Bruce cranks along the Foothill Bike Trail. Photos and trail reviews July 10, 2019. Some trail tracks from 2010.
Southern Ogden Foothill Trails
Foothill, Par Course, Ogden Bobsled, Blue Ribbon
Waterfall Canyon, Bonneville Shoreline, and moreThis page covers the Ogden foothill trails between Beus Canyon and
Taylor Canyon. (Official trails only -- you'll note a wealth of
"social trails" as you zoom in the satellite view.) The trails
range in difficulty from very short-and-easy Par Course Loop to the long
and tough
Bonneville Shoreline Trail (BST)
.
The area is a west-facing dry hillside interrupted by sharply-cut canyons. The trails pass
through zones of grass, sage brush, and gambel oak. Trail elevation ranges
from 4700 feet at
the trailheads to 5700 feet on the upper BST. The usual riding season
is May through November.
View south on the upper half of the Par Course loop. Typical low oak scrub terrain.
On the Strong Canyon Trail just uphill from 36th, we're looking at a plethora of signs, but nothing that says the bike isn't supposed to be here. If you continue, you'll find yourself on a hiking path.
There are some trails in the area that are hiking-only, as well as one-way trails for bikes.
The tangle of trails at the 36th South trailhead is particularly confusing
to newcomers. And
while there are a lot of signs, there is often more than one common name
for an individual
trail, and trails are signed based on the trail name (such as Foothill
Bike Trail), and the
route (such as Gib's Loop), and the destination of the trail (Waterfall
Canyon). I've based
my trail names on the posts along the trails themselves.
The Bonneville Shoreline from Beus to Rainbow Gardens is long and interesting enough to be
a destination trail for out-of-towners. Most of the trails discussed on
this page will only
attract local riders. For Ogden-area beginners, I'd recommend Mt Ogden,
Foothill, and Par Course
as starting trails in this area.
You'll need to stop occasionally to read the small print on trail signs. The use of both route names and trail names can be confusing.
Looking into the 29th Street kiosk from the parking lot.
The best trailhead for access to the BST is 29th Street. Trails are plainly signed, and the
navigation uphill to the connectors is simple. (The northbound and southbound
connectors form
an arc alongside the BST and are sometimes called the "lower BST." See
the topo map.) 29th
Street also offers unconfusing access to the north end of the Foothill
Bike Trail.
The 36th Street trailhead is smallish, and uphill navigation is complex. This trailhead connects
to the south end of Foothill and the north end of Par Course. It's the
main access point for
the Mt Ogden trail. (The Mt Ogden trail can also be picked up at its north
end at Marquardt
Park on Taylor Avenue.)
As 36th South turns right, it becomes Skyline Drive. The Skyline Drive trailhead has quick
access to the south end of Par Course.
This is the way uphill from 36th.
High on the hill, northbound on the BST.
The north end of Beus Drive has roadside parking with quick access to the BST. The right fork
is a connector that quickly joins the BST, while the doubletrack left
fork is a BST alternate
that passes the top of the Ogden Bobsled.
The Beus Canyon trailhead is on 4600 South just off Skyline Drive. It offers a fairly steep
and rugged climb uphill to the BST. (Skyline Drive offers a bail-out "loop
route" to get back
to this trailhead.) Beus Canyon is not a good trailhead for accessing
the other foothill trails.
Crossing the creek on the lower alternate Foothill Bike Trail. If you want to go to the BST, you'll need to get onto the real trail further uphill.
The Foothill Bike Trail is an easy ride both aerobically and technically. On the north, it
starts at the 29th Street trailhead. (Note that both Foothill and the
hiking path lower on
the hill are called Gib's Loop. Gib's is a route, not an individual trail.)
The hiking trail
runs just below Foothill all the way between 29th and 36th.
On the south, Foothill is reached by (1) heading north on the Par Course Loop to its end, then
turning uphill on the cindered doubletrack, (2) going uphill from the
36th Street trailhead
and finding the uphill doubletrack.
