Regional overview

The northern Bighorn Mountains rise from the sagebrush and grasslands of the Bighorn Basin and the Powder River country, capped by the sub-alpine plateau along US-14 and US-14A between Burgess Junction, Dayton and Lovell. The zone treated here runs from the Wyoming–Montana state line south to the Cloud Peak Wilderness boundary and covers the high country crossed by the two northern trans-range highways, the eastern escarpment above Dayton and Sheridan, and the deep limestone gorges of the western flank around Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area. Elevations range from roughly 1,100 m at the mouth of Bighorn Canyon to 2,943 m (9,655 ft) on Bald Mountain and 3,088 m (10,133 ft) on Black Mountain.

The main hiking centres are Burgess Junction — the sub-alpine plateau on US-14 near the Burgess Ranger Station — and Sibley Lake, Prune Creek and North Tongue campgrounds, all along US-14 between Dayton and Burgess. On the north-west edge, the Medicine Wheel / Medicine Mountain National Historic Landmark on FSR 12 off US-14A is the single most culturally significant site in the range and one of the most important pre-contact stone constructions in North America. On the south-western descent from US-14A, Porcupine Falls and Bucking Mule Falls sit in the deep-cut limestone of Big Horn Canyon and Devil Canyon. Terrain is a mixture of sub-alpine plateau, limestone escarpment, glaciated tarns on the higher ground, and deep canyons on the western descent. Snow lingers on Bald Mountain and along US-14A into late June, and the highways commonly open only in mid-to-late May depending on the year.

Cultural, legal and safety context matters more here than in most of the range. The Medicine Wheel National Historic Landmark is a sacred site actively used by Northern Plains tribes for ceremony; visitor conduct is governed by a Historic Preservation Plan (HPP) developed in cooperation with tribal representatives. The site is closed to the public during ceremonies. Do not touch, disturb, or remove any of the stones. Do not tie prayer cloths or offerings unless invited to do so. Photography of ceremonies is not permitted; general landscape photography is allowed when the site is open. On the western canyons — Porcupine, Bucking Mule, Devil Canyon — access roads (FSR 13, FSR 14) are unpaved, seasonal, and can be rough after rain. Wildlife includes black bear, moose, elk, mule deer and prong­horn; rattlesnakes are common on the western canyon rims below approximately 1,800 m. Cell coverage is limited across the plateau and absent in the canyons.

Selection rationale

The five hikes cover the cultural centre-piece of the range, two waterfall descents on the western escarpment, a signature east-side canyon walk, and a short, high sub-alpine summit. Medicine Wheel is the required cultural anchor. Porcupine Falls and Bucking Mule Falls are the two canonical western waterfall walks off US-14A, each with a distinct character — Porcupine is a steep short plunge to a plunge pool, Bucking Mule an overlook onto a 200-foot drop into Devil Canyon. Tongue River Canyon from the Dayton trailhead is the standard eastern gorge walk into the Cloud Peak Wilderness edge. Steamboat Point is the short high summit that gives the plateau’s clearest single-summit view. Route notes were cross-checked against USFS Bighorn National Forest recreation pages, the Medicine Wheel HPP, and the Wyoming Trails site.

Summary table

# Hike Country Route type Distance Gain Max elevation Difficulty
1 Medicine Wheel National Historic Landmark USA Out-and-back (walk-in only) ~4.8 km ~90 m ~2,940 m Easy
2 Porcupine Falls USA Out-and-back ~1.3 km ~120 m ~2,300 m Easy but steep
3 Bucking Mule Falls (Devil Canyon rim) USA Out-and-back ~5.5 km ~180 m ~2,340 m Easy to moderate
4 Tongue River Canyon from Dayton USA Out-and-back ~9–13 km ~250–400 m ~1,700 m Moderate
5 Steamboat Point USA Out-and-back ~2.4 km ~180 m ~2,610 m Easy but steep

