View to the southwest as we begin the trip around the mountain at 9000 feet on the Bowhunter Trail. Ride, photos, and GPS track 9/2/2011 by Bruce.
Bowhunter Loop
via Team Big Bear and Flagstaff Loop
This ride is unique among Park City's many offerings. It features views over 360 degrees of
the mountain peaks of the Wasatch and Uintah Mountains. The short version starts at Deer Valley's
upper Silver Lake Lodge. It's 10.6 miles round trip, with 1000 vertical feet of climbing starting
at 8100 feet elevation.
The longer version of this ride starts at the Snow Park (lower) Deer Valley lodge and climbs
Deer Crest to the upper lodge. Add 3.2 miles each way and another 900
vertical feet of climbing.
Your total ride will be 17 miles.
Navigation through the multiple trails in the area can be challenging. I suggest using a GPS
track, so the display can tell you if your bike is wandering off onto
a sucker fork.
We've just left the easy Midmountain trail and are pedaling in deep fir forest past some interesting wooden construction on Team Big Bear.
The climbing surface for Team Big Bear is a little more technical than Tour des Suds, with tighter turns, steeper grade, and more bumpy stuff in the trail.
This ride is for upper-intermediate bikers. The climb up Team Big Bear is a bit on the technical
side and semi-steep at 400 vertical feet per mile over the first mile.
Bowhunter itself is a very narrow ribbon of trail on a side-slope, requiring good handling
skills. The slope isn't dangerous, but you've got to aim the bike straight
to keep in the 10-inch
groove.
From the Silver Lake Lodge, look for a broad path on the right, heading downhill to an underpass.
Coast downhill, and as soon as you pass below the road, veer left onto
singletrack. You're
now on the Midmountain Trail.
We're nearing the shoulder of the hill on Team Big Bear.
As Team Big Bear heads into the flats east of Flagstaff Mountain, we can see Silver Lake Lodge below us.
After 0.7 miles on Midmountain, keep left and uphill as the lower Tour des Suds drops away.
Keep uphill at two more (unmarked as of 2011) trail forks. At mile 1.4,
fork L uphill onto
Team Big Bear.
Climb at a moderate pace on slightly-technical surface for a mile. When the trail reaches the
edge of a gravel road, keep straight and continue on singletrack.
At mile 2.8, you've reached the fork for the Flagstaff Loop. You'll head out on one trail,
return on the other. Go either way. Let's go right. (That's what the track
file says.) Stay
on Flagstaff. A new 2011 trail "Ruby Lift Road" enters on the left as
you cross doubletrack.
Stay right. At another subtle fork, keep left on the main trail.
The mountaintrails.org map. Get a current one at a Park City bike shop. If you're not following a GPS track (or even if you are), you'll find the map a necessity. Many intersecting trails, new trails popping up all the time, and lots of trail forks without signs.
The Flagstaff Loop has little elevation change. It's a fun cruiser.
The Ruby Lift Road trail will rejoin after a mile or so. At mile 3.9, keep straight and head
uphill past the return limb of the Flagstaff Loop. Deer Camp will join
on your left. As you
crest the rise, veer left at a trail fork at mile 4.3. This is Bowhunter.
Cross the doubletrack
and head south around the mountain.
At mile 4.7, the trail dumps onto doubletrack for a few feet. Watch for the continuing trail
on your left. If you begin to descend on doubletrack, you went too far.
On the far side of the mountain, you'll come into a complex of trail intersections at mile
5.6. Keep left on the trail signed for Ruby Lift Road. At mile 5.9, you're
back at the original
Bowhunter loop fork.
Typical Park City terrain. Aspen, fir, ferns and wildflowers.
We've popped out of the forest onto the ridgeline west of Bald Mountain. We'll head up and to the left to reach Bowhunter.
Head downhill toward the intersection with the Flagstaff Loop. When you reach it, turn right
at mile 6.3 onto the return limb of the loop. Keep straight as two trails
fork off to Deer
Camp on your right.
The Ruby Lift Road trail will join you after a half mile. Keep straight. A little bit later,
keep right again as the Ruby Lift Road trail forks left uphill. Just after
you cross a dirt
road at mile 6.9, the trail splits. Go right. (The trail on the left is
a shortcut.) At the
next fork, the shortcut rejoins. Go right again.
