On the DH trail below Lizard Lake. Multiple tree-trunks cross the trail. Most can be hopped by the typical expert trail-rider. Some are axle-high and require chainring guards and super trials skill. This log is half-buried on the upside, making a nice air opportunity. Photos by Bruce, August 27, 2008.
Lizard Lake
Loop ride or DH bomberLizard Lake offers two advanced-technical rides: A 3-1/2 mile DH ride connecting two points
on the Nebo Loop road, with 1500 vertical feet of descent. The second is a short loop from
the Shram Creek trailhead, heading up and around Lizard Lake, then descending via the lower
portion of the DH trail for 5.2 miles and 900 feet of climbing. Both rides require log-hopping
skills for maximum enjoyment. For intermediate riders, there's the option of taking the upper
portion of the Lizard Lake DH, but continuing downhill on the Shram Creek Trail.
For the DH ride, the shuttle car stays at the Shram Creek trailhead (the parking area where
the Winward Reservoir road takes off). The dropoff car heads up the paved
road, past the Blackhawk
Campground road, to 100 yards before the split with the gravel Santaquin
Canyon road at 8400
feet.
The trail drops a mile to join the Rock Spring Trail (fork right), then splits left off Rock
Spring onto Shram Creek after another 1/10 mile. Another 0.2, fork right
and begin hopping
logs as you descend. You won't actually pass Lizard Lake on this route
-- if you want to see
the lake, pass the Shram Creek turnoff and climb a stiff hill, then catch
the trail past the
lake as in the loop ride.
We're looking north from the Nebo Loop road. The DH trail starts here at this sign.
View uphill on the Shram Creek trail as we climb. Most of the ride is in the aspens, with maples lower on the mountain and firs scattered here and there.
The DH route below Lizard Lake is studded with fallen trees, many of them years old. Some are
small enough to bang over, and some have cheater routes around them. There
are plenty of eight-inch-plus
logs that are a nice challenge. Ride what you can, step over the rest.
This is the fun part
-- see how many you can clear.
Quick newbie log-basher hint: To clear a log that's up to an inch higher than your chainring,
pop the front wheel over it. As the front wheel rolls down the backside
of the log, immediately
get your weight on the handlebars and touch the front brake, so the rear
wheel pops up. Yes,
do a little "nose wheelie." Let the bike roll forward with the rear wheel
off the ground. The
chainrings miss the log as the rear wheel makes contact with the top of
the log and rolls over.
Nice.
The loop ride climbs the Shram Creek trail. It averages 400 vertical per mile (about 8% slope),
with a few stiff spots. Very doable. Reaching the Rock Springs trail,
the route forks left
1/4 mile to the lake. The downhill trail starts as a faint singletrack
heading north directly
to, and around, the lake. It becomes more prominent when it joins the
DH route about 1/3 mile
below the lake.
At Lizard Lake, we follow singletrack (just to the west -- left -- of this sign) to the lake shore, then go to the right around the lake. The downhill trail exits the photo just behind the trees at the left.
Advanced log-basher hint: For a really big log, wheelie the front tire dead-center onto the
top of the log. As the tire hits the log, hold both brakes and stand on
the pedals. Move your
body up and forward so you're over the top of the log. Jump up and pull
the bike up and forward
so it comes down with both wheels on the log. Stop and lock both brakes.
Crouch a little. Now
jump for the open spot on the other side of the log, pulling the bike
with you. Release the
brakes as you pull the front of the bike up and forward. With the front
wheel in the air, the
rear wheel rolls down the backside of the log. 1-2-3 steps. How'd you
do?
On the upper end of the Lizard Lake trail, heading downhill toward the Rock Spring Trail.
Riding notes, DH route:
0.0 Start north (R) from road along fence
0.8 Fork R on Rock Springs
1.0 Fork L on Shram Creek
(don't go through creek)
1.2 Fork right (Lizard Lake DH)
1.3 Keep straight (R = up to lake)
2.7 Rejoin Shram Creek Trail
3.2 Fork R
3.4 Up across cattleguard to parking
Riding notes, counter clockwise loop:
0.0 From parking just off Nebo Loop N39 56.558 W111 40.564
Drop off parking on DT, L
uphill on ST
0.2 Trail from alternate parking joins on R N39 56.403 W111 40.661
0.7 Fork R (L = return path) N39 56.033 W111 40.625
1.1 Fork L (R = to Sheepherder Trail) N39 55.879 W111 40.864
2.4 Straight. Lizard Lake DH splits off on L N39 54.983 W111 40.490
2.6 Fork L (down through creek) Rock Springs Trail
N39 54.765 W111 40.662
2.9 Lizard Lake, fork L toward lake N39 54.827 W111 40.403
3.2 Keep straight downhill N39 54.983 W111 40.490
(L = DH route from Shram)
4.5 Rejoin Shram Trail
N39 56.033 W111 40.625
5.2 Back at trailhead.
Another trail view on Lizard Lake Trail.
Map of the trails from Lizard Lake
Getting there: Going south, take
the Payson exit 250 from I-15 and turn left. Head into Payson on U-115 to
the traffic light, then turn left (100 North, U-198). About 1/3 mile
later, at the top of a small hill, turn right at 600 East. Zero your
odometer here. Drive 9.1 miles up the Nebo Loop Road.
(Pass the Grotto Trail and Bennie Creek Cutoff Trail.)
Loop parking, bottom of shuttle: As you approach a
cattleguard, there's a dirt road on the right, signed for Winward
Reservoir. Parking is at the wide area
on your left. The Shram Creek trail starts about 150 feet down the dirt road, just
across the cattleguard, on the left.
Top trailhead for DH ride: Continue uphill on the Nebo Loop
Road about 5 miles. As you see the gravel Santaquin Canyon road splitting
off ahead on your right, the Lizard Lake trail heads north (to your right)
away from the road along the western side of the fenceline.