TrailPratt Cabin
4.8-mile moderate hike to a historic cabin in McKittrick Canyon. Stream crossings, loose rock, canyon views.
Guadalupe Mountains National Park
Leave No Trace is not a hiking trail—it's your ethical contract with Guadalupe Mountains. Master the Seven Principles: Plan Ahead and Prepare, Travel and Camp on Durable Surfaces, Dispose of Waste Properly, Leave What You Find, No Fires Allowed, Respect Wildlife, and Be Considerate of Other Visitors. These principles, grounded in recreation ecology science, are non-negotiable. Every choice you make on the trail—every step off the marked route, every artifact pocketed, every ounce of waste left behind—cascades into the ecosystem. Know them before you arrive.
Educational—applies to all activities in the park
Understanding how to minimize your impact and become a true steward of Guadalupe Mountains
• **Know Before You Go** — Read regulations specific to Guadalupe Mountains (no fires, no pets, no artifact collection) before arrival • **The 200-Foot Rule** — Human waste must be 200 feet from water. Master the Cat Hole Method before your first backcountry trip • **Social Trail Trap** — The shortcut you take becomes the damage everyone follows. Stay marked. No exceptions • **Leave No Trace ≠ Zero Impact** — You cannot have zero impact. Goal is to minimize it. That distinction matters • **Start Small** — Master principles on day hikes before backcountry. One mistake costs the ecosystem years
Year-round (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall)
Essential teaching for all family members. Kids age 6+ can grasp the principles; teens and adults must master them. Make it a family pact before every trip.
Hikers who internalize Leave No Trace principles report deeper wilderness connection and pride in stewardship. The science backing these principles—grounded in recreation ecology research—is solid. Master them and you transform from a visitor to a protector.
None required. These are mandatory ethical principles, not permit regulations.
Not applicable
Persons of all abilities can understand and follow Leave No Trace principles.
Essential teaching for all family members. Kids age 6+ can grasp the principles; teens and adults must master them. Make it a family pact before every trip.
Hikers who internalize Leave No Trace principles report deeper wilderness connection and pride in stewardship. The science backing these principles—grounded in recreation ecology research—is solid. Master them and you transform from a visitor to a protector.
" Hikers who internalize Leave No Trace principles report deeper wilderness connection and pride in stewardship. The science backing these principles—grounded in recreation ecology research—is solid. Master them and you transform from a visitor to a protector."
All seven. They're interconnected. Skip wildlife respect and animals stress, escalating human-wildlife conflict. Skip waste disposal and you poison water sources downstream. They work as a system.
No. You can leave zero litter but destroy the backcountry by cutting switchbacks, collecting wildflowers, stacking cairns, or collecting 'pretty rocks.' Responsible hiking means respecting the entire ecosystem.
Acknowledge it, correct it if possible, and adjust immediately. Report serious violations (illegal fires, wildlife harassment) to park rangers. The goal is learning.
Many are (no fires, no artifact collection, designated camping only). Others are ethical standards. At Guadalupe Mountains, all are non-negotiable.
No fires allowed, ever. Use a camp stove only. Dead wood is critical desert habitat; fire scars don't heal for decades.
Dig a Cat Hole at least 200 feet from water and trails. Bury 6-8 inches deep. Pack out toilet paper in a sealed bag. Unglamorous? Yes. Essential? Absolutely.
No. Principle #4: Leave What You Find. Collect photographs. The wildflower you pick may be a rare species. The rock you take disrupts the ecosystem. Leave everything as you found it.
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