Cloudcroft activities guide

Complete Guide to Activities in Cloudcroft, NM (2026)

Cloudcroft is at its best when you combine trails, overlooks, food stops, and town time. This guide curates the strongest activity mix for 2026 and flags the closures and restrictions that matter.

Best forHiking, scenic drives, low-key mountain weekends, cabin stays, and Burro Avenue strolling.
Works best inSummer and fall for reliability; winter only if snow conditions cooperate.
Big 2026 caveatFire restrictions and several closures make condition checks essential before you go.

Intro

Intro

Cloudcroft works best when you treat it as a compact mountain base rather than a checklist town. The village itself is small. The range of things to do is not. In one day you can hike a Forest Service trail, look across Mexican Canyon, browse Burro Avenue, stop for coffee or tea, drive the Sunspot Scenic Byway, and end with dinner or a drink. In another season, that same day might turn into snow play, skiing, or a lodge-and-fireplace kind of trip.

This guide focuses on activities that are actually tied to a Cloudcroft stay in 2026. It does not try to list every possible outing in the Sacramento Mountains. It curates the activities that make the place distinct.

**2026 note:** Conditions matter more than usual this year. Lincoln National Forest entered Stage 1 fire restrictions on March 27, 2026, and some recreation areas remain under separate closure orders. Sunspot information is also conflicted across official pages; one visitor page still describes tours and a walking loop, but the NMSU calendar page says Sunspot, the visitor center, surrounding areas, and local hiking trails are closed to the public for the foreseeable future.

Overview

What Cloudcroft is good at

What it is not

Best bets if you only have one day

1. Walk or drive to the Mexican Canyon Trestle area and take a short trail or overlook stop. 2. Hike Osha Trail or another close Forest Service trail. 3. Spend time on Burro Avenue for shops, coffee, bakery, tea, or wine. 4. Drive part or all of the Sunspot Scenic Byway, but verify current Sunspot access first. 5. End at The Lodge, Cloudcroft Brewing, or another in-town stop for a meal or drink.

Best activities in Cloudcroft

1. Hike Osha Trail

If you want one easy answer for a first Cloudcroft hike, this is it. The Forest Service calls Osha Trail a great beginning hike for all ages and places it just north of the village off US 82. It is close, scenic, and manageable enough for many visitors to do on the same day they arrive.

What makes it work is not raw drama. It is convenience plus payoff. You get forest, elevation, and basin views without a long drive or a complicated route.

**Why it stands out**

**What to watch**

2. See the Mexican Canyon Trestle and nearby railroad-grade trails

This is one of the most Cloudcroft-specific things you can do. The Mexican Canyon Trestle is not just a viewpoint. It ties the village to its railroad history and gives shape to several nearby trail experiences, including the Cloud-Climbing Trestle Trail, Overlook Trail, Village Spur Trail, and parts of the Old Cloudcroft Highway alignment.

The activity here can be as light or as involved as you want. Some visitors stop for a short look. Others turn it into a walk or bike outing.

**Why it stands out**

**What to watch**

3. Stroll Burro Avenue

Burro Avenue is not a major shopping district. That is part of why it works. It is compact, walkable, and easy to browse without pressure. The Chamber shopping directory shows a concentrated strip of shops, galleries, jewelry, gifts, outdoor gear, wine, tea, and related stops, especially around the Burro Street Exchange.

This is one of the best low-effort Cloudcroft activities because it works in any season and does not require much planning. It also mixes naturally with eating and drinking. One good lap can include coffee, a boutique stop, a gallery or Southwest goods store, and lunch.

**Why it stands out**

**What to watch**

4. Build a food-and-drink crawl

In Cloudcroft, eating can be part of the activity rather than just a break in the day. Burro Street Bakery, Black Bear Coffee, Old Barrel Tea Company, Noisy Water Winery, Cloudcroft Brewing Company, Mad Jack’s BBQ, and The Lodge’s dining outlets give the village enough variety to build a slow afternoon or evening around stops rather than a single reservation.

This works especially well for repeat visitors, second-home owners, and anyone traveling with a mixed-energy group.

**Good versions of this**

**What to watch**

5. Drive the Sunspot Scenic Byway

The Sunspot Scenic Byway is one of the strongest drives tied to a Cloudcroft visit. New Mexico Tourism describes it as a 15-mile road beginning two miles south of Cloudcroft, with stops such as Haynes Canyon Vista and broad views toward White Sands and the basin country below. The Lincoln National Forest also lists it among the scenic drives in the area.