Foothill is 1.1 miles long, with around 150 feet of overall climbing when done between the
36th and 29th street trailheads.
Navigation from 36th Street can be a bit troublesome. (It's very easy to wind up on a hiking-only
trail, without any sign telling you otherwise.) But if you get on the
broad doubletrack as
soon as you reach it, then keep heading straight uphill on the DT, you
won't go wrong. Go past
two singletrack connectors to the Par Course on your right, pass the entry
to Strong's Canyon
trail on your left, then go past the Foothill Alternate trail on your
left. Then turn left
across the bridge on the real Foothill.
While much of Foothill is low scrub, there are some shady areas.
Foothill is a good choice for beginning riders, but there are some parts that younger children won't be able to ride.
You'll need to get on the Foothill Bike Trail (the real Foothill, not the alternate) to climb
up to the BST. After you've climbed from 36th Street and turned north
on the singletrack Foothill
Bike Trail, you'll quickly come upon the Blue Ribbon Uphill Bike Trail
on your right. The trail
fork is halfway between the bridge and the spot where the Alternate Foothill
rejoins.
Blue Ribbon Uphill Bike Trail
(one-way uphill)
At the trail fork for the Blue Ribbon, looking up toward Malans Peak.
The Blue Ribbon trail climbs from the Foothill Bike Trail to the Bonneville Shoreline (BST).
As stated above, you'll need to get on the Foothill Bike Trail (not the
lower alternate) to
ride Blue Ribbon.
The combination of Foothill and Blue Ribbon is a relatively pleasant way of getting uphill.
You'll need to find another way back downhill, as this trail is one-way
uphill only. From 29th
Street, a nice easy experienced-beginner loop is Foothill to Blue Ribbon,
then BST north to
the Waterfall Canyon BST Connector, then catching the link to 29th Street
downhill.
Typical dry hillside on Blue Ribbon. It's not a bad climb.
The trail is narrow, with closely-encroaching roots and tree trunks. It works well when heading uphill, but it's too tight to be a downhill.
Blue Ribbon is 1/2 mile long with 200 feet of elevation gain. The path is narrow dirt singletrack
winding through dry grass and short gambel oak. The climb would rate strong
beginner to early-intermediate
in difficulty.
Much of the trail lies on the power line corridor in a dense grove of scrub oak.
The Par Course Loop is a narrow loop just uphill from Skyline Drive above Weber State. The
outgoing and returning sides of the loop are just a few feet apart in
the oak brush. The Par
Course Loop is 0.8 miles around, with only trivial elevation change. It
can be done either
direction.
Par Course can be found by heading uphill from the 36th Street trailhead and taking the first
southbound trail you find, or by heading north from the Skyline Drive
trailhead.
The loop has numbered exercise stations, which will likely be of more interest to hikers than
mountain bike riders. The stations are numbered in a clockwise direction.
Particularly on weekend
mornings, expect quite a few fellow trail users on foot. Some spots on
the trail have thick
brush, making passing difficult. And exercisers may suddenly step into
the trail without seeing
you.
At an exercise station. I posed the bike for the picture. Too busy riding to exercise.
View north at Malans Peak and Lewis Peak.
A portion of the Par Course loop is also part of the Weber State University (WSU) Discovery
Loop. The WSU loop is a route, not a trail. And it's labeled"hiking only"
even when the route joins an obvious bike trail, -- such as Par Course and the
lower alternate BST. Confusing not only for you, but also for the hikers
you'll encounter.
Just past the south end of the Par Course Loop, the Ogden Bobsled comes down into the Skyline
Drive trailhead. Par Course, particularly the uphill limb of the loop,
is used by high-speed
riders who are looping up Blue Ribbon to the BST to drop back down Bobsled.
A rare -- and short -- tougher spot on the trail, where you'll need to wind around between the rocks.
Ogden Bobsled Trail
(one-way downhill)
Coming into a turn on Bobsled.
