Big Bear Mountain Bike Park

June 24, 2019
The relaxed head tube angle

Located less than 100 miles from downtown Los Angeles, Big Bear Lake and Snow Summit Mountain Resort are well within day-trip distance of about 18 million people, thousands of which are passionate mountain bikers. Those lucky dogs!

Sending it on Upper Fall Line. First rider: Scott Durkin. Second rider: Blake Rennie.

History

Back in the 1990’s, the heyday of downhill mountain bike racing, Big Bear Lake was the place to be. Many of the professional downhillers from the United States lived, practiced, and raced in Big Bear, and the mountain bike scene helped propel the summer economy. Anyone who was anyone raced in Big Bear, and it hosted several venerable World Cup races over the years. It was like this as recently as 2005–and then everything changed.

View of Big Bear Lake from the chair lift.

There’s a lot of hearsay and rumors surrounding the cause of the demise of Big Bear as a mountain bike destination, but after talking to a lift operator who had been around since the mid-90’s, we got the inside line on what actually happened.

From what we heard, it was the perfect storm of unfortunate circumstances. One of the main triggers was a man who was paralyzed while competing in a downhill race at Snow Summit(the resort that serves as the focal point for downhill mountain biking in the area). The man brought an eight-figure lawsuit for damages against Team Big Bear, one of the race organizers. He quickly lost the law suit, and thankfully decided to stop pursuing the litigation, but if he had continued he would have had to pursue NORBA, and then Snow Summit.

Since Snow Summit is privately owned, the owner decided that the money made running the lifts in the summer for mountain bikes just wasn’t good enough to warrant the liability coverage he would need to carry if another sue-crazy moron ever decided to come after the resort.

Following my bike up the chair lift.

At just about the same time, the US Forest Service came after Snow Summit too. While not pushing a lawsuit, they asserted that the traffic from the downhill mountain bikes was causing severe damage to the trails in the surrounding San Bernardino National Forest. Despite the fact that all the trails are multi-use and are open to hikers, equestrians, and motorcycles as well as mountain bikes, the downhillers bore the blame for the supposed damage.In addition, there was a significant rash of illegal mountain bike trail building taking place in the National Forest, which didn’t endear mountain bikers to the USFS at all.

After everything was said and done, mountain bikes weren’t banned from the chairlifts, but Snow Summit banned mountain bikers from riding anywhere on the resort property. They were, however, allowed to ride the lift up to the top and then exit the resort property and descend some of the trails that lie outside the resort boundary in the National Forest. Also, there were severe limitations put on the size and types of bikes allowed on the lift. All bikes loaded could only have one crown, couldn’t have more than about 5 inches of suspension, had to have 3 chain rings, and had to come in under a very severe weight limit.

The Present Mountain Biking Environment

While the lifty we chatted with seemed to want to push the blame for the demise of mountain bike racing and tourism in the area onto the USFS, the National Forest is still the only place where bike-riding patrons of the Sky Chair can descend the mountain. Snow Summit property is strictly off limits to bikes.

Current rates for the Sky Chair.

However, in the past couple of years, things have slowly been changing. The restrictions on the bikes allowed on the lift have been reduced significantly. According to the website:

1. Bikes must be less than 38 pounds.
2. Designated tire size must be less than 2.5 inches.
3. Front shock must have less than 7.5 inches of travel.
4. Bikes must have at least two chain rings unless they are single speed.

Even since these guidelines were published, the restrictions have been loosened further. Most of the bikes I saw on the lift had only one chain ring, many of them had more than 7.5 inches of travel, and the tire size has been upped to 2.7 inches.

Scott Durkin on a log ride near Dickies.

However, the one measurement that the resort has remained firm on is the 38 pound weight limit, which is pretty light for a downhill bike. According to the friendly lifties, the main reason for the continuation of the weight limit is an OSHA policy. Because the chairs aren’t equipped with roll-on bike loading, lift operators must lift bikes and hang them off of a peg, and apparently some regulation keeps the weight of the repetitious loading from surpassing 38 pounds.

Along with the loosening of the bike restrictions, IMBA Trail Solutions has been contracted to build a cross-country singletrack trail dubbed the “Skyline Trail” along the top of the ridge line above Snow Summit and Big Bear Lake. Rumor has it that Trail Solutions has also been recruited to consult on the possibility of constructing a new mountain bike trail on the face of the mountain on Snow Summit’s property. If such a trail ever comes to pass, Snow Summit and Big Bear Lake in general will be headed back on the path to the downhill glory days of yore!

Shredding the Current Singletrack

Since there are no purpose-built jump/flow lines on the face of the mountain like you can find at places such as Mammoth, Winter Park, and Whistler, the downhill riding at Snow Summit takes place on highly technical singletrack trails in the nearby National Forest. The lines range from steep with rocky/loose tread to steeper and rockier with bigger baby heads and looser sand! Granted, the Little Saigon trail is lusher and loamier and feels like you’ve been teleported straight out of arid So Cal and across the ocean to the jungles of Vietnam.

Source: www.singletracks.com
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