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Cold Creek/Larch Mountain/Tarbell Trail
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Cold Creek/Larch Mountain/Tarbell Trail 

Location: Washington, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 45.76369°N / 122.34444°W

Trail Type: Cross Country, Downhill, Mountain

County: Clark

Technical Difficulty: Medium

Aerobic Difficulty: Hard

Layout: Out & Back

Elevation Gain: 2000 ft / 610 m

Length: 10.0 Mi / 16.1 Km

Trail Quality: 
 - 1 Votes
 

 

Page By: Malibu

Created/Edited: Dec 6, 2009 / Jun 14, 2010

Object ID: 273720

Hits: 1684 

Page Score: 88.58% - 8 Votes 

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Trail Information Overview

This trail, which is a part of the system in the Yacolt Burn region of SW Washington, is a favorite among off-roaders in the Portland metro area. The reasons are many but a few include the flowy and switchbacky downhill, the epic views of other major NW peaks, the serenity of burbling streams, the fact that most of the best features of this ride can be enjoyed in about a 60-90 minute ride and the proximity to significant urban centers in this region.

 
Mount Saint Helens casting a ghostly profile in the hazy distance.

 
My favorite trail bud and I taking a break at the summit of Larch.

 
Riding the scree on Larch.

 
The reward for making the Larch summit.

 
Mount Rainier peaking over. He's not visible from too many locations in SW Washington until you get some elevation.


 
Mount Hood from near the summit of Larch Mountain.


 
Last gasp of snow for the Winter '09-'10 on this mid-March ride?


 
Cold Creek regulars at the parking area.



Riders looking for a big all day or even a multi-day loop with camping can tie this section in with the rest of the 25 mile Tarbell Trail loop. For more of a loop challenge, a detour over the neighboring Silver Star Mountain Trail can be included. There are several trailheads offering many options for places to jump on and off this system.

 
Snow is about 12" deep from an early November storm. Alaska style (thanks Eric)


For "routine" rides, most who frequent Cold Creek/Larch Mountain start at the trailhead located at the Cold Creek bridge along the 1000 Road and out-and-back up Larch as far as they feel like or have time for. The leg/lung burn climb is rewarded by some of the best downhill in the area. This is a great after work ride or a viable stop when time is limited. The options are many in this system.

By the way, someone may know why Larch Mountain was named so as there are really no Larches to speak of on its slopes. Perhaps the Yacolt fire of 1902 eliminated most of the Larch growth?

Trail Description

The Cold Creek/Larch Mountain/Tarbell Trail is mostly single track from with the occasional double track or logging road section. Fortunately, these are short and few. Along the way, riders can enjoy buffed surfaces, rock gardens, several bridges over creeks and drainages of various sizes, waterfalls, bermed switchbacks, small-to-medium jumps, and trail elevations that take the rider from creekside to 50-60 feet above and back in a matter of a few hundred yards. Trail junctions have adequate signage and mileage markers line the various routes about every half mile.

 
Looking back from a couple switchbacks up. This is a top class section of downhill!


 
Ed, our LBS owner and some of the Cold Creek regulars work on a bermed switchback.


Here is a LINK to the map of the Yacolt Burn trails which include Cold Creek/Larch Mountain, the Tarbell Loop, Silver Star and Bells Mountain. As a matter of clarification, this map does not label specifically the Cold Creek/Larch Mountain section but it is labeled Tarbell Trail and is the route on the map that runs in a generally SE direction from Cold Creek Campground to Grouse Vista.

Where's CC/LM? Any red tape?

LINK. to MapQuest map for Cold Creek Campground. This area is accessed by three main routes: The 1000 Road from Camas to the south, the 1400 Road from Vancouver/Hockinson to the west and Dole Valley road from Battle Ground/Yacolt to the north.

No red tape. Access to this area is free of any permit requirements for parking or access. It is managed by Washington Department of Natural Resources who have set up no-fee campgrounds at Rock Creek and Cold Creek. Just use your best trail manners, please.

When to Bike

At the 1200'-3500' elevation, portions or all of this trail can be ridden year round depending on snowfall, washout and slide damage, and the inevitable logging operation. Because the Cold Creek Bikers have adopted this trail, it remains in very good shape almost year round and dedicated individuals are pretty quick to take care of downfalls and other repairs and improvements.  
Early snow made this mid-November ride a little trickier and shorter.

Images

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