Kansas · USA

Tuttle Creek Reservoir Spillway Road

Limestone canyons below Kansas's biggest dam

Moderate

The spillway road at Tuttle Creek cuts through flood-sculpted limestone canyons that most Kansans never see, following the Big Blue River below the state’s largest earthen dam. During high water releases, the spillway becomes a thundering waterfall that carves new channels through the bedrock. The road passes abandoned farmsteads flooded out when the reservoir filled in 1962, their foundations still visible in the limestone shelves during low water.

Moderate difficulty requiring high-clearance vehicles for rocky sections and potential water crossings. Road conditions change with reservoir releases – check with the Corps before heading out. Spring offers wildflowers in the canyon, but summer heat reflects off limestone walls. The road can be impassable during high water releases or ice conditions. Randolph State Park provides camping and boat access, or explore dispersed camping areas upstream where the Blue meets Fancy Creek.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features, ,
Length (miles)8 mi / 12.9 km
DurationHalf day
Max elevation (ft)1180 ft
Best seasonMay-October
Minimum vehicleStock 4WD high-clearance
Nearest townManhattan, Kansas
Land managerUS Army Corps of Engineers
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceGood
Water crossingsYes
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Difficulty
Official: Moderate

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