Req 7d6 — Best Areas & Backcountry
Best Areas for Snowshoeing
Groomed Nordic Centers and Resorts
Many cross-country ski areas allow snowshoeing on designated trails. These offer:
- Pre-packed, well-marked trails
- Groomed surfaces that make the hike easier
- Facilities like warming huts and restrooms
- Ski patrol available for emergencies
The main limitation is that snowshoers must stay on designated paths and off Nordic ski tracks.
State and National Parks and Forests
Public lands with trails that are used for hiking in summer become snowshoe routes in winter. Advantages include:
- No trail fees in many areas
- Wide variety of terrain — from easy forest walks to rugged mountain routes
- Freedom to explore without staying on a designated loop
Considerations: Trails may be unmarked in deep snow. Cell service may be limited. Check with park rangers about current conditions and closures.
Golf Courses and Open Fields
In areas with consistent snow cover, golf courses and large open fields are excellent beginner destinations — flat, open, and low-risk. You can hike in large circles, practice technique, or explore without needing navigation skills.
Backcountry (Off-Trail)
Anywhere there is snow and no trail — forests, mountain terrain, open meadows. This is where snowshoeing becomes a true wilderness activity.
Advantages of Backcountry Snowshoeing
- Access to remote terrain not reachable by groomed trail
- Wildlife observation — fewer humans, quieter approach, more animal sightings
- Solitude and wilderness experience — exactly what many people seek
- No fees or crowding — completely free once you have your gear
- Terrain freedom — you decide where to go and how far
Dangers of Backcountry Snowshoeing
Getting lost: Snow covers trails, blazes, and landmarks. Navigation requires a map and compass (or GPS). Whiteout conditions can disorient even experienced hikers.
Avalanche risk: Steep backcountry terrain — especially slopes of 30–45 degrees — can avalanche. Snowshoers in avalanche terrain should carry beacon, probe, and shovel and know how to use them. Check the local avalanche forecast before any backcountry trip.
Falling through ice: Crossing frozen ponds or streams is tempting but dangerous. Ice thickness varies and is impossible to judge from the surface in all conditions. Avoid crossing frozen water unless you know for certain it is safe.
Post-holing: Without snowshoes, or with undersized snowshoes, you “post-hole” — break through the snow crust up to your knee or hip with every step. In deep backcountry snow this can be exhausting and dangerous if it slows you to the point where you cannot return before dark.
Remote emergencies: An injury far from a trailhead in cold weather is a serious situation. There may be no cell service, no patrol, and no shelter. Solo backcountry travel is high risk. Always tell someone your plan and expected return time.
Official Resources
🎬 Video: Where and How to Snowshoe Safely (video) — https://youtu.be/tYo3RNM2ock?si=e8ozQUSDO9Lp5T7L