of varying difficulty. Loose rock terrain and sheer drop-offs demand trekking poles and solid footwork. Weekends fill to capacity; weekday visits yield parking certainty and solitude.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Moderate to Strenuous (varies by route and endpoint chosen)

Trail Highlights

Witness a phenomenon seldom seen in the southwest: deciduous trees blazing orange, red, and yellow in the high desert from 6,000 to 9,000 feet elevation. Views span from intimate canyon floors lined with maples to ridge-top panoramas across Texas and New Mexico.

Insider Tips

• The false summit at McKittrick Notch is an intermediate viewpoint, not the destination—continue 100 yards past the official 'viewpoint' for true color panoramas. • Dog Canyon area colors peak 1-2 weeks earlier than McKittrick Canyon. Plan accordingly if you're chasing the absolute peak. • McKittrick Canyon closes at 5:00 PM Mountain Time sharp—exit by 4:30 PM or hike out in twilight and risk navigation errors. • Water at Smith Spring tastes mineral-heavy; filter and carry backup hydration anyway. • Tuesday-Thursday are ghost towns; Sunday is wall-to-wall conga line. Math is simple. • Arrive Pine Springs by 6:00 AM weekdays, 5:00 AM weekends, to secure parking—lot fills by 8:30 AM peak season. • Rent trekking poles at Pine Springs Visitor Center if you didn't pack them; loose rock demands them.

Best Season to Hike

Fall

Hiking Tips

  • Trekking poles are non-negotiable—loose rock surfaces cause ankle injuries. Rent or bring your own.
  • Carry 2.5+ liters of water minimum; strenuous routes demand 3-4 liters. High elevation + desert sun = rapid dehydration.
  • Start before sunrise on weekdays; weekend lot fills like a concert by 8:30 AM.
  • McKittrick Canyon closes at 5:00 PM Mountain Time—plan your exit; don't hike out in twilight.
  • Check weather 48 hours prior; fall storms create slick, dangerous conditions on loose rock.
  • No dogs allowed on any trails. Period. Wildlife comes first.
  • Bring a paper map or download offline maps—trail conditions vary by season and some junctions lack clear signage.

Family Info

Shorter routes (Smith Spring Loop, Pratt Cabin viewpoint) are family-feasible with good supervision, sturdy boots, and poles for all children ages 6+. Devil's Hall, Notch, and ridge trails are NOT suitable for young children due to loose rock, steep grades, and unguarded cliff exposure. Hand-holding essential on technical sections. Monitor children for altitude fatigue at this elevation. Start early and plan short days to avoid tired, clumsy hiking in fading light.

What Hikers Say

Hikers rave about the rarity and intensity of fall colors in the high desert and the stark beauty of deciduous trees against evergreen pines. Consensus: visually worth the drive and effort, but loose rock demands fitness, poles, and honest self-assessment. Weekday visits transform the experience from zoo to sanctuary—solitude, parking guarantee, and unobstructed color views. Weekend crowds and parking chaos are the primary complaint.

ℹ️ Data Sources
🏞️ National Park Service 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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