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Mount Spokane State Park requires the use of a Discover Pass for every vehicle that enters the park.
Overview
6.1 miles of glorious alpine trail available to shuttle from the summit of Mount Spokane. Prepare for varied terrain, beautiful scenery, and some old and new school trail experiences to keep you coming back hungry for another run.
Need to Know
The final section of the N. Summit Road is open seasonally. Generally it will be open from mid-June to Mid-October. If the gate is closed the majority of Trail 140 can still be ridden. Park at the Upper Kit Carson Parking area and follow the KC Loop Road for roughly a tenth of a mile until you see a foot path to your right.
The trail ends next to the Bear Creek Lodge (private property) and also a good for post ride libations when there isn't a wedding happening. The parking adjacent to the building and across the street is fee based.
Alternative parking can be found roughly .5 miles lower down the road in a small gravel lot on the South side of Mt. Spokane Park Drive (see map). No restroom, plan accordingly.
Description
Mt. Spokane offers some great alpine mountain biking and Trail 140 arguably offers the best experience.
If this is your first visit to Mt. Spokane, take a moment to enjoy the views from the summit. Just above the parking lot a granite and timber
Vista House (circa 1933) perches atop a field of boulders, offering expansive views and a great spot to snap a photo.
The top section of Trail 140 is nice and flowy as it weaves through trees and skirts the granite boulder field. A turn near the the Summit Road marks a (for now) rougher section of rerouted trail ahead. Loose and scrappy it will provide some technical challenge until it is refined later this year. It's over pretty quickly and you'll be back to a smooth ride on classic singletrack.
As you near the Upper
Kit Carson Loop Road, be extra cautious for other trail users. Trail 140 can be traveled in either direction and the foot path spur that connects 140 to the KC Loop Road is a higher traffic area (the spur and road can be used to transfer onto
Trail 130 - Singletrack).
A nice new section of
fundulated trail carries you off down the mountain until you reach the Saddle Junction (pit toilet included). Continue to the left and look for the doubletrack leading past the pit toilet. Just to the left,
Trail 110 splits off.
This section of trail has minimal descent, and even a few short ups which can make it difficult to carry speed. But, it's over pretty soon and the action starts back up with a sweeping 180 turn into some really grand singletrack passing beneath a beautiful canopy of trees.
The trail deposits you onto KC Loop Road from which you'll take your first right-turn option. About a half mile on doubletrack and you'll see a trail cutting down off the left. This is your ticket into a majestic grove of trees. Coming up, there is some heavy duty ruts providing a spirited and bumpy ride.
Stay on your toes because this gives way to a narrow trail closed in tight by a thicket of trees. A really cool section of riding known as
Jedi Trees. The end of the trail is nearby but Trail 140 will wind things down first with a more mellow ride-out before setting riders loose on a gravel road. You're almost at the finish line, just a trip around a closed gate and you wrap up next to the Bear Creek Lodge.
Note that trail exits over private property at Bear Creek Lodge. Keep on the path and off of retaining walls.
Contacts
Shared By:
Eric Ashley
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