Hiking

Ice Plant Trails

Intro: The Ice Plant trails offer some of the best mountain biking in the Ely area and are 
accessible right from town.  Summer and early fall is the best time to ride.  This network 
of trails is suitable for beginners up to advanced riders.  There's some big challenging 
climbs, some fun twisty single-track and some long downhills.  Mix and match the trails in 
this area or combine them with the trails at Ward Rec. Area using the new Connector trail 
and you can stay entertained for awhile.  Did I mention shuttling the downhill is possible?

Advisories:  The trails in this area are unsigned and can be very difficult to find your first 
time out.  Although we have tried to provide the best directions possible, you should plan 
on missing or not finding some of the trails.  Read the ride description carefully, look at 
the map, and plan on doing a little exploring your first time out and you should be fine.  

The majority of these trails are located within the watershed for Ely so please recreate
responsibly!  This also means that most of the trails are closed to motorized vehicles so
please keep the dirtbike in the truck if you choose to ride here.  Thanks!

Access to this trail crosses private land so please be respectful towards private land 
owners.  One of our goals is to establish permanent access, but until then understand that 
access routes may change.

Ride at your own risk!
 

The Trails

Cutoff Trail
Difficulty: Easiest
Length: 6.8 miles, 655' elevation gain
Notes: All of the climbing is pretty mellow, unless you miss the hidden 
single-track which might result in a little hike-a-bike. Not a big deal though. 
Lower Coyotes
Difficulty: More Difficult
Length: 7.9 miles, 907' elevation gain
Notes: A couple of short tougher grunt climbs but very doable. This trail 
is hard to find and if missed you start heading up Upper Coyotes, a much 
more difficult and longer ride.
Upper Coyotes
Difficulty: Most Difficult
Length: 11 miles, 1657' elevation gain
Notes: A long grunt of a climb and a couple nasty steep pitches make 
this a most difficult trail. Take the Connector over to Ward Rec. and 
combine this ride with G-Loop for a real long one. You can shuttle up 
to the Ward Rec. Area or Ski Hill Road and choose how much climbing 
you want to do and get all of the downhill.
 

Here's the GPS Tracks

 

Trail Description

Getting There: Getting to the trails is a little confusing since this area has 
a ton of trails, tracks, and roads crisscrossing all over the place and none of the 
trails are signed.  If you are trying to start from Ely I would advise bringing a GPS 
or a local guide for your first time out, otherwise you'll have to rely on your sixth 
trail sense.  Maybe we'll have these trails signed or marked with flagging by next 
spring.  That said the directions and map start at the water tanks next to the High
School off of the Hwy 6 bypass.  You can easily ride to here from downtown Ely.
Start near the High School and the water tank with the large Bobcat mural on it
(GPS 001) and head south on Bobcat Drive towards the college. On your right 
as the road curves left towards the college you'll see a series of berms, jumps, 
and trails. Head into this spaghetti bowl and ride west towards the mountains on 
the quad width trail that runs along a small ditch. You'll know you're heading the 
right way when you come upon an abandoned car, follow the trail left and keep 
going on this, ignoring all the side trails, until you get to the poleline road (GPS 030),
about 1.25 miles from where you started on Hwy 6. Remember this junction since 
you'll loop back to here. If you've made it this far congratulations.
Directions for All Trails: Cross the poleline road and keep heading 
west on the same quad trail towards the mountains.  There's a spaghetti bowl of 
trails in here that all end up in the same place.  Take the narrowest one on the 
right side, you should be able to get glimpses into a big canyon on your right.  
Keep climbing up and after about 1.75 miles you should see a trail that goes off 
to your right with a big rolling berm at the top of it.  This is the top of Whoops 
which loops back to the trail you just came up (see directions for Whoops later on).  
Another ¼ of a mile you should see a faint single-track trail coming in on your left, 
(GPS 031) this is the Cutoff which ties into the upper trails coming down. 

Keep climbing and in a short while (.14 miles according to TOPO) you might see 
a very hidden piece of single-track on your left (it's hidden so wider things don't 
use it GPS 009), this loops around to avoid a nasty climb. Look for it when 
you're halfway up the second steep pitch of the climb. If you miss it no worries, 
just climb the nasty hill and keep going. About ½ a mile from the Cutoff there 
is again a very hidden piece of single-track on your left (GPS 012). Look for it 
on a mellow twisty section right after a couple of steeper climbs. This is the 
cutoff for Lower Coyotes.

For Upper Coyotes keep climbing up Ice Plant Canyon until you top out at 
8,200'. On your right you'll see the connector trail (GPS 017) that takes you over
to Ward Rec. Area (see that trail description for more info). From here it is mostly 
all downhill. Watch out for the first pitch, it is STEEP! After that smooth sailing and 
some fun cruising downhill with a couple of unexpected peddles. Once you hit 
the fence line keep following the trail downhill, again watch out for another STEEP 
section! Keep cruising on this super fun downhill. When you hit a crest after a little 
bit of pedaling and before the next downhill pitch look to your left (GPS 023), this 
is where Lower Coyotes comes in (A fun alternative is to cross back over on this 
and then hit Whoops). At the tail end of this next downhill section it'll flatten out 
with some whoops, slow down and look to your left for a single-track trail. Follow 
this, and after a little while you'll see the Cutoff coming in on your left, then keep an
eye out on your left for some sneaky sections of single-track to avoid stupid climbs. 
Hopefully you find them, if not, life goes on and you climb harder. Enjoy Upper 
Slalom until it spits you out on a dirt road, cross straight over the road and continue 
with lower Slalom. This dumps you out onto the poleline, head North and tie back 
in with the trail you came up, then head back into Ely.

Description for Whoops: This is a fun little side trail (GPS 008) with 
some big whoops that were created by the Army Corps of Engineers to prevent 
flooding in Ely.  The only tricky part with this trail is the exit.  If you miss it, you'll 
end up in the bottom of Ice Plant Canyon and the only way out is to throw the 
bike over the shoulder and hike.  Not a fun experience for anyone.  After ¾ of a 
mile the trail will follow one of the drainage channels to the right (GPS 007), you 
should see tracks, and connect back with the trail you climbed up.  Climb up and 
take Cutoff over to hit upper and lower slalom or just head down.   
Group ride on the new connector trail
Single-track on Ice-Plant, photo Kent Robertson
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Site last updated 5/30/2006
Visitors since 11/14/2004