Wilderness
Cloud Peak Wilderness
In Wilderness natural processes are the primary influences and human activities are limited. Here we experience wild places without disturbing or destroying the action of these natural processes. The Wilderness Act of 1964 defines wilderness as "an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain . . . an area protected and managed so as to preserve its natural conditions." Please follow the special regulations and always use Leave No Trace techniques to help keep this area wild, clean, and pristine into the future. One main requirement to note is anyone who enters Cloud Peak Wilderness must complete a registration form.
In 1984, Congress passed the Wyoming Wilderness Act, which designated the Cloud Peak Wilderness in the Bighorn National Forest. Long recognized as having some of the most majestic alpine scenery in America, this region was managed as the Cloud Peak Primitive Area as far back as 1932. For 27 miles along the spine of the Bighorn Mountain Range, the 191,914 acre Cloud Peak Wilderness preserves many sharp summits and towering sheer rock faces standing above glacier-carved, U-shaped valleys.
Named for the tallest mountain in the Bighorn National Forest - Cloud Peak at 13,167 feet - the area is blanketed in snow for a large part of the year. Most of the higher ground doesn't show bare until July. On the east side of Cloud Peak itself, a deeply inset cirque holds the last remaining glacier in this range.
Several hundred beautiful lakes cover the landscape and drain into miles of streams. The area is characterized by an attractive mix of pine and spruce opened by meadows and wetlands. The area is visited each year by thousands of backpackers who hike the more than 100 miles of trails.
Go to Wilderness.net for additional maps and information about Wilderness.