1. Medicine Wheel National Historic Landmark

Bighorn Medicine Wheel viewed from the north, on Medicine Mountain
The Bighorn Medicine Wheel on Medicine Mountain, viewed from the north. Photo: Imerriot, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryUSA (Wyoming, Bighorn National Forest, National Historic Landmark)
Sub-regionMedicine Mountain, off US-14A
StartMedicine Wheel parking area on FSR 12 (off US-14A)
FinishMedicine Wheel site at approximately 2,940 m (out-and-back turn-around)
Route typeOut-and-back on gated administrative track (walk-in only; no vehicles)
Distance~4.8 km round-trip (~3.0 mi)
Elevation gain~90 m (~300 ft)
Elevation lossMatches gain
Maximum elevation~2,940 m at the wheel
Estimated time1.5–2.5 hours round-trip
DifficultyEasy walking grade at altitude; exposed to weather
Best seasonMid-June to early October; US-14A and FSR 12 closed by snow in winter
Public transportNone; drive from Lovell (~65 km) or Burgess Junction (~55 km)
Verification statusRoute and access verified against USFS Medicine Wheel NHL page and the National Historic Landmark listing

Itinerary

The site is accessed from a designated parking area on FSR 12, a short spur off US-14A on the north-west flank of Medicine Mountain. From the parking area, a gated gravel administrative track — the same one used by USFS interpretive staff — leads roughly 2.4 km south-east across open alpine tundra to the wheel itself. No private vehicle traffic is permitted beyond the gate; visitors walk the full distance. The wheel sits on the summit plateau of Medicine Mountain at approximately 2,940 m, a low ring of stones approximately 24 m across with 28 radiating spokes and a central cairn. Interpretive materials at the parking area and site are prepared in cooperation with tribal representatives. Return is on the same track back to the parking area.

Why it is essential

The Bighorn Medicine Wheel is the most significant single cultural site in the range — a Northern Plains stone construction of pre-contact origin, actively used for ceremony today, and one of the largest and best-preserved medicine wheels in North America. It is a National Historic Landmark and part of the Medicine Wheel / Medicine Mountain Historic Preservation Plan agreed between the USFS, the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the Wyoming SHPO, and Northern Plains tribal partners.

Equipment

  • Trail shoes; the track is graded gravel
  • Rain jacket, warm layer, and wind layer — the summit plateau is fully exposed
  • Sun protection and water
  • Optional binoculars for landscape and wildlife
  • Nothing to leave at the site; do not bring flowers, tobacco or other offerings unless a tribal cultural monitor invites you to do so

Hazards and notes

  • The site is closed to public access during ceremonies. Do not enter closed periods. Watch for USFS closure signage on FSR 12 and at the gate.
  • Do not touch, move, remove or add stones. Do not tie prayer cloths or offerings on the site’s protective barrier fence.
  • Photography of ceremonies and of tribal participants is not permitted; general landscape photography is allowed when the site is open.
  • No dogs, no drones. Group behaviour must remain quiet and respectful.
  • The plateau is fully exposed to weather; storms build fast and cold linger into late June.
  • US-14A is closed in winter and typically opens in mid-May.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
USFS Bighorn — Medicine Wheel NHL fs.usda.gov Web page Official managing authority
National Park Service — Medicine Wheel NHL npgallery.nps.gov Web page Landmark record
CalTopo — Medicine Mountain caltopo.com Web map Route geometry

Sources

2. Porcupine Falls

Snapshot

CountryUSA (Wyoming, Bighorn National Forest)
Sub-regionWestern escarpment, Porcupine Creek
StartPorcupine Falls Trailhead on FSR 146, off FSR 13 (US-14A spur)
FinishBase of Porcupine Falls (out-and-back turn-around)
Route typeOut-and-back on Porcupine Falls Trail (steep switchbacks)
Distance~1.3 km round-trip (~0.8 mi)
Elevation gain~120 m (~400 ft) on the return
Elevation loss~120 m on descent to the falls
Maximum elevation~2,300 m at trailhead
Estimated time45–75 minutes round-trip
DifficultyEasy in distance, moderate in grade — steep sustained switchbacks and steps
Best seasonMid-June to early October; access roads closed by snow
Public transportNone; drive from Lovell or Burgess Junction
Verification statusRoute confirmed via USFS Porcupine Falls recreation page

