Colorado Trail Trip
October 11th, 2008Ahh, finally getting around to posting some pictures from the Colorado Trail Mountain bike adventure that Frank and I went on a few weeks back. The goal of the trip was to mountain bike the entire Colorado Trail….from home to trailhead in Denver, then take the trail from Denver to Durango before finally riding back on the road.
However, after dealing with a broken stove from the get go on top of a cold/rainsoaked evening, post tour of Missouri plague, many ridiculous sections of hike-a-bike, a broken rear rack, several flats, a few frosty mornings, bad brakes and food shortarges we ALMOST completed the entire trail. Unfortunately, after ten days on the trail and nearing Durango the frame on my mountain bike broke which put an end to the trip!
It definitely felt like a failure in many ways especially since we overcame soo much along the way and got so close to finishing the trail. However, we were able to learn a ton along and one thing for sure our next trip will be way easier to plan for. We knew going in that the trip was not going to be easy but we definitely did not think it was going to be as hard as it actually was! I guess that is what makes going on adventures soo appealing…they are not easy and everything has to fall into place to be successful.
Needless to say I am planning future mountain bike trips and have already tried a new route up Longs peak which was a success.
Anywho, here are some pictures…
Getting ready to head out of Boulder.
Riding through the Buffalo Creek Fire area which occured in the spring of 1996 and burned 12,000 acres.
After an evening of cold rain soaked camping we tried to dry our stuff the following night at the Kenosha pass campground. Needless to say most of our gear ended up freezing. However, at this campgound we met Liz who helped us out tons…supply us with water, a bit of food, and a couple of beers…thanks Liz!
One of the more popular sections of the Colorado Trail…Kenosha Pass to Gold Hill Trailhead via Georgia Pass.
Nearing the top of Georgia pass.
One of our flats which took awhile to change due to the racks on our bikes.
The views heading towards Goldhill Trailhead which is located between Breckenridge and Frisco.
The following day on our way up to Kokomo Pass enroute to Leadville.
Above the treeline getting closer to Kokomo summit.
Ahh…finally the summit of Kokomo Pass.
The view from the otherside of Kokomo Pass towards Leadville.
Back in the trees on the descent. I like trees!
From Leadville we headed south toward Buena Vista and the leaves were changing.
Nearing Buena Vista…getting excited to re-supply.
Athough the trees looked lovely…the trail southwest of Buena Vista got crazy hard (rocky/hike-a-bike) and did not get easier for over three days!
One of the harder hike-a-bike sections of the trail…nearing the Continental Divide and Marshall Pass. From here the Continential Divide Trail and Colorado Trail Coincide for something like 170 miles.
Frank working his way up towards the Continential Divide.
It was nice to have some smooth trail once on the Divide…however, it only lasted for about two miles.
After several very slow days we got to ride on some roads in order detour a Wilderness Area! Nearing the top of a pass called Slumgullion.
This picture was taken about fifteen minutes before my frame broke nearing the top of Cinnamon Pass. I almost threw my bike off the mountain….ahhhhhh!
Anyway, that is most of the pictures. Wish I would have taken some more of our frost mornings, rainy evening, rocky trails, and camp fire cooking. However, it is easier said then done as survival is more important than a photo
One last thing before I go…it is official…Frank Pipp, Randy Reichardt, and myself are starting a guiding buisness. The buisness is called “Beyond Boulder Adventures.” If anyone is interested in going on bike tours similiar to this, or road bike tours, or snowshoe hut trips, or anything else they can think of let us know and we will make it happen! Hopefully we can share our love of the outdoors with you!
later, g.
October 12th, 2008 at 4:15 am
Can i tag along on your next trip mate? Looks like a blast, amazing scenery, and pretty cool story too! Have you shaved the beard off yet?
October 12th, 2008 at 6:11 am
Get your site up and post the link. How about dogsledding?
October 12th, 2008 at 9:16 am
What an amazing trip! Your pictures are great and I am sure that it was an adventure to say the least. Pretty cool man. Riding for Bissel again next year?
October 12th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
I’ll only take you up on an adventure if you have an awesome company logo.
October 12th, 2008 at 4:15 pm
That’s an incredible trip. As cliche as the word epic is in mountain biking, this looks like an epic trip. Great photos, thanks for sharing Garrett!
RC
October 13th, 2008 at 2:26 pm
Seriously, I still think about the crazy shit you do when I’m feeling tired and unmotivated. You guys really know how to live. Say hi to Steph if you ever see her out there. Miss you guys!
October 14th, 2008 at 4:57 pm
Hey Garrett,
Great trip and spirit of adventure. The CT is a good one that starts off well and quickly falls to pieces in the middle with all the hike-a-bike, as you found.
That’s a lot of gear you’re hauling for a singletrack trip. I heard there’s a new site that might give some ideas on that…
Hope to see more Peltonen bikepacking adventures…
October 14th, 2008 at 7:52 pm
Very cool story and pics. Sucks about the broken bike though…
October 21st, 2008 at 6:42 am
Wow.. Awesome trip! Thanks for sharing!
I keep thinking I am going to come up with some wild ass adventure to embark on here in SE Wisconsin, but a run to the Cheese factory in Sheboygan is about all I can come up with. ha ha..
Get the site up for ‘BBA’ I want to check it out!
No Giro d’ Grafton next year? You better bring your grizzly adams beard back for one more try! You need to move up one step on the podium!