The Grotto

The Grotto

Natural Attr
Last Updated: July 2026

Type

Geological Formation

Accessibility

Moderate hike—3.5 miles from trailhead, steady elevation gain, no scrambling required

Features

Open cave depression, stone picnic benches and tables, Permian limestone canyon walls, canyon floor ecosystem, views of upper canyon switchbacks leading toward the Notch and McKittrick Ridge.

Overview

About This Attraction

In McKittrick Canyon's deep shade sits a cave alcove where water erosion sculpted Permian limestone into a natural shelter—stone benches and picnic tables await hikers. This cultural landscape bears traces of early-20th-century ranching and hunting operations. The site layers geological and human history: erosion over millennia created the alcove; humans adapted it as a rest stop. From the McKittrick Canyon Trailhead, expect a moderate 3.5-mile approach with exposed switchback terrain continuing above toward the Notch.

Quick Facts

Type

Geological Formation

Access

Moderate hike—3.5 miles from trailhead, steady elevation gain, no scrambling required

Main Features

Open cave depression, stone picnic benches and tables, Permian limestone canyon walls, canyon floor ecosystem, views of upper canyon switchbacks leading toward the Notch and McKittrick Ridge.

What You'll See

Open cave alcove with stone benches and picnic tables; Permian limestone canyon walls; views upslope of steep switchback terrain ascending toward the Notch and McKittrick Ridge; canyon floor ecosystem and vegetation.

What Makes It Special

Historic cultural landscape site bearing traces of early-20th-century ranching and hunting operations; shallow cave alcove naturally formed through water erosion of Permian limestone; represents layering of geological and human adaptation to canyon geography

Safety Considerations

Canyon setting presents gravity hazards from steep slopes and unstable limestone. Stay on trail; do not venture past rock formations or barriers. Switchbacks above the Grotto climb steeply with exposure—avoid unless experienced with canyon hiking. Afternoon thunderstorms are a genuine hazard July–September; start early, descend by mid-afternoon. Never shelter under overhanging rock during lightning. Maintain safe distance from wildlife (25 yards standard, 100 yards for bears).

ℹ️ Data Sources
📖 National Park Service — The Grotto (official page) (checked 2026-07-14) 📖 National Park Service — Guadalupe Mountains National Park fees, hours & conditions (checked 2026-07-05) 📖 Climate data: Pine Springs, Tx Us, 5,590 ft (NOAA 1991-2020 normals, station USC00417044) 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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