Alamo Road
Hiking Around Las Vegas, Desert National Wildlife Range
Alamo Road
 
Alamo Road
Sign at the Corn Creek-Alamo-Mormon Well road junction (view east)

Overview

The Alamo Road, so named because it once connected Corn Creek with the town of Alamo, is a bumpy, 40-mile dirt road that runs north along the west side of the Sheep Range from Corn Creek to the south edge of Desert Dry Lake, a large, dusty playa. The road gets rougher the farther out you get, and finally signs prohibit crossing the playa and connecting with the road down from Alamo because of washouts. The road is pretty good and suitable for sedans out to Hidden Forest Road. This is a nice road for a drive in the desert or an easy way to get away from town to camp out in the desert, but it is wild and remote country.

Link to map.

For general information on camping, hiking, regulations, other issues, and the natural history of the Wildlife Refuge, see the Desert National Wildlife Range -- Area Overview page.

Alamo Road
Alamo Road just north of Corn Creek (view north).

Watch Out

Other than the standard warnings about hiking in the desert... the Alamo Road generally is a good dirt road, but it runs out into wild and remote country. There are no services or developments of any kind. Cell phones work along the south end of the road where you can see the town of Indian Springs, but don't count on calling for help from farther out. Bring water and food, a good spare tire, a shovel, tools, a tow rope, bailing wire (I learned the hard way) and anything else that you might need to survive a night stuck out in the desert. Close in, the road is graded occasionally, and for the most part can be driven at about 25 mph, but out past Hidden Forest Road, the road is slower and rocky spots and washouts sneak up on you.

While out there, please respect the land and the other people out there, and try to Leave No Trace of your passage. Also, this road leads to remote country, so be sure to bring the 10 Essentials. This is a wildlife refuge, so pay extra attention to respecting the land.

Alamo Road
Joe May Road (right) at Alamo Road (left) (view northeast).

Location

The Alamo Road is located on the Desert National Wildlife Range and starts about 30 minutes northwest of Las Vegas. To get there, drive out to the Information Kiosk (Table 1, Site 1) at the Corn Creek Field Station. Sign the visitor register so the Refuge will get credit for your visit (use a false name if you don't want the government to track your movements, but visitor records will lead to more funding for things like road grading). Continue east for about 50 feet to a T-intersection with a large sign. The Alamo Road starts here and runs north (left), while the Mormon Well Road starts here and runs south (right).

Alamo Road
Cow Camp Road (right) at Alamo Road (left). Arrow marks the gap in the mountains the Cow Camp Road goes through (view north).

The Road

The Alamo Road runs north along the west side of the Sheep Range from Corn Creek (Wpt. 1) to the south edge of Desert Dry Lake (Wpt. 15). Signs prohibit crossing the playa and connecting with the road down from Alamo because of washouts, but tracks in the dust show that some drivers ignore the signs. Wildlife Refuge personnel say that they will fix the road someday, but it has been closed for years.

The first 15 miles north of Corn Creek, out to Hidden Forest Road (Wpt. 4), are relatively well graded and suitable for most sedans (depending on the weather). The road north from there is rougher, but it is fine for high-clearance, 2-wheel-drive (2WD) vehicles (depending on the weather). A 4WD vehicle would only be necessary if the road were wet or washed out. There is a narrow spot in the bottom of a canyon north of Sheep Pass (just beyond Wpt. 11) that could be sandy or a washout problem, so if it looks bad, don't drive down because it will be even harder to drive back up on the way home; you don't want to get stuck 30-some miles out.

HIdden Forest Road
Hidden Forest Road (view east from Alamo Road).
From Corn Creek, the road runs nearly straight north and level for miles until bending slightly to the east, bounding across several gullies, and continuing nearly straight and level for many more miles. Even the rough road up Sheep Pass is nearly straight until near the top (Wpt. 11). Beyond Sheep Pass, the road winds down a narrow canyon before straightening out and running nearly straight north for most of the way to Desert Dry Lake. Near the lake, the road takes a turn to the east (right) and runs east along the south edge of the playa. After running nearly straight over a couple of low ridges, the road turns north (left) at a fork (Wpt. 14) and runs out onto the edge of the playa where signs prohibit (but do not block) further progress.
Alamo Road
White Rock Road (right) at Alamo Road (left) (view northeast).

With the exception of Sheep Pass (Wpt. 11), the road traverses middle-elevation Mojave Desert Scrub vegetation. Along the southern end of the road, the landscape is very dry and even the creosote bush is stunted and widely spaced. To the north, the vegetation is more typical of Mojave Desert Scrub. At Sheep Pass, the road climbs into the Blackbrush Zone where blackbrush is the dominant species, and Joshua Trees, yuccas, and many other low growing shrubs are common. During spring, there can be many flowers along the road, and when the temperatures begin to warm, this is a great place to see cactus flowers.

There are a number of undeveloped campsites along the Alamo Road. Camping is unrestricted, so you can camp anywhere, but be kind to the land and choose an existing campsite; don't drive off-road into the bushes to camp or even to get off the road. There is a nice campsite by some crags near the base of Sheep Pass (22 miles out; Wpt. 9), and there is another nice campsite on the bajada overlooking Desert Dry Lake (38 miles out; Wpt. 13). There are many other places to pull off the road and camp.

Alamo Road
Deadhorse Road (right) at Alamo Road (left) (view northeast).

There are a number of side roads along the Alamo Road that lead to interesting hikes and more campsites.

Joe May Road (3.1 miles out; Wpt. 2) leads to hikes up Joe May Canyon and Black Gate Canyon. Joe May Road is a fine (depending on the weather), high-clearance, 2WD dirt road that runs up the bajada for about 4 miles to undeveloped campsites at and near the end of the road. This was a graded road, but it is not maintained.

