
Wildfires can have devastating effects on hiking trails and the surrounding environment. In recent years, rising temperatures and prolonged droughts have led to more frequent and intense wildfires, putting many beloved outdoor areas at risk. This report examines how wildfires impact hiking trails, covering long-term environmental changes, trail accessibility, economic consequences, climate change’s role, community restoration efforts, and case studies of affected trails. Each section provides insights into these issues, with references to research and real-world examples.
Long-Term Environmental Changes
Wildfires can permanently alter ecosystems along hiking trails. High-severity fires often burn so hot that they change the soil composition and structure. Scorched soil can lose its ability to support previous plant life – for example, some forest soils become water-repellent or nutrient-poor after an intense fire. In many cases, the old forest does not grow back the same way: burned areas may be taken over by invasive grasses or scrub instead of the original trees (source: fws.gov). Severe fires can also double the concentration of toxic compounds in soil, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which inhibit new plant growth (source: news.stanford.edu). These chemical and physical soil changes make it harder for the ecosystem to recover and can lead to long-term loss of forest cover.
Biodiversity often suffers in the wake of wildfires. Fires may directly kill a large number of animals and plants, and the loss of habitat can push species to local extinction. The 2019–2020 Australian “Black Summer” fires are an extreme example: about 12.6 million hectares burned, and an estimated 3 billion animals were killed, with many species becoming endangered or closer to extinction as a result (source: earth.org). Even less catastrophic fires can eliminate old-growth tree canopy and understory plants that certain wildlife depend on. For instance, after a high-severity wildfire, it can take more than a century for large trees to return, and species that need mature forest (such as owls that nest in old-growth canopy) cannot thrive until the forest regenerates (source: fws.gov). In some cases, the original ecosystem might never fully rebound if climate conditions have changed or if invasive species establish themselves first.
At the same time, many ecosystems have evolved with fire as a natural disturbance, and some plant and animal species are adapted to survive or even benefit from periodic fires. Certain pine cones only open to release seeds after exposure to intense heat, meaning some plants require fire to reproduce (source: earth.org). New vegetation that sprouts after a low-intensity fire can create food and habitat for wildlife, potentially increasing biodiversity in the long run. Animals also have behaviors to cope with fire – for example, rodents may shelter in burrows and larger mammals flee and later return. However, the adaptations that flora and fauna have developed over millennia are being tested by the unprecedented size and frequency of modern fires. When fires burn too hot or occur too often, they can overwhelm the regenerative capacity of the ecosystem, leading to permanent changes in plant and animal communities.
Effects on Trail Accessibility
Wildfires frequently make hiking trails unsafe or inaccessible, sometimes for months or years. Even after the flames are out, the landscape is left in a hazardous condition. Common issues include structural damage to the trail and environmental instability. Key hazards that affect trail accessibility in burned areas are:
- Falling Trees and Limbs: Trees weakened or killed by fire can fall without warning. Even if a burned tree looks solid, its roots may be charred underground, and the tree can topple once winds or gravity take effect. Hikers in burn zones face a heightened risk from falling trunks and branches (source: fs.usda.gov). In subsequent years, as dead roots rot, the likelihood of treefall along the trail remains high (source: pcta.org). This makes traveling through burned forests dangerous, especially on windy days.
- Unstable Ground: The heat of a wildfire can destroy root systems that once anchored the soil. After a fire, the ground may be riddled with ash pits and holes where roots burned away (source: fs.usda.gov). The loss of vegetation and root structures also means the soil is looser. Trails in burn scars often become uneven and can collapse or give way underfoot. Hikers might find sections of trail that have crumbled or eroded, requiring careful navigation or detours.
- Rockfalls and Landslides: Vegetation helps stabilize hillsides, so when a fire removes that cover, slopes are prone to sliding. Burned-over slopes above trails can shed rocks and boulders that were once held in place by tree roots. The year or two after a fire, soil on steep terrain can be very unstable and prone to landslides (sources: wta.org, fs.usda.gov). Hikers and trail crews have encountered entire sections of trail buried by rockfall. In some cases, retaining walls or switchbacks are destroyed by sliding debris, leaving no safe path across the slope.
