North Carolina · USA

Coastal Forest Road Network Alligator River

Sand roads through coastal wilderness

Moderate

The Coastal Forest Road Network winds through 150,000 acres of the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge where logging roads from the 1960s now serve as corridors through some of the last intact coastal plain wilderness in the Southeast. Sand-based roads thread between cypress swamps and pocosins – unique shrubland ecosystems that harbor red wolves and the densest black bear population on the East Coast. The main route follows an old railroad grade that once hauled timber from companies like the Roper Lumber Company, whose abandoned equipment still rusts in the undergrowth.

This is moderate-difficulty sand driving requiring aired-down tires and steady throttle control to avoid bogging in soft spots. A full-size truck or SUV with decent ground clearance handles it fine, but momentum is your friend in the deeper sand sections. Spring and fall offer the best conditions with lower water tables and fewer bugs. Dispersed camping is allowed in designated areas, and the refuge provides some of the darkest night skies on the East Coast. It’s a forgotten corner of Carolina where the only traffic lights are fireflies and the road less traveled leads to places most people never knew existed.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features, ,
Length (miles)45 mi / 72.4 km
Duration2-3 days
Max elevation (ft)35 ft
Best seasonOctober-April
Minimum vehicleStock 4WD
Nearest townManteo, North Carolina
Land managerU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsNo
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Difficulty
Official: Moderate

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