Possibly the most technical spot on the downhill... The trail squeezes between a...
Possibly the most technical spot on the downhill... The trail squeezes between a sandstone slab and steep side-slope just before a sudden plunge. Photos May 20, 2010.
Jackalope

Jackalope is a loop ride in the McCoy Flat trail system west of Vernal. It climbs from McCoy Flats to a ridge overlooking the city. The clockwise loop is 8 miles, with an altitude change of 1000 vertical feet, finishing at 6300.

Most of the trail is intermediate technical. The descent can be a bit tricky if you don't like loose rock. Aerobic requirement is moderate. All of the climbing is stuffed into three miles of steady moderate slope.

The ride is a clockwise loop. It starts from the McCoy trailhead. Go east from the fenced parking on the " And Cookies " trail, with a fork onto Jackalope a mile later. The first 1.5 miles are easy singletrack across a flat of sage and grass.

The trail fork where Jackalope forks off of And Cookies. Mellow singletrack here...
The trail fork where Jackalope forks off of And Cookies. Mellow singletrack here. Our destination is the top of those mountains in the distance.
Climbing on a trailbase of clay and shale through the junipers, with occasional ...
Climbing on a trailbase of clay and shale through the junipers, with occasional outcrops of sandstone.
The next three miles is climbing, at a fairly mellow average of 300 vertical per mile. There are no ledges or tricky stuff on the climb. Just straight-ahead singletrack.

At first, you're in a juniper forest on a base of clay. Occasional wildflowers dot the hot dry slopes. The trail follows a wash uphill.

The second half of the climb is on windswept slope among small shrubs, grasses, and windflowers. The pitch remains about 6%. Behind you are the mountains of the Strawberry Ridge. To the north are the snowcapped peaks of the Uintas.
Approaching the summit, McCoy Flat is lost in the distance. The round rocks are ...
Approaching the summit, McCoy Flat is lost in the distance. The round rocks are outflow from the distant Uinta Mountains.
The trail fork. Why do Jackalopes always have two-prong deer horns, rather than ...
The trail fork. Why do Jackalopes always have two-prong deer horns, rather than antelope horns? They're supposed to be half-rabbit, half-antelope, right?

At mile 3.4, you reach the top of Serpendipity (think Serpent-twisty plus dips). Keep left uphill to stay on Jackalope. (Serpendipity descends all the way down and across the road to Retail Sale .)

Continue climbing uphill to the ridgeline. The trail gets a little steeper just before the top.
As we climb steadily uphill, Serpendipity twists down the gully to our right.
As we climb steadily uphill, Serpendipity twists down the gully to our right.
View northeast. Across the ridge, we see a grain silo and the eastern end of tow...
View northeast. Across the ridge, we see a grain silo and the eastern end of town along US-40.
Stop at the top of the ridge to look at the views. To the northeast, you can see a piece of Vernal and surrounding farmland, with the exposed Weber Sandstone on the mountains behind the valley.
The descent is the most demanding part, as the upper half has frequent boulder-laden turns. The steeper areas are mined with loose round rock that can catch on your tires and skid. Keep those fingers away from the front brake while turning! These sections are best done "bombs away" rather than slow butt-over-the-saddle.
As we descend southwest down the ridge, we see a meander of the Green River in t...
As we descend southwest down the ridge, we see a meander of the Green River in the distance.
The trail slope becomes more gentle, and the rocks disappear from the trailbase....
The trail slope becomes more gentle, and the rocks disappear from the trailbase. Here the trail is holding onto a little strip between two washes.
Lower on the mountain, the trail becomes again becomes twisting dirt ribbon. Four miles of downhill.
There's one nice tech spot where the trail rolls across a narrow ridge, turns and skirts an overhanging sandstone slab, then drops steeply to the valley floor. Walk it if you have to.
Fun spot.
Fun spot.
Back on the red dirt of the valley floor, we roll up and down as we head back to...
Back on the red dirt of the valley floor, we roll up and down as we head back to the trailhead.
Riding notes, clockwise loop (ONE WAY trail):
0.0  Find southbound ST on southwest side of DT
       Trail = And Cookies   N40 21.028 W109 34.902
0.1  Fork L (R = return trail)  N40 21.022 W109 34.806
0.3  Cross DT   N40 21.126 W109 34.80
1.0  Fork R onto Jackalope (L=And Cookies)  N40 21.412 W109 34.992
3.4  Fork L uphill (R = Serpendipity descent) N40 22.212 W109 33.127
4.0  Ridgeline, veer R and downhill  N40 22.355 W109 32.598
5.7  Cross Serpendipity (keep straight) N40 21.503 W109 33.452
7.9  Back at And Cookies, fork L
8.0  Back at corral
Getting there:  
While driving toward Vernal on US-40, pass mile marker 138, then turn right on the narrow paved McCoy Flats road ( N40 23.427 W109 35.752). If you miss McCoy Flats road, go to the viewpoint overlooking Vernal and backtrack exactly 2 miles, then turn left into the road. Drive 3 miles. Immediately after passing a corral on your left, turn into the large fenced BLM trailhead parking lot.

Camping: BLM land, primitive camping allowed. No developed sites.
Bathroom:
At trailhead
Water:
Bring your own.
Bike services, maps, trail conditions:

Altitude Cycle, 580 East Main, Vernal. 435-781-2595

Map of McCoy Flats
Map of McCoy Flats
Riding resources for this trail:
Single-page riding guide

GPS track files (right-click and "Save as..."):     GPX Jackalope
    McCoy Flats area trails
Topo McCoy area map for printing:   View map
Lodging, camping, shops:   Links to Vernal area resources