Green Garden 5 Reasons You Must Backpack the Teton Crest Trail – GWC Mag gwcmagApril 14, 2024068 views By Michael Lanza On my first backpacking trip on the Teton Crest Trail in Grand Teton National Park, camped on Death Canyon Shelf, a broad, boulder-strewn and wildflower-carpeted bench at 9,500 feet, I awoke to the sound of heavy clomping outside my tent. I unzipped the tent door to investigate—and saw a huge bull elk standing just outside my nylon walls. As I’ve come to learn over more than 20 trips to the Tetons since that first one over three decades ago, that elk encounter symbolized just one of several compelling reasons why every backpacker should move the Teton Crest Trail to the top of their to-do list: the wildlife. Where it occurred illustrates another reason: After years of backpacking all over the United States—including the 10 years I spent as a field editor for Backpacker magazine and even longer running this blog—Death Canyon Shelf is still one of my all-time favorite backcountry campsites. Hi, I’m Michael Lanza, creator of The Big Outside. Click here to sign up for my FREE email newsletter. Join The Big Outside to get full access to all of my blog’s stories. Click here for my e-guides to classic backpacking trips. Click here to learn how I can help you plan your next trip. Watching the sunset from a campsite in the North Fork Cascade Canyon, Grand Teton National Park. And I certainly consider the Teton Crest Trail one of the 10 best backpacking trips in America. It’s the one I keep going back to again and again. (Read about my most recent trip.) I think the five reasons I lay out below will give you insights into questions you might have about this classic hike—and inspire you to go do it. But know this important planning detail: The park begins accepting permit applications at recreation.gov usually on the first or second Wednesday in January at 8 a.m. Mountain Time. (The date changes every year and gets announced by late autumn.) Apply then because most campsites along the TCT that are available to reserve for summer dates will disappear quickly—typically within minutes. The park only issues reservations for about one-third of permits in advance—and only through May 15, although most reservations get claimed long before then—leaving two-thirds available each night during the hiking season for people seeking walk-in permits, which can be obtained no more than one day in advance of starting a trip. While there’s high demand for walk-in permits and popular camping zones will fill up first, it’s often possible to get a walk-in permit for a very good hike; and if you’re near the front of the line, perhaps for your first-choice route and camps. My top-selling e-guide “The Complete Guide to Backpacking the Teton Crest Trail in Grand Teton National Park” will tell you everything you need to know to plan and pull off that trip. And I’ve helped many readers of my blog plan a successful and memorable backpacking trip in the Tetons. See my Custom Trip Planning page to learn how I can create a personalized trip plan ideal for you. If you’ve backpacked in the Tetons or have other thoughts or suggestions about this trip, I’d appreciate you sharing those in the comments section at the bottom of this story. I try to respond to all comments. Here are the five reasons every backpacker must hike the Teton Crest Trail. Jeff Wilhelm at Lake Solitude on the Teton Crest Trail, Grand Teton National Park. Click photo for my expert e-guide to the Teton Crest Trail. 1. It’s Not Particularly Hard Some big, wilderness parks are famous for steep, rugged terrain, high elevations, and/or severe weather. But with the exception of two or three long uphill slogs—like Paintbrush Divide from either direction, or climbing from the lower Death Canyon Trail to either Static Divide or Death Canyon Shelf—trails in the Tetons are not especially difficult. Most of the hiking is at elevations that flatlanders acclimate to fairly quickly and have no trouble with, other than occasional shortness of breath. Like most of the Mountain West, the Tetons commonly see afternoon thunderstorms in summer, and snow can fall in September. But they generally receive stable, sunny weather with moderate temperatures during the peak hiking season, from mid-July through mid-September. Click here now to get my e-guide The Complete Guide to Backpacking the Teton Crest Trail. Don’t expect an easy stroll (and keeping your pack light has the biggest impact on comfort and fatigue). But we took our kids backpacking in the Tetons for the first time when they were eight and six, on a three-day, 20-mile loop from String Lake Trailhead up Paintbrush Canyon and down Cascade Canyon—probably the park’s most popular multi-day hike, and it includes the highest and hardest pass on the TCT. (Click here now to get my e-guide to that trip, which is the best beginner-friendly backpacking trip in Grand