Tahoe Rim Trail

Tahoe Rim Trail
View of Lake Tahoe looking north from Tahoe Rim Trail
Established 1981
Length 165 mi (266 km)
Location California, Nevada, U.S.A
Trailheads Tahoe Meadows, Spooner Summit, Kingsbury North, Kingsbury South, Big Meadows, Echo Summit, Echo Lake, Tahoe City, Barker Pass, Brockway Summit, Mount Rose Summit, Glen Alpine Spring, Eagle Falls
Use Hiking, Equestrian, Mountain Biking
Elevation
Elevation change 24,400 ft (7,400 m)
Highest point Relay Peak, 10,338 ft (3,151 m)
Lowest point Tahoe City, 6,240 ft (1,900 m)
Hiking details
Season Spring-Fall
Surface Natural/Gravel
Website www.tahoerimtrail.org

The Tahoe Rim Trail is a 165-mile (266 km) long-distance hiking trail that forms a loop around the Lake Tahoe Basin in the Sierra Nevada and Carson ranges of California and Nevada in the United States. The trail ranges in elevation from 6,240 feet (1,900 m) at the outlet of Lake Tahoe to 10,338 feet (3,151 m) at Relay Peak in Nevada. About 50 miles (80 km) of trail above the lake's west shore are also part of the much longer Pacific Crest Trail. Additionally, 96 Miles of the trail along the east and south sides of the Lake Tahoe basin are designated as a National Recreation Trail.[1]

The idea of a crest trail around Lake Tahoe was first proposed in 1978 by Glenn Hampton, a recreation officer of the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit (LTBMU) of the U.S. Forest Service. The trail was completed in September 2001, almost entirely through volunteer effort. The trail currently exists mostly on land managed by the LTBMU and Lake Tahoe-Nevada State Park, with shorter segments in the Tahoe National Forest and the Carson Ranger District of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest.

The main hiking season is usually from July through September, though lingering snow patches may sometimes be found into August of high snow years. The trail is open year-round, but is not marked for winter use. The climate is typical of the Sierra Nevada, with severe storms during the winter and almost no precipitation falling in the summer.

Mountain bikes are permitted on roughly half the trail, and the entire trail is open to equestrians, other than a short segment in the north, and skiers. Motorized recreation is prohibited along its entire length. Hikers must obtain permits before entering the very popular Desolation Wilderness area southwest of the lake. The trail also passes through the Mount Rose Wilderness and the Granite Chief Wilderness. A section of the trail also passes through or near the Freel Roadless Area.[2]

References

  • Hauserman, Tim The Tahoe Rim Trail ISBN 0-89997-288-8

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