Honey Flat and developed loops
Details- Booking
- Reserve through Texas Parks and Wildlife.
- Sites
- Sites with water and electric hookups, restrooms and showers nearby.
- Best first check for RV and tent campers who want hookups, with bison often nearby.

State Park · Texas
Panhandle red-rock canyons, the official Texas State Bison Herd roaming free, a 64-mile rail trail, and dark-sky camping near Quitaque.

Field briefing
Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailway changes fast with season and elevation.
Before you go
Plan around heat, wind, and the bison, which can be on the road or near your campsite and require a 50-yard buffer.
The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.
Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.
Prime hiking weather, though wind and storms move fast across the caprock.
Pack Wind layer, sun protection, and a full water supply.
Very hot and exposed on the red-rock canyon floor.
Pack Dawn starts, electrolytes, and a strict heat cutoff.
Cooler hiking and strong canyon color, the best all-around window.
Pack Layers, sun protection, and early weekend booking.
Cool to cold, quiet trails, and crisp dark-sky nights.
Pack Warm layer, wind protection, and traction for damp rock.
The Texas State Bison Herd
Descendants of the Charles Goodnight herd roam free across the park, so you may meet them on the road or near campsites. Stay at least 50 yards back and never get between animals.
Upper and Lower Canyon Trail
The classic red-rock canyon hike past hoodoos and caprock walls, with the option to extend onto the Haynes Ridge overlook.
Caprock Canyons Trailway
A 64-mile rail-to-trail route on the old Fort Worth and Denver line, including the Clarity Tunnel, a former railroad tunnel now home to a bat colony.
Move exposed miles to the morning and keep water, shade, and storm checks ahead of the wish list. For one day in Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailway, make The Texas State Bison Herd the non-negotiable, add Upper and Lower Canyon Trail only if the first stop runs clean, and keep Caprock Canyons Trailway as the flexible finish.
Turn Caprock Canyons's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Build around conditions
Let season, elevation, and weather set the plan.
Plan your trip
4 quick tools, already seeded for Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailway. Tune the numbers around temperature swings, footing, layers, and how much margin the route needs.
Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.
Kit Authority
Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailway packing list
0 of 23 packed. Check items as you pack, then take this list to the store, trailhead, or campsite.
Pack planning
Use this as a constraint check while you are still shaping the trip. The active checklist becomes useful once your route, dates, and sleep plan are set.
Checklist mode
23 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.
The buying guides that match what Caprock Canyons asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.
Camp inside the park to get canyon mornings, dark skies, and the chance to see bison near camp, with developed hookup loops and primitive backcountry options. The nearest town services are in Quitaque, just outside the park, with more lodging in Turkey and a longer drive to Childress or Plainview. This is remote country, so stock up before you arrive.
Camping reservations
The park has developed campsites with water and electric hookups, water-only sites, and backcountry wilderness camping by permit. Bison move freely through the park, including near campsites, so a 50-yard distance rule applies everywhere.
Reviewed June 11, 2026
Booking window
Reservations are made through the Texas State Parks system. Book ahead for cooler-season weekends, and obtain a backcountry permit for wilderness camping.
Where to book or verify
Official park page with bison guidance, alerts, fees, and facilities.
Official reservation system for campsites and day passes, or call (512) 389-8900.
Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.
Campgrounds to know

Plan the last mile as carefully as the destination.
Airports, roads, entrances, and local movement belong in the same plan.
Getting there
Arrival note
Caprock Canyons is near Quitaque in the eastern Texas Panhandle, about 100 miles southeast of Amarillo.
Car strategy
A car is required, the roads in are rural, and services are limited, so fuel up and buy supplies before arriving.
Car strategy
Drive the park road slowly, because the free-roaming bison have the right of way.
Pair this with lodging: the simplest base is the one that removes a real morning problem, not just the one nearest the map pin.
Yes. The park is home to the official Texas State Bison Herd, which roams free throughout the park, including on roads and near campsites. Keep at least 50 yards away and never get between animals.
The day-use fee is $5 per person age 13 and older, with a group rate for larger groups. Camping is reserved and paid separately.
It is a 64-mile rail-to-trail route on the old Fort Worth and Denver railroad line, open to hiking, biking, and horseback riding, and it includes the Clarity Tunnel with its bat colony. You can hike or ride any segment.