• Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!

    You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!

Cut your own trails?

Marc

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2005
Messages
7,526
Points
0
Location
Dudley, MA
Website
www.marcpmc.com
Has anyone ever cut their own MTB trails before? I made one a long time ago, when I was in high school, and I actually cut about a 1/2 mile worth and started losing interest.

I'm thinking about trying again, now that I've seen more trails, know more about them and what makes trails fun and interesting. The wooded area around my parents' house is a great place for it, rolling land with very interesting terrain.

And I already have a rake, pulaski and chainsaw... just because... why would you every want to be without those?
 

marcski

Active member
Joined
Jan 10, 2005
Messages
4,576
Points
36
Location
Westchester County, NY and a Mountain near you!
We're building a whole bunch of new singletrack in the local woods that we ride in. There are a bunch of really old trails and some old dirt, rocky roads. We only use a rack and our hands. There are lots of huge slick rocked boulders in these woods. So we look for those and scope out the terrain leading to them and find interesting, technical, routes over the rocks, around trees and through whatever rock gardens we can find. Of course, we've also been throwing in your log rolls every once in a while. Rode them this morning before work. Sweet! Rake away, Marc.
 
Last edited:

Marc

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2005
Messages
7,526
Points
0
Location
Dudley, MA
Website
www.marcpmc.com
Awesome! I'm glad you're having success.

There are some parts of my parent's land I could do with just the metal rake but most places there's a lot of topsoil, loam and leaf mold. To get a trail to last in those areas I find you have to take about 4" of that black soil off the top, and the pulaski is perfect for that job, as well as cutting roots and clearing weeds.

You should take some pics of your trails and post em here, so we can see the fruits of your labor-
 

Talisman

New member
Joined
Nov 1, 2004
Messages
673
Points
0
Location
New England, ayup
I cut short sections of trails and improve deer trails so I can bike them. The sections of trails I cut are usually to avoid wet areas or large fallen trees that can't be easily sawn. The challenge is to keep the trails cleared enough so they remain rideable as the briars, pucker brush, wild rose bushes and fallen limbs are relentless.
 

Marc

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2005
Messages
7,526
Points
0
Location
Dudley, MA
Website
www.marcpmc.com
Talisman said:
I cut short sections of trails and improve deer trails so I can bike them. The sections of trails I cut are usually to avoid wet areas or large fallen trees that can't be easily sawn. The challenge is to keep the trails cleared enough so they remain rideable as the briars, pucker brush, wild rose bushes and fallen limbs are relentless.

Totally unrelated obscure factoid... the wild rose bushes are most often not "wild" at all, most of them were transplanted here by the farmers of New England back in the 50's as a part of the "natural fence" program. All multifloral rose bushes. And then the took over everywhere. What a pita when cutting a trail.
 

Marc

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2005
Messages
7,526
Points
0
Location
Dudley, MA
Website
www.marcpmc.com
Yeah, I saw that when I googled the subject... Not a whole lot there if you ask me. I mean, maybe some of it may pertain to terrain other people build on, but I am in a predominately dry, mixed soft and hard wood area with not a lot of ground cover and brush except for some rather annoying firebush.

The biggest challenge is the thick layer of dead leaves and leaf mold. Those woods are a fire waiting to happen...
 
Top