Devils River Limestone Canyon Crossing
Last wild river in Texas limestone country
The Devils River cuts through 50 million years of limestone in one of Texas’s most isolated canyon systems, accessed via a bone-jarring ranch road that drops 800 feet through Devil’s River State Natural Area. This 18-mile route follows the ancient river channel through towering limestone walls, requiring 12 major water crossings where the crystalline spring-fed river runs knee-deep over bedrock shelves. The highlight is Devils Backbone — a knife-edge limestone ridge where the trail skirts 200-foot drops into emerald pools below.
This is expert-level terrain requiring lockers, skid plates, and recovery gear for the technical limestone ledges and unpredictable water levels. Spring floods can make crossings impossible; late summer offers the most predictable conditions but scorching heat. No cell service, no facilities, and 60 miles from the nearest fuel in Del Rio. What you get is access to one of the Southwest’s last pristine river ecosystems and camping under some of the darkest skies in Texas.
Trail Specs
| Difficulty | Expert |
|---|---|
| Trail Type | Technical 4x4 |
| Surface | Rock |
| Features | Camping, Remote, Scenic, Water Crossings |
| Length (miles) | 18 mi / 29 km |
| Duration | 2 days |
| Max elevation (ft) | 2100 ft |
| Best season | September-November |
| Minimum vehicle | Locked 4WD with skid plates |
| Nearest town | Del Rio, Texas |
| Land manager | Texas Parks and Wildlife |
| Permit required | Yes |
| Cell service | None |
| Water crossings | Yes |
| Dispersed camping | Yes |
| 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 Google | Search on Google → |
Location
Trail Conditions
No recent condition reports. Be the first to post one.
Log in to post a condition report.
