Tennessee · USA

Caney Fork River Gorge Technical Loop

Cumberland Plateau's most technical gorge crossing

Difficult

The Caney Fork cuts a technical gorge through the Cumberland Plateau that’ll test your line choice and your nerve. This loop drops 800 feet through limestone bluffs where Confederate forces once hid supplies, with multiple creek crossings that turn nasty fast when the Caney Fork runs high. The crux comes at Devil’s Breakfast Table — a house-sized boulder field that demands precise wheel placement and a spotter.

Difficult terrain requiring high-clearance 4WD with skid plates and recovery gear. Spring floods make water crossings dangerous through May; late summer and fall offer the best conditions. No permits needed on this mix of state forest and private timber roads, but respect the no-camping signs near the gorge rim. You earn spectacular views of the plateau and some of Tennessee’s most pristine whitewater, plus bragging rights on completing one of the state’s gnarliest technical loops.

Be the first to save this trail

Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features, , ,
Length (miles)18 mi / 29 km
Duration1 day
Max elevation (ft)1850 ft
Best seasonAugust-November
Minimum vehicleModified 4WD with skid plates
Nearest townSparta, Tennessee
Land managerTennessee State Forest
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsYes
Dispersed campingNo
Start coordinates
End coordinates
Copy both for Google Maps directionsClick to copy the directions URL · or open it directly in a new tab
Find on GoogleSearch on Google →

Location

Ratings & Reviews

Quality
0 ratings
Difficulty
Official: Difficult

Trail Conditions

No recent condition reports. Be the first to post one.

Photos

No community photos yet.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *