As someone who grew up in the endless plains of Texas, it’s hard for me to imagine crossing it on a bicycle. But that’s exactly what the Great Plains Gravel Route intends for those cyclists brave enough to attempt it.
This novel bikepacking route finally opens in April after years of development by some of the biggest names in gravel biking. The route begins at the Texas-Mexico border near Big Bend National Park and meanders north through five other states. The route proceeds across Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and South and North Dakota — before a terminus at the Canadian border.
This 3,800-mile route aims to show the very best of the Midwest, a part of the country long ignored by many outdoor enthusiasts. Lovers of gravel biking have begun embracing this “Great American Desert.” This is exemplified by increasingly popular races, such as Kansas’s Unbound and Oklahoma’s Mid-South Gravel.
In fact, the organizers of those races — Bobby Wintle of Unbound and LeLan Dains of Mid-South Gravel — first began exploring the idea of the Great Plains Gravel Route over 10 years ago. They’ve since connected with four other collaborators, each one designing the route through their state. That includes Jerod Foster, a Texas professor and cyclist who explained his vision for the route in a 2019 essay.
It’s meant to celebrate America’s Great Plains “via those veins of rural byways that thread the farms, ranches, grasslands and plains towns and cities together,” Foster wrote.

Great Plains Gravel Route Q&A
To learn more about this epic new adventure, GearJunkie interviewed Noelle Battle, the executive director of the nonprofit Bikepacking Roots. The organization joined the project in fall 2023 and will give the new gravel route a permanent home on its website. The route should be online by early April, when Bikepacking Roots will update its website with the latest maps and stopovers.
GJ: What do you think are some of the highlights of the route?
Battle: Big picture, each segment has been carefully curated to showcase the hidden beauty of the Great Plains, from the rugged Big Bend region of Texas to the rolling Flint Hills of Kansas, and from Nebraska’s prairies to the iconic Black Hills and Badlands of the Dakotas.
But there are so many hidden treasures. One example of a specific highlight is Caprock Canyon State Park outside of Lubbock, Texas. It has beautiful red canyons and grasslands and is also home to the Texas State Bison Herd.



