I need to give a special thanks to my long time riding bud, Bill O'Neil (Better known as “MrMountainHop” online) who put this route together and collaborated heavily with the creation of this page, particularly the options provided at the end. Bill has a real knack for putting together some awesome routes that often include trails off the beaten path. When arranging this ride with Bill my main theme was “I'm driving a long way, lets use all of the day.” Boy did Bill and the San Gabriel Mountains deliver on that. |
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Directions:
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Maps: Here is the map and elevation profile for this ride that also shows some of the options available for the ride. Electronic Data Files: National Geographic TPO - Google Earth KML - Garmin GDB - Raw GPX |
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Ride Notes: | ||
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The ride starts from the Chilao Flats Visitor Center. We did this ride in December so the campground was closed. My mileage described here starts from the entrance to the campground off highway 2. Normally I derive my mileage from paper notes using my bike computer. These where derived using my GPS track data. I find that over the course of long and twisty ride the GPS track data method tends to come up short on the actual mileage. This total ride could be as much as a mile longer than described, however the smaller individual segment mileages are pretty close. | ![]() |
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From the entrance to the Chilao Visitor Center and highway 2 (Point A on the map) proceed westward and gradually downhill past the visitor center. At 0.7 miles (Point B) take note of that the Silver Moccasin trail crosses the road here. You will be coming down the hill from your right later in the ride. Continuing on, you will turn right at 1.0 miles (Point C) (Following signs for the ranger station). You will cross over Chilao Creek and start gradually climbing. At 1.5 miles (Point D) veer right at the ranger station onto 3N14 which turns to dirt shortly after this point. The grade on this climb is mild all the way to Point F. The early morning temperatures here in December were pretty cold making me quite content to try and stay warm by pedaling. | ![]() |
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The trail to the summit of Mount Hillyer can be quite sandy during the dry season. This was not the case on this ride. Snow and ice did a fine job of hampering the climb today. The grade was fairly mild at the start but just about one half mile into the trail, it got stupidly steep for a short bit. Luckily it was short lived and mellowed a bunch until reaching the summit of Mount Hillyer at 5.3 miles (Point H). | ![]() |
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The Mount Hillyer trail flattened out after about 1.3 miles from the summit near Horse Flats campground (Point I). From there you will hang a right on a trail that is well marked pointing to the Silver Moccasin trail. In .2 miles (Point J) you will come to a T-intersections with the Silver Moccasin trail. | ![]() |
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Hang a right on the Silver Moccasin trail as it turns to the south and heads downhill. The next mile is a bunch of rock waterbar hopping fun as the trail weaves and switchbacks its way down the mountain. Looking through the photos I realized I must have really enjoyed this section as I did not stop to take a single picture. Around 8.0 miles (Point B) the trail comes out onto the road you started the ride on. Bear to the left and then a quick right to stay on the Silver Moccasin trail. | ![]() |
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For the next 3/4ths of a mile the trail has little in the way on the technical features and the sight lines are great as it sheds off about 400 feet. Those are some good ingredients for a downhill ripfest and we whipped up a good batch of the stuff. An added bonus was that the trail was out in the sun and south facing so there was no snow to put us in check. It was over all too quickly when the trail rolled out onto forest service road 3N86A (It is not on my map). Continue down the fireroad in the direction you were going when you came out onto the road. (south-southeast) | ![]() |
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At around 11.25 miles (Point O), You will come to a 3-way junction. The Silver Moccasin trail switchbacks sharply to the left and uphill. If you continue straight on the trail you are currently on it heads out to Vetter Mountain. On the day we did this ride we made the first set of tracks in the snow once we made the left. | ![]() |
