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Guadalupe Mountains National Park Camping

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Guadalupe Mountains National Park - Ken Lund
Photo: Ken Lund
Guadalupe Mountains National Park - daveynin
Photo: daveynin
Guadalupe Mountains National Park - Ken Lund
Photo: Ken Lund
Guadalupe Mountains National Park - daveynin
Photo: daveynin
Guadalupe Mountains National Park - miatamaniac92
Photo: miatamaniac92

Campgrounds

Campgrounds in Guadalupe Mountains National Park

Dog Canyon Campground

Guadalupe Mountains National Park

Frijole Horse Corral Campground

Guadalupe Mountains National Park

Pine Springs Campground

Guadalupe Mountains National Park

Wilderness Permits

Guadalupe Mountains National Park

Overview

A brief introduction to Guadalupe Mountains National Park

Come experience mountains and canyons, desert and dunes, night skies and spectacular vistas within a place unlike any other. Guadalupe Mountains National Park protects the world's most extensive Permian fossil reef, the four highest peaks in Texas, an environmentally diverse collection of flora and fauna, and the stories of lives shaped through conflict, cooperation and survival.

Guadalupe Mountains National Park is a national park of the United States in the Guadalupe Mountains, east of El Paso, Texas. The mountain range includes Guadalupe Peak, the highest point in Texas at 8,751 feet (2,667 m), and El Capitan used as a landmark by travelers on the route later followed by the Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoach line. The ruins of a stagecoach station stand near the Pine Springs visitor center. The restored Frijole Ranch contains a small museum of local history and is the trailhead for Smith Spring. The park covers 86,367 acres (134.9 sq mi; 349.5 km2) in the same mountain range as Carlsbad Caverns National Park, about 25 miles (40 km) to the north in New Mexico. The Guadalupe Peak Trail winds through pinyon pine and Douglas-fir forests as it ascends over 3,000 feet (910 m) to the summit of Guadalupe Peak, with views of El Capitan and the Chihuahuan Desert.
The McKittrick Canyon trail leads to a stone cabin built in the early 1930s as the vacation home of Wallace Pratt, a petroleum geologist who donated the land. Dog Canyon, on the northern park boundary at the Texas-New Mexico State line, is accessed via Carlsbad, New Mexico or Dell City, Texas. Camping is available at the Pine Springs campground and at Dog Canyon. A public corral for livestock is available by reservation. The park observes Mountain Time.
The Gypsum sand dunes lie on the west side of the park near Dell City. A rough four-wheel drive road leads to the Williams Ranch.

Read more about Guadalupe Mountains National Park at Wikipedia

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Other nearby parks

Open to camping at other nearby parks? Here are a few other parks you'll find in the vicinity.

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Map

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