- Flash Floods and Debris Flows: Burned soil often cannot absorb water well, so rain runs off quickly, turning into torrents downstream. During storms, especially heavy downpours, a burned watershed can experience sudden flash floods. These floods carry ash, mud, and charred logs in what’s known as a debris flow. Trails in canyon bottoms or along creeks can be washed out by mudslides or flash floods after a wildfire (source: pcta.org). Even moderate rain can clog stream channels with debris, then release it in a surge that obliterates bridges and trail sections in its path.
Because of these dangers, land managers often close trails and recreation areas in the aftermath of a wildfire. Officials may keep burned areas off-limits for weeks, months, or even years until hazards are mitigated (source: pcta.org). For example, if many fire-damaged trees threaten to fall, crews must remove those “hazard trees” before reopening the trail. Similarly, landslide-prone hillsides need to be stabilized. Sometimes the trail itself is so damaged that it effectively disappears – retaining walls and tread support might be gone, leaving an impassable slope (source: pcta.org). In such cases, rebuilding the trail is a major undertaking that can take several seasons. Hikers are urged to respect closures, since entering too soon not only endangers themselves but can hinder recovery efforts or trigger rescues. Only once the area is deemed safe – with fallen trees cleared, unstable ground repaired, and bridges rebuilt – are trails gradually reopened to the public.
Economic Consequences

Wildfires can also carry heavy economic consequences for communities and businesses that rely on hiking and outdoor recreation. Popular trails often draw tourists, and trail closures mean lost revenue for local economies. When a wildfire shuts down access to national parks or wilderness areas, nearby towns see immediate declines in visitor spending on lodging, food, guiding services, and gear sales. For instance, a major fire in July 2018 forced Yosemite National Park to close during the peak of its tourist season. In just a 20-day closure, the surrounding region lost an estimated $50 million in tourism revenue (source: purdue.edu). That represents thousands of canceled trips – hotel rooms, restaurant meals, and park tours that never happened. Similarly, when Glacier National Park faced closures due to fires in 2018, officials voiced concern about the economic hit to communities that normally see a surge of summer visitors.
For small outdoor-oriented businesses, the impacts can be long-lasting. A devastating wildfire can lead to “red seasons” with dramatically reduced visitation for a year or more. Some businesses struggle to survive this downturn. Research on past disasters indicates that some establishments experience “rapid, catastrophic failure” or never return to pre-disaster revenue levels after a wildfire (source: purdue.edu). Even if they reopen, they may limp along at reduced capacity because the flow of hikers, campers, and tourists has diminished. It often takes time for a destination’s reputation to recover from images of wildfire damage and for visitors to come back in the same numbers. This means lost jobs and tax revenue in the interim, compounding the economic blow to rural communities.
Wildfires also impose direct costs for trail restoration and infrastructure repair. After the flames, land management agencies and volunteer groups must invest in rebuilding efforts. There may be bridges to replace, trail tread to re-cut, and signs or trailhead facilities to fix. All of this requires funding. In the Columbia River Gorge (Oregon), for example, the Forest Service spent over $12,000 just to replace burned trail signs and warning postings within the first year after the Eagle Creek Fire (source: fs.usda.gov). They also had to replace multiple footbridges that the fire destroyed (source: fs.usda.gov). Across the West, the rising costs of fighting fires are eating into budgets that could otherwise pay for recreation maintenance. Each large wildfire event can rack up millions of dollars in suppression costs, and afterwards additional millions in rehabilitation of the landscape and trails. This financial strain often means projects like new trail construction or facility upgrades are put on hold. In some cases, local governments and nonprofits step in to raise funds for trail restoration, but not all communities can afford the needed repairs easily. The economic burden of wildfires, therefore, includes not only immediate tourism losses but also the significant expense of restoring the natural and recreational resources that were damaged.
