Up next Latest Truck and Overland Upgrades Worth Checking Out Published on May 04, 2026 Author BRANDON HOFFNER Photo Credit Brandon Hoffner Share article Facebook 0 Twitter 0 Mail 0 Fordyce Creek Trail: California’s Toughest Jeep Run AS SEEN IN OUR MARCH/APRIL 2026 ISSUE – Buy Now! I LIVE FOR THIS Fordyce Creek Trail is the kind of place that separates “I like off-roading” from “I live for this.” Tucked into the Sierra Nevada near Cisco Grove, California, this roughly 12-mile Jeep trail has a reputation that even the Rubicon respects. It’s shorter than its famous neighbor, but most folks who’ve run both will tell you Fordyce hits harder, faster, and with fewer breaks in between. The trail follows the canyon carved by Fordyce Creek, starting near Eagle Lakes Road off I-80 and working its way toward Meadow Lake. On paper it’s just under 12 miles. On the trail, it feels like an entire weekend packed into a single day. Big granite boulders, ledges, tight off-camber squeezes, and constant rock crawling keep you busy from the first obstacle to the last. There are five infamous “winch hills” along the route, each one steep and loose enough to earn its name. Fordyce Creek isn’t a place to learn how your 4×4 works. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter Then there’s the water. Fordyce Creek itself runs beside and across the trail multiple times, and the crossings are a huge part of its character. Flows are controlled by the dam upstream, which means the water doesn’t always drop as summer goes on. In fact, during hot spells, the release can increase, turning crossings from hood-deep to flat-out impassable. It’s common advice to check flow data before you go and to avoid the trail entirely on high-water days. Deep, fast water, slick rock, and big ledges make winches, recovery gear, and smart group planning non-negotiable. For all that intensity, Fordyce delivers just as much reward. Between the winch hills and creek crossings, the trail opens up into stretches of classic high-Sierra scenery: pines, granite slabs, waterfalls, and clear pools that look like postcards. Many groups make a weekend of it, camping near the creek or up by Meadow Lake, trading stories around a fire about broken parts, tough lines, and the one climb they want to try again. Most guides call Fordyce an extreme trail that requires 35-inch or bigger tires, lockers front and rear, armor, and a solid cooling system. These are considered the starting point, not upgrades. It’s also a trail you run with friends, not solo. But if you bring the right rig, the right crew, and the right respect, Fordyce Creek Trail sits right near the top of the “must wheel before I’m done” list.
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