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Trail Tuesday featuring Cold Creek, Southwest Chapter
Cold Creek Rider at Sunset

Trail Tuesday featuring Cold Creek, Southwest Chapter

02 | Apr | '24
Vivika Stamolis

Less than an hour's drive from Vancouver, Washington, lies Cold Creek, a trail in the Southwest Chapter, known for its challenging climbs, exhilarating descents, and breathtaking views. Cold Creek is the most heavily biked section of the Tarbell trail system, and is distinctive enough from the rest of the system that it deserves its own guide and write up. 

coldcreekCold Creek is the section of the Tarbell trail that parallels Cold Creek up the flanks of Larch Mountain. Riders can choose whether they want their climbing torture out in the open and at the beginning by climbing up a logging road that’s punishingly steep for the first mile, or get on with the grunt under trees after a nice, gentle warmup by choosing a pedal up known as Murphy’s Grade, which climbs gently under trees most of the way up the hill and proceeds to get serious about the climbing after the first mile and a half. Downhillers who couldn’t arrange a shuttle typically walk up the road, cross country and all mountain riders typically ride up Murphy’s grade. There is a third option that involves a partial shuttle up to the Thrillium trail parking lot, then a steep 1 mile pedal up past the gate and up the road to the top of Larch Mountain, then a rough and rocky descent down an old road grade strewn with baby heads to the rocky clearing called the Flintstones that usually marks the top for most rides climbing from the bottom.  

The Cold Creek trail sits on some of the best dirt in Washington. The surface is mostly packed Cascade Clay under the needles from top to bottom, with very occasional wet spots that are well drained by berms and culverts and an insanely active group of volunteers who keep this trail rideable essentially all year, so long as it’s not buried in snow. It’s mostly low elevation, with the bottom half rideable all year, and the top half typically open from late March through early December. The sections that descend through clear cuts are susceptible to loose surfaces during the driest months, but it’s not significant enough to affect the riding experience.

All mountain riders and downhillers will really appreciate this line as it descends consistently with only a couple of very minor transitions that require minimal pedaling. Cold Creek is the closest mountain biking gets to feeling like a downhill ski run in late season, with little kickers everywhere there could possibly be a kicker, and nice little drops right where you need them so you can pick up speed. Experienced riders might even be able to avoid pedaling a lot of the transitions if they use the aerial features skillfully. This trail has benefited from 20 years of riding and digging, and 20 years of incremental improvements have added up to a uniquely rewarding experience. In short, this trail is all about flow

Rollable obstacles abound, with the trail descending through multiple root falls, rock gardens, and over numerous natural features that keep you looking ahead and around every corner and sight line. The bike will not carry you down this line; you’ve got to ride it actively. You will be panting by the time you get to the bottom. This trail is what all-mountain and enduro bikes are built for. But riders of hard tails and 120mm bikes need not fear. The trail builders have assiduously provided roll-arounds for every significantly sized feature.

XC riders shouldn’t scoff at this trail, even though it looks short at only 3.3 miles from the parking area to the typical stopping point, which is a picnic table located in a field of dinner plate rocks. Keep in mind that the top of this trail is 2000 feet of climbing from the bottom. This is how you pack in the elevation training after work. 

This trail rewards intrepid climbers with breathtaking views of Mount Saint Helens and Silver Star Mountain, which, at 4200 feet, looks decisively alpine and rugged as its flanks are treeless down to 2000 feet, a lingering result of the Yacolt Burn, the largest forest fire in Washington State history, which tore through this area in 1902. 

Explore the trails and check out the map on TrailForks.

  

coldcreek view of mountain bob h

That was a lot. If we lost you at some point in there... In summary, when you ride Cold Creek, you’ll get:

  • Epic views of Mount Saint Helens and Silver Star Mountain
  • Challenging climbs that will double the size of your quads
  • Big, exhilarating descents through lush forests and rocky terrain
  • Great dirt, mostly packed Cascade Clay under the needles from top to bottom
  • Tons of fun features from root falls to rock gardens, with roll-arounds for all larger features
  • Over 20 years of trail maintenance and incremental improvements 

 

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TRAIL TUESDAY FEATURING COLD CREEK, EVERGREEN SOUTHWEST
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