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Boundary Trail Epic
1 reviews
 5 of 5

This two-day trek from Adams to St. Helens on the Boundary Trail is one of the most spectacular and vicious rides you''ll ever experience. East end starts at the Council Lake Campground. Finish is at the South Coldwater (230A) Trailhead. The six-mile section from Bear Meadows to Norway Pass is in good shape. The rest is a crapshoot, especially in the middle of the Dark Divide between Council Lake and Elk Pass. Plenty of chances for carnage - big rock drops on the sides, trail sloughed off in places, limbs and rocks everywhere, unrideable motorcycle ruts.
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Latitude
46.25940750573607
Longitude
-121.63410186767578
Trail Directions
From Portland - I-5 north to 503 east at Woodland. 503 becomes FR 90 after Cougar. Take FR 23 (left/north) to FR 2334 to Councl Lake Campground. About 97 miles from Portland.
Trail Length
50-60 Miles
Trail Level
Extreme
Trail Type
Singletrack
City/County
Cougar
Zip/Postal Code
98616
Country
USA
Information Added By
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Reviews 1 - 1 (1 Reviews Total)

Review Date
July 28, 2006

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Aerobic Difficulty
 5 of 5

Technical Difficulty
 5 of 5

Ridden Trail:
Ridden Once

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 3 votes

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Reviewed by: Jim from CR ,  Cross Country Rider

Summary:
If anyone tells you they’ve cleaned every hill and obstacle on the Boundary Trail between Adams and St. Helens, they’re full of it. This 50+-mile mountain biking trek is an epic on steroids.
We started at Council Lake near Mount Adams on Tuesday morning and finished at Coldwater Lake north of Mount St. Helens on Wednesday afternoon. In between, we followed the Boundary Trail through the Dark Divide, one of the largest and wildest undeveloped areas in the West.
The ride team and I were poster children for AARP. My partners included outdoor extremist Brian Mahon, 49; former U.S. Cycling Team member John Platt, 50; and my brother, Dave, 52.
As Mahon described it, the plan was simple – “First, we’ll go up; then we’ll go down.”
In a 1995 book titled 50 Choice Single-Tracks, author and rider Michael Orendurff described the Boundary Trail as “a CAT tour – Constant Anaerobic Threshold.”
Orendurff rated the trails in his book as Easy, Intermediate, Advanced, or Absurd. He tabbed the Boundary Trail as “triple-plus” Absurd. “The surface is all the worst of everything you could imagine –,” Orendurff wrote, “sharp rocks, big boulders, scree fields, washouts, blowdown, unrideable up- and downhills, snow late into the summer . . . complete hysteria.”
The stretch between Council Lake and Norway Pass features 11 climbs of 700 feet or more, all above 4000 feet. Some of the ascents are so steep and so rutted by motorcycle traffic that they are ridiculously unrideable.
Orendurff failed to mention that there is virtually no water source during a brutal 10-mile stretch from Hat Rock to Badger Lake. We filtered water at Badger and staggered on to Elk Pass, where our support crew provided fuel and fluid. We gutted out the last 10 miles of the day from Elk Pass to Bear Meadows and then on to the trailhead at Norway.
We calculated the first day at 35+ miles – please note that these felt like nautical miles – with 12,000-15,000 feet of climbing.
The next morning, we worked our way through the Mount Margaret backcountry before descending near St. Helens Lake and pedaling up to the intersection with South Coldwater Trail 230A. It took 6.5 hours to cover the final 16 to 20 miles from Norway to the South Coldwater Trailhead.
My therapist and I will be discussing the Boundary Trail for some time, although I suppose it wasn’t all bad. I got to see spectacular terrain, came away with incredible photos, and, even at 55, was able to survive the ride.
I’m probably too whacked out to rationally estimate how much climbing we did during the entire ride, but I’d put the quad-popping, two-day total at close to 20,000 feet.
If you decide this is something you really want to do, be prepared. Orendurff recommends allowing three days for the ride, as well as a support vehicle to meet you at Elk Pass and Norway Pass. There is no cell reception.
“Excellent physical condition, flawless equipment and sound planning are mandatory.”
A little luck wouldn’t hurt either.



Recommended Route:
Council Lake to Elk Pass to Norway Pass to South Colwater Trailhead.



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Reviews 1 - 1 (1 Reviews Total)


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