One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

Feb 4, 2016
by SRAM  
Trails are the basis of everything in mountain biking. They’re the arteries that flow life into every ride. They’re the blank canvas, the empty sheet. They’re the beginning middle and end of every mountain bike story.

Whether beaten into submission by machines, carefully sculpted with blistered hands and simple tools, or worn into being by centuries of animal traffic, each trail is as varied as the people who ride it. The trail’s story changes with each passing rider — every one of them having their own distinct perspective and definition of speed, space, time, adventure, danger and awesome — and each is another One of Many.

The following is One in a collection of short stories from three different trips to three different trails. If presented as simple trail beta, these pieces might detail the dirt — and a turn here, a climb there, a drop after that. But seen through the eyes of each of these riders, these stories represent unique experiences — One of Many stories that happen each day.

You are one of many. What is your story?



Every June, my trail map emerges from winter hibernation and finds its way back onto the coffee table, where it will live until the snow starts to fall again. And each time I unfold the accordion and focus in on the trip I’m planning, I start getting antsy. It has been three seasons since I last pedaled in these parts on the map, and my patience for snow melting has run out.

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion
One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion
One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

The San Juan Mountains in southwest Colorado are a rugged, stunning and very high mountain range that is heavily concentrated in minerals. One hundred and fifty years ago, these mountains separated the booming mining metropolises of Telluride, Silverton, Ouray and Durango. Today we are able to access and ride in the San Juans because of the old mining infrastructure. The trails that used to connect these towns, which were simply carved into the sides of the mountains, are now popular scenic roads that take you deep into the backcountry. The old mule and horse paths have transformed into the most perfectly pitched, 18-inch-wide flowy singletrack that fluently contours the topography.

One Of Many Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion
One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

Mary Dishman's main trail companion; a Juliana Roubion equipped with SRAM X01, SRAM ROAM 60 wheels, SRAM Guide RSC brakes, RockShox Pike RCT3, RockShox Monarch Plus RC3 and RockShox Reverb Stealth.

The trail that attracts the most mountain bikers to the San Juans is, without a doubt, the Colorado Trail. Completed in 1987, and connecting Denver to Durango, the Colorado Trail is 486 miles long and passes through eight mountain ranges. This long-distance trail provides easy access to miles and miles of some of the country’s best alpine singletrack.

I’ve lived in Durango for more than 10 years now and have found that the CT running through the San Juans to Durango acts as our highway, an artery that breathes seemingly unlimited riding possibilities into the area. When I say “highway” I literally mean high way. The CT winds through the region at elevations of between 11,000 and 12,500 feet above sea level for about 60 miles on a ribbon of singletrack that you can usually see for days in front of you. Our tree line is around 11,800 feet, so you might imagine the high alpine panoramic landscape.

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion
One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

Cascading off this main artery into the adjacent drainages below are dozens of trails that act as the veins in this equation. There is a lifetime’s worth of riding in this mountain range alone. But the window we get every year is short — 3 months, maybe. When it’s time, you motivate.

The cycling community in Durango is filled with a passion and history I have yet to see anywhere else. Among all the sport’s old legends is a mix of younger pros ranging from XC to Enduro riders. The local youth mountain bike development program, called Durango Devo, has grown from just 8 participants to over 700 in just 10 years. The program even offers a pushbike group that has more than 50 little munchkins per school year. The Explorers group is comprised of about 40 mini “Magellans” who tackle multiple-day bike-packing trips each spring, summer and fall. And alongside all of the kids and pros riding around town, there is a plethora of locals that just get after it.

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion
One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion
One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

Riding around on the local town trails with friends is always a hoot, but I feel there is something about riding in the high mountains that strengthens friendships. It could be the task at hand: It’s not always fun to pedal uphill for hours at a time, or to get caught in a lightning storm. Sometimes a little suffering can get the best of you, but your buddy’s contrasting attitude — and a bit of humor — can really pull you through. It could also be the dirt. The dirt you find in and around the Colorado Trail is some of the best I’ve pedaled on. It’s the icing on the cake. It makes those high-fives sting. Quality rides makes quality friends.

