There are guided hikes, and then there is what the Hole Hiking Experience does — and the difference becomes clear about ten minutes into your first outing, when your naturalist guide drops to one knee beside a patch of wildflowers and starts explaining the centuries-old relationship between grizzly bears and whitebark pine nuts with the kind of infectious enthusiasm that makes you wonder why you ever hiked alone.
Based right in Jackson, Wyoming, the Hole Hiking Experience has been leading small-group and private excursions into Grand Teton National Park and the surrounding wilderness since 1999. They are the longest-running permitted guiding operation in the park, and that tenure shows in every detail. These are not cookie-cutter tours where a guide reads from a laminated card. The naturalists here — many of them with advanced degrees in ecology, geology, or wildlife biology — read the landscape like a living book and they genuinely want you to love every page of it.
What sets a trip with Hole Hiking apart is the sheer range of what is available. Whether you are a first-time visitor who wants a gentle morning walk through sagebrush flats with the Teton Range glowing above you, or a seasoned hiker itching to push into the backcountry above the treeline, there is an itinerary matched to your pace and ambition. Some of the most popular options include the iconic Cascade Canyon hike, accessible via a shuttle boat across Jenny Lake — a crossing that is magical in its own right — and the Paintbrush Divide route for those who want to earn their views with a little elevation gain and a lot of breathtaking reward.
Family groups are warmly welcomed, and the guides have a particular gift for engaging kids. Watching a ten-year-old suddenly lose interest in a screen because a guide just pointed out fresh moose tracks in the mud is one of those genuinely priceless travel moments. The tours run from late spring through early fall, when the park is at its most spectacular — wildflowers carpeting the meadows, streams running cold and clear, and wildlife moving through the valleys in full view.
Groups are intentionally small, typically capped at six to eight guests, so you are never jostling for a view or straining to hear the guide over a crowd. Snacks, trekking poles, and a deep well of local knowledge are all included. You bring your layers, your curiosity, and your camera — the Tetons will handle everything else.
Book through their website at holehiking.com and take the time to browse their custom itinerary options. If you are visiting Jackson Hole and you leave without spending at least one morning on the trail with these people, you have left the best chapter unread.