Role of Climate Change
Climate change plays a major role in the increasing threat wildfires pose to hiking trails and wildlands. In a warming world, many regions are experiencing hotter temperatures, drier conditions, and longer droughts – all of which make wildfires more likely and more severe. Multiple studies have found that climate change has already led to longer wildfire seasons, increased wildfire frequency, and a greater area burned (source: epa.gov). In practical terms, this means that the window of time each year when fires can occur has expanded (spring comes earlier, summers are hotter and longer, autumn rains arrive later). For example, warmer spring temperatures and reduced snowpack leave forests dry sooner, and extended summer dry periods create ample fuel for fires. As a result, places that historically might burn once a decade might now face fires every few years.
Statistics bear out the connection between rising temperatures and wildfires. The hottest years on record have coincided with some of the most extreme fire seasons. In the United States, all 10 of the years with the largest area burned by wildfires have occurred since 2004, a period that overlaps with many of the warmest years documented globally (source: epa.gov). Prolonged heat waves dry out vegetation, essentially turning forests into tinderboxes ready to ignite from a lightning strike or a spark. Extended droughts, like those associated with climate change in the American West and Australia, kill trees and create vast stands of dead wood that can fuel massive fires. Climate projections suggest that without significant mitigation, we will continue to see more frequent, larger, and hotter fires driven by higher temperatures and erratic rainfall patterns (source: epa.gov).
This climate-driven increase in wildfires directly threatens hiking trails by raising the odds that any given trail could burn in a given year. Areas that once rarely saw fire are now at risk, and well-loved trails have been burning more often. For long-distance trails that span hundreds or thousands of miles, the challenge is even greater. The Pacific Crest Trail Association has observed that as the climate warms, it is becoming harder for thru-hikers to complete the entire trail in one season because sections are frequently closed by fire or blanketed in smoke (source: pcta.org). What used to be an occasional detour has turned into a regular occurrence – recent years have seen multiple large fires along the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT), Appalachian Trail, and Continental Divide Trail, forcing hikers to skip sections for safety. Beyond the immediate closures, climate change means that the landscapes hikers traverse are changing. A trail that once wound through lush forest might, after repeated fires, run through swathes of charred snags or young brush for the foreseeable future. In this way, climate change not only increases fire risk but also alters the very character of trail environments for decades to come.
Community and Volunteer Efforts
In the aftermath of wildfires, community and volunteer efforts are often the backbone of trail restoration. With limited government resources available for rebuilding trails (much of the U.S. Forest Service budget, for example, is now spent on fire suppression rather than recreation management), volunteers step up to fill the gap (source: oregonhorsecouncil.com). Local hiking clubs, conservation organizations, and outdoor enthusiasts organize work parties to make burned areas safe and passable again. These groups work in partnership with land management agencies to prioritize which trails to reopen and how to do it safely.
Volunteer trail crews take on a variety of critical tasks to rehabilitate fire-damaged trails:
- Clearing Fallen Trees: One of the first jobs is removing the countless downed trees (blowdowns) that block the trail after a fire. Fire-scorched trees with compromised roots tend to topple over in wind and weather, often littering the trail corridor with logs (source: oregonhorsecouncil.com). Teams of volunteers use saws and other tools to cut up and remove these hazards, re-opening the route. This is not only important for access – it also prevents hikers from creating new paths to skirt debris, which can cause further erosion.
- Repairing Trail Tread: Volunteers also repair the trail surface itself. Many sections of trail become pitted with holes where stumps and root systems burned underground. A volunteer crew will fill in these dangerous holes and rebuild the tread to make the trail safe for foot travel (and stock animals, in horse-friendly areas) (source: oregonhorsecouncil.com). They may need to dig, move soil, and re-bench the trail into slopes where it has slumped or washed out. Without this work, a burned trail can remain an obstacle course of craters and loose ash.
-
Erosion Control and Infrastructure: Post-fire, trails are very vulnerable to erosion when rains come. Volunteer projects often include installing water bars or drainage ditches to channel runoff away from the trail. Crews might stabilize hillsides by planting native seedlings or placing barriers in severely burned spots. In addition, volunteers help rebuild small bridges, culverts, and signs destroyed by the fire. In one fire-scarred area of the Columbia Gorge, for example, volunteers and staff replaced three footbridges within a year of the wildfire and posted new warning signs before reopening the trail (source: fs.usda.gov). These efforts restore both safety and navigability to the trail network.
