New Mexico Hiking & Outdoor Blog
8 state-specific guides covering 6,475 trails and 636 parks across New Mexico. Ranked lists for the longest hikes, hardest climbs, family trails, waterfalls, dog-friendly routes, and the best parks.
Every New Mexico guide we’ve published
Sorted alphabetically. All posts are grounded in real trail and park data.
Best Dog-Friendly Hikes in New Mexico: Leash-Welcome Trails
Hikes in New Mexico where dogs are explicitly welcome — picked for moderate length, manageable terrain, and verified leash access.
Best Family-Friendly Hikes in New Mexico: Easy Trails for Kids
Short, gentle New Mexico trails sized for kids, grandparents, and recovery days. The ones we'd take our own families on.
Best Waterfall Hikes in New Mexico: 10 Trails to See Falls Up Close
New Mexico's best hikes to named waterfalls — from short family-friendly viewpoints to all-day cascade chasing.
New Mexico's 10 Most Punishing Trails by Elevation Gain
Steep is hard. These are the ten New Mexico trails with the most total elevation gain — quad-burners earned by hard climbing.
The 10 Longest Hiking Trails in New Mexico, Ranked
New Mexico's longest mapped hiking trails, ranked by distance with notes on what makes each route worth the commitment.
The 10 Most Challenging Hikes in New Mexico
New Mexico's ten hardest hikes — expert difficulty, big mileage, or serious exposure. Reserved for experienced hikers.
The Best Beginner-Friendly Hikes in New Mexico
Ten gentle, well-marked New Mexico trails perfect for first-time hikers, families, or recovery days.
The Best National Parks & Recreation Areas in New Mexico
Federal parks and recreation areas in New Mexico ranked by what they actually offer hikers and campers, not just popularity.
Safety + planning guides for any state
Evergreen hiking and camping primers that apply whether you’re hiking in New Mexico or anywhere else.
How to Read the SAC Hiking Scale (and Why It Matters)
The SAC scale is the most common trail difficulty system on OpenStreetMap. Here's how to interpret each tier — and why a T3 can ruin your day if you're not ready.
The 10 Essentials: What to Actually Pack on Every Day Hike
The 10 Essentials are the minimum survival kit for any hike. Here's what they are, why each one is on the list, and what to skip.
A Complete Beginner's Guide to Hiking (Without the Marketing)
Your first hike doesn't have to be a disaster. A practical step-by-step for picking a trail, packing right, and building real outdoor skills.
How to Score Hard-to-Get Campsites on Recreation.gov
Booking a Yosemite or Glacier campsite at peak season feels impossible. Here's the strategy that actually works.
How Trail Difficulty Ratings Actually Work (and Why They Lie)
Every trail app rates trails differently. Here's why an "easy" trail in one app can be a "hard" trail in another — and how to read between the lines.
When to Visit Each Major National Park (Without the Crowds)
Summer at Yosemite means three-hour shuttle lines. Here's when each major US national park is actually worth visiting.
Featured New Mexico guides
A scrollable shortlist of our highest-traffic state posts.
The 10 Longest Hiking Trails in New Mexico, Ranked
New Mexico's longest mapped hiking trails, ranked by distance with notes on what makes each route worth the commitment.
New Mexico's 10 Most Punishing Trails by Elevation Gain
Steep is hard. These are the ten New Mexico trails with the most total elevation gain — quad-burners earned by hard climbing.
The Best Beginner-Friendly Hikes in New Mexico
Ten gentle, well-marked New Mexico trails perfect for first-time hikers, families, or recovery days.
The 10 Most Challenging Hikes in New Mexico
New Mexico's ten hardest hikes — expert difficulty, big mileage, or serious exposure. Reserved for experienced hikers.
The Best National Parks & Recreation Areas in New Mexico
Federal parks and recreation areas in New Mexico ranked by what they actually offer hikers and campers, not just popularity.
Best Waterfall Hikes in New Mexico: 10 Trails to See Falls Up Close
New Mexico's best hikes to named waterfalls — from short family-friendly viewpoints to all-day cascade chasing.