Teton National Park.) They were 10 and eight when we took took them on a four-day hike on the TCT. In truth, on much of the TCT, you follow a good footpath, traversing a high plateau and descending and ascending canyons that are rarely steep. It is certainly tiring but not exceptionally strenuous. See my story “How to Know How Hard a Hike Will Be.” Find your next adventure in your Inbox. Sign up now for my FREE email newsletter. A moose along the Teton Crest Trail in the North Fork Cascade Canyon. Click photo to learn how I can help you plan your trip. 2. There’s a Good Chance of Seeing Wildlife I’ve seen elk (and heard them bugling in September), moose, deer, pronghorn antelope, marmots, and pikas in the Tetons. Both times I’ve backpacked with my family there, we’ve seen moose fairly close (though at a safe distance). There are black and grizzly bears in the Tetons, but bear encounters are not common; in all of my trips there, I’ve seen one black bear, and it ignored me hiking down the trail while it fed on berries a short distance away. You should take appropriate precautions, of course, and the park requires carrying bear canisters for food storage. Look for elk, marmot, and pikas at higher elevations in summer, moose in wet areas (like Phelps Lake, the forks of Granite Canyon, Death Canyon, and the main stem and forks of Cascade Canyon), pronghorn and bison in Jackson Hole, and deer everywhere. Hit the trail early in the morning or explore from your campsite in the evening hours—and be quiet—for the best chances of seeing wildlife. I’ve helped many readers plan an unforgettable backpacking trip on the Teton Crest Trail. Want my help with yours? Find out more here. Todd Ardnt backpacking the Teton Crest Trail toward Alaska Basin. 3. It’s Not Crowded Most dayhikers do not venture as far as the more-remote sections of the Teton Crest Trail, and climbers focus largely on the Grand Teton and other high peaks in the park’s core. Consequently, you’ll see only other backpackers on much of the TCT, and those numbers are managed to provide a wilderness experience. With the exception of a few spots that get busy at certain times of day—like misleadingly named Lake Solitude around midday in July or August, when dayhikers are streaming in, or Alaska Basin (which is actually outside the park, but along the TCT) on summer weekends, and in campsites in mornings and evenings—you will not see too many people in the Teton backcountry, especially after Labor Day. Campsites are also fairly well spread out within the camping zones, keeping parties largely out of sight and earshot of one another. See my “12 Expert Tips for Finding Solitude When Backpacking.” Click here now to get my e-guide to the best short backpacking trip in Grand Teton National Park. Todd Arndt above the South Fork Cascade Canyon in Grand Teton National Park. 4. It’s Not Experts-Only Beginners who can read a map can backpack the TCT. Throughout Grand Teton National Park, you will find trails that are well-constructed, obvious, and clearly marked, including signs at junctions. You can hike moderate days and still complete a Teton Crest Trail trip in four days, or take an overnight or weekend trip on a section of it. In many ways, backpacking the Teton Crest Trail is relatively beginner-friendly. Get good gear. See my picks for “The 10 Best Backpacking Packs”and “The 10 Best Backpacking Tents.” David Gordon backpacking the Teton Crest Trail toward Paintbrush Divide. 5. It’s Drop-Dead Beautiful However high your expectations may be from the many articles, photos, and videos of the Tetons readily available to anyone with wifi, a hike on the Teton Crest Trail will still wow you. From the campsites to the high passes, canyon bottoms, and virtually every step of the hike, the TCT offers a succession of soaring cliffs, vast fields of wildflowers (in mid-summer), waterfalls, and nearly constant but ever-changing views of one of the most dramatic and famous mountain skylines in America. That’s why I consider it one of “America’s Top 10 Best Backpacking Trips.” See my e-guide “The Complete Guide to Backpacking the Teton Crest Trail in Grand Teton National Park” and my Custom Trip Planning page to learn how I can help you plan your Teton Crest Trail trip. Get full access to all Teton Crest Trail stories and ALL stories at The Big Outside, plus get a FREE e-guide. Join now! See all of my stories about Grand Teton National Park and the Teton Crest Trail (which require a paid subscription to read in full), including these: “A Wonderful Obsession: Backpacking the Teton Crest Trail”“How to Get a Permit to Backpack the Teton Crest Trail”“Walking Familiar Ground: Reliving Old Memories and Making New Ones on the Teton Crest Trail”“The 5 Best Backpacking Trips in Grand Teton National Park”“10 Great Big Dayhikes in the Tetons” See a menu of all stories about national park adventures at The Big Outside.