Community involvement not only accelerates the physical recovery of trails but also builds public awareness and stewardship. Trail volunteer programs (such as those led by the Washington Trails Association, Pacific Crest Trail Association, Appalachian Trail Conservancy, and Back Country Horsemen chapters) have mobilized thousands of hours of labor in recent wildfire recoveries. This work is crucial because agency resources are stretched thin; as one trail advocacy group noted, most burned acres will not be restored by federal agencies alone, making volunteer help indispensable (source: oregonhorsecouncil.com). By pitching in to reopen trails, local hikers, equestrians, and outdoor groups ensure that these natural spaces are not abandoned after a fire. They also often advocate for preventative measures, like better land management and firebreak maintenance, to protect trails from future fires. In sum, community and volunteer efforts are a vital part of the response, helping to rehabilitate damaged trails and prevent further degradation of our outdoor recreation areas.
Case Studies of Impacted Trails
The following case studies highlight examples of hiking trails in different regions that were severely impacted by wildfires, and describe their recovery progress:
Eagle Creek Fire – Columbia River Gorge (Oregon, USA)
The Eagle Creek Fire in 2017 was a human-caused wildfire that burned over 50,000 acres in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area of Oregon (source: opb.org). This fire hit a very popular hiking region, home to dozens of trails, waterfalls, and scenic viewpoints along the Gorge. The blaze charred forests on steep canyon walls and forced the closure of iconic trails frequented by thousands of visitors each year. Infrastructure was hard-hit – wooden bridges, picnic areas, and trail structures burned, and a six-mile section of the Historic Columbia River Highway (a key access road and bike path) was closed for more than a year due to fire damage. In the immediate aftermath, officials identified hundreds of hazard trees (over 9,000 unstable trees near roads and trails) that had to be cut down so they wouldn’t fall on people. Workers also installed protective fencing along cliffs to catch rockfall because the loss of vegetation led to more rocks crashing down near popular sites (source: fs.usda.gov).
Recovery in the Columbia River Gorge has been an enormous undertaking, but it showcases successful collaboration between agencies and volunteers. The U.S. Forest Service teamed up with nonprofits and volunteer groups (such as Trailkeepers of Oregon and Friends of the Columbia Gorge) to restore the trail network. By late 2018, just a year after the fire, major progress had been made: nearly 2,500 volunteers contributed about 25,000 hours of labor to repair and rebuild trails in the Gorge(source: fs.usda.gov). Thanks to these efforts, many beloved trails – including Angel’s Rest and Multnomah Falls paths – reopened within one year of the fire. Crews replaced three destroyed bridges in 2018 alone, and by June 2018 roughly 60 miles of trails had been reopened to hikers. Some of the most damaged trails, like the Eagle Creek Trail itself (known for its steep cliffs and waterfalls), took longer; replacement footbridges had to be flown in by helicopter in late 2019 to span chasms where the old bridges burned(source: opb.org). The Eagle Creek Trail finally reopened in 2021 after extensive repairs and safety checks.
Ecologically, the Columbia Gorge is recovering, but with notable changes. In the years since the fire, visitors can see hillsides once dense with firs now dotted with blackened snags like “charred toothpicks” (source: opb.org). New vegetation is coming back—ferns, grass, and young shrubs cover the forest floor, and in many places a “vigorous response” of young trees and brush has greened up the slopes. However, in the steepest, rockiest areas, the soil was so thoroughly burned that trees have been slow to return. Park rangers note that trail crews now spend a lot of time cutting back abundant brush that sprouted post-fire, a sign that nature is regenerating. Still, the landscape will bear fire scars for decades. Dead standing trees will continue to fall over the next 100 years, gradually decaying and enriching the soil. The Eagle Creek Fire case demonstrates both the destructive impact a wildfire can have on a recreation hub and the effective restoration that is possible through concerted community and agency action. The beauty of the Gorge remains, albeit with a new mosaic of young forest growing amid the remnants of the old.
