I recently found this website and have been awestruck by the photos and riding opportunities in the SW US. I've taken 2 trips out west to mountain bike and car camp (and learn it takes a while for me to adjust to 10K feet). One trip was a sampler of CO and another trip was around NM. Loved the Gila NF in NM.
I'm from PA, and do my riding in north central PA, far western MD, into WV and a trips to the Adirondacks in NY and annual trips to WNC.
The following struck me from the pics of the SW riding (these are just observations to compare and constrast) :
1. Long trails legal for biking in the SW/W.
2. Very few trees. This means no blow down to contend with, less trail maintence and if there is a trail shown on a topo probably a good chance that is ridable. In my neck of the woods, if the map shows a trail, you don't know what to expect, it could be in good shape, it could be so choked with blowdown that you can't ride more than 30 yards at a stretch or it could be totally overgrown with mountain laurel making you think the trail doesn't even exist or it has been lost.
3. Big blocks of land with minimal human development. In the east, finding remote, truly off the beaten track trail is not so easy, but there a places that seem remote and are not NF wilderness, but not on the scale the west.
4. Water. The east has it, pretty much everywhere except for ridge tops. (I should start taking advantage of this start carrying less water
)
5. Photographic light--the SW has that sunrise/sunset light for good photography... the east, we have high contrast between shade and bright... so photos can simultaneously be under and over exposed. Plus, in the ridge and valley areas, the sun drops behind the next ridge and you don't get much, if any low angle sun.
6. Rain. I think I was on Grand Mesa? outside Grand Junction, CO and it started to rain, the rain turned the dirt roads into terrible fligging, clogging mud. Not so fun. In the east, it rains, the trails get slick but the mud isn't so bad. Those Rocky Mtn daily t-storms are kind of a nusance. The east t-storms are kind of mixed in with the weather patterns, not necessarily a daily occurance type of thing.
7. Exposure. East - a lot of riding, if not most, is under the tree canopy. Not in the SW.
8. Lifestyle. West -more laid back, larger % of population is outdoorsey than East? I don't know, maybe this is just a perception thing.
Comments?