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Ride, Explore, and Dine in Valley Springs



November 30, 2020


If you’re experiencing cabin fever right now, you’re not alone. While travel options are restricted by the pandemic, there’s one way to get away, experience California, and stay COVID-safe: bicycle tourism. California’s Central Valley and Sierras have great bike rides that will give you a welcome break from daily life.

Great Bike Rides to Support Arts Education Each spring Valley Springs holds an arts education fundraiser for Calaveras County K-12 public schools. See https://www.rideandwalk4art.com/ The three route options are available on this website, 25, 45, and 75. The routes start at Hogan Dam and wind around the Tri-Dam Lakes. Hogan Dam Cameron Trail, New Hogan Lake A multi-use trail starts at a small parking area north of the park headquarters. From there it travels above the water on crushed gravel and a number of interconnecting sections of road. The wide trail provides easy access to the Wrinkle Cove area, Fiddleneck area, Acorn Campground, and Oak Knoll Campground, and eventually ends at the Coyote Point Trail just north of Coyote Point. There’s intermittent to no shade so hike or bike either in the early mornings. Acorn Campground to Observation Point is a must family ride. No traffic road. Rides 4, 8, 10, miles. Wrinkle Cove to Lime Creek, Valley Springs Five miles out and back to practice road bike riding skills. The road is mostly flat with several short rolling hills. Light traffic, watch for deer during fall and summer. Parking at Wrinkle Cove Sheldon Road, West of Valley Springs My favorite ten-mile flat road and with expansive views of Sierras. My wife and I used this road to practice and prepare for bike tours in Europe and Asia. Parking is along fence lines just off Highway 26. Turn around at Escalon Belotta Road Berkesey Lane, Rancho Calaveras Absolutely the best two-mile road to learn how to ride a bike. This is my go-to bike road to teach grandchildren to ride a bike. Parking at either end of the road. Gwin Mine Road, Paloma A three-mile downhill ride to Middle Bar Road and a hilly bike ride back. This is a good ride for e-bikes. South Hogan Road, Hogan Dam Reservoir Below the Hogan Dam and across Calaveras River is a six-mile out and back rolling quiet rural road. The hill climbs out are challenging but, the ride back is much easier. There is very little traffic and beautiful views of Sierras. Salt Springs and Hunt Road, Milton The Salt Spring loop is as well known as any bike ride in the foothills partly or maybe mostly due to its use for the Copperopolis Road Race in the early spring. It’s a lovely ride with varied terrain, great scenery, and very little traffic, but the pavement is very rough. If you can set yourself up with 28C (1 1/8″) or wider tires, you’ll be fine. With 23C road tires, you may feel a bit beat up afterward. Parking after Salt Springs Reservoir, along the road.

https://www.calbike.org/great-bike-rides-in-the-sierras/



“Big Trees has seen an increase in local visitors and cyclists during the pandemic, park representative Rhiannon Montgomery told the Enterprise, especially during more restrictive times. Yet the park has remained a “hidden gem,” despite a number of articles mentioning it over the years.” Published in the Calaveras Enterprise, January 21, 2021



A recent Forbes article listed “The California Gold Country” as one of the top 15 U.S. destinations to visit in 2021. Calaveras County Visitors Bureau Executive Director Martin Huberty took responsibility for the high-profile mention, part of an ongoing campaign to boost local tourism when the world inevitably emerges from COVID-19 shutdowns.


According to Huberty, the goal is to attract the right kind of traveler—someone who will spend money and respect local resources.


“The important thing to remember is that Calaveras County has been a tourist destination since the 1850s,” he said. “They’re coming no matter what.”


While 2020 saw an influx of visitors to the county’s natural attractions, arriving to “stretch their legs, dispose of their garbage and go home,” the parade of weekender vehicles stretched along the Highway 4 corridor was not significantly reflected in dollars spent at local businesses, he said.

Despite a seemingly unprecedented amount of visitors to places like Natural Bridges, White Pines Lake and Pinecrest Lake in Tuolumne County during the pandemic, data suggests it wasn’t enough to bolster local jobs.


Preliminary data from the state Employment Development Department for August 2020 shows a 31% decrease in those employed in Calaveras County’s leisure and hospitality sector compared to 2019, while retail trade saw a 14% drop in employment.


Meanwhile, visitors parked dangerously along busy roadways, defecated at protected sites and left their trash.


“Representatives from the Stanislaus National Forest said where they were putting one dumpster, they were putting nine dumpsters this summer,” Huberty said. Natural Bridges, a cave and swimming destination near Vallecito managed by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, has been a sort of “sacrificial lamb” in recent years, Huberty said, due to its accessibility and growing popularity among out-of-towners.