The Ogden Bobsled trail is a steep, high-speed plunge down a ravine. The trail is for experts
and upper-intermediate riders. It drops 300 vertical feet in 0.4 miles,
ending at the Skyline
Drive trailhead.
Bobsled starts on an alternate path of the BST just north of Beus Drive. To get there when
riding southbound, keep to the right about 1/10th mile after crossing
the creek in Strong Canyon.
Here the main BST becomes a narrower singletrack, while the alternate
is wide and fairly straight.
The Bobsled is marked by a little trail post.
Bobsled is known by other names, including "Death Rut." The high-speed sections have highly-banked
turns with trenching and chunky loose stuff at the bottom. So if you can't
ride fast, you may
not be riding for long.
Just before Bobsled hits the trailhead, it intersects a connector trail between the Par Course
Loop and Skyline Drive. A right turn here will start you on the path back
uphill.
Top of Bobsled, on an alternate line of the BST.
Hitting the turn high. No, the camera is not tilted. That's the trail -- no room at the bottom. In fact, the bottom of a turn is often filed with chunks and erosion trenches.
Popular looping routes are (1) north on Par Course, Foothill to Blue Ribbon, BST south to the
top of Bobsled, and (2) city streets Skyline to Country Hills to Lakeview
to Beus Drive and
up to the alternate BST.
Mt Ogden and Taylor Trails
That service road is the Mt Ogden trail. It gets better, but there's only 0.4 miles of singletrack.
The Mt Ogden trail runs from the 36th Street trailhead to Marquardt Park on Taylor Avenue.
It's a very easy 0.8 miles long, and is half service road and half singletrack.
It serves primarily
as a way for locals to ride to the 36th Street trails. There's little
reason anyone else would
want to ride it.
The north end of the Mt Ogden trail is found at the south side of the parking area for Marquardt
Park on Taylor Avenue. Start on the asphalt path, then grab a primitive
singletrack along the
creek. You'll skirt the north side of the park. As you leave the park
southbound, the trail
becomes more "trail like."
A spur off the north end of Mt Ogden goes to Taylor Avenue at the south side of the Marquardt
Park. It ends at the sidewalk on the south edge of the park.
The trail fork. Both sides go to the park, arriving on opposite sides.
Bonneville Shoreline Trail and Connectors
Heading toward the creek crossing in Strong's Canyon on the BST.
The
Ogden Bonneville Shoreline Trail
is discussed on another page. The BST from Rainbow Gardens to Beus Canyon is 6.6 miles, and
it's usually done as an out-and-back or a one-way "drop-off and pickup."
But there are options
for small loops and shorter out-and-back forays. This page will focus
on the connecting trails
and how the BST can be used with the lower foothill trails.
From the 29th Street trailhead, a well-marked singletrack climbs 1/4 mile up to the Waterfall
Canyon trail, also called the "BST access trail" or "lower BST." The BST
access trail forms
an arc below the BST, so from the top of the singletrack, you can go either
north or south
to climb to the BST.
Straight ahead is the connector to the BST. The singletrack to the right goes down to the 29th Street trailhead.
The BST access trail, AKA lower BST, northbound from 29th with Ben Lomond Peak in the distance.
Both northbound and southbound, the access trail is a broad and uninteresting grunt climb.
It can get a little hot on a summer's day. Southbound, you'll reach the
BST just north of the
creek in Waterfall Canyon. From the trailhead, it's 0.7 miles and 400
vertical feet.
Once you reach the BST, the trail narrows to singletrack and you'll find some shade. If you're
heading south, you'll first hit Waterfall Canyon, then Strong Canyon.
You can drop off the BST at the Ogden Bobsled, Beus Drive, or the Beus Trailhead. To descend
Bobsled, keep right onto the doubletrack alternate to the singletrack
BST just after descending
from Strong Canyon. It will take you to the top of Bobsled.
The bridge for the BST in Waterfall Canyon.
The canyons along the BST tend to be rough and steep; the hillsides between relatively smooth cruising.