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Over the course of the next mile we rode ride through a nice pine forest while mostly climbing along a hillside. There are a couple of spur trails that head off to the east and back to highway 2. The Silver Moccasin trail is well marked so it is hard to miss a turn. Around Point P, the trail switchbacks to the right as one of those spurs continues straight. I have a couple of pictures of this turn below as it is the easiest one to miss. From Points P to R you will be going through the Charlton Flats campground and crossing the campground roads twice. The second road you cross is 3N15 which goes out to Vetter Mountain. | ![]() |
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NOTE: If you are going doing what is considered the "Classic Figure 8" loop out here you will want to hang a left on one of the spurs or roads that head to the east at Points N, P, Q and certainly at Point R. Once you go beyond Point R on the Silver Moccasin trail you have committed to a significant chunk of additional mileage and climbing. I'll describe the rest of the Classic Figure 8 loop in the options section below. | ![]() |
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You should be pretty jazzed about that awesome descent at this point, I know I had a big stinking smile on my face. Time to whip it off. The trail turns quite freaking steep at this point as you will climb about 500 feet over the next 3/4ths of a mile. It is a rather pretty climb in the trees and the trail itself is quite buff. This section screwed with my head a bit as the trees and the buffness of the trail seemed to hide the steepness from my eyes, but the legs and lungs will telling the truth. The trail also is along a steep hillside so if you blow your line to the low side you could be in long roll down the hill until you hit one of the many trees. | ![]() |
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At around 14.9 miles (Point T) the trail thankfully flattens as it comes out into a pull-out on highway 2 at Shortcut Saddle. The Silver Moccasin trail crosses the road here and drops down into Shortcut Canyon. That section of trail will we ride on some other day. Considering that this was a December ride, we had to take stock on the amount of daylight we had left. Considering the amount of trail left ahead we assessed that we had a 30 to 45 minute buffer of daylight left. | ![]() |
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After Ride GrubYour options for after-ride grub are limited unless you want to drive 27+ miles back into town. Luckily the only close option is also a great one. Newcomb's Ranch about a 1/4 mile past the Chilao Visitor Center turnoff has some good beers, burgers and other goodies. The Ortega Burger did not stand a chance after our ride up here. At least one of the bartenders is a fellow mountain biker who is in tune with all the MTB happenings of the area. |
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This route is published in several books and online sources. Since I live near San Diego, I wanted something bigger if I going to drive such a long way. If you are not up for such a big ride you could do a smaller loop.
Do the ride as described above, but when when you get to Points N, P, Q and certainly at Point R, take either a spur trail or the road east back out to Highway 2. From the entrance to the Charlton Flats campground and highway 2, turn left and then a quick right onto 2N15. This paved road soon turns back to dirt. You will climb for about .7 miles where you will then descend for about 1.4 miles back out to highway 2. Turn right and mostly climb 1.4 miles back to the Chilao Visitor Center turnoff where you started.
If the main route described above is not enough or maybe you are against doing point-to-point rides, then this is for you.
Park off of Lynx Gulch Road (Lower trail head in parking directions). Ride east along Big Tujunga Canyon road back to the Alder Creek crossing. Just to the east the crossing is the skinny Alder Creek singletrack heading off north along the creek bed. The day we were there the trail was marked with a simple stick wedged in the ground. After about .2 miles of following along the creek bed the trail crosses Alder Creek. The crossing at Alder Creek is primitive. A bit of beginner-level route finding is required to pick up the trail, which leads up and to the right immediately following the crossing, over the crest of a little rock outcropping. Once you have picked up the trail it will soon join onto a fireroad for maybe 100 yards before splitting off to the right back onto singletrack. From that point on you will have 3.5 miles of some significant climbing and a couple of descents on a sometimes yucca infested trail up to Loomis Ranch. From Loomis Ranch you will keep going uphill on fireroad 3N18. The next section of fireroad up to the junction with 3N14 at Point E is make-you-want-to-cry steep. Don't say you were not warned. From this point you will continue on the rest of the route I described above. The Alder Creek add-on encompasses about six miles, roughly 2,400 feet of climbing and 450 feet of descent. The total mileage of this loop would be around 26 miles and 5,600 feet of elevation change.
Check out Bill O'Neil's account of this loop as he told it on the SpokeJunkies' Trail Graffiti Forum.
Alder Creek Part I, Part II and Part III.