Sorry you had bike problems man! The DT is on my radar for next season for sure! Nice video, pics, and editing! I like your style! I love being a local rider in Duluth too! What a gem!
I appreciate it! Yeah mechanicals can happen but quite a bummer when they do. I did make it back a week later and rode the whole thing (next video!). Be sure to bring lots of water and snacks!!Yeah Duluth is fantastic, feel fortunate to be a local for sure!
Thanks for the tour, enjoyed it. My buds and i took a break from Cuyuna a few years ago, headed over to Daroof. Rode the Mission Creek trails, then tried to follow the DT. It was stil being pieced together, so it was pretty hard to follow. We ended up at Bent Paddle Brewing for a couple beers and lunch, then had to ride all the way back to Chambers Grove Park to the truck. Long day, but totally worth it. Beautiful town and trails !!
I love how, when mountain biking, it’s a natural flow of events to end up at a brewery! 🍻 DT is pretty well mapped out now, but still good to have some form of navigation, there are still a few tricky spots!
These trails are awesome and right at my skill level. I live in British Columbia and I ride up a big techy climb and then try to survive the crazy downhill. Great fat bike video as well from a year ago. I am thinking of getting one.
You could probably put a fat bike to good use up in BC! I’d love to ride out there someday, looks amazing. Yeah Duluth is a special place for sure, so much good riding. You can really feel like you’re out in the middle of nowhere, but you’re always close to civilization, and the riding really is fantastic. Thanks for watching! 🤙
@@robonbikes nice! I've only been mountain biking for about a year now so I'm still increasing my skill level. Maybe next year or the following year when I actually buy myself a full suspension bike. Right now I'm rocking a borderline entry level hardtail with a coil fork (polygon Xtrada 6).
@Tmacademia Nice! I started with a hardtail, great way to start! If you can make it to Duluth, the Mission Creek trails would be a good system to start on. Pretty darn smooth, super flowy. An all around good time!
Dt is awesome, especially with fall leaves changing. I have ridden it a few times start to finish, from Mission to Lester. So epic, the terrain and views are the best in the state imho. Last time i did it on a fully rigid fat bike, i won't do that again! Lol
The Traverse is a great ride and a lot more challenging than people think! I did it in August last year, when it was 90 degrees and very humid and it was tough! The fall is the best time to ride it for sure.
Heck yeah it’s a grind for sure! Amazing how many miles of great trail there are! Props for taking this on in hot conditions, that sounds like quite the effort, bet you went through a lot of water.
@@robonbikes I went through a 3 L Camelback as well as a 20 ounce water bottle and I still ran out of water around Hartley. I needed to refill before I hit Morningside, Hawk Ridge, and Lester River Trail. It was a total of 3400 feet of climbing! Even though it’s “Green” trails, it’s a grind. Maybe you can do the whole thing next year.
I actually went back 6 days later and rode the whole thing 🤙. That’ll be my next vid. Yeah man I went through almost 5 liters on the second go, got a refill at Hartley Nature Center. I’ve never had that much on a single ride before, pretty nuts!
@@robonbikes Yeah, I’ve run two Grandma’s marathons and the Traverse is a lot harder. Just sayin’. The climbing involved and the technical aspect of mountain biking makes the Traverse a huge challenge, as well as the distance. 43+ miles is a long way to ride on Duluth single track. I rode it by myself and I think that makes it even tougher, too. If I rode it again, I’d have someone meet me half way to replenish my supplies and ride with a partner or a group to make it more fun.
Dang, the fact that you said it’s harder than a marathon makes me feel pretty good about going back and finishing it (plus the 24 miles back to the car!). Great work on the marathons!! I hate running 😂
Nice video, Rob. Sucks about the mechanical. We were there in the Spring and I took some of those trails down into town to meetup with some friends at Ursa Minor Brewing and they were super fun along with some great views of the city and the water.
Too bad a mechanical limited what otherwise looked like a great day of fall riding in Duluth! The Traverse is incredible, it’s been fun to see it’s development over the years, finally completed the entire DT ride and checked it off the ride list earlier this year. Duluth has so many great trails it’s easy to forget about some, just rode craft connector for the first time in years and that is one scenic downhill. Looking forward to how your next ride on the DT went!
Nice work man, it’s a big ride to check off the list for sure. Gotta admit it was more of a grind than I thought it would be (at least on the second go when I actually finished it). I’d love to do craft from the top too, as I just took it down from Enger, either way it was a great bonus trail!!
Great video. I only hope that Duluth will build more adapted trails. I use a wheelchair so I can’t use a normal bike, but been riding an adapted 3-wheel mountain bike with Northland Adapted Recreation. We’re running into issues with trails that are too narrow, especially at little bridges. Not asking for much…just a bit wider trails.