If you pass by the Bobsled option, your next exit is Beus Drive. A short connector drops down
to the street. After that, the trail narrows and climbs another 500 vertical
feet. It's a rough
2.1 miles to the Beus Canyon trailhead, which is why relatively few riders
go this way. If
you don't want to do a road return, it's a tough 1000-vertical climb back
uphill.
Popular BST loops are (1) Foothill from 29th then up Blue Ribbon, BST north to Waterfall and
down the connector to the TH, (2) up Waterfall to the BST, south to Bobsled
and back via Par
Course and Foothill.
Heading south from Waterfall Canyon on the BST.
Map of the Ogden foothill area
Getting there, beginner-level trails:Par Course: From Harrison Blvd in Ogden, take 36th South
and follow it around to the right until it becomes Skyline Drive. About
1/4 mile after the right turn, find the parking on your left. The
trail at the north end of parking goes directly to the Par Course loop.
Alternate: On 36th South, turn left into the 36th South trailhead
just as 36th begins to turn right. (This parking area is small and will
usually be full on weekends.) Start uphill on singletrack at the kiosk
(not the broad dirt road signed as Mt Ogden trail). 0.2 miles uphill, turn
into the singletrack on your right. You'll reach the loop fork in 1/10th
mile.
Foothill Bike Trail: From Harrison Blvd in Ogden, take
30th South around the school, then go north a block to 29th South.
Continue east to the trailhead on the edge of town. At the far south side
of the trailhead parking, go through the kiosk area and take the middle
trail. (To the right is the hiking-only trail, while 90 degrees left is
the climbing trail to the Waterfall Canyon BST alternate and then up to
the BST.)
Alternate: From the 36th South trailhead, climb uphill and get onto the
wide cindered path when you find it. Keep going until you reach the
Foothill Bike Trail.
Getting there, BST access: Go to Harrison Blvd in Ogden. It's the key to all trailheads. (From the north, take the 12th Street exit off I-15 and drive towards
Ogden Canyon. From the south, get off I-15 in Farmington on US-89 and head
north. A couple of miles after you pass under I-84, turn right onto
Harrison Blvd, just as US-89 turns westward to enter Ogden.)
Rainbow Gardens: At the north end of Harrison, turn east
toward the mountains. Take Highway 39 to Valley Drive at the mouth of the
canyon. Immediately leave Valley Drive to Rainbow Gardens. Go to the
southwest corner of the parking area to find the BST.
22nd South TH: From Harrison, take 22nd south to the edge
of town and enter the trailhead. Trails climb north and southeast from
this trailhead to the BST.
29th South TH: From Harrison Blvd in Ogden, take 30th
South around the school, then go north a block to 29th South. Continue
east to the trailhead on the edge of town. At the far south side of the
trailhead parking, go through the kiosk area and turn left on the
singletrack heading east.
36th South TH: From Harrison, turn east onto 36th South.
Turn left into the 36th South trailhead just as 36th begins to turn right.
(This parking area is small and will usually be full on weekends.) The
Foothill Bike trail will take you to Blue Ribbon for your climb up to the
BST.
Skyline TH: This trailhead has additional parking. Pass by
the 36th South trailhead and go 1/4 mile south on Skyline Drive. Turn left
into parking. Take either limb of the Par Course Trail north to Foothill
and climb up to Blue Ribbon.
Beus Drive: On Skyline Drive just south of Weber State,
you'll come to a round-about. Exit eastbound on Country Hills Drive, then
turn right onto Lakeview Drive. At Beus Drive, turn left and climb to the
end of the road. The BST alternate trail starts at the end of the road.
Take either fork northbound.
Beus TH: From Harrison, take 46th South eastbound. Just
after crossing Skyline Drive, find the trailhead on your left.
Riding resources for this trail:
GPS track files (right-click and "Save as..."):
Multi-track
area file
Rainbow-to-Beus
BST track only
Topo map for viewing or printing:
View
Ogden topo
Lodging, camping, shops:
Links to Ogden area resources
Extended map of the Ogden BST