Skip to main content

Lost Sierra Route Could Be Your Next Epic Long-distance Hike

There are hikes, and then there are hikes. Most outdoorsmen will never tackle a hardcore long-distance hike like the Appalachian Trail or Pacific Crest Trail in their lifetime. They require intense planning, the best thru-hiking gear, superhuman training, and six months or more for the hike itself. But, what if there were a trail that split the difference between an average day hike and an epic, need-to-quit-my-day-job-first thru-hike? Enter the Lost Sierra Route.

The proposed 600-mile path follows the coastline and mountain ridges that connect more than a dozen communities. Starting from Truckee, California — a blip of a town just northwest of Lake Tahoe — the Lost Sierra Route will carve a single-track, multi-use trail dotted with some of the Northwest’s most breathtaking scenery all the way to Reno, Nevada. It’s an impossibly beautiful region full of lush valleys, jagged peaks, high alpine lakes, and historic ghost towns. Soon, it will all be open to hikers, bikers, horseback riders, trail runners, fishermen, hunters, and more.

Mountain bikers riding the trails along California's future Lost Sierra Route.
Sierra Buttes Trail Stewardship

California’s non-profit Sierra Buttes Trail Stewardship (SBTS) is spearheading the new route’s development as part of the Connected Communities Project. In its own words, the project is “a visionary effort led in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service, SBTS, and community partners to connect 15 mountain towns for economic prosperity through outdoor recreation – an $887 billion industry.” It started primarily as a financial development initiative to revitalize the small towns in California hardest hit by decades of decline amid the loss of the logging and mining industries. In recent years, things have only been made worse by record-setting wildfires and COVID-related shutdowns.

Recommended Videos

But, it’s also about sharing a love for one of the country’s most amazing natural landscapes with every level of outdoorsmen. Hiking long-distance trails like the Pacific Crest Trail and even the relatively “short” John Muir Trail is daunting physically and mentally, requiring significant planning for resupplying with food, water, and gear along the way. By contrast, SBTS’s project coordinator Trinity Stirling wants “to design a trail for everyone and allow them to refuel — get a bite to eat or stay in a hotel  — right on the trail network, leaving a lot of flexibility for trip planning.” Along the planned route, visitors will pass dozens of historic inns, grocers, and local eateries, allowing them to quickly hop off and back on the trail on the fly.

A Trail for Everyone

The first portion of the Lost Sierra Route is slated to open in 2023, while the entire path should be completed around 2030. It’s a long way off, but it should be worth the wait for outdoorsmen who appreciate the stunning natural beauty of Northern California and Nevada. In the meantime, start planning your hike now with some of the best backpacking gear for hitting the trail.

Mike Richard
Mike Richard has traveled the world since 2008. He's kayaked in Antarctica, tracked endangered African wild dogs in South…
These are the best Colorado ski resorts for beginners to learn their turns
From small resorts to bustling mountain estates, we have a resort for every budding skier and snowboarder
Skiiers shred slopes at Beaver Creek ski resort

When it comes to the best ski resorts in the world, Colorado is always near the top of the list. With a huge stretch of the Southern Rockies, this state offers some of the best skiing experiences out there, especially for beginners.

If you're new to the slopes, Colorado ski resorts are the perfect place to learn. Many cater specifically to beginners, with gentle runs, friendly instructors, and easy-to-navigate areas. Plus, December, January, and February bring ideal conditions, with cold temperatures and frequent snowstorms creating perfect powder.
Beaver Creek

Read more
No laundromat while camping? Try this classic laundry solution
Here's how to wash your clothes while hiking, camping, or RV'ing
camping hack for laundry toby wong fttvcvu89 m unsplash

If you've ever been on the road for any length of time, you'll know that one of the biggest challenges is how to do the laundry. As someone who RV'ed for several years in a 1991 Airstream Motorhome with a family of 7, this was a huge challenge for us, and we often resorted to coin laundry whenever we could get it. Laundry services aren't always available during your rockiest adventures, so it's handy to have an alternative in your back pocket should you run out of undies.

Washing your laundry the old-fashioned way is definitely not glamorous, but what must be done must be done. If undies are all you need, a quick scrub in the RV sink will be sufficient. But if you have a whole pile of stinky clothes marinating in the corner of your rig? Here's how wash your clothes while on the trail.
How to wash your clothes on the trail — the old-fashioned way

Read more
Zion Off-Road’s 2025 Z2 is an all-in-one gear trailer and off-road micro camper
It's a versatile gear/cargo hauler during the week and a go-anywhere micro camper on the weekends
Zion Off-Road Z2 micro-camper/trailer being towed down a desert trail by a pickup truck

Teardrop campers are almost always the best trailer-based option for minimalist campers. But in the last few years, a new breed of stripped-down micro towables has hit — towables, like the 2025 Zion Off-Road Z2 modular utility trailer.

The Z2 ditches the bloated, feature-packed design of many of today's premium (and pricey) gear haulers/micro campers in favor of versatility and customizability. It's a completely modular platform that starts as little more than a cargo-hauling trailer that resembles those most landscapers might use. But the secret sauce of the Zion Off-Road Z2 micro camper trailer is its arsenal of bolt-on accessories that transform the Z2 from an "ordinary" gear/cargo hauler to a legit micro camper on the fly.

Read more