The road itself is the activity. Even if Sunspot access is limited, the drive still gives you the transition from dense high-country forest to wider open viewpoints.

**Why it stands out**

**What to watch**

6. Spend time at The Lodge and its golf course

Golf at The Lodge is one of the classic Cloudcroft activities because it is tied to the village’s long-running idea of mountain leisure. The Lodge’s current site presents golf, dining, and the historic hotel itself as part of one experience, and the property’s social posts indicate the golf course opened for the 2026 season.

Even for non-golfers, The Lodge can be part of the activity mix. It is one of the strongest places in town to build a slower afternoon or evening around views, drinks, and a meal.

**Why it stands out**

**What to watch**

7. Camp, RV, or rent a cabin and let the stay be part of the activity

This matters in Cloudcroft more than in many small towns. The area’s cabin stock, RV parks, and campgrounds do not just support activity. They are part of the activity. Staying in the pines, cooking outside, taking a short walk at dusk, and using town only as a resupply point is a real version of the place.

Representative options in the broader Cloudcroft orbit include Pines Campground in Lincoln National Forest, 16 Springs, Camp Rio, and a large inventory of cabin and short-term-rental stays.

**Why it stands out**

**What to watch**

Outdoor activities

Hiking

The simplest way to think about Cloudcroft hiking is to split it into three buckets:

Easy, close-to-town hiking

Short scenic-history hikes

More involved trail outings

Scenic drives

These are the best driving activities tied to a Cloudcroft stay:

Sunspot Scenic Byway

The strongest “leave town and see the mountain” drive. Good for almost any traveler type. Verify destination access.

Fresnal Canyon Road (FR 162C)

The Forest Service lists this as a scenic drive with panoramic overlooks of the Tularosa Basin and White Sands.

Sacramento Canyon backroads

Useful if you want a slower, less packaged forest drive and are comfortable with changing road conditions.

Camping and RV life

This is one of the most practical activity categories around Cloudcroft because many visitors come specifically to stay outside.

Pines Campground

Forest Service site near Cloudcroft. The current page says it opens May 15, 2026 and has 24 sites, with hiking access and RVs up to 35 feet.

16 Springs

Private RV park positioned as a forest-based camping base close to Cloudcroft.

Camp Rio

In the Mayhill area, not in the village proper, but part of the realistic “Cloudcroft area” camping decision set.

Winter recreation

Ski Cloudcroft

Still a real part of the activity mix, but with an important caveat: the official site says the 2025–26 season closed on March 7, 2026 because of warm weather and lack of snow. In a good winter, skiing, tubing, and snow play remain strong reasons to come. In a weak winter, they become conditional rather than reliable.

Snow walks and town weekends

Even when ski conditions are poor, Cloudcroft can still work for a winter weekend built around forest views, short walks, fireside lodging, and food.

In-town activities

Burro Avenue and the Burro Street Exchange

This is the core “just be in town” activity. The Chamber describes Burro Street Exchange as a mixed retail and eatery cluster that reflects an Old West feel. That is a fair description of the social role it plays, even if the best reason to go is simpler: it concentrates the town’s easiest browsing.

Coffee, tea, bakery, and wine stops

Cloudcroft’s smaller scale helps here. A coffee stop does not need to be a separate agenda item. It can be a hinge between activities. Good in-town pause points include:

Dining as an evening activity

Cloudcroft is not a late-night town, but dinner can still be a destination activity. The strongest anchors are:

Quiet in-town time

Cloudcroft also rewards low-key activity:

That is not filler. It is part of why repeat visitors come back.

Seasonal activities

Spring

Summer

Fall

Winter

Best activities by traveler type

Best for first-time visitors

1. Osha Trail 2. Mexican Canyon Trestle area 3. Burro Avenue 4. The Lodge for dinner or drinks 5. Sunspot Scenic Byway, if conditions allow

Best for families

Best for couples

Best for hikers

Best for day-trippers from Alamogordo

Best for repeat visitors and second-home owners

Planning notes

2026 conditions that matter

Practical advice

Source notes

Core Cloudcroft activity and town sources

Forest Service and public-land sources

Scenic drive and astronomy sources

Local business and activity sources

Research gaps