Trails Utah https://tu.suziecampbell.com The Greatest Trails On Earth™ Mon, 13 Sep 2021 22:59:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.9 Hardlick Trails https://tu.suziecampbell.com/hiking/hardlick-trails/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/hiking/hardlick-trails/#respond Mon, 13 Sep 2021 07:30:22 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28809 Trails Utah is building state-of-the-art mountain bike trails like the new Hardlick Trail in Herriman. This downhill-only black diamond trail is now open and ready to rip. But we need your help to build more! If you can GIVE TO THE STAMPEDE FUNDRAISER so we can build more intermediate flow trails everyone will love. Thanks for the support!

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Love trails?! Celebrate Giving Tuesday Dec. 3rd https://tu.suziecampbell.com/hiking/love-trails-celebrate-giving-tuesday-dec-3rd/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/hiking/love-trails-celebrate-giving-tuesday-dec-3rd/#respond Wed, 27 Nov 2019 18:32:14 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28592 Giving Tuesday is a powerful day of giving when people just like you stop and give to causes that matter to them. Please take a moment now and consider what trails mean to you and consider giving to trails.

At Trails Utah we believe that trails can be a force for good in people’s lives. Trails connect us to wild places and help make our communities better, healthier places to live. They connect us to the landscapes we love and give us space to let go, recharge, and enjoy time with friends and family. Trails bring us JOY!

While access to trails is always FREE, planning, building, and maintaining trails is not. Trails Utah works to advocate for more and better trails, safe and secure trail access, and trails that are designed for FUN while safeguarding our natural resources. Grants and funding are often available for trail construction, but moving dirt is only the very last phase of a project.

We need your support to conduct the critical behind-the scenes planning that often takes years before a shovel ever hits the dirt. Project development involves extensive planning, stakeholder agreements, design work, environmental studies and many other tasks before grants can be written. Please help us do the work needed to bring you,….

Click here to Give to Trails Utah for Giving Tuesday!

Thanks and Happy Trails this Holiday Season!

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You Are Needed https://tu.suziecampbell.com/news/you-are-needed/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/news/you-are-needed/#respond Tue, 27 Jun 2017 17:18:16 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28411 WE NEED YOU!!!!

Join Trails Utah and help us plan for and build the Greatest Trails on Earth right here in your backyard! We need to count you among the ranks of those seeking better funding for trail projects and access to Utah’s open spaces as we work with elected officials and funding entities to bring more resources to trails in our state.

Trails Utah is an advocacy and facilitation organization with the professional experience and capacity to bring stakeholders together, plan, design, and execute the creation of trails for all types of trail users. We build trails using the very latest sustainable design features and are dedicated to working with trail user groups and land managers to protect the environments we play in and provide the best trail experience possible.

We know you love trails, so become a Trailhead, a Scout, or a Pathfinder, pick up some of our great logoed gear, and stand (hike, run, walk, bike) with us! We provide a whole host of planning and management services at very low or no cost so we can take care of trails, plan for new trails, and doing outreach. There’s a lot of work to do and we need your support!

Thank you,

Sarah L. Bennett

Executive Director

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What is a Hamongog Anyway? https://tu.suziecampbell.com/hiking/what-is-a-hamongog-anyway/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/hiking/what-is-a-hamongog-anyway/#comments Wed, 21 Jun 2017 00:39:06 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28387 Have you ever looked at the map above alpine and noticed First Hamongog, Second Hamongog, and East Hamongog? Well, you are not alone. I have done this many of times. After living in the Lehi area for the past four years and exploring the various mountains around here I finally made it up to the Hammongogs.

These names sound mythological. They sound like some sort of winged sculpture. Because of this, I always presumed that they were some sort of rock formation out of the mountain. Well, I recently discovered that that is not the case. They are not some mystical rock outcropping or natural gargoyle. They are something very different. So, I went to the discovery to find the origin and why we have three of them off of the south side of Lone Peak in the Wasatch Mountains.

Who Named the Hamongogs? It is difficult to locate the origin of the names of these three areas upon the North Mountain. What we can derive is where the names come from to establish what a Hamongog actually is. While planning a route up to Lake Hardy this past week I stumbled upon the blog, Hiking in Utah’s Wasatch Mountains which stated, “In this instance, it means ‘mountain meadow’. The name is derived from a reference in the Bible meaning ‘Valley of the multitudes of Gog’.” So, knowing a little bit of my biblical history and reference I knew that Gog was an Old Testament reference. I took this knowledge and turned to the Hebrew lexicon to divine my name origin.

