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The
Bryce Canyon National Park and Garfield County areas of Utah have
many mountain biking trails. Click below for specific information
on each trail.
Utah
Mountain Biking Trails
- Cassidy
Trail
- Believed
to have been used by the famous outlaw Butch Cassidy in his many
escapes from the lawmen of the day. Relive some Old West adventures
of your own on this wonderful red rock trail.
- Cassidy,
Rich, & Ledge Point Trails
- These three trails
intertwine with each other to form several loops ranging from
3 miles to 8 or more miles. The shortest loop follows the Rich
Trail from the Red Canyon Trailhead for 1 mile to its junction
with the Ledge Point Trail. A half-mile climb takes you out to
Ledge Point with views of Red Canyon and out to the Sevier River,
the Markagaunt Plateau, and Brian Head Peak.
Casto
Canyon Trail
- Beginning at the Casto
Canyon trailhead, the trail takes you into a wonderful world of
red hoodoos, sandstone cliffs of white, pink and even green colors.
The spectacular red rock is evident along most of the Casto Canyon
ride until you reach the forested areas of ponderosa pines, where
the colors change with every turn of the trail.
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- Coyote
Hollow Trail
- The Coyote Hollow
Trailhead is the eastern access point to the Thunder Mountain
Trail. See description below.
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- Fremont
Trail
- Along this trail, you
will take in spectacular views of red rock cliffs, and wind your
way through ponderosa pine forests, quaking aspen stands and sage
flats as you climb in and out of the canyons. Elevations range
from 7880 feet at Tropic Reservoir to 9030 feet at Smith Canyon
and dropping to 6080 in Circleville.
- Losee
Canyon Trail
- Located at the bottom
of Losee Canyon, the trail follows the canyon floor, winding through
the red hoodoos and the many colored sandstone cliffs up to the
higher elevations of the Red Canyon area.
Paunsaugunt
Trail
- Views of the Pink
Cliffs, Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, and the Kaibab
Plateau in northern Arizona greet riders of the Paunsaugunt Trail.
The trail begins at Tropic Reservoir and several loops from 20-75
miles can be made.
- Red
Canyon Bicycle Trail
- The Dixie National
Forest and Utah Department of Transportation partnered to create
this paved bike trail paralleling Highway 12. Bicyclists can now
enjoy Red Canyon's scenery without worrying about traffic on the
highway.
Thunder
Mountain Trail
- One of the premier
trails in the region, the Thunder Mountain Trail follows a normally
dry wash for about 1.5 miles before climbing a series of steep
switchbacks to a ridge that overlooks Red Canyon to the north,
Wilson Peak to the southeast, and the Sevier River Valley to the
west.
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