Riding Arizona

I had the opportunity to ride the trails in Arizona back in January when I was out that way for work. Riding the local trails is something I’ve been looking forward to doing since my first visit to Arizona early last year.

I didn’t know where to start; South Mountain, Papago, and so on. I ended up driving 45 minutes North of Phoenix to the McDowell Sonoran Conservancy in Scottsdale to ride the Brown’s Ranch trail. The weather was mild, though the sun was grueling by the end of the ride. The views were great, with large Saguaro’s dotting the landscape and the ability to see other mountain range’s off into the distant, albeit somewhat hazy which added to the depth effect.

I opted to ride from the Brown’s Ranch trailhead taking the bike bypass from the trailhead and looping around Brown’s Mountain. As I rounded the mountain I was able to make the parking lot and the end of the loop. I didn’t want the ride to end, so I decided to double back and enjoy the loop in reverse.

When I researched Brown’s Ranch trail, I was able to discover a 15 mile loop that covered a wide swath of trails. Unfortunately, the directions to execute such a ride were missing details and/or I missed signs that I was supposed to follow; which is entirely plausible as I was staring at the mountains as I rode past them. So instead I put in 8 miles and still enjoyed every minute of it. I debated going back out and doing another lap on the loop, however, light was quickly getting away from me and I wanted to try to hit other trails (which ended up being a big fail with my phone dying and not knowing the area).

My first ride at Brown’s Ranch on Strava (8.17 miles, 01:05:51) https://www.strava.com/activities/3006116435

My second ride at Brown’s Ranch on Strava (7.48 miles, 01:16:53) https://www.strava.com/activities/3026303519

The following weekend, I went to Sedona to ride Bell Rock. I was not ready for the elevation change, my lungs were on fire within 20 minutes of riding – by the end of the 2 hour ride, I was absolutely slaughtered. Luckily I had a great riding partner that knew the trail fairly well and led the ride, forcing me to push myself to keep up as much as possible; otherwise I would have just taking it a lot easier.

You can see Bell Rock on Strava (11.05 miles, 01:55:13) https://www.strava.com/activities/3023280073

This trip was my first ride on a full suspension bike, and won’t be my last. I ride a 2019 Trek Roscoe 8 hardtail, but the Specialized Stumpjumper FSR left such an impression that I plan on selling my 2019 Trek Roscoe 8 hardtail to make room for a full suspension.

Katie Jackson Park

The Katie Jackson park trail has several loops North/South Red and Blue. Additionally, you’ll find a wooden jump section, dirt jumps and a pump track if you head left at the trail head on the red loop and go behind the nearby apartments.

While I was riding, it looked like the wooden jumps were dissembled, and I saw no dirt jumps or the pump track. While not listed on the DORBA website, at one end of the North Red loop there’s the entrance to the Yellow trail. I’m not sure if this is for mountain bikes and so I stayed off it. Perhaps that’s where the pump track and additional jumps were. Next time, I’ll explore more.

What I was able to ride, was fun and made the ride a bit interesting. The trail includes various tree slaloms and a few flow sections where you can get some speed up. Right after you pass the first red/blue intersection on the blue loop, you’ll come across a wooden roller feature along the White Rock Creek. Next you’ll find a long wooden bridge, also on Blue right after the second red/blue intersection. When you ride the red loop, you’ll come across a long skinny wooden feature that progressively gets narrow as you ride along it, which then dumps you back out to blue right before the aforementioned wooden bridge.

Trailhead Location: Katie Jackson Park, 4900 Haverwood Lane, Dallas, Texas 75287
GPS Coordinates: 33.007534, -96.817351

Distance: 3.81 miles
Time: 29:28

You can see it on Strava https://www.strava.com/activities/3174569839

Link to the DORBA Katie JAckson trail: https://www.dorba.org/trail.php?t=33

Northshore Trail (Flower Mound, TX)

Today I ventured out to the Northshore (of Grapevine Lake) to ride the first 2 loops of the 7 loop trail system. The first two loops are approximately 3 miles each, with the full loop system if ridden being approximately 22 miles.