Itinerary

The trail leaves a small parking area on FSR 146, itself reached by FSR 13 off US-14A on the western descent from Medicine Mountain. From the trailhead, a graded track drops in steep switchbacks and short flights of steps down the north bank of Porcupine Creek to a viewing area at the base of Porcupine Falls, a single plunge of approximately 60 m (200 ft) into a rock-walled amphitheatre. The full descent is only about 650 m one-way, but the loss of elevation is sustained and gained again immediately on the return. Return is on the same line.

Why it is essential

Porcupine Falls is the single most-photographed waterfall in the Bighorn National Forest and the canonical short-descent waterfall walk on the western escarpment. The falls itself sits in a small, sharp limestone bowl, unusual in a range dominated by open sub-alpine plateau, and the walk delivers the falls with minimal committing distance. It is a natural pair with Bucking Mule Falls on the same day trip.

Equipment

  • Trail shoes or boots — the descent is uneven and can be greasy after rain
  • Rain jacket and warm layer
  • Water and snacks
  • Sun protection at the trailhead; the bowl at the base of the falls is shaded
  • Optional walking poles for the return climb

Hazards and notes

  • The descent is sustained and steep — the return will feel harder than the distance suggests.
  • Steps and switchbacks can be wet and slick, particularly after rain or in early season melt.
  • Access roads (FSR 13, FSR 146) are unpaved and become rough after rain. Check road status before travel.
  • No swimming or wading in the plunge pool; the base is a small, cold amphitheatre with limited standing room.
  • Bear and moose activity along Porcupine Creek.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
USFS Bighorn — Porcupine Falls fs.usda.gov Web page Official managing authority
CalTopo — Porcupine Creek caltopo.com Web map Route geometry
AllTrails — Porcupine Falls alltrails.com Web page Distance and elevation cross-check

Sources

3. Bucking Mule Falls and the Devil Canyon rim

Devil Canyon Overlook in Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area
Devil Canyon Overlook in Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area — the western edge of the Bucking Mule Falls / Devil Canyon rim area. Photo: DimiTalen, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryUSA (Wyoming, Bighorn National Forest, adjacent to Bighorn Canyon NRA)
Sub-regionWestern escarpment, Devil Canyon rim
StartBucking Mule Falls Trailhead on FSR 14 (Big Horn Canyon Rim road)
FinishBucking Mule Falls overlook (out-and-back turn-around)
Route typeOut-and-back on Bucking Mule Falls Trail #100 to the marked overlook
Distance~5.5 km round-trip (~3.4 mi) to the overlook
Elevation gain~180 m (~590 ft)
Elevation lossMatches gain
Maximum elevation~2,340 m at trailhead
Estimated time2–3 hours round-trip
DifficultyEasy to moderate — mostly gentle grades, one short steep section near the overlook
Best seasonMid-June to early October
Public transportNone; drive from Lovell or via US-14A and FSR 14
Verification statusRoute confirmed via USFS Bucking Mule Falls page; distance and gain cross-checked with third-party GPX

Itinerary

The trail leaves the Bucking Mule Falls Trailhead on FSR 14 above the Devil Canyon rim and follows Trail #100 north across open sagebrush-meadow and mixed forest. The route is broadly flat for the first 2 km before a short steepening as it approaches the canyon rim. The overlook, protected by a rail, gives a full view onto Bucking Mule Falls — a single free drop of approximately 60 m (200 ft) into the head of Devil Canyon — and a broad view down-canyon toward the Devil Canyon Overlook of Bighorn Canyon NRA. Return is on the same line. A longer through-trail continues north toward the Devil Canyon system for backcountry hikers, but the overlook is the standard day-hike turn-around.