There are so many miles of well-established singletrack trails in Duluth, this seems like a no-brainer. Would be great to see future builds incorporate an adaptive layout. Did I run into you at Tioga by chance?
Really digging the shots! Also that craft connector really wasn’t the worst decent for ya; I guess it’s better than being way out there with nothing. Really curious to see part two of the journey.. ❤😂🎉😢😮😅😊
Yeah Craft Connector was a pretty ideal bail route for sure! Duluth is ripe with great views, as you’re well aware, though lugging the camera on such a big ride is a questionable decision 😂
It can yes. This spring was difficult with all the rain, the trails were closed frequently. Latter half of the season has been great, but the trails are getting dry!
Would a full suspension XC bike work on this trail, or do you really need a 140mm trail bike? Also if I wanted to do an out and back ride, is there a recommended section of the trail?
That would be a perfect bike considering the length and amount of climbing. Mine is 120mm rear with a 130mm fork and it hit the sweet spot for this ride. If you like technical riding I’d start on the east side (Lester Park) for an out and back (Hawk Ridge is a great technical trail with great views to boot). Starting on the west side (Chambers Grove Park) would be more flowy. There’s no wrong choice!
@@charliemiller4910I actually made it to Duluth last weekend. I did use my full suspension trail bike, and I agree it would have been fine on my xc bike. The next day I did Split Rock , Fade to Blue going south to north was really hard … but fun. Lots of crazy rock gardens!!
Hey Rob, I live up here - shoot me a message if you want to ride the Traverse again from East to West this summer or fall. I can help shuttle a return vehicle from Mission to Lester unless you want the ultimate loop - to which I’d say we can ride back on Will Munger, Cross City, and finally the Lakewalk. ✌️
Sorry you had bike problems man! The DT is on my radar for next season for sure! Nice video, pics, and editing! I like your style! I love being a local rider in Duluth too! What a gem!
I appreciate it! Yeah mechanicals can happen but quite a bummer when they do. I did make it back a week later and rode the whole thing (next video!). Be sure to bring lots of water and snacks!!Yeah Duluth is fantastic, feel fortunate to be a local for sure!
Thanks for the tour, enjoyed it. My buds and i took a break from Cuyuna a few years ago, headed over to Daroof. Rode the Mission Creek
trails, then tried to follow the DT. It was stil being pieced together, so it was pretty hard to follow. We ended up at Bent Paddle Brewing
for a couple beers and lunch, then had to ride all the way back to Chambers Grove Park to the truck. Long day, but totally worth it.
Beautiful town and trails !!
I love how, when mountain biking, it’s a natural flow of events to end up at a brewery! 🍻 DT is pretty well mapped out now, but still good to have some form of navigation, there are still a few tricky spots!
These trails are awesome and right at my skill level. I live in British Columbia and I ride up a big techy climb and then try to survive the crazy downhill. Great fat bike video as well from a year ago. I am thinking of getting one.
You could probably put a fat bike to good use up in BC! I’d love to ride out there someday, looks amazing. Yeah Duluth is a special place for sure, so much good riding. You can really feel like you’re out in the middle of nowhere, but you’re always close to civilization, and the riding really is fantastic. Thanks for watching! 🤙
What an incredible trail. I love Duluth, maybe someday I'll ride it
Hope you can, more trails than you know what to do with, and I don’t think there’s a bad one anywhere in the area!
@@robonbikes nice! I've only been mountain biking for about a year now so I'm still increasing my skill level. Maybe next year or the following year when I actually buy myself a full suspension bike.
Right now I'm rocking a borderline entry level hardtail with a coil fork (polygon Xtrada 6).
@Tmacademia Nice! I started with a hardtail, great way to start! If you can make it to Duluth, the Mission Creek trails would be a good system to start on. Pretty darn smooth, super flowy. An all around good time!
Dt is awesome, especially with fall leaves changing. I have ridden it a few times start to finish, from Mission to Lester. So epic, the terrain and views are the best in the state imho. Last time i did it on a fully rigid fat bike, i won't do that again! Lol
Wow a fully rigid fatty, that’s some chunky terrain for such a steed! 😅. Probably good on climbs but slower over all the technical sections.
The Traverse is a great ride and a lot more challenging than people think! I did it in August last year, when it was 90 degrees and very humid and it was tough! The fall is the best time to ride it for sure.
Heck yeah it’s a grind for sure! Amazing how many miles of great trail there are! Props for taking this on in hot conditions, that sounds like quite the effort, bet you went through a lot of water.
@@robonbikes I went through a 3 L Camelback as well as a 20 ounce water bottle and I still ran out of water around Hartley. I needed to refill before I hit Morningside, Hawk Ridge, and Lester River Trail. It was a total of 3400 feet of climbing! Even though it’s “Green” trails, it’s a grind. Maybe you can do the whole thing next year.
