Crooks Gap Road to Bison Basin Road

Difficulty

Difficult

Maps

USGS 7.5 Quadrangles: Crooks Peak, Brenton Springs, Crooks Mountain, and Soap Hole; BLM Surface Management Status: Bairoil and South Pass; CDT Mapset: Maps 241 – 244, Section WY09.

Length

24 miles

Directions

Directions from Rawlins: Drive 67 miles northwest of Rawlins on US-287 to the small town of Jeffrey City. From Jeffrey City, follow the graded and well-maintained Crooks Gap Rd. south for 5 miles until a fork appears in the road. Take the left fork and continue south past a sign that says Wamsutter 52 miles, Sweetwater Mill 31. There is also a large sign for the Jackpot uranium mine on the side of Sheep Mountain. At mile 12, the road crosses a cattle guard. Park south of the cattle guard on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) administered land. The CDT continues just to the south of a fence, following a faint two-track heading west.

Closest Town

Rawlins

For More Information

BLM Lander Field Office: (307)-332-8400.

Experience the only place where the Continental Divide splits, creating a large circular basin where the water does not flow into the Pacific or Atlantic Oceans, but into a succession of ponds and salt flats in an area known as the Chain-of-Lakes. Native shrubs such as sagebrush, saltbush, and active sand dunes dominate the landscape. The Crooks Gap Road to Bison Basin Road segment is a 24-mile stretch of the CDT located southeast of Lander and northwest of Rawlins. It is ripe with potential wilderness experiences, including possible wild horse sightings. Brenton Springs, a perennial spring 4 miles into this segment, offers the first water source. The landscape takes on a new character as the route heads out of the basin and up onto Crooks Mountain.
It is rumored that “Crooks Gap” and “Crooks Mountain” were named perhaps as the site of an ambush or as a hideout for a gang of outlaws. The less exciting truth is that they were named after General George Crook, an army commander. In spite of the unrelenting sun, this segment of the CDT is very pleasurable. You’ll walk through sagebrush, limber pine, and the occasional cottonwood or aspen tree.

Photo by Matt Berger