According to the Strong’s Concordance here is what I found,

Hamon-Gog – multitude of Gog, the name of the valley in which the slaughtered forces of Gog are to be buried ( Ezekiel 39:11 Ezekiel 39:15 ), “the valley of the passengers on the east of the sea.”

Hamon – a multitude – from the origin root of hammah meaning a sound, murmur, roar, crowd, abundance

Hammon – Warm Springs – A city in Asher, (Joshua 19:28) apparently not far from Zidon-rabbah.

So, from these three definitions, I come to the conclusion that a mountain meadow, or place of a spring, is established. I don’t think that this is going to be some Apocalyptic battleground, but they are beautiful meadows amongst a hillside full of trees. Now, go out and get up to one of the Hamongogs and enjoy them as I have.

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Support Cedar City Trails https://tu.suziecampbell.com/events/support-cedar-city-trails/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/events/support-cedar-city-trails/#respond Thu, 25 May 2017 19:06:52 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28368 Trail building season is upon us.

We have a lot of trails (5 to be exact) approved to be built this year. Our first trail to focus on is a trail that will connect the “C” Trail to the new Greens Lake Trailhead. When this trail is completed we will have an 8 mile trail from the top of the C Trail down to the Southview TH.

We will meet at the Greens Lake TH at 9am Saturday May 27th and work until about 3pm. We will have some tools available to use but if you have a rake to bring that would be helpful.

Things to bring: Work gloves, work shoes, water, and a snack/lunch.

https://www.facebook.com/pg/DMBTA/events

Hope to see you all out there.

Dixie Mountain Bike Trails Association
Cedar Chapter

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Wire Mesa https://tu.suziecampbell.com/featured-trail/wire-mesa/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/featured-trail/wire-mesa/#respond Fri, 05 May 2017 21:09:59 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28312

Description of the Trail

Sitting amongst the desert mesas and vistas was a small and undeveloped mesa just above the town of Rockville in Utah’s Dixie. With the continual pressure of mountain biking in the region there was need for a new trail system here. For those that are looking for something a bit less technical than the classic Goosebury Mesa and yet more challenging than something like the JEM trail. If you haven’t spent some time on this trail then you ought to go check it out. The Wire Mesa Trail is a good undulating loop that can be ridden either direction. Having just opened in early 2017 this is a good ride that you are sure to enjoy.

Trail Stats

Total Distance

7.4 Miles

Vertical Gain

428 feet

Trail Type

Loop

Trailhead Location

Wire Mesa TH

Duration

Best Season

Activity

2 Hours Year Round Mountain Biking

Max Elevation

Min Elevation

Difficulty

4,502 feet 4,326 feet Intermediate
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Celebrating Earth Day https://tu.suziecampbell.com/events/celebrating-earth-day/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/events/celebrating-earth-day/#respond Fri, 21 Apr 2017 18:26:31 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28306 Tomorrow, we here at Trails Utah will be celebrating Earth Day by exploring the trails in Southern Utah. There we will discuss ways to help improve the trails throughout the state of Utah. Across the globe there are more than 1 billion people that participate in Earth Day activities. What are you doing?

Earth Day History

After the oil spill in Santa Barbara in 1969, then Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin sought to educate the public about the environment. Sen. Nelson then acquired the assistance of advocate Denis Hayes, who was the first national coordinator. While utilizing a staff of 85 individuals they were able to rally a national grass-roots movement that included 20 million people throughout the United States. They rallied, held public talks on the environment, and university students protested in defense of the environment.

“It was on that day that Americans made it clear that they understood and were deeply concerned over the deterioration of our environment and the mindless dissipation of our resources.” – Gaylord Nelson

Before this momentous step forward there was no EPA, no Clean Water Act, no Clear Air Act, and nothing that regulated our destruction of the environment that keeps us alive.

Paris Climate Agreement

Last year the world made a big step forward as many nations came together to sign the Paris Climate Agreement.

“We each have a role to play in ensuring that we do not pass a world beyond repair on to our children. Everyone must do their part, and as long as we unite to protect the one planet we have, we can leave it in better shape for future generations.” – Barack Obama on signing the Paris Agreement

This agreement is among many other efforts put forward to lessen our impact on the environment and help to better preserve it for future generations. We must do our part to keep this world a wonderful place to live, work, and play.

A Few Things You Can Do

1. Pick up trash along your local trail

We are trail users because of the peace of mind that they can bring. They bring us closer to this great earth in which we live. We especially enjoy the pristine quality of the backcountry. Many of our trails are heavily used and with that, unfortunately, comes unnecessary litter and human impact. Help by carrying out your own trash as well as any trash that you see along the way. If we all reach out then these trails will remain as great places to see and enjoy. The environment and wildlife will be better for it as well.

