[pct-l] bikes on the PCT

shon mcganty smcganty at yahoo.com
Wed Oct 10 11:16:04 CDT 2012


I disagree.  Perhaps someplaces they can co-exist, but not on the PCT.
 
This summer I spent a week hiking in Oregon near Bend, where Mtn bikes are nearly omnipresent.  I could not enjoy my hike while stepping off the trail 5,000 times!  I couldn't imagine doing this on the PCT too.
 
 

________________________________
 From: Bob Bankhead <wandering_bob at comcast.net>
To: PCT List Forum <pct-l at backcountry.net> 
Sent: Tuesday, October 9, 2012 9:12 PM
Subject: [pct-l]  bikes on the PCT
  
Mountain bikers and hikers can co-exist on the same trail. Look at the Colorado Trail. With the exception of a few wilderness areas, non-motorized bikes are allowed anywhere along its length. Parts of the trail are included in the routings of the Leadville and Breckenridge 100 mile races, and there is even an annual bike race from Denver to Durango on the CT. There are designated biker CT road routes around those sensitive wilderness areas.

How do they do it? Respect for each other. Bikers put in hundreds of manhours each year maintaining the CT. I've never met a disrespectful biker on the CT. Quite the contrary, they are a great resource for hikers, often sharing water, trail condition, and providing rides to/from remote trailheads. Yes, the bikes do cut ruts into the trail tread, but fixing that is where a lot of their maintenance hours go.

The rules of the road are everyone yields to stock, and bikes yield to hikers. Courtesy modifies that a bit such that descending hikers routinely step off the trail for bikes pedaling uphill. It's a lot easier to get going again for the hiker. Bikers are well aware of the presence of hikers and make a concerted effort to avoid collisions on blind corners and sweeping curves, even during the races.








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