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Camping on the Medicine Wheel Scenic Byway: 14A in Wyoming

My camp on the Medicine Wheel Scenic Byway. I’ve been lucky this summer to get many great rainbows, but this one was special because it came with a great view!
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This is a wide shot of the ridge I was camped on. In the distance you can see the white dots, those are the many RVs camped below me; there are many more in the trees where we can’t see them. This is where a small vehicle pays off. None of the big RVs could come up here, so I got a great view all to myself–and better internet. None of the ridge was level. My Tri-Levelors really paid off here.
As soon as I got up on top of the hill and was on the Plateau I turned on my Verizon JetPack and Wilson Sleek to see if I could get any signal. To my total surprise I had a fairly strong 4g signal almost right away and it held steady the whole way. According to my Benchmark Atlas, there was a spider web of Forest Roads that led off of 14A (which is the Medicine Wheel Scenic Byway) into the Bighorn National Forest so I took what looked like the largest road, and also had the most smaller roads leading off of it. My experience has been that’s where I’m most likely to find a good dispersed campsite.
I was very surprised by the large number of 5th Wheels, Travel Trailers and Class A RVs that were camped along all the roads. Most of them showed no sign of people being around and they had obviously just been brought up the hill and left there, probably only being used on weekends. They filled all the most choice camping spots so I just kept going.

Here I’ve walked over to the edge and I’m shooting down at the valley below me with all the RVs. The Bighorn NF has a spiderweb of Forest Roads all through it with hundreds of nice campsites everywhere.

The northern part of the Bighorn National Forest is a high plateau with a nice forest in it. The mountains are really just rolling hills as you can see in this shot.
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I was high enough on the mountain I had a very good Verizon 4g signal and amazing views all around us. I could look down at all the RVs camped in the meadows below us and thought “Yeah, those were nice spots, but I would rather have this one any day!” Cody and I walked up most of the way to the mountain above us and back for our evening walk and then an evening thunderstorm rolled in and brought some wind and rain. If you’ve spent much time in the Rocky Mountains, you know that is very typical behavior. Fortunately it also brought a very nice rainbow which I got some nice shots of. That night we had very little traffic, just a few ATVs caught in the rain. The next morning we had a bit more but not much, mainly ATVs. Cody and I took our walk and headed out to finish our trip.
This part of the Bighorn national Forest is not really tremendously beautiful. It is a nice forest with many meadows and streams but the mountains are really just rolling hills. It’s a very nice place and I can see spending your vacation time here if you lived nearby but compared to all the stunning beauty that’s not that far away, I’d rather go there any day.

Another typical shot of the rolling hills in the northern part of the Bighorn NF along Medicine Wheel Scenic Byway.

This is a shot down the hill at the high pains on the eastern descent on the Medicine Wheel Scenic Byway towards Interstate 90. If you could see far enough, the Black Hills of SD would be right over there. It’s a typical mountain climb into the Rockies, nearly all of our vehicles can make it no problem.
- The “Oh My God Hill” is well worth the drive if your vehicle can handle it
- The Medicine Wheel National Monument
- I had a very nice campsite with great 4g signal
Other than those three things I’d say skip it and take the southern route, Highway 16, into the Bighorns which is much prettier. In my next post I’ll tell you all about that.
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Thank you for giving your reasons for rating a scenic route. I’m from Ohio and I’m easily satisfied with scenery. Mostly I want a quiet and natural kind of place. Beyond that, my other priorities influence my decisions. Good phone/Internet reception adds to the attraction. The Medicine Wheel Scenic Byway seems like a place I could spend time.
Calvin, the great thing about the West, and especially Wyoming, is you drive 30 minutes away from any town and you are in “quiet and natural!!” That’s just about all their is. Of course that’s not true of the more populated states, California for example, but it’s still very easy to find!
Bob
Hi Bob,
Good information for the traveler and very nice pics, as usual.
Thanks,
Omar
Thanks Omar!
Bob
All the RV’s parked in prime spots for the week so that the owner can come up on the weekend just grate on me.
We have a similar problem here in SE BC Canada. There are limited BC forestry campsites (free sites) on desirable lakes and people park a junker trailer in a site for the summer – essentially “reserving” the site for themselves. Often these are small campsites of 3 to 8 sites, or so, and have 2 to 5 sites “permanently” occupied. No one there all week … sometimes for weeks at a time …
Since the forestry service has been downsized, no enforcing of the 14 day stay limit ever happens. So these sites are dominated by those who park there as soon as the snow melts and the sites are hogged all summer. Our tax dollars were spent to build these sites – for the few who get there first? What about the rest of us that just want to enjoy the area for a day or two?
If the forestry service gets too many complaints of this problem, they just simply close down the campsite and bulldoze the road into it. This has happened many times in this area leading to increased pressure on the few campsites that are left.
In the US, the BLM would be similar to our forestry service – only we are governed province by province, so the BC forestry service is who we deal with in this area. Soon, all forest roads here will be gated and locked with no access to the public. If you happen to work for the forestry service or be related to someone who does, you get a key for the gate. Sort of like the Kings private reserve in old England …
Oops, sorry for the rant, Bob. Delete all if you wish
No problem Les, it’s a problem to be talked about. Here in the US the government agencies are will respond if they get enough pressure. For example, when I was a campground host in the Sierras, we had that exact problem but enough people complained that they finally went up and chased everyone out who had been their the whole summer.
The Ranger I talked to in the Bighorns also enforced the 14 day rule. But rather than make them leave the Forest, he made them move the rig every 14 days. So every 14 days every campsite came open and it was first come first served again. I thought that was fair because it was so hard to get a rig up that big hill.
Bob
Bob, those hills are my old stomping grounds for 20 years. I guess you went UP the OMG Hill. The real fun is driving down it. About 8 miles of 10 per cent grade, as you head for the flat lands and on to Cody.
The Medicine Wheel preservation to a National Monument was launched by 3 tribal elders, 2 of whom I had the pleasure of knowing, Bill Tallbull, Northern Cheyenne, and John Hill, Crow. These men plus an Arapaho elder had the foresight to work towards preservation of this sacred site. I was invited to participate in ongoing meetings between the Forest Service, archeologists, and tribal members. This group worked on a plan that eventually received gov’t approval to expand the monument from 110 to thousands of acres. Tribal people call it Medicine Mountain.
I’m sorry you missed this glorious spot. The “hills” actually climb to over 13k feet. The east side of the Big Horns, near Buffalo, Wyoming is where the 3 allied tribes, Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho, fought great battles to save land that was their very best hunting grounds. Literally millions of prong horn antelope, elk, deer, and buffalo roamed the plains from the Black Hills of South Dakota to the eastern slopes of the Big Horns.
They are the second oldest mountain range in the US and very walkable, as there are so many green open areas between the forests and rock formations. It’s land dear to my heart but I don’t miss the smell of burning brakes, driving miles down that 10 per cent grade road.
Yes, I drove up it and that was hard but I don’t even want o think of the burning brakes going down it!! Truly an amazing place!
My most exciting trip down the OMG hill was when I pumped the brakes but they did not work. Steered to stop at bottom of hill, got out, laid on the ground, heart pounding, gave thanks for being alive. Those signs that say “Pull over to cool brakes” mean something!
Yes they do Kathleen! Glad you made it through your experience safe and sound!
Kathleen, it’s by far the worst hill I’ve ever been on!!!!