Chimney Tops 2 Fire – Great Smoky Mountains (Tennessee, USA)
In late November 2016, the Chimney Tops 2 Fire ignited in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, eventually burning into the adjacent town of Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Within the park, the wildfire scorched approximately 11,400 acres, about 2% of the park’s area (source: smokymountainnews.com). This fire was unusual for the Smokies, a region known for wet, temperate forests that don’t often see large burns. Driven by extreme winds and drought conditions, the fire swept through both lower hollows and high elevation zones. Many trails were affected: 31 miles of trails in the park were initially closed due to fire damage. Some of these reopened relatively quickly after crews cleared debris, but several trails suffered severe damage. Notably, the popular Chimney Tops Trail – which leads to a pair of rocky pinnacles – was heavily impacted and had to be closed indefinitely at its upper section.
Hikers who were given a special preview of the area after the fire described a radically changed landscape. In the Chimney Tops summit area, the intense heat had burned the forest down to bare rock (source: smokymountainnews.com). What was once a lush mountaintop with rhododendrons and other vegetation became a stark, charred ridge. The thin soil on the steep slopes had been almost entirely stripped away by the fire and subsequent wind – “there’s little to no soil to be found, just rock and char,” reported one park spokesperson. Many trees were blown down in the windstorm that spread the fire, and as they fell, they ripped up chunks of trail and soil with them. The result was that sections of the trail were literally gone, leaving an obstacle course of uprooted trunks and exposed rock where the path used to be. Because of these conditions, park officials determined that the upper Chimney Tops area would remain closed for the foreseeable future. As of mid-2017, the Chimney Tops Trail was only partially reopened, allowing access to an overlook below the summits, but the last portion to the top has been closed and could remain closed for years. Other trails in the burn zone, like the Sugarland Mountain Trail and Bull Head Trail, were also closed for many months; they eventually reopened after extensive rehabilitation and natural regrowth, though hikers can still see blackened tree trunks and signs of the fire along those routes.
The recovery in Great Smoky Mountains NP has been aided by nature’s resilience. Within a couple of years of the fire, many of the burned slopes began to sprout vegetation. Grasses and fireweed colonized the clearings, and by spring 2018 the forest floor had green patches returning. The National Park Service conducted erosion control and trail repair where possible, and monitored how the ecosystem bounced back. Repeat photography and studies in the burn area have shown that lower-severity burn zones recovered quickly, while the high-severity patches (like Chimney Tops) remain dramatically altered with slow regrowth. This case highlights how a single wildfire in an area unaccustomed to fire can reshape hiking trails and visitor access. It also underscores the long timeline of recovery for severely burned landscapes – a summit trail may be closed for a generation until soil and forest regenerate enough to make it safe again. In the meantime, park managers have used the event as a learning experience in fire management and trail design, considering whether and how to reroute trails like Chimney Tops in the future to better accommodate natural disturbances.
“Black Summer” Bushfires – Blue Mountains (New South Wales, Australia)
In the austral summer of 2019–2020, Australia experienced an unprecedented series of bushfires, often referred to as the “Black Summer.” One of the hardest-hit regions was the Greater Blue Mountains World Heritage Area, a vast expanse of national parkland west of Sydney known for its rugged sandstone cliffs, eucalyptus forests, and extensive hiking trail network. The scale of the fires in this region was staggering: by the time rains extinguished the flames, about 80% of the Blue Mountains World Heritage Area had burned (source: api.internal-displacement.org). This level of destruction in a renowned tourist and wilderness area was previously unthinkable. The fires torched hundreds of miles of walking tracks and bush trails, many of which are popular with both local bushwalkers and international visitors.
In terms of trail impact, the fires in the Blue Mountains led to the closure of numerous national park sites and routes. Iconic lookout points and trails – such as those around the Three Sisters rock formation in Katoomba, or the Grand Canyon Track in Blackheath – were in the path of the fires or affected by heavy smoke and falling debris. Park authorities closed the entire Blue Mountains National Park during the peak of the crisis. In the immediate aftermath, the landscape was a patchwork of blackened tree trunks and ash-covered ground. Trail infrastructure like staircases, boardwalks, signage, and railings were destroyed in some locations. The hazardous conditions (burnt trees likely to fall, and loosened rocks on cliffs) kept many areas closed well into 2020 as assessment and recovery began.
