Название: Mountain Bike: Park City
Автор: Jared Hargrave
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Спорт, фитнес
isbn: 9781680512359
isbn:
45.High Star Ranch Advanced Loop
46.High Star Ranch Intermediate Loop
ROUTES AT A GLANCE
WELCOME TO PARK CITY
Park City, nestled in Utah’s Wasatch Mountains, is world famous for luxury ski resorts and the Sundance Film Festival. But what visitors to this bustling winter destination don’t realize is that Park City is also home to some of the best mountain bike trails in the world. The town even has an award to prove it. In 2012, Park City was named the world’s first Gold Ride Center by the International Mountain Bicycling Association (IMBA). To become a Gold Ride Center, Park City had to meet a set of criteria that took into account the following: number of trail miles, quality of trails, quality of hotel rooms and restaurants, bike shops, trailhead facilities, bike parks, brew pubs, and cooperation among local government, businesses, and land owners to create a vast, interconnected trail network.
Variety of trails is also very important. Park City has it all, from beginner loops to rugged backcountry epics and downhill-only gravity trails. Over 400 miles of nonmotorized trail are continuous, connected, and easy to access. The network spans two ski resorts and beyond, from low-elevation sagebrush desert to old-growth evergreen and aspen forests, to breathtaking alpine terrain above tree line.
Also, Park City isn’t the only trail destination in this guide. Nearby towns along the Wasatch Back, such as Heber City, Kamas, and Oakley, each have rapidly expanding singletrack networks of their own. Park City truly is a mountain biking paradise.
PARK CITY OVERVIEW
The Wasatch Mountains are the most prominent range in Northern Utah, stretching 160 miles from the Utah–Idaho border south to the center of the state. Situated right in the middle of the range in the Central Wasatch and located only 33 miles from downtown Salt Lake City (and its international airport), Park City is super easy to get to via Interstate 80 up Parleys Canyon. In fact, mountain bikers can be on the trails at Summit Park or Glenwild with just a 30-minute drive from the capital city.
Dead leaves crunching under tires and cool temperatures make autumn a favorite time of year to ride Park City. (Photo by Sean Zimmerman-Wall)
At 7000 feet in elevation, Park City is definitely a mountain destination. Anyone arriving from sea level would be wise to acclimate for a few days before tackling the trails. Because of the high-alpine locale, the diverse terrain allows for excellent mountain biking from spring through autumn.
The Glenwild area (Routes 22–25), located just north of Park City near Kimball Junction, is at a lower elevation with trails mostly on south-facing slopes. These rides are among the first to dry out in the spring. You’ll find bitterbrush and sage down low and an alpine transition zone higher up with maples and scrub oak. Round Valley (Routes 29–35), which is closer to town, is similar and is another good option for spring riding. In Heber City, Kamas, and Midway (Routes 39–47), where the elevation is between 5000 and 6000 feet, the Dutch Hollow, Riverview, and High Star Ranch trails are also dry and ready to ride in the spring.
As summer begins and the snow line performs its slow disappearing act up the mountainsides, mid-elevation trails above Park City open up. Most of these trails are located in ski resorts like Deer Valley and Park City Mountain (Routes 1–18). Here, the mountain biking is on smooth singletrack that winds through aspen groves and stands of fir and pine. Solitude Mountain in Big Cottonwood Canyon (Route 37), the WOW Trail (Route 38), Utah Olympic Park (Routes 19–21), and Road to WOS (Route 27) are other trails that are ready to ride by summertime.
Finally, from midsummer through fall, the highest trails above tree line reveal themselves from under the melting snow. Deer Valley and Park City Mountain have many high-elevation rides, like the Bowhunter Loop (Route 10), 9K Trail (Route 16), and Shadow Lake (Route 2). But the most popular and highest ride, at an elevation of 9800 feet, is the Wasatch Crest Trail (Route 36). Ride this classic when you can, because the window of opportunity can be short depending on how long it takes for the snow to melt.
LOCAL MOUNTAIN BIKING HISTORY
Park City was settled in 1868 after silver ore was discovered. The town was incorporated in 1884 and it boomed as mines tunneled into the mountainsides. But by the 1950s, silver mines shut down and the town lost most of its population. Skiing saved the economy in the 1960s and ’70s, and today Park City is booming once again, with tourism as a primary economic driver.
But skiing is a winter sport, and back in the ’70s there wasn’t much happening in the summer months. So, in the early 1980s, when mountain biking was in its infancy, Tom Noaker opened the town’s first bike shop, New Park Cyclery. Back then, riders pedaled on old mining roads. In 1985, Charlie and Kathy Sturgis started their shop, White Pine Touring. To create actual singletrack trails, Charlie began the Thursday Night Ride series, an event that doubled as a pirate trail-building mission.
Meanwhile, СКАЧАТЬ