This summer, I had the chance to take some fine Canadian folks on some of the most quality riding I have ever found. I was a little scared, at first, because of the unusually wet spring and unknown trail conditions. I was feeling the pressure to show them our best rides because they were coming from the mountain bike meccas of Whistler and Squamish.

After scheming for endless hours with the map, I came up with a three-day itinerary. But there was still a problem with the plan: I had no idea exactly how much snow and debris we would find. The local consensus was that there would be a blanket of snow covering the trail. But the temperatures were rising rapidly and, as I mentioned earlier, my snow-melting patience was gone.

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion
One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

Images for SRAM Colorado Trail
Images for SRAM Colorado Trail

Downed trees, high creek-crossings and snow were to be expected in the early season obstacle course. The drifts and other snowy patches not only added a remarkable contrast to the scenery, they also gave us an awareness of our presence in this rugged vastness. Raging waterfalls now cascading off cliffs will be mere trickles by late summer, baby skunk cabbage that will soon be taller than your handlebars and the spastic, curious, chirping marmots that were just waking up: It all added to the vitality these mountains emanate.

Every June, the first big high-country ride brings me a boost of energy and ear-to-ear smiles, because it rekindles my passion for mountainous adventure. We were all feeling the electric mountain buzz as we pedaled in, around and through this main-artery trail, laying down fresh tracks in the dirt and snow.

One Of Many - Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many Colorado Trail Reunion

One Of Many Colorado Trail Reunion

We gathered, about ready to start a descent off the artery, dropping into one of its mind-melting veins. The anticipation was killing me. You could stare at this trail all day long on the map and understand that it drops down a steep ridgeline. You can see that it descends 2,500 feet in just under 4 miles. And I could talk about the most perfect aspen grove the trail winds through till I’m blue in the face. But to experience it again, with friends, and watch their expressions as they began to understand what I had been talking about, and showing them on the map, was like being there for first time all over again. Maybe even better.

Sometimes you just have to go to know.



Words by: Mary Dishman
Photos by: Adrian Marcoux
/ @amarcouxphotos

More in this series:
One Of Many - Della Creek Dog Fighting


sram.com / @SramMedia



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51 Comments
  • 39 0
 You can't really appreciate high alpine trails or riding above tree line until you've done it. There's nothing else like it. I rode the Monarch Crest Trail this past July, and I cannot get it out of my head. I HAVE to go back.
  • 7 0
 Ditto. I did Monarch Crest for the first time early October. Such an experience.
  • 3 0
 And the crest is pretty well developed even. Go try a ride like Snow Mesa to miners creek outside Creede, primitive singletrack in its bare bones form
  • 3 0
 These pictures are amazing. Still, it doesn't do the ride justice, nothing does except riding it.
  • 2 0
 For me, nothing beats waking up at 3am and heading out to hike your bike up to the top of some of the peaks out there (wilderness area permitting), and then finding a line down while racing through the scree. I've done a few 12ers now and it is incredible but definitely not easy
  • 3 0
 Monarch will forever be a favorite
  • 2 0
 Ride the MCT in July with my wife for the first time. Hooked. Ridden all over the country and BC and nothing compares.
  • 9 0
 Those photos are amazing
  • 7 0
 Incredible work by the photographer. Absolutely stunning!
  • 7 0
 Sometimes you just have to go to know exactly, just go........ thanks, very nice pictures and words
  • 5 3
 Great pictures, for all those that dont know though, Juliana bikes are literally the exact same as their santa cruz counterparts, same geo, measurements, they just spec with female saddles and narrower bars. That not to say they are worse but the only thing about them designed for women is the paint job. no shorter reach, head tube, any of that.
  • 7 1
 For those of you who don't know, women's specific geometry is a crock of marketing shi&. 2 men of identical height may also justify different setups as a result of different proportions and riding styles. So why buy a Julianna? Not sure I've figured that one out yet. Those colors are hot though!
  • 8 0
 given the current crop of santa cruz colors, juliana might actually be the more masculine color line
  • 9 1
 I don't understand why everyone continues to re-affirm this. We know. Who cares? They're sweet bikes, women seem to like them. Just enjoy the fabulous article!
  • 3 0
 Terrific story and pics.....well done Mary and Adrian!

