Tuesday 12/1Geezers Road Ride. Group at the intersection of Tuachan and Snow Canyon Drives at 11 a.m. for a ride up the canyon. After a regroup the ride continues for those who wish to continue pedaling.
Wednesday 12/2Tour de Hood. No drop ride meeting at Confluence park at 8:30 a.m.
Thursday 12/3Geezers Road Ride. Meet at the Ivins Fire Station at 11 a.m. for a ride up Utah Hill.
Saturday 12/5Road Ride. Meet at 11 a.m. at the Ivins Fire Station.
Sunday 12/6Road Ride. Meet at 11 a.m. at the Ivins Fire Station.
There has been talk,
lots of talk, for years. Some efforts have been
made but nothing of a concerted push to get things going. The time has
come.
I personally don't feel that I am the person for the job, so don't see
this as an appeal for you all to join me. Rather, I would hope that a
few of us can come together and make this happen. As Mr.Gurr put it, we
need a steering committee. We need a group, a club if you will, that
will take responsibility for the rapid growth in popularity of the
trails in our area and the ever more needed trail maintenance. A group
of people who are willing to break with the old protocol of our area of
building illegal trails that are neither sustainable, managed nor
maintained. We need a group of people to step up, speak for mountain
bikers and take charge of what is going on in our area. The time has
come.
I personally feel that we are at a junction, an apex. We can continue
the way we have for the past couple of decades, fighting the BLM,
feeling entitled to ride where ever and however we feel. Or we can
stand up and change the way things are going by working in conjunction
with
land management,
helping maintain our trails, educating other riders and in the end
building an extensive, sustainable, well-built trail network for all of
us to enjoy.
I often compare
Fruita, Colorado
and Moab. Moab's trails are among the most celebrated, popular trails
in the world. They are, however, poorly built, unsustainable, and more
often than not illegal. I have watched and read as one trail after
another is closed, opened, closed again. There is a constant battle
between what can be ridden and what
land managers
are trying to close down. One side of a line. Jump across the border
to Fruita and you will find endless miles of beautifully trimmed
singletrack (not jeep trails/roads). Some of the most challenging
trails, scenic routes and, in my opinion, best trails out there. All
with complete maps, trailheads and constant access.
What's the difference? One community has gone the route that we are
currently on, fighting land managers, feeling entitled to ride wherever
they want, and basically ignoring any and all ethical practice of our
sport. One shop even has stickers that say, "The only good trails are
illegal." Then the contrast of the community that has embraced land
management, used countless volunteers and has followed the creed of
advocacy. The first community is Moab, the second is Fruita.
I may be wrong. Maybe we should let things just roll down a course and
see where we end up, but I would rather take the time and organize with
my fellow riders to enhance my local trails and to help maintain the
amazing trail system we already have. The time is now that we must
decide which path we are going to follow. The one where we end up with
endless miles of beautifully trimmed, expertly technical singletrack or
the one where we end up with all of our trails looking like the Bear
Claw Poppy and trail closures are a regular occurrence.
I would like to choose the first. Anyone who would like to help steer
our community in the right direction, please shoot me an email and lets
get things going... lukas (at)
mooseknuckleralliance.org
Ride more.
The Crew @ Red Rock Bicycle Co.
Corner of 100 S. & Bluff St.
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