Continental Divide Trail
From border to border, this map covers the entire length of the Continental Divide Trail. Available in three styles although even the “mappiest” is minimalistic to let the landform and the trail itself truly pop.
The Continental Divide Trail was formally established in 1978 after the establishment of the Appalachian and Pacific Crest Trails. The trail runs through New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, the Idaho/Montana border, and finishes going through Montana until it reaches Waterton Park, four miles into Canada.
See below for descriptions on our three signature styles.
Prints are shown framed for display purposes only.
From border to border, this map covers the entire length of the Continental Divide Trail. Available in three styles although even the “mappiest” is minimalistic to let the landform and the trail itself truly pop.
The Continental Divide Trail was formally established in 1978 after the establishment of the Appalachian and Pacific Crest Trails. The trail runs through New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, the Idaho/Montana border, and finishes going through Montana until it reaches Waterton Park, four miles into Canada.
See below for descriptions on our three signature styles.
Prints are shown framed for display purposes only.
From border to border, this map covers the entire length of the Continental Divide Trail. Available in three styles although even the “mappiest” is minimalistic to let the landform and the trail itself truly pop.
The Continental Divide Trail was formally established in 1978 after the establishment of the Appalachian and Pacific Crest Trails. The trail runs through New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, the Idaho/Montana border, and finishes going through Montana until it reaches Waterton Park, four miles into Canada.
See below for descriptions on our three signature styles.
Prints are shown framed for display purposes only.
Continental Divide Trail Map!
We have three signature styles of map depending on what you’re looking for:
“Minimalist” - Title and, of course, the Continental Divide Trail. Clean, simple, elegant. More of an “art” look than a “map” look (although it is spatially accurate).
“Just The Basics” - Adding onto the minimalist style with a hillshade underneath to give the feel of the topography, major lakes. A basic map.
“All The Things” - Just as it sounds. The mappiest of them all. Adds in the state boundaries and labels as well as the surrounding states masked so that they’re still there, but don’t pop as much as the states that the Continental Divide Trail runs through.