2. Conserve Power

  1. Turn off your lights and other electronics when you are no longer using them. This sounds basic, but only half of adults claim to do this simple task.
  2. Phantom power comes from large electronics that remain plugged in for extended periods of time. Many TVs and other electronics have a power saver mode, but the EPA reports that 1% of carbon emission comes from electronics left plugged in. Use a power strip and shut it off when you are not using these for extended periods of time.
  3. Renewable energy goes a long way in helping to reduce our carbon footprint. Look into solar programs, more efficient vehicles, and other ways that you can reduce your energy usage.
  4. If you won’t be using your machine for 20 minutes, turn off the monitor. If it won’t be needed for more than two hours, turn off the computer.

3. Conserve Water

The average American uses between 80 and 100 gallons of water a day. By slowing the flow we can bring this number down drastically. Shut the water off more, take shorter showers, and use more efficient toilets to reduce your water usage.

4. Reuse, Reduce, Recycle

We have become a society that is driven on consumerism. Thanks to Patagonia (worn wear) and others we are a little more aware that we can repair and reuse the gear that we have. We have probably all gotten a tear or ripped seam in our favorite jacket. How did we respond? Did we just replace it with a new one, or did we tape it, stitch it, or patch it? We can do our part in reducing waste by not accumulating so much and then repairing what we currently have.

5. Connect with the Environment

Various studies have been performed to show that time in nature, hiking, exercise, and green space all contribute to a healthier lifestyle. Such benefits include improved concentration, lower incidence of diseases such as depression, diabetes, heart disease and others, decreased stress hormones, and improved overall lifestyle. By connecting with these natural places we find a happier and healthier life.

6. Ride Share

By eliminated the number of trips that we are taking and amount of cars on our roadways we can help to reduce emissions into our air. Breathe Utah has been working to bring awareness as well as improve overall air quality by encouraging such activities.

7. Plant a Tree

Trees provide the oxygen that we need to breath. They help in reducing carbon dioxide to help us live a healthier life.

8. Support A Nonprofit

Nonprofits such as Trails Utah, The Nature Conservancy, Breath Utah, and others work to make the environment a more sustainable place to live. These nonprofits survive by individual member donations, corporate sponsorship support, and government grants. Utilizing the money raised we are able to put these funds to work to help bring awareness, advocate for the environment, and make the places that humans and the environment come together more sustainable.

Conclusion

By taking care of this earth that we have stewardship over we are leaving it better for future generations as well as making it more sustainable for each of us. We love to play in the great places that the outdoors provides so let us watch out for it and do something this Earth Day to celebrate our great planet!

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Bells Canyon Lower Falls https://tu.suziecampbell.com/featured-trail/bells-canyon-lower-falls/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/featured-trail/bells-canyon-lower-falls/#respond Thu, 06 Apr 2017 17:01:01 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28277

Description of the Trail

Starting at the Sandy bench this trail takes you along some beautiful singletrack up past Bells Reservoir and into Bells Canyon. Then following the creek up the canyon you arrive to a turn off that takes you to a beautiful waterfall. Bells Canyon Lower Falls is one of the great hikes of the Wasatch. The parking lot on any given Saturday confirms that. Be aware that parking can be tricky and the trail very busy on nice days in the WASATCH. The best times to take in this hike may be on sunny winter days when the crowds are few. We hiked this on one winter weekday and still saw over a dozen other individuals on the trail.

To help you find the trail here are some directions. Starting at the Bells Canyon Trailhead you wind your way up and along the the trail until you reach the reservoir. Many will end their hike here, but we highly recommend that you continue onward. Take the perimeter road to the east and you will come to a singletrack trail on your left. There is a sign to mark the trail to the waterfall. This trail will then wind through the trees until you come to a bridge hat puts you on the south side of the river. Follow the river up into the canyon. You will then climb your way up the canyon. After you’ve ascended for a while up the steep trail you will see a fork trail off to your left. This trail then winds back into the trees and down to a ledge where you are able to take in the views of the Bells Canyon Lower Falls. Along this side trail you can also capture some amazing valley views as well.

Enjoy!

Trail Stats

Total Distance

4.6 Miles

Vertical Gain

1,578 feet

Trail Type

Out and Back

Trailhead Location

Bells Canyon TH

Duration

Best Season

Activity

2 Hours Year Round Hiking/Snowshoe

Max Elevation

Min Elevation

Difficulty

6,793 feet 5,261 feet Moderate

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Love Utah Give Utah 2017 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/events/love-utah-give-utah/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/events/love-utah-give-utah/#respond Tue, 28 Mar 2017 03:59:50 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28207 Trails Utah is honored to be a part of the annual Love Utah Give Utah event again this year. Each year the Community Foundation of Utah hosts a day of giving at the end of March. This event is an excellent opportunity to give to your favorite nonprofits and learn about, and support some new ones. Trails Utah is proud to be a part of the non-profit community working to make life better for Utahns. We encourage you to support this event and give generously to the charitable organizations like Trails Utah, who are helping to make a difference.

