The Bighorns are a popular destination for hiking, backpacking, fly fishing, hunting, horseback riding, and increasingly
ATV riding and
snowmobiling. Fishing opportunities abound in the Bighorns, with a high prevalence of brook trout. Camping is available at many established campgrounds with facilities, or across most of the national forest. Wilderness users must register at trailheads, but no permit is required, though there are regulations about group size, prohibiting fires at high elevation, and camping away from water sources. Motorized trails wind through most of the national forest. The noise impacts from ATV use outside of the Cloud Peak Wilderness contrast from the former marketing motto that invited people to "Visit the Bighorns if you can stand the quiet." The
Cloud Peak Wilderness has a network of hiking trails to remote areas and alpine lakes. Higher trails are often covered with snow except from July through August. After Labor Day, there is a good chance of high country snow storms at any time. The Bighorns are home to one of the elite
ultramarathons in the nation. The
Bighorn Trail Run is held every June. The Bighorns are home to two small ski areas: Meadowlark Resort off Highway 16 near Buffalo, and Antelope Butte Ski Area on U.S. 14 between Dayton and Greybull, which reopened in 2019 after a long hiatus. Antelope Butte hosts a summer festival with music, and foot and bike trail races. The Bighorn National Forest permits land leases for hundreds of summer home cabins throughout the Bighorn Range. Regulations require the cabins to visually fit into the natural surroundings, and that cabin owners reduce fuels around the premises to reduce wildfire risk. The National Forest also permits summer grazing for cattle and sheep, and professional outfitting and hunting services. Private inholdings and businesses within the Bighorn National Forest include Tepee Cabins, Folly Ranch, Dome Lake Club, Bighorn Reservoir Company, Kearny Reservoir, Paradise Ranch, Bear Lodge, Arrowhead Lodge, Elk View Inn, South Fork Lodge, Deer Haven Lodge, and Meadowlark Lodge, and Wyoming High Country Lodge. The former Spear O Wigwam guest ranch hosted Ernest Hemingway in 1928, where he wrote part of "A Farewell to Arms." The
Sioux, Crow, and
Cheyenne peoples have long considered the Bighorns sacred mountains. Image:BighornMountainsWyoming.jpg|The Bighorns feature extensive alpine tundra Image:AlpinelakeBighorns.jpg|High lake in the Bighorns Image:BighornMountainstundra.jpg|Above timberline in the Bighorns Image:Looking down the western edge of the Bighorn Mountains along Medicine Wheel Passage (U.S. Route 14A), 2009.jpg|Western slope of the Bighorns File:Panorama of Buffalo, Wyoming at the base of the Bighorn Mountains.jpg|Eastern slope of the Bighorns above Buffalo, WY ==See also==