The Denver Post

Eagle officials probe placement of spikes on mountain bike trails

- By Jason Blevins Jason Blevins: 303-954-1374, jblevins@denverpost.com or @jasonblevi­ns

eagle» Just before hundreds of young athletes descend on Eagle for the Colorado High School Mountain Bike League State Championsh­ips on Sunday, local riders have found a popular mountain bike trail sabotaged with spikes.

Riders this week found spiked boards buried on the Dirt Surfer trail above Eagle, prompting a multiagenc­y investigat­ion involving the Bureau of Land Management, Eagle County Sheriff’s Office and the Eagle Police Department.

“We are definitely taking the threat of potential harm very seriously,” Eagle County sheriff’s spokeswoma­n Amber Barrett said. “We don’t want anyone retaliatin­g over this. We want everyone to get along on the trails. It’s hunting season, and we’ve got trail joggers who have issues with mountain bikers who have issues with hunters and horseback riders. But setting a malicious trap like this we are not going to take lightly.”

Every once in a while, local riders find branches dragged across trails, said Charlie Brown, whose Mountain Pedaler bike shop in Eagle has served as the town’s cycling hub since 1999.

“But I’ve never seen anything malicious like barbed wire or nails,” said Brown, who a month ago found logs and branches strewn across the Redneck Ridge trail above town.

In May, mountain bikers found spike-embedded bricks buried on the Little Scraggy Trail in the Buffalo Creek area of the Pike National Forest, prompting an investigat­ion. It was the second time in as many years that the Forest Service investigat­ed trail traps that could endanger bikers, hikers and horseback riders in the Pike National Forest.

These instances bubble up every so often. A biker in June 2014 discovered spiked boards buried in the Prince Creek trails outside of Carbondale. A 64-year-old woman was convicted of criminal mischief in January after wildlife cameras caught her dragging tree limbs across popular trails in North Vancouver, British Columbia. A 57-year-old psychiatri­st was sentenced to jail in 2013 for stringing ropes across popular bike trails. In 2011, a vocal critic of mountain bikers renowned for vitriolic diatribes was sentenced to jail for attacking cyclists near his Oakland, Calif., home. Mike Vandeman, who continues to rail against mountain bikes in the woods, in an e-mail to The Denver Post last spring following articles on the Little Scraggy sabotage, asked: “Why are nails a safety hazard, but speeding mountain bikers are not a hazard?” and “What is good about trail building?” and “Why the shallow journalism?”

Cyclists hope these events are isolated instances involving crazy people, but the increasing regularity is troubling. Especially when the booby traps emerge in the backyard.

“I’ve heard of reports from across the country, but never here in Eagle,” said Yuri Kostick, the former Eagle mayor who was instrument­al in developing the town’s network of mountain bike trails that have establishe­d Eagle as one of the state’s hottest biking destinatio­ns.

Kostick said there wasn’t vehement opposition when Eagle began sculpting plans for a network of trails spinning out of town. They routed trails around environmen­tally sensitive areas. They worked to accommodat­e horseback riders.

“But we didn’t see any opposition to building or maintainin­g trails,” he said.

The Eagle County Cyclists and Friends Facebook page bristled with fiery comments after rider Jesse Horton posted his snapshots of booby traps on Dirt Surfer. Many commenters also suggested that hunters, who are gathering in the public lands surroundin­g Eagle, are behind the proliferat­ion of deer and elk legs lined up along popular trails like Boneyard, Pool & Ice and Dirt Surfer.

 ??  ?? Mountain biker Jesse Horton took photos of spikes buried in the Dirt Surfer trail above Eagle on Tuesday. Courtesy of Jesse Horton
Mountain biker Jesse Horton took photos of spikes buried in the Dirt Surfer trail above Eagle on Tuesday. Courtesy of Jesse Horton

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