Mountain biking trail in works at Pea Ridge

Youth team to gain local practice site

Klay Templeton, 4, risks losing his sunglasses as he bikes Saturday along the new trail near Pea Ridge High School. Dozens of bike riders, mostly team members in the National Interscholastic Cycling Association, formed the trail by riding the route over and over to create a dirt path.
Klay Templeton, 4, risks losing his sunglasses as he bikes Saturday along the new trail near Pea Ridge High School. Dozens of bike riders, mostly team members in the National Interscholastic Cycling Association, formed the trail by riding the route over and over to create a dirt path.

PEA RIDGE -- The first multiuse, single-track trail in Pea Ridge will provide the local youth mountain biking team with a place to practice. It will also provide an outdoor recreational amenity for the larger community.

The Arkansas chapter of the National Interscholastic Cycling Association, the Pea Ridge Blackhawk Cycling team and Ozark Off Road Cyclists have partnered to build a quarter-mile, single-track trail in an area called The Grove. The area sits between the primary, middle and high schools.

The space was formerly an underused outdoor classroom, said Anya Bruhin, coach of the Blackhawk Cycling team. The 17-member team, which consists of middle and high school students, doesn't have an authentic mountain biking space to ride. It practices drills in a grassy field.

Building a trail on the site will provide the team a place to practice without having to pack up and drive to trails in other cities. Other community members could use it as a walking or cross country running trail, Bruhin said. The trail will be closed to the public during school hours.

Bike advocates and volunteers worked the first of two trail-building days Saturday. Participants worked from 9 a.m. to noon learning about trail construction and maintenance.

Eli Wiggins, a member of the Blackhawk team, was one of nearly 50 volunteers from across the region who helped create the trail.

He's experienced in maintaining trails, but this was the first trail he helped build.

"It's a lot harder than you think it is," Wiggins said, explaining that everyone packed down the trail path then labored to remove the grass with various tools. "It makes you want to take care of the trails more."

The trail will be valuable to the cycling team, Wiggins said, but also to others.

"There's lots of kids that ride who are not part of the team that would love to have this trail," he said.

The project will consist of two trail paths. One that is easy, and another that includes more opportunities for mountain biking skill progression, Bruhin said.

Benton and Washington counties have 219 miles of natural-surface trails. Other and sometimes larger trail systems have recently been in the spotlight, such as the Back 40 in Bella Vista, the eventual 16-mile Coler Mountain Bike Preserve in Bentonville, a proposed trail at Millsaps Mountain in Fayetteville and the 3-acre skills park that breaks ground Tuesday in Springdale.

Smaller trails such as the one being built in Pea Ridge have a role to play in the region's system, mountain biking leaders said.

"The smaller trail systems are important because they offer a controlled-environment opportunity for kids and beginners to learn in a safe setting," Bruhin said.

Smaller trails help provide experience and build confidence in young and new riders, said Brannon Pack, executive director of Ozark Off Road Cyclists.

Volunteers will construct the trail using International Mountain Biking Association guidelines.

The trail will help build the school district's mountain biking team and allow the district to offer diverse activities for its students, said Mark Laster, district communications director.

photo

NWA Democrat-Gazette

Ryan Amthauer (left) and Brent Flanagan break up rotting wood fixtures Saturday while cleaning up an area next to the trail.

Metro on 06/04/2018

Upcoming Events