Why it is essential

Bucking Mule Falls is the second essential western waterfall and, unlike Porcupine, is a rim-side overlook onto a free 60-metre drop into a limestone canyon. It sits at the head of Devil Canyon and connects the plateau country of the northern Bighorns to the deeper canyon system of Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area on the west. It is the natural half-day pair with Porcupine Falls on any US-14A trip.

Equipment

  • Trail runners or light boots
  • Rain jacket and warm layer
  • Water (1.5–2 L; no reliable water on the route)
  • Sun protection — most of the route is exposed
  • No dogs off-lead near the overlook

Hazards and notes

  • The rim overlook is exposed; keep clear of the edge and stay within the railing.
  • FSR 14 is unpaved, seasonal, and rough in patches; passable to 2WD in dry conditions but check status.
  • Rattlesnakes are documented on the lower rim below approximately 1,800 m.
  • Storms build fast on the plateau in the afternoon; no natural shelter on the route.
  • The through-trail beyond the overlook enters wilderness-quality country and requires navigation and self-sufficiency; do not extend without preparation.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
USFS Bighorn — Bucking Mule Falls Trail fs.usda.gov Web page Official managing authority
NPS — Bighorn Canyon NRA nps.gov Web page Adjacent NRA management
CalTopo — Devil Canyon rim caltopo.com Web map Route geometry

Sources

4. Tongue River Canyon from Dayton

Snapshot

CountryUSA (Wyoming, Bighorn National Forest)
Sub-regionEastern escarpment, Tongue River gorge above Dayton
StartTongue River Canyon Trailhead, at the end of Tongue Canyon Road west of Dayton
FinishUpper canyon (turn-around varies; ~4.5–6.5 km one-way to upper gorge)
Route typeOut-and-back on the Tongue River Canyon Trail
Distance~9–13 km round-trip depending on turn-around
Elevation gain~250–400 m depending on turn-around
Elevation lossMatches gain
Maximum elevation~1,700 m in the upper canyon
Estimated time3–5 hours round-trip
DifficultyModerate — sustained gentle climb with sections of rocky tread
Best seasonLate May to mid-October; can be walked shoulder-season on the lower gorge
Public transportNone; drive from Dayton (~5 km)
Verification statusRoute confirmed via USFS Tongue River Canyon page and Sheridan County descriptions; distance depends on turn-around choice

Itinerary

The trail leaves the Tongue River Canyon Trailhead west of Dayton at approximately 1,300 m and heads west up the north bank of the Tongue River into the gorge. Vertical limestone walls close in quickly; the river is loud through the lower canyon and the trail is at times cut into the cliff base. The route passes several small caves — some of them named on USFS maps — and follows the river bank on a broadly rising grade. Walkers can turn around at any point; common turn-arounds are the first significant creek confluence at approximately 4.5 km one-way, or the upper gorge where the trail joins the wider Bighorn National Forest trail system at approximately 6.5 km. Return is on the same line to the trailhead.

Why it is essential

Tongue River Canyon is the signature east-side gorge of the northern Bighorns and one of the most dramatic limestone canyons in Wyoming outside the Bighorn Canyon system. The walk delivers vertical rock, a big loud river, cave overhangs, and — near the trailhead — the mouth of the canyon looking east across the Sheridan plain. It is the standard low-elevation half-day walk on the east side and the natural counterpart to Steamboat Point above.

Equipment

  • Sturdy trail shoes or light boots — the tread is rocky and can be wet
  • Rain jacket and warm layer
  • Water (2 L; treat river water only)
  • Sun protection at the mouth; the upper gorge is shaded
  • Bear spray — bears are documented in the canyon
  • Head-torch if planning to enter caves; caves have loose rock and low ceilings and are not maintained