Alamo Road
Alamo Road at Sheep Pass (view north).

Cow Camp Road (8.5 miles out; Wpt. 3) is a good, high-clearance road that leads up through an interesting canyon (could be sandy) that cuts through a low range of mountains. Beyond there, the canyon opens up and the road traverses an open bajada until reaching the base of the Sheep Range, which abruptly jut up out of the ground. About 4.6 miles up the road, a large campsite on the north (left) side of the road provides a good place for 2WD vehicles to stop. Beyond there, the road gets rougher. About 0.8 miles past the campsite, the road forks. The south (right) fork leads for another 0.5 miles to an old corral and watering trough at the base of a pour-over. The north fork (left) leads another 1.2 miles to an overlook at the base of the cliffs and a deep, narrow canyon with a pour-over that blocks upstream passage (after crossing a sandy wash, there is a short bit of 4WD road). I missed it, but the USGS topo map shows a third road forking off to the left from the second road. Tracks ran up a wash just before the 4WD section, and it is possible that this was the third road.

Alamo Road
Alamo Road with Desert Dry Lake in the distance (view north).
Hidden Forest Road (14.6 miles out; Wpt. 4) leads east to the Deadman Canyon trailhead. Hikes up Deadman Canyon lead to the Hidden Forest, Wiregrass Spring, the old Warden’s Cabin, Hayford Peak, and the summit of Sheep Peak. Hidden Forest Road is a fine (depending on the weather), high-clearance, 2WD dirt road that runs up the bajada for about 4 miles to undeveloped campsites at the end of the road. This was a graded road, but it is not maintained.
Alamo Road
Alamo Road south of Desert Dry Lake (view east).

White Rock Road (20 miles out; Wpt. 8) is a rough (depending on the weather), high-clearance, 2WD dirt road that runs up the bajada for 3.0 miles and ends on the edge of a wash. The road leads around one set of black cliffs and runs up to some rocky bluffs at the base of the Sheep Range that appear to be formed from volcanic ash (the white rocks). There is a campsite at the end of the road.

Alamo Road
Campsite south of Desert Dry Lake (view north).
Dead Horse Road (23 miles out; Wpt. 10) is a 4WD road that runs for 9.2 miles up into the Sheep Range. The road runs in a wash with deep, soft gravel in several places, but generally seems suitable for 2WD. However, one time when I was several miles out, a soft bit of gravel at a narrow spot in the wash swallowed up my truck; I shifted into 4WD and drove out, but that would have been a bad spot in a 2WD. The road runs out around the south side of the East Desert Range (the mountain that the Alamo Road crosses at Sheep Pass), then continues east towards the Sheep Range for 8.5 miles to a broad area with a big campsite. At that point, the road forks three ways. The right and middle forks are blocked by signs, but the left fork turns north and continues down a canyon for another 0.8 miles to a small campsite on the edge of a wash.
Cabin Canyon Road
Cabin Spring Road near the end (view east).

Cabin Spring Road (39 miles out; Wpt. 14) leads east from Desert Dry Lake to Cabin Spring (dry). Cabin Spring Road is a high-clearance, marginally 4WD road that runs for about 9 miles to undeveloped campsites at the end of the road. There is a nice campsite on a low bluff 5.2 miles up Cabin Spring Road, but beyond there, the last 3.6 miles get pretty rough. The road was graded at one time, but it has not been maintained for many years. The spring is intermittent or dry -- I have never seen water there.

The Alamo Road makes for a great place to get away from it all, but remember that this is wild and remote country -- you could be the only person out there for a very long time.

 
Table 1. Highway Distances (NAD27; UTM Zone 11S). Download Highway GPS Waypoints (*.gpx) file.

Wpt. Location Time* Longitude Latitude Northing Easting Elevation (feet) Point-to-Point Distance Cumulative Distance
1 Corn Creek T-intersection 0835 36.4384 115.3565 647307 4033624 2,814 0.0 0.0
2 Joe May 0847 36.4835 115.3659 646381 4038613 3,240 3.1 3.1
3 Cow Camp Rd 0859 36.5531 115.3956 643593 4046293 3,560 5.4 8.5
4 Hidden Forest Road 0913 36.6350 115.3527 647277 4055447 4,490 6.1 14.6
5 Pine Canyon Road (service road only) 0917 36.6498 115.3484 647633 4057089 4,496 1.0 15.6
6 Unnamed Road west (service road only) 0920 36.6636 115.3426 648125 4058637 4,410 1.0 16.6
7 White Sage Road west (service road only) 0943 36.7009 115.3203 650045 4062809 4,250 2.8 19.4
8 White Rock Road 0953 36.7120 115.3139 650597 4064041 4,230 0.9 20.3
9 Campsite by crags 0956 36.7299 115.3044 651410 4066048 4,296 1.3 21.6
10 Dead Horse Road 1002 36.7542 115.3003 651729 4068744 4,283 1.7 23.3
11 Sheep Pass 1021 36.8373 115.2963 651925 4077976 5,039 5.8 29.1
12 Fork in the road (service left; Alamo right) 1108 36.9259 115.2881 652473 4087816 3,470 6.7 35.8
13 Campsite overlooking playa 1152 36.9322 115.2555 655369 4088573 3,283 2.0 37.8
14 Fork near corral (Cabin Sp. right; Alamo left) 1125 36.9251 115.2399 656771 4087804 3,248 1.0 38.8
15 Sign to stop travel across playa 1129 36.9314 115.2361 657095 4088515 3,213 0.5 39.3

* Not in a hurry.
 
Note: All distances, elevations, and other facts are approximate.
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© Jim Boone; Last updated 091018

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