Chihuahua · Mexico

Cañón de Santa Elena Rio Grande Traverse

Remote border canyon through towering limestone walls

Expert

The old mining road that parallels the Rio Grande through Cañón de Santa Elena cuts through some of the most remote country on the Texas-Mexico border. This forgotten route follows ancient river terraces carved into limestone cliffs that tower 1,500 feet above the muddy Rio Grande, passing abandoned mercury mines and prehistoric pictograph sites that few overlanders ever see. The road becomes increasingly technical as it approaches the Maderas del Carmen, with deep arroyos and loose rock sections that demand careful line choice and momentum.

This is expert-level desert navigation requiring full recovery gear, GPS backup, and at least 3 days of water per person. Stock vehicles won’t cut it — you need heavy-duty skid plates, rock sliders, and aggressive tires for the boulder fields near Kilometer 47. Best run October through March when temperatures drop below deadly. The payoff is absolute solitude in country that feels more like Mars than Earth, with night skies so dark you can read by starlight and silence so complete your ears ring.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features, ,
Length (miles)67 mi / 107.8 km
Duration3-4 days
Max elevation (ft)4800 ft
Best seasonOctober-March
Minimum vehicleModified 4WD with skid plates
Nearest townOjinaga, Chihuahua
Land managerCONANP
Permit requiredYes
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsYes
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Official: Expert

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