Starting out southbound on Bowhunter, as a tiny ribbon of trail hugs the sideslope.
At the south end of the mountain at 9100 feet, we see Cascade Mountain and Timpanogos on the skyline.
At mile 7.8, keep right as you reach Team Big Bear again. Retrace your route back to the Silver
Lake Lodge.
For the longer (17-mile) ride:
Navigating from the lower (Snow Park) lodge is more complicated. If you aren't familiar with
the trail system, you'll need a GPS track. Or a guide. Or a current Park
City trails map, an
odometer, and a sense of adventure. But here goes.
A few patches of twisted aspen cling to the slope.
On the east side, we're looking down at Jordanelle Reservoir. The peaks of the Uintah Mountains form the skyline.
To the right of the lodge, head uphill on the dirt lift road. Above the lift, veer L across
the meadow and climb the singletrack by the log fence. Do a 180 right
turn (south). Now a 180
left toward the Deer Crest trail system. As you reach The Gap, switchback
up the hill to Deer
Crest and head south. When you reach doubletrack on the ridgeline, keep
straight until you
pick up singletrack again.
When the trail drops onto a paved road, cross to the dirt road opposite and slightly uphill.
Follow the dirt path to the ski lift south of the lodge. Veer right across
the grass and look
for the underpass that marks the start of the Midmountain trail.
Almost to the end of Bowhunter. The trail ends at the intersection where the route down from the lift on Bald Mountain hits Homeward Bound and Naildriver. If you don't want to hit the second half of the Flagstaff Loop, consider a plunge down one of these trails.
Short ride, from Silver Lake (upper)
Lodge:
0.0 R downhill on DT, aim for underpass
N40 37.284 W111 29.326
0.1 L on singletrack (Midmountain Trail)
N40 37.267 W111 29.330
0.7 Keep L uphill (R = lower Tour des Suds)
N40 37.146 W111 29.754
1.0 Keep L uphill N40 37.177 W111 29.842
1.4 L uphill on Team Big Bear N40 37.111 W111 30.155
2.4 Keep straight (don't go onto road)
N40 36.894 W111 30.031
2.8 Keep R (Flagstaff Loop) N40 36.768 W111 29.880
3.1 Keep R N40 36.537 W111 29.969
3.9 Keep R (straight) N40 36.121 W111 29.586
(L = Flagstaff second part
of
loop)
4.2 Keep L (R = Deer Camp)
N40 36.298 W111 29.463
4.3 L on smaller trail (Bowhunter)
N40 36.338 W111 29.361
4.4 Cross DT N40 36.255 W111 29.350
4.7 Join DT, rapid L off DT on ST
N40 35.945 W111 29.401
5.6 90-degree L on Ruby Lift Road trail
N40 36.322 W111 29.094
5.9 Back on original trail, retrace
6.3 R on Flagstaff return path N40 36.121 W111 29.586
6.8 Keep R (L = Ruby Lift Road trail)
N40 36.537 W111 29.877
6.9 Keep R N40 36.574 W111 29.895
7.5 Keep R N40 36.605 W111 29.889
7.8 Keep R on Team Big Bear N40 36.768 W111 29.880
9.2 L on Midmountain N40 37.111 W111 30.155
10.6 Back at lodge
Topo map of the Bowhunter loop area.
Getting there: In Park City, follow the signs
toward Deer Valley Resort. Just after the road divides, the parking lots
come into view. If you're going to the lower (Snow Park) lodge, continue
through the curve past the lodge then turn into the parking area. The ride
will start on the far left side of the lodge near the lift. Go uphill on
the dirt doubletrack about 150 yards, then turn left to cross the ski
slope. Enter the singletrack that climbs north uphill along the wooden
fence.
To get to the upper (Silver Lake) lodge, turn left on Royal Drive just
after the road divides -- before you actually see the Snow Park lodge.
Drive 4 miles uphill, following the signs. When you come to a parking lot
on your right, surrounded by tall buildings, pull in. From the lot, angle
southeast between buildings until you arrive at a wide open area. Your
ride will start by aiming right, coast downhill to below the underpass. As
you pass under, turn left onto singletrack. This is the Midmountain Trail.
Bike services, water, bathrooms are near the lift by Silver Lake Lodge.