Recovery in the Blue Mountains has been cautiously optimistic. Australia’s ecosystems include many fire-adapted species, and indeed within months of the fires, green shoots and epicormic growth (new shoots from tree bark) were visible on eucalypt trees. Nature has somewhat regenerated, with wildlife like birds and small mammals gradually returning to regenerating areas (source: lemonde.fr). By late 2020 and 2021, many of the major tourist tracks were reopened after extensive safety work – crews cleared countless charred tree limbs, repaired lookouts, and rebuilt sections of trail that had washed away in post-fire floods. The NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, along with local volunteers, carried out massive restoration projects to stabilize slopes and prevent erosion in the Blue Mountains. Walking tracks were prioritized for reopening based on tourism and community importance; for example, the Prince Henry Cliff Walk near Katoomba was one of the earlier trails to be restored for public access.
Despite this progress, the sheer scale of the burn means full ecological recovery will take many years. Conservationists note concerns about biodiversity loss, as some sensitive species (like certain frogs and ground-dwelling mammals) were hit hard. Additionally, invasive weeds often take advantage of disturbed ground, so there are ongoing programs to control weeds in the burned areas. The community has shown resilience – local outdoor clubs, Aboriginal land management groups, and residents have all been involved in regeneration activities such as tree planting and even using traditional Aboriginal burning techniques to reduce future fire risk (source: lemonde.fr). Trails that have reopened may offer a different experience now: hikers might pass through extensive young regrowth or open vistas where dense bush once stood. The Blue Mountains case study underscores the global reach of wildfire impacts – even temperate rainforest and woodland areas in Australia can face extreme fire under climate-stressed conditions – and it highlights the importance of sustained recovery efforts. Two years on, most major trails are back in service, but the memory of the Black Summer fires has led to renewed efforts in fire preparedness and landscape management to protect this cherished hiking region in the future.
Conclusion
Wildfires have a multifaceted impact on hiking trails, from transforming the environment and rendering trails temporarily impassable to causing economic hardships for nearby communities. The problem is exacerbated by climate change, which is making fires more frequent and intense. Yet, the case studies and responses also demonstrate hope: with concerted effort, damaged trails can be restored, ecosystems can regenerate (albeit sometimes in altered forms), and communities can adapt. Protecting hiking trails in the long run will require a combination of proactive forest management, climate action to mitigate wildfire risk, and continued support for the volunteer and community initiatives that help trails recover. By understanding the challenges outlined in this report – environmental changes, safety hazards, economic costs, and the need for collective action – trail stewards and outdoor enthusiasts can better prepare for the era of wildfires and work to preserve the hiking experience for future generations.
Sources:
- U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service – How Does Wildfire Impact Wildlife and Forests? fws.gov
- Stanford University News – Wildfires’ Long-Lasting Impacts on Soil Chemistry news.stanford.edu
- Earth.org – Impact of Wildfires on Biodiversity (Australian Bushfires) earth.org
- USDA Forest Service – Safety Tips for Burned Areas (Willamette NF) fs.usda.gov
- Pacific Crest Trail Association – Burn Area Safety Guidelines pcta.org
- Purdue University/Associated Press – Wildfires Burn Economy in Yosemite (2018) purdue.edu
- USDA Forest Service – Columbia River Gorge Post-Fire Recovery Updates fs.usda.gov
- U.S. EPA – Climate Change Indicators: Wildfires epa.gov
- Pacific Crest Trail Association – A Changing PCT: Climate Change and the Trail pcta.org
- Oregon Horse Council/TrailMeister – Trail Savvy: Caring for Trails after a Wildfire oregonhorsecouncil.com
- OPB (Oregon Public Broadcasting) – Columbia Gorge after Eagle Creek Fire opb.org
- Smoky Mountain News – Chimney Tops Fire Trail Damage smokymountainnews.com
- Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre – 2019–2020 Australian Bushfires Report api.internal-displacement.org
- Le Monde – “Australia after Black Summer: slow recovery” (Blue Mountains) lemonde.fr