CONTINENTAL DIVIDE TRAIL - SUMMARY
The Continental Divide Trail is a 3000 mile
footpath that runs along the Rocky Mountain range from Mexico to Canada. The trail's
northern terminus is at the U.S.- Canadian border in Glacier National Park. The
southern terminus is at the U.S.- Mexican border near Antelope Wells, New Mexico.
The Continental Divide Trail (or CDT as it is often called) crosses 5 states, 25 national
forests, 3 national parks, 3 Indian reservations, and many Bureau of Land Management and
wilderness areas. It was officially designated by Congress as a National Scenic
Trail in 1978, but currently is only 70% completed. Large segments of the CDT have
yet to be planned, designated, or mapped (let alone constructed, marked or signed.).
The CDT is primarily maintained and managed by the Continental Divide Trail Society which
was founded in 1978 by Jim Wolf. In 1995, a new organization called the Continental
Divide Trail Alliance was formed to aid the efforts of the CDTS. The group's
mission is to unite the various CDT stakeholders and land management agencies to support
the Continental Divide Trail.
A
thru-hike (or walking the entire length of the Continental Divide Trail in a single year)
is a major undertaking. Only a handful of backpackers make the attempt annually, and
only a few finish it the same year. Most thru-hikers start in early May from the
southern terminus. The Rocky Mountain snowpack is light in some years, however,
making start dates in April a possibility. Regardless, the problem for northbounders
is the snow. In Colorado it lasts until late June, and in Glacier National Park it
flies as early as September. Both thunderstorms and snow can occur anytime in the
summer, so be aware that your hike can be brought to a halt by adverse weather conditions
year-round in the Rockies. Typically thru-hikers arrive in Wyoming by August and
finish the CDT in Alberta by October.