Notom-Bullfrog Road, a 60-mile-long dirt road along the east side of Waterpocket Fold, is good for less strenuous biking than Cathedral Valley. It's more level, and accessible, and this means you'll probably share the road with at least some cars, though probably few bike riders. It starts nine miles east of the Capitol Reef Visitor Center on UT 24. About 30 miles south of UT 24 it intersects with the Burr Trail Road, which traverses the lower end of the Waterpocket Fold across the southern portion of Capitol Reef National Park. If you continue south on the Notom Road, in another 30 miles it reaches Bullfrog Marina on Lake Powell.
Burr Trail Road is also good for biking, either west from the Notom-Bullfrog Road, which begins with a dizzying, vertical, switchback ascent of the Waterpocket Fold, then levels off considerably, or from Boulder in the east. It's a 40-mile-long, partly paved route through rock-walled canyons, which does see a fair amount of vehicular traffic. Well-marked side roads are plentiful and good bets for biking terrain.
UT Scenic Byway 12, running south from UT 24 in Torrey, provides a good biking route and access through Boulder to the Burr Trail Road. Between Torrey and Boulder, it offers a sinuous ride over 45 miles of mountainous terrain, topping out at 9,200 feet on Summit Mountain Pass.
From Boulder, the road drops down through canyon country for 30 miles into the town of Escalante. Just about any of the dirt roads diverging from UT 12 are generally worthy of further exploration by bike, too.
Numerous bike routes branch off into the mountainous area north of Escalante, off Hell's Backbone Road, or south of Escalante, off Hole-in-the-Rock Road, which leads to Escalante River Canyons National Monument, America's newest national monument. For additional information contact BLM Teasdale or Escalante district offices.
If You Go . . .
The best time of year to visit Capitol Reef may be in the fall.
Early Mormon settlers originally chose to farm this area around 100 years ago for the good year-round water flows from the Fremont River. Apple and pear orchards they planted are still thriving today -- maintained by the park service. Around September, the orchards are brimming with fruit, which visitors may pick for $.50 per pound.
Pedal Pusher Bike Tours, 151 West Main Street, PO Box 79, Torrey, UT 84775, 801/425-3378, fax 801/425-3378, can provide bike rentals or tours, as well as information about area biking.
Buffalo Jack's Trading Post, Jct. UT 12 and UT 24, Torrey, UT 84775, 800/999-2000, rents bikes by the hour or daily, provides shuttle service to a from trail heads, can provide maps and information, biking supplies and accessories.
Escalante Outfitters & Bunkhouse (310 West Main Street, PO Box 158, Escalante, UT 84726, 801/826-4266) offers mountain bike tours and shuttles, specializing in the Escalante River Canyons National Monument. The tiny Torrey area offers some excellent places to stay and eat within close proximity to the Capitol Reef National Park.
SkyRidge Bed & Breakfast, PO Box 750220, Torrey, UT 84775, 801/425-3222 (phone & fax), feels like a western art gallery, with modern book-filled rooms, with hot tubs. Highly recommended.
Cockscomb Inn B&B;, Box B, Teasdale, UT 84773, 801/425-3511 (phone & fax), is a cozy refurbished old home with guest rooms.
Cafe Diablo, in Torrey, 801/425-3070, serves unlikely, imaginative, delectable southwestern food. It's clean, and unlike certain other local establishments that serve Mormon proscriptions against stimulants along with your meal, they do not burn the coffee. It is definitely the best restaurant in the area, if not the state.
For area information contact Wayne County Travel Council, PO Box 7, Teasdale, UT 84773, 800/858-7951.
Steve Cohen is the author of Adventure Guide To The High Southwest, 2nd Edition, 1996, and Adventure Guide To Utah, 1996, both available from Hunter Publishing. The books detail activities on foot, on horseback, on wheels (jeeps, 4-wheel drives, bikes), on water, and on snow, as well as accommodations and dining throughout Utah and the adjacent states of Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.
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