Mojave Road Historic Trail
140 miles of wagon ruts across the Mojave
The wagon ruts are still there, carved into hardpan by thousands of wheels between 1858 and 1885, when the Mojave Road was the main artery connecting the Colorado River to Los Angeles. The Mojave Road Historic Trail follows this 140-mile route across California’s emptiest desert, threading between volcanic mesas and dry lakes from Needles to Barstow. You’ll need a high-clearance 4WD and three to four days to traverse the same path that nearly killed half the people who tried it during the Gold Rush. This isn’t a technical rock crawl—it’s an endurance test of navigation, preparation, and respect for the desert’s ability to strand you 40 miles from cell service.
The route gains 4,200 feet over mixed terrain, climbing from the Colorado River flats through Joshua tree forests to a high point of 4,800 feet at Mid Hills. You’ll cross sandy washes, follow rocky two-tracks, and navigate by cairns and wagon ruts that GPS sometimes can’t find. Fort Piute stands as the trail’s midpoint landmark, its stone walls still intact where soldiers once protected travelers from Apache raids. Water is scarce—carry two gallons per person per day and fuel for 200 miles. The National Park Service and BLM manage different sections, but no permits are required. Dispersed camping is allowed throughout, though finding level ground between the creosote and cholla requires patience.
October through April offers the only tolerable window for this crossing. Summer temperatures exceed 120°F, and winter can bring flash floods to the normally dry washes. A stock Jeep Wrangler or Toyota 4Runner will handle the trail, but recovery gear and spare tires are mandatory—the volcanic rock and abandoned mining debris puncture sidewalls regularly. Cell service disappears after Needles and doesn’t return until Barstow, making satellite communication your only lifeline. This trail breaks down the unprepared and rewards those who understand that the Mojave gives nothing for free.
What you get for the effort is genuine solitude across landscapes that haven’t changed since the wagon trains passed through. You’ll camp under star fields unmarked by light pollution, walk through ghost towns where only foundations remain, and follow a route that shaped California’s early history. The Mojave Road isn’t about conquering obstacles—it’s about crossing empty country the way travelers did 150 years ago, when preparation meant the difference between making it to the next water or joining the bones scattered along the trail. Have a dirty day.
Trail Specs
| Difficulty | Moderate |
|---|---|
| Trail Type | Overland Route |
| Surface | Mixed |
| Features | Camping, Historic, Remote |
| Length (miles) | 140 mi / 225.3 km |
| Duration | 3-4 days |
| Max elevation (ft) | 4800 ft |
| Best season | October-April |
| Minimum vehicle | High-clearance 4WD |
| Nearest town | Needles, CA |
| Land manager | National Park Service / BLM |
| Permit required | No |
| Cell service | None |
| Water crossings | No |
| 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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