TR: Mt. Blackmore, where bikes belong eternally.
Went up and rode Blackmore today. Nothing too out of the ordinary here, but I figured I would document it with some pics while it's still legal. Pushed up to the saddle and decided I have neglected some good old ridge scramblin' fun for too long. I climbed up over Elephant Mountain to the next peak south on the ridge. What a beautiful day for pictures. No smoke, no thunderstorms. When I got back to my bike, I finished the push to Blackmore and then enjoyed a wickedly gratuitous decent of close to 4000 feet. Every one of them sick. My life sucks.
While going up, I had lots of this to look forward to on the way down:



and some of this....


Friendly hiker dude:

Beautiful alpine singletrack. So much fun was had on the way down.

A look down on the meadow section...

Mt. Blackmore. From Elephant Mountain. You can see the trail going up the side to the summit. From here I scrambled south in my skate shoes to the next peak along the Hyalite Ridge. It is an unnamed point just over 10,200'.

The peak:

Pristine hanging valley above Twin Falls. Not many folks hang out there.

Only a few visitors up here. You can do some awesome day trip ridge scrambles in these parts. One is to go from here to Squaw creek divide and down the Hyalite Creek trail. Epic.

View of Mt. Blackmore and Bozeman in the distance.

For those of you into such adventures, you can park a shuttle car at South Cottonwood trailhead and be one of a handful of people to ride down this beautiful valley for the season. I hear it's ridiculous.

Back to the original goal: The final push up to the summit of Blackmore


Some wildflower shots:



Scenic of the section of ridge I walked.

Summit shot with Gallatin Valley and Bridgers:

Sorry fellas, no action shots as I was alone. Weekdays off has its drawbacks in that regard. Hopefully I can use this to motivate some weekend warriors. I had so much fun riding down. That trail has a little bit of everything and it is 99% rideable! From buff alpine cruising to dark technical forest it is a trail that is just perfect for bikes. I love rocks and roots!
On an advocacy side note, every person I met on the trail was not only totally friendly and talkative, they couldn't even believe that people ride there! I bet banning bikes wouldn't even enter their mind. That is the case with over 90% of the people that are actually out on the trail. That is why I get so livid about the tyrannical minority and their desire to legislate us off of these beautiful and perfect trails. The numbers just don't seem to be in their favor.
And the trail was in the best shape I have ever seen, by the way. So get out there and show people what we do and tell them why it is some of the greatest fun a person can have. It is our job as trail riders these days.
Last edited by tone capone; 07-31-2008 at 09:25 PM.
"The skis just popped me up out of the snow and I went screaming down the hill on a high better than any heroin junkie." She Ra
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