Overall the ride was challenging with its techy climbs and the occasional flowy downhill into tech or drop features. I was able to ride the majority of the drops and features withholding ‘Nope Hill’ and ‘THE DROP’…next time though.

This is probably the best all around XC style trail I’ve ridden in Texas so far (keep in mind I’ve only lived here for several months so far).

Trailhead Location: MADD Shelter
GPS Coordinates: 33.0054487,-97.0977975

Distance: 6.53 miles
Time: 1:10:22

You can see it on Strava here: https://www.strava.com/activities/3136478885

Link to the DORBA Northshore trail: https://www.dorba.org/trail.php?t=19

2019 Statistics

As I’m a rather large data analysis nerd, I am always using apps like AllTrails or Strava for my hiking and biking escapades. To close out 2019, I’ve gathered statistics from my rides across both AllTrails and Strava.

I hope to double (perhaps even triple) these numbers for 2020 (albeit doubling elevation gains from a year in Connecticut to living in in rather flat Texas will be extremely hard).

35140.33834
HoursMilesPersonal RecordsActivities
2019 Training Calendar Stats

Going forward, I will streamline my riding recordings into one app (Strava) to make computing the numbers easier.

Add me on Strava

NW Community Park

Ranger, Wolverine, and Coyote Loops

Northwest Community Park is a single track bike trail that was built by the Shawnee Trail Cycling, Frisco Cycling and Dallas Off Road Bicycle Association (DORBA) volunteers in October 2012, with DORBA currently maintaining the trails.

Trail Head Location: Teal Parkway and Little River Drive, Frisco, TX 75034 across from Sue Wilson Stafford Middle School.

GPS Coordinates: 33.1980  -98.8680

Single Track Trails

Ranger Loop is approximately 2.53 miles long* (Ranger was shortened due to the active construction on-going)

Wolverine Loop is approximately 1.06 miles long

Coyote Loop is approximately 1.49 miles long

Riding Ranger to Wolverine, back to Ranger to Coyote back to Ranger is approximately 5.2 miles with ~200 ft elevation gain.

So Long New England, Hello Texas

After hiking and riding the glorious and challenging trails of Connecticut and New York for a season, life has moved my family to the less mountainous state of Texas. Cutting my teeth on some of Connecticut’s more challenging trails such as Indian Ledge Park (Trumbull, CT), Collis P Huntington State Park (Bethel, CT), Wadsworth State Park (Middletown, CT), and Wilton Town Forest (Wilton, CT) was a great way to re-expose myself to the joy of mountain biking after about 20 years of leaving the sport behind in my teens.

While those trails could be extremely grueling, especially for someone who started extremely out of shape, I feel like it was somewhat of a baptism by fire; not to mention all the gnarl, up hill climbs, and rock gardens. Now that I’ve moved down to Texas, I’m finding hardly none of those challenges, however, what I used to have a love/hate relationship and have been sorely missing since I’ve moved, has been replaced with longer distance riding, switchback galore, and groomed trails with wooden features and jump kickers.

I’m not quite at the level where I’d feel comfortable hitting the jumps down here, as I struggled enough with the rollers and drops up North, but I’ve found a great bike park that’s roughly 10 minutes from me that has a mixture of everything. NW Community Park (Frisco, TX) has become my local stomping grounds. I plan on hitting up the Lake Lewisville trail system with some hiking and to scope it out for riding lines. Roughly a month into living in Texas, while missing the elevation changes and extreme nature of some of the more challenging trails in Connecticut, I’m looking forward to taking a step back and working on my fundamentals through a more measured progression down here in Texas.

If anyone has any recommended trails in the DFW area – please let me know. Also, I’m looking for others to ride with, so if you don’t mind a trailer behind you, reach out so we can get something together.

NoPro

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started