There is a moment, somewhere along the sage-brushed bluffs above Cody, Wyoming, when the wind drops, the hawks circle overhead, and the Absaroka Range fills every corner of your vision like a painting that has no frame. That moment is why I keep coming back to the Carter Mountain Trail System, a network of accessible, rewarding hiking and mountain biking trails tucked into the rugged terrain just south of downtown Cody that most visitors drive right past on their way to Yellowstone.
And honestly, that is their loss — and your gain.
The Carter Mountain trails wind through the Bureau of Land Management land that rises dramatically from the Shoshone River valley floor. You do not need to be an elite athlete to enjoy them. The lower loops are wide, well-marked, and forgiving enough for families with older kids or anyone who just wants a solid afternoon outdoors without hauling a full mountaineering kit. That said, the upper routes climb steeply into terrain that will earn your respect quickly, rewarding the effort with panoramic views of the Bighorn Basin stretching east toward infinity.
What makes this trail system genuinely special is the sense of true Western wilderness you get without driving forty miles into the backcountry. You can park along the BLM access roads off Highway 120 south of town, lace up your boots, and within ten minutes you are surrounded by juniper, bitterbrush, and open sky. Mule deer appear around nearly every bend in the cooler hours of morning and late afternoon. Golden eagles are practically residents. In spring, the hillsides flush green and wildflowers push up through the rocky soil in colors that seem too vivid to be real.
Mountain bikers have quietly been discovering this area for years, and the trails have enough technical variety to keep experienced riders engaged without being punishing to intermediate cyclists. The natural surface trails roll and drop in ways that feel organic rather than engineered, because they largely are — carved over decades by local riders and hikers who simply loved this land.
Bring plenty of water, because the Wyoming sun is serious business and shade is a luxury out here. Sturdy footwear is a must; the rocky terrain is beautiful but uneven. Start early in summer, and in the shoulder seasons — late September through October especially — the light turns golden and the crowds thin to almost nothing. You may spend an entire afternoon out there without seeing another soul.
Cody is famous for its rodeos, its museums, its gateway-to-Yellowstone reputation. All of that is well-deserved. But the Carter Mountain trail country offers something quieter and perhaps more lasting: the feeling that you have stepped into the West as it actually is, not as it has been packaged for a postcard. Come out here for two hours and you will understand why people choose to build their whole lives in a place like this.
Access is free, the terrain is waiting, and the views will stay with you long after you have driven home.