Breaking News
Order a Guide
Boating Report
Sign up for Forever West E-News
Wyoming: Official State Travel Website - wyomingtourism.org
Wyoming Tourism Website Navigation
Site Navigation
WYOMING OUTDOORS & NATURE TRAVEL TALES
Backcountry Snow Sports
Backpacking: Camping the Way It Was Intended
Beginning Biking in Jackson Hole
Best Bets For Sighting Wildlife
Biking the National Forests
Birding in Wyoming
Boulder Basics
Calling All Powder Hounds
Camping 101
Camping with Horses
Devils Tower Centennial
Dining in the Parks
Dogsledding in Bridger-Teton National Forest
Dude, Where's My Horse?
Extreme Powder in Jackson Hole & Grand Targhee
Family Wildlife Tour
Fat Tire Finds in Jackson Hole
Fishing for the Cutt Slam
Following Pioneer Trails
Fountains of Youth
Getting Soaked on the Snake River
High Horsepower Sledding
Hunting the Hunted
Interstate 80: Ride with the Legends
Jackson's Other Mountain
Laying Tracks
Mother Nature's Oddities
Natural Wonders & Historic Treasures
On The Water
Secret Yellowstone
Simple Snowy Range
Snowmobiling Adventures on the Continental Divide Trail
Snowy Soaking
Steamy Romance
Sustainable Tourism
Tetons for Two
The Ball Does Go Further Up Here
The Road to Fantastic Fishing
The Secret Spot
Three Days of Fishing
Wild Horses Loop Tour
Wildlife Gear up for Winter
Wind River Floats
Wyoming Winterland
Wyoming's Fall Foliage
Yurt-to-Yurt in Evanston

Travel Manager
You currently have 0 items in your custom travel guide. Click to view your items. Save the information in your cart by logging in or registering now. Sign up for our Forever West E-News.
 
Navigation
 
Sponsored Content



Navigation
you are here:  Wyoming's official state travel website / discover Wyoming / outdoors & nature / Wyoming outdoors & nature travel tales / biking the national forests

Biking the National Forests
By Kurt Repanshek, Member, American Society of Journalists and Authors

Biking trail near Laramie
Biking trail near Laramie
Southeastern Wyoming seems to be little more than a vast sweep of high plains. But look closer and you’ll discover sprawling national forests that nurture mile after mile after mile of mountain bike trails that will thrill any level of cyclist. So toss your bike shoes in with your cowboy boots and be prepared to ride when you enter the Cowboy State.

Day One: Happy Jack and “Land of the Earth-Born,” aka Vedauwoo
Midway between Cheyenne and Laramie rises a boulder garden of monumental proportion, a rocky landscape laced with single- and double-track routes. Known as “Vedauwoo,” this slice of the Medicine Bow-Routt National Forest is named after the Native American word for “earth-born,” and you just might feel that way pedaling around the towering walls and outcrops of rock.

Among the favorites here is the Turtle Rock Trail, a three-mile loop that negotiates slabs of Vedauwoo’s rockscape. The single-track trail, which is shared by hikers, also cuts through aspen groves and past beaver ponds.
After you’ve warmed up at Vedauwoo, point your car six miles west on Interstate 80 to the Happy Jack recreation area and its abundance of trails. From the Lincoln Monument parking lot (Exit 323) you can roll onto the Headquarters Trail, named after the Civil Conservation Corps headquarters camp based here in the 1930s. Link the Headquarters Trail to the Summit Trail and you’ll have a six-mile loop that offers stunning views north, south, and east to the Vedauwoo area.

Still got some pedal left in you? Then head a mile west along the Happy Jack Road and pass through
Mountain biking
Mountain biking
Tom Moran
the Tie City trailhead. From here a four-mile loop through aspen glades and fir trees knits together the Pole Creek, Aspen, Roller Coaster and Blackjack trails. If that’s not enough, there are many more combinations you can string together to stay out until sundown.

Day Two: Tackling the Snowy Range
About 30 miles west of Laramie stands the Snowy Range, a gorgeous stretch of mountains thick with trees, streams and lakes… and mountain bike rides. A popular downhill ride is the North Fork Trail, which crosses the North Fork of the Little Laramie River. The trail’s upper end, which is the best place to start, lies along Brooklyn Lake Road. The 4.4-mile-long trail cruises through an open park-like setting before dropping into a steep ravine that cradles the river. Switchbacks take you down to the river, where bridges help you cross it.

The trail ends in the North Fork Campground about five miles west of Centennial on Highway 130. Due to the trail’s downhill nature, it’s best to use a shuttle system for this ride. Or, drop the kids off at the top and drive down to meet them in the campground.

Closer to Centennial are the Little Laramie and Corner Mountain loop trails. Both wind about seven miles through forests of aspen, spruce, Douglas fir and lodgepole pine. Bobbing up and down across the landscape, the trails never prove too intimidating for novice and intermediate riders.

Ambitious bikers can start the day at the top of the North Fork Trail, then follow the Sand Lake Road down to the Little Laramie Trail and, if you still have energy, cruise back down Highway 130 to the Corner Mountain Trail.

For more information:
Medicine Bow National Forest


Related Articles
Fat Tire Finds in Jackson Hole
I've learned there are plenty of trails that are open to bikes in Jackson Hole. After all, the Tetons are only one of the four mountain ranges in the area and Grand Teton National Park only covers a portion (albeit a large one) of the Tetons themselves. Here are a few trail recommendations for varying difficulty levels, as well as some Jackson Hole bike shops happy to give out more bike info.
read more


Yellowstone National Park offers a number of ways to relax and have fun. Bring your own equipment, rent equipment from concessionaires, or book an all-inclusive package.
read more

Sponsored Content
Central Rafting

Listings of Historic Sites

Southeast Horseback Riding

Southwest State Parks

State Park Listings

Change the Season - Wyoming Tourism
Interactive Map Wyoming Regions About Wyoming Plan your Trip Discover Order a Guide Breaking News Order a Guide Order a Guide Order a Guide Boating Report Order a Guide Sign up for our Forever West E-News Main Menu Press Section Travel Industry International Visitors Interactive Map Home Page Home Page