I actually went back 6 days later and rode the whole thing 🤙. That’ll be my next vid. Yeah man I went through almost 5 liters on the second go, got a refill at Hartley Nature Center. I’ve never had that much on a single ride before, pretty nuts!
@@robonbikes Yeah, I’ve run two Grandma’s marathons and the Traverse is a lot harder. Just sayin’. The climbing involved and the technical aspect of mountain biking makes the Traverse a huge challenge, as well as the distance. 43+ miles is a long way to ride on Duluth single track. I rode it by myself and I think that makes it even tougher, too. If I rode it again, I’d have someone meet me half way to replenish my supplies and ride with a partner or a group to make it more fun.
Dang, the fact that you said it’s harder than a marathon makes me feel pretty good about going back and finishing it (plus the 24 miles back to the car!). Great work on the marathons!! I hate running 😂
Love your videos dawg! Love the representation on the MN trails! I'd love to try the traverse again in the spring (it kicked my ass last time).
Thanks man! Yeah the Traverse will do that, I did it a week after this ride, was completely tanked by the end.
Nice video, Rob. Sucks about the mechanical. We were there in the Spring and I took some of those trails down into town to meetup with some friends at Ursa Minor Brewing and they were super fun along with some great views of the city and the water.
Yup, great trails everywhere, with all the views too, pretty special place! Plus a brewery!! 🍻
Too bad a mechanical limited what otherwise looked like a great day of fall riding in Duluth! The Traverse is incredible, it’s been fun to see it’s development over the years, finally completed the entire DT ride and checked it off the ride list earlier this year. Duluth has so many great trails it’s easy to forget about some, just rode craft connector for the first time in years and that is one scenic downhill. Looking forward to how your next ride on the DT went!
Nice work man, it’s a big ride to check off the list for sure. Gotta admit it was more of a grind than I thought it would be (at least on the second go when I actually finished it). I’d love to do craft from the top too, as I just took it down from Enger, either way it was a great bonus trail!!
Great video. I only hope that Duluth will build more adapted trails. I use a wheelchair so I can’t use a normal bike, but been riding an adapted 3-wheel mountain bike with Northland Adapted Recreation. We’re running into issues with trails that are too narrow, especially at little bridges. Not asking for much…just a bit wider trails.
There are so many miles of well-established singletrack trails in Duluth, this seems like a no-brainer. Would be great to see future builds incorporate an adaptive layout. Did I run into you at Tioga by chance?
Really digging the shots! Also that craft connector really wasn’t the worst decent for ya; I guess it’s better than being way out there with nothing. Really curious to see part two of the journey.. ❤😂🎉😢😮😅😊
Yeah Craft Connector was a pretty ideal bail route for sure! Duluth is ripe with great views, as you’re well aware, though lugging the camera on such a big ride is a questionable decision 😂
@@robonbikes No doubt, The first ride Evan and I did he brought his full camera and tripod kit and that greatly hindered our efficiency lol!
if you havent yet, the umd trails are a pretty short but fun ride
Nice! I did one of them when I went back and finished the traverse. Think it was just called UMD.
Does weather often impact your ability to ride the trails?
It can yes. This spring was difficult with all the rain, the trails were closed frequently. Latter half of the season has been great, but the trails are getting dry!
Would a full suspension XC bike work on this trail, or do you really need a 140mm trail bike? Also if I wanted to do an out and back ride, is there a recommended section of the trail?
That would be a perfect bike considering the length and amount of climbing. Mine is 120mm rear with a 130mm fork and it hit the sweet spot for this ride. If you like technical riding I’d start on the east side (Lester Park) for an out and back (Hawk Ridge is a great technical trail with great views to boot). Starting on the west side (Chambers Grove Park) would be more flowy. There’s no wrong choice!
I ride pretty much everything here on a 120mm travel hardtail. a XC bike would work just fine in my opinion.
@@charliemiller4910I actually made it to Duluth last weekend. I did use my full suspension trail bike, and I agree it would have been fine on my xc bike. The next day I did Split Rock , Fade to Blue going south to north was really hard … but fun. Lots of crazy rock gardens!!
Yeah that Fade to Blue trail is a technical monster!
Hey Rob, I live up here - shoot me a message if you want to ride the Traverse again from East to West this summer or fall. I can help shuttle a return vehicle from Mission to Lester unless you want the ultimate loop - to which I’d say we can ride back on Will Munger, Cross City, and finally the Lakewalk. ✌️
Cool man, will do!
shlarbin the gnar
🤣 Shlarbin! I’m stealing that!
id be shocked if those were not builb by trail builders at one point. they have part in singletrack aswell as parks.
These were all built by trail builders