Late Season Moab

|| Rain fell from 10pm Friday night until 12pm Saturday afternoon. We waited, drank coffee, talked and shot photos around the campsite. As the clouds lifted and the rock began to dry we made our way out to the Amasa Back trail in Moab and began our climb. Small streams had turned to creeks and red sand into crimson-colored mud thanks to the weather. By the time we reached this view the sun had just broken through the clouds and had begun to warm the rock at higher altitudes. Dusk fell soon after, and we made our way down, with fire, dinner, and the celebration of drier weather on our minds. ||

I shot this photo of my Santa Cruz Heckler on a Panasonic DMC-LX5 point-and-shoot camera.

The End

|| Hitching a ride home in the back of a truck happens year round. Rarely comfortable and often cramped, this ritual of riders or skiers making their way home en-masse is one for the ages. Out in Brian Head, where this shot was taken, you have to worry less about the police taking interest, and more about freezing your face off before you hit the campfire. During the winter in Big Cottonwood, you discover the fine art of duck-and-cover in order to avoid highway patrol, but that’s for lust of snow, not dirt. In this particular shot we were three deep in the bed and countless deep in the cab, with six filthy, muddy bikes across the back after riding Dark Hollow in Brian Head. You can see my foot in the lower right of the frame, jammed between the wheels in a desperate attempt to stretch out as we made our way home. Hardly the most technically impressive, this photo captured for me what that trip was all about: community and dirt. ||

Nights in Brian Head

|| Flip it over, spin the wheel, listen for the noise; the grind, click or clink that leads to the demon in your bike. From muddy ride to hot campfire, the day progress until you’re leaning over the fork, headlamp burning to light up the dark and reveal your ride. The midnight mechanic doesn’t sleep until the work is done, and even then it’s hard to sleep without a ride. ||

Art and Steve prep their kit for the morning’s festivities. Shot with a Canon 5D Mkii and a steady hand.

Riding it Out

|| Mountain bikers Ben Thomas and Steve Sramek look out over the hills of Brian Head, Utah. This was my first trip to Brian Head, and a wet one to say the least. This photograph was shot mid-ride on the Bunker Creek, the bottom of which we soon discovered chalk full of mud and cow paddies. Bunker Creek is a longer, multi-hour ride which requires shuttling with two vehicles from top to bottom. Brian Head is packed with riding options, some a little loose and rocky, others loamy or potentially buffed by group after group of riders. By the end of the trip we had ridden for three days, run into rain storms, countless mechanicals and flats, sheep herders, and wide skies full of stars at night. I look forward to going back. ||

The Canyons

Looking down over Park City from the Gondola at the Canyons Resort in Utah.

|| With acres of real estate and only a few singletrack trails criss-crossing its face, the Canyons Resort has suffered from a lack of freestyle mountain biking terrain. As of this past summer this changed with the opening of multiple, gondola and lift-accessed riding chocked with jumps, bermed turns and heavy features. Given the recent, growing interest freestyle riding south of Whistler and Western BC, the Canyons could carve out a niche for themselves over the coming years. Only time will tell, but for now there’s still a pretty killer view from the gondola. ||

Rampage: What Goes Up…

Mountain biker jumps to a wall ride transfer at the Red Bull Rampage event in Virgin, Utah.

|| Jump to wall ride transfer at Red Bull Rampage. This event is chock full of outdoor and mountain bike photographers all jockeying for the most amazing shots. I traveled down to the event with photographers Stan Evans, Re Wikstrom, and Erik Seo. Seo ended up with the opening spread in the 2010 Bike Mag editorial article that covered that season’s event. ||