Coyote Canyon Road — Anza-Borrego Desert Palm Oasis to Alcoholic Pass
De Anza's canyon, still wild and unforgiving.
Coyote Canyon is the artery that Juan Bautista de Anza himself followed in 1774 on his overland route to Alta California, and driving it today you still feel the weight of that history. The route enters from DiGiorgio Road near Borrego Springs and immediately drops into a sandy wash flanked by fan palms and tamarisk thickets. The Lower Willows section demands active creek navigation — water crossings are real and the channel shifts seasonally, so scouting before you commit is not optional. As you push north through Middle Willows and into Upper Willows, the canyon narrows, walls climb, and the trail surface transitions between deep sand, embedded rock, and loose cobble. The technical crux comes near Alcoholic Pass, where the shelf road tightens and shelf-edge exposure is legitimate. Bighorn sheep work these walls year-round; slow down and look up.
Minimum vehicle is a high-clearance 4WD with low-range and proper skid protection — this is not a Jeep Wrangler-in-stock-trim trail if the creek is running. The canyon is closed annually from June 16 through September 15 to protect wildlife, so spring (February–May) and late fall are your windows. Fuel in Borrego Springs, carry at least four gallons of water per person per day — desert math applies hard here. Dispersed camping is allowed within Anza-Borrego Desert State Park rules. Cell service drops to zero past the first mile. This route delivers real desert solitude, genuine history, and enough technical demand to keep you honest.
Trail Specs
| Difficulty | Difficult |
|---|---|
| Trail Type | Backcountry, Technical 4x4 |
| Surface | Mixed, Rock, Sand |
| Features | Camping, Historic, Remote, Scenic, Water Crossings |
| Length (miles) | 27 mi / 43.5 km |
| Duration | 1-2 days |
| Max elevation (ft) | 4200 ft |
| Best season | February-May |
| Minimum vehicle | High-clearance 4WD with low-range |
| Nearest town | Borrego Springs, CA |
| Land manager | California State Parks — Anza-Borrego Desert State Park |
| Permit required | No |
| 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
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