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Looks like me checking my draw results every year.That is amazing, and great examples of why bikes have no place in Wilderness. It’s also pretty humbling, since my bike skills are more like...
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Bike riding skills are better than his engineering skills.That is amazing, and great examples of why bikes have no place in Wilderness. It’s also pretty humbling, since my bike skills are more like...
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My backyard . I can see the finish line from my place in Park City. The Wasatch Crest portion of that course is a great ride or hike. Awesome views, open and fairly flat. I’ll leave all those steeps, switchbacks and technical terrain for the younger crowd!Error
www.trailforks.com
Course Beta
Total Miles: A little over 75 Miles
90% Singletrack (Probably more, but we don’t want the other races to feel bad)
Around 12,000′ + Elevation Gain (give or take a 1,000′)
Average Finish Time: 9 hours (Fastest, just over 6 hrs, slowest is nearly 13 hours)
My daughter is a nurse, she's worked on so many of these guys. According to her, all them have had multiple broken bones. Jaws, necks, legs, knees, you name it.
Bad ass chit. Even in the day it wouldn't have been me....I never thought about glamor photos.Not me. Looks like @Hem
Although I’m supportive of eBikes (with definitional limitations) on trails where bikes are currently allowed, I’m not supportive of any form of mechanized travel in Wilderness areas. It’s a good thing to have some areas set aside that are left in their pristine condition. There’s no shortage of legal mountain biking trails and areas. Let’s keep Wilderness areas wild.
It puts local control in first. The wilderness areas I've been in, well good luck getting a bike up most of those trails. To many rocks and sections that are to steep
So just for the sake of discussion, what is the argument for not having mtbikers in the bob?Bikers would have a field day on the main trails in the Bob Marshall complex.
Personal opinion, bikers would dramatically increase use on areas that are already over used, the main river corridor. There's an existing issue with people not cleaning up after themselves. Already enough outfitter conflicts. Its not national park level trashed, but I wouldn't consider the Chinese wall or the south fork to be limited use.So just for the sake of discussion, what is the argument for not having mtbikers in the bob?
Sure some bike horse conflicts... I haven’t visited the bob, but the forum consensus seems to be its a huge area with few animals, despite limited human use? Correct? What would the negative impacts be?
Im not advocating for it I’m just kinda curious.
So just for the sake of discussion, what is the argument for not having mtbikers in the bob?
Sure some bike horse conflicts... I haven’t visited the bob, but the forum consensus seems to be its a huge area with few animals, despite limited human use? Correct? What would the negative impacts be?
Im not advocating for it I’m just kinda curious.
I have never been there. I may never go there. It is a very hard place to get to. And that is the point.So just for the sake of discussion, what is the argument for not having mtbikers in the bob?
Sure some bike horse conflicts... I haven’t visited the bob, but the forum consensus seems to be its a huge area with few animals, despite limited human use? Correct? What would the negative impacts be?
Im not advocating for it I’m just kinda curious.
It is really difficult having a rationale debate over that question, aside from the meaning of wilderness language.... what is the argument for not having mtbikers in the bob?
The difficulty lies within the mindset of those, such as myself, who adamantly advocate for wild pristine places
The effort and monetary entry level for pack horses is orders of magnitude higher than a mountain bike. This by there nature they limit the number of users.Here's my outsider's opinion on this; what is the difference between using a bike or a bunch of horses?
I've seen comments about how other more open areas are "dirtier", that's an uneducated public issue, not a horse rider Vs biker Vs Hiker. Would allowing mountain bikes actually do any damages far in the wilderness areas? The farther you go into any public area, the "cleaner" it gets, sure you still find trash deep in the bush, but that's the result of assholes who could ride a horse as much as a bike.
Why can't people with limited budgets use tools to go farther? Why is it limited to people who own horses and all the equipment that goes with it or those who can afford it?
Biker Vs Horse rider issues; one example of an inconsiderate rider ramming into horses shouldn't be used to ban all bikes. I mean, by that logic we should ban ALL firearms due to criminals. I'm sure there are tons of inconsiderate horse riders around (see the many threads about outfitters rounding up elk, etc).
Anyway, I have no say in this as I'm from the Great White North, but I think this is a valid debate.
So moving a massive camp with a dozen horses is fine but one guy on a mountain bike isn't? I get what you are saying but this rule also prohibits the average dude from going into the wilderness without pack animals.
... or a chopper if you are willing to pay a small fine.
The effort and monetary entry level for pack horses is orders of magnitude higher than a mountain bike. This by there nature they limit the number of users.
The whole point of wilderness is to limit the use, not so much that you can't enjoy it, but enough so that it is hard to enjoy it.
That is the erroneous perception. Couple years ago, my wife and I backpacked for a week in the Bob Marshall WA, hiking seventy miles. We saw as many or more visitors hiking than... why is it limited mostly to those "wealthy" enough to own pack horses?