The dollars we raise through Love Utah Give Utah will go directly to creating better trails and more trail access for you and communities around the state. We work closely with land managers, land owners, and governmental entities to create partnerships and aid in trail planning, design, and construction. Please help us share our love for trails during Love Utah Give Utah

We are committed to giving Utah The Greatest Trails on Earth™

DONATE NOW

Check out our current projects:

Grit Mill Trail System

Together with the Salt Lake Climbers Alliance and the Salt Lake Ranger District of the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, Trails Utah is working to help create a trail network of loop and spur trails that provides access to some of the most iconic granite crags in the state. Located at the mouth of Little Cottonwood Canyon in the heart of the Wasatch Range, this climbing area has long suffered for a lack of established trails that could easily and sustainably provide access to the base of their climbs. As a result, the area is traversed by numerous, steep, highly eroded trails. But we’re changing that. Working together with other non-profits, land managers, and county government we are creating a trail network that will not only take climbers to their routes, but provide anyone wanting to get out for a hike with some truly spectacular views of the canyon and the valley.

“Zoo to U” or Foothill Trails Renovation Project

Trails Utah has spent over a year working with the University of Utah, This is The Place State Park, and Salt Lake City Parks and Public Open Space to develop a comprehensive plan for improving trails and trailheads in the foothills between Emigration Canyon and the Avenues in Salt Lake. This project includes improvements to the Bonneville Shoreline Trail, new loop trails for shared use, hiking only trails, and improved trailheads. Like any worthwhile trail project adjacent to a bustling city this project poses enormous logistical hurdles but we are making progress and hope to have some new trails underway by fall of this year.

Great Western Trail Revival

This long-range project is dedicated to purposefully establishing the Great Western Trail (GWT) through the state of Utah, from north to south, for all types of trail users. First conceived of in the 1970s as a trail that would run from the Canadian Border through five Western states to Mexico, the GWT has largely existed only as a concept. Existing trails, jeep roads, and ATV trails have acquired the GWT moniker in places but realizing the trail as a connected, backcountry, through route in Utah for a variety of users has remained elusive. Starting in the Wasatch Mountains, we are now working to identify trail improvements and new trail segments that could better establish the trail for communities living along the Wasatch Front. Trails Utah is committed to reviving the concept and the trail itself, connecting people to the spectacular landscapes of our state from one end to the other.

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Beginning the Grit Mill Project https://tu.suziecampbell.com/news/beginning-grit-mill-project/ https://tu.suziecampbell.com/news/beginning-grit-mill-project/#respond Sun, 27 Mar 2016 00:57:07 +0000 https://tu.suziecampbell.com/?p=28392 This year Trails Utah is launching into one of our biggest trail projects yet! We are excited to be a part of a pioneering partnership between the Salt Lake Climbers Alliance (SLCA), Salt Lake County, and the Salt Lake Ranger District of the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest to help design and build a needed trail system for climbers and hikers at the mouth of Little Cottonwood Canyon.

The dream of a trail system that can serve recreationists and help protect the area has been pursued by the climbing community in Salt Lake for decades. Trails Utah is grateful for the chance to help make that dream a reality.

The Grit Mill climbing area, renowned for its massive granite buttresses, draws thousands of climbers from around the country and beyond every year. More than a few notable expedition and big wall climbers honed their skills on the granite faces of Little Cottonwood Canyon, a recreational Mecca for outdoor enthusiasts of all kinds. But because there are no formally constructed and clearly marked trails to get climbers to the base of their routes, this unique natural area has become heavily impacted by user-created trails that scar and erode the hillside. Garbage and graffiti have also taken their toll, but the synergy of public land managers working together with user groups and the non-profit community is going to change all that.

While Trails Utah will begin working with professional trail contractors to build the main loop trails through difficult rocky terrain, hand crews from the Access Fund, another non-profit dedicated to preserving climbing access and “conserving the climbing environment” will work with the SLCA to build the spur trails leading up to the base of the most popular climbing areas. They will also build “belay pads,” or platforms, where climbers can more safely belay their partners. Work will begin on the Grit Mill Trail System and Climbing Access Trails this spring and likely continue until completion in 2017. Come out and lend a hand and your support to this innovative trail project during one of several upcoming trail work days and events!

Written by Sarah Bennett

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