This faint singletrack trail runs through a remote zone right on the border of the Buffalo Peaks Wilderness.

Statistics

1 - 2

hrs

494

m

495

m

7

max°

Difficulty

FATMAP difficulty grade

Difficult

Description

The Davis Meadows trail is a faint, little-used singletrack that is worthy of much more traffic than this remote trail receives.

Running along the border of the Buffalo Peaks Wilderness, it’s difficult for a bike-legal trail to get more remote than this! The singletrack begins as a flowy line through grassy ground surrounded by aspens.

Quickly the trail gets more difficult, with steep rock rolls mixed in, or the option to down climb on a rickety wooden ladder. Around the halfway point in the singletrack, the trail crosses a stream and passes through a small group of ancient, abandoned cabins from the mining days of yore.

The final stretch of the trail gets much drier and rockier, ending in a technical rock-filled descent across the mountainside.

Boulders, babyheads, and ledge drops combine to create a tough descent—a radical departure from the rest of the trail. While the return pedal on the dirt road isn’t great, the views of the Fourmile Travel Management Area are stunning, and you’ll get a feel for just how far out in the middle of nowhere you actually are!