The visitors bureau doesn’t promote these “secret spots” in an effort to preserve them for a manageable number of visitors, Huberty said. But over Fourth of July weekend, Natural Bridges became swamped nonetheless, overwhelming local emergency services and causing the attraction to be shut down.


Officials are now developing plans to limit capacity at Natural Bridges when it reopens for the summer season, hopefully protecting the site for many seasons to come, according to Park Manager Cynthia Davenport.


At Calaveras Big Trees State Park, which was specifically mentioned in the Jan. 1 Forbes article, crowds haven’t been an issue due to the park’s ability to actively monitor and restrict capacity, if needed. Unlike Natural Bridges, the attraction requires the purchase of a pass to enter and provides ample, safe parking.


Big Trees has seen an increase in local visitors and cyclists during the pandemic, park representative Rhiannon Montgomery told the Enterprise, especially during more restrictive times. Yet the park has remained a “hidden gem,” despite a number of articles mentioning it over the years.


“We haven’t had an article that has given us that boost or brought that attention,” Montgomery said. “Forbes may be the biggest that we’ve had as far as reach goes.”

Big Trees State Park was recently one of the tourist destinations listed in a travel story published by Forbes magazine.


According to Huberty, bringing that attention to these underrated attractions is paramount among visitors bureau staff, who have been furloughed multiple times during the pandemic.


“Once this is over and people can travel again properly, they won’t want to come to the Gold Country,” Huberty said, suggesting that travelers will be itching to pursue vacations further from home.


To maintain the interest of discerning travelers, Huberty has forgone controversial social media promotions and instead forged working relationships with a handful of freelance travel writers who can best represent the area in publications like Forbes.


“We’re interested in bringing people to the county who are going to interact with our attractions. That’s a particular type of traveler. We’re not inciting a rush of people to come,” he said, though appealing to visitors who will spend money in the area while discouraging the more destructive visitors is a Catch-22.“

“We feel the pressure of not wanting people to come, but also feel the pressure of keeping places in business.”


Notably, most of the destinations spotlighted in the Forbes article are closed during the regional Stay-at-Home Order, including local wine tasting rooms, and the campgrounds and museum at Big Trees.


Nonetheless, Huberty said the focus on targeted media in cooperation with travel writers over the past year has already brought an influx of guests to local Airbnbs.


“What I love most about getting writers out here who have (lived) in the Bay Area for a considerable amount of time is that they had no idea any of this existed,” Huberty said. “I think most of this work is being done in the hopes that when people can travel properly again, we have our base.”






This blog post and photos are submitted courtesy –Mark Schwartz, Co-Founder, California Alps Cycling


One of my favorite things to do here in the CA Alps is to visit the little town of Genoa. It has a dusty, musty, rusty ol’ watering hole, named after the town, and it’s the oldest bar in Nevada; a few great restaurants/cafes, some antiquing and a nice little park, Mormon Station, for picnicing. It’s definitely worth some time and the bloody marys, and the cold beer, at the Genoa Bar can make for a nice little diversion – not necessarily on the bike but hey, to each his/her own, I guess. I’ve been known to partake in a beer or two during a ride. Haven’t tried a “BM” yet but I think I may just have to get that a whirl.


Okay, to make it an even better day, ride to Genoa! From CAC HQ here in Markleeville, it’s 55 miles and about 3000 feet of climbing. And, if you time it right (head out early a.m., NLT 9) so you’re coming back with the wind. Even then, no promises. The wind gets to whipping out in Carson Valley, especially in the area in and around “the mesa.”


So that’s my route, on this somewhat chilly February day. From CAC HQ, up to Woodfords, Diamond Valley, and Foothill.


As I mentioned, part of this ride includes Diamond Valley, Foothill Rd. and Emigrant Trail. You can add or deduct all or part for a shorter, or less hilly, or both, version of the ride. Diamond Valley, where Snowshoe Thompson (see my December 2017 post) lived, is a fun little diversion, but can be windy (windy’s somewhat redundant here in the Eastern Sierra, I’ve learned). Emigrant Trail, especially coming from Genoa, is a nice little kicker and if you haven’t done the ride from Markleeville to Woodfords than you’ll learn that those little rollers aren’t so little.


The altitude in Markleeville is about 5600′ and it’s about 4500′ in Genoa. Temps can vary, as always, depending on time of year but I’ve found that the typical weather apps are pretty good. Wind is generally stronger in the afternoon and generally comes from the West or Northwest. It can scream down those eastern faces so BOLO (be on the lookout) there. In the summertime, thunderstorms can develop quickly and drop a shitload of water in a short time so heads up there as well.



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