Hazards and notes

  • Rockfall risk from the limestone walls; do not linger under overhanging sections after freeze-thaw or heavy rain.
  • The river is fast and cold. Do not attempt to cross above the trailhead in high water.
  • Rattlesnakes are common on the sunny south-facing lower canyon slopes.
  • Caves are unmaintained; entry is at own risk and lighting is essential.
  • No dogs off-lead. Bear and moose activity in the upper gorge.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
USFS Bighorn — Tongue River Canyon fs.usda.gov Web page Official managing authority
Sheridan Travel and Tourism — Tongue River Canyon sheridanwyoming.org Web page Access notes
CalTopo — Tongue River Canyon caltopo.com Web map Route geometry
AllTrails — Tongue River Canyon Trail alltrails.com Web page Distance and elevation cross-check

Sources

5. Steamboat Point

Steamboat Point rising above US-14 in the northern Bighorn Mountains
Steamboat Point above US-14 in the northern Bighorn Mountains. Photo: hakkun, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryUSA (Wyoming, Bighorn National Forest)
Sub-regionEastern escarpment above US-14, near Sibley Lake
StartSmall pullout on US-14 at the base of Steamboat Point (~2,430 m)
FinishSteamboat Point summit (out-and-back turn-around)
Route typeOut-and-back on a short informal trail
Distance~2.4 km round-trip (~1.5 mi)
Elevation gain~180 m (~590 ft)
Elevation lossMatches gain
Maximum elevation~2,610 m at the summit
Estimated time1.5–2 hours round-trip
DifficultyEasy in distance, steep in grade — sustained uphill on a rough path
Best seasonJune to early October; US-14 open year-round but the trail holds snow into June
Public transportNone; drive from Dayton (~40 km) or Burgess Junction (~15 km)
Verification statusRoute confirmed via USFS Bighorn recreation index and multiple guidebook descriptions; the trail is unsigned

Itinerary

The path starts from a small unmarked pullout on the north side of US-14 directly below Steamboat Point, the prominent limestone prow that rises above the highway approximately 15 km east of Burgess Junction. The trail is short but steep, climbing directly up the south-east ridge through open sub-alpine meadow, scattered spruce, and short rocky steps to the summit at approximately 2,610 m. From the top the view runs south across the Cloud Peak plateau, east across the Powder River country to the Sheridan plain, and north along the escarpment. Return is on the same line back down to the highway pullout.

Why it is essential

Steamboat Point is the shortest signature summit walk on the eastern flank of the Bighorns and the walk that most cleanly delivers the range’s north-south scale in one panorama. It is visible from US-14 as the prow that gives the sub-region its landmark identity, and the summit itself sits above the escarpment with unobstructed views in every direction. It is the natural short-summit counterpart to the Tongue River Canyon walk below.

Equipment

  • Sturdy trail shoes; the tread is rough and steep
  • Rain jacket and warm layer
  • Water (1 L)
  • Sun protection at the summit
  • Optional walking poles for the descent

Hazards and notes

  • The trail is unsigned and informal; do not rely on trailhead markers.
  • Steep grade; slippery when wet.
  • The summit is fully exposed; storms build quickly and there is no shelter.
  • Highway parking is a small pullout; do not park on the highway itself.
  • No dogs off-lead near cliff edges at the summit.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
USFS Bighorn — Recreation index fs.usda.gov Web page Official managing authority
CalTopo — Steamboat Point caltopo.com Web map Route geometry
AllTrails — Steamboat Point alltrails.com Web page Distance and elevation cross-check

Sources

Region-level sources

Source URL
USFS Bighorn National Forest fs.usda.gov
USFS Bighorn — Medicine Wheel NHL fs.usda.gov
USFS Bighorn — Porcupine Falls fs.usda.gov
USFS Bighorn — Bucking Mule Falls fs.usda.gov
USFS Bighorn — Tongue River Canyon fs.usda.gov
USFS Bighorn — Recreation index fs.usda.gov
NPS — Bighorn Canyon NRA nps.gov
National Park Service — Medicine Wheel NHL record npgallery.nps.gov
Sheridan Travel and Tourism sheridanwyoming.org
Wikipedia — Bighorn Medicine Wheel en.wikipedia.org
Wikipedia — Steamboat Point (Wyoming) en.wikipedia.org

Further reading