Good timing too........18 inches of snow here at my place......can't wait for spring/summer and a visit to the San Juans!
  • 4 0
 Engineer Mountain Trail and Molas Pass are definitely in my short-list of top favorite rides. Nice writeup and great photos. Can't wait to go back!
  • 2 0
 Put cataract ridge on your to do list. 38 miles or tire wide primitive singletrack and it hits the highest point on the co trail @ 13,200ft
  • 1 0
 Rode Engineer last summer during a family trip to Lake City. AWESOME!
  • 4 0
 That's the kind of trail where I'd be constantly grabbing brakes to stop and look around.
  • 2 0
 "Trails are the basis of everything in mountain biking. They’re the arteries that flow life into every ride."
Yes. But more importantly, the other way round, they are also the arteries that flow riding into every life! Smile
  • 5 0
 Summertime in Colorado. Better get your riding in before 1 p.m.
  • 4 0
 LOL I think your usually good til 2:30 but the sooner your down the better for sure. Got caught in a storm at Curt Gowdy last year. Came out of nowhere, lightning striking all around me, was properly fearing for my life!
  • 1 0
 When you're up as high as these riders are, I would take no chances. If you get caught up there, there's nowhere to go, nowhere to hide. The good news is, the first six hours of daylight is flawless.
  • 4 0
 Agreed, most of the high stuff I've ridden was by shuttle like the crest, so at least I was heading down most of the time. I reckon in Summit County 80% of the storms roll in between 2 and 3, but that one at Gowdy was around 12. Rolled in out of the clear blue in minutes, definitely don't want to add myself to the 15 or so people killed in Colorado every year, it's no joke that's for sure.
  • 4 1
 Tsk, tsk. Picking the Columbine flowers is against the law; it is every citizen of CO's duty to protect those flowers.
  • 3 0
 What! Are you the flower police! Wink
  • 4 0
 Actually picking the flower is not against the law, provided you dont pick more than 25 and aren't on private land. No I'm not the flower police.
  • 3 0
 Amazing nature.It's my dream to take my bike to Colorado mountains one day.Now I should start saving the money!
  • 1 0
 Second photo is the backside of Engineer Mountain. Epic camping! Some guy ski based the other side a couple years back. Just beyond that is Purgatory Ski Resort (DMR).
  • 3 0
 love my home town Durango, such a beautiful place to shred.
  • 2 1
 Serene backdrops... Joy in the faces of great athletes... The pinnacle of bike engineering and design... Then, TURKEY GOBBLE!!!
  • 3 0
 Incredible. I need to get out of Wisconsin.
  • 3 0
 Riding at 11,000 feet ... my lungs are burning just thinking about it.
  • 1 0
 What a great article! I'm from DGO and it's the sickest place on earth. Your are free to be who you really are in D- Town. Thanks for sharing!
  • 2 0
 Great story and photos! Special place on earth for sure...
  • 1 0
 Definitely makes me wanna get to Durango. It's stunning there!
  • 1 0
 really dig the edit work on these pics, like the little grain, light is too insane
  • 2 0
 Cool write up and awesome work at capturing it Marcoux.
  • 2 0
 Yeah! Summertime! Great photos! Wake me up in March. night....
  • 1 0
 It is -15 at my house currently, I think I would rather be warm and riding high alpine singletrack!!!
  • 3 0
 Colorado > All
  • 1 0
 That is real mtbing...sweet
  • 2 0
 awesome photos
  • 3 0
 Marcoux is a boss.
  • 1 0
 Sweet capture Adrian! looks like an amazing spot to roll on some wheels!
  • 1 0
 How'd they get the Juliana to stand up?
  • 2 0
 Yup! Auto track stand. All "Pro Builds" do that MANA. Some can manual too! Shh... Industry secret.
  • 1 0
 Why am I in F...ing CT????
  • 1 0
 those new rockshox decals are not so appealing.
  • 1 0
 Just awesome !
  • 1 0
 so beautiful!







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