

Be sure to bring plenty of food and water with you and appropriate clothing and bike repair supplies. Trail enthusiasts are encouraged to carefully consider their experience, skills, and preparedness before taking “The Plunge”. Less experienced riders may easily get in a difficult position with no alternate routes except backtracking to Lands End Road. The Palisade Plunge navigates remote, backcountry terrain with some sections of extreme exposure that require high levels of confidence and skill to ride. The final finish is a techy classic desert canyon, ending dirt at Hwy. The final descent along a ridgeline with views of the valley will grab riders’ attention and not hand it back freely. The route grabs riders’ attention with its variety of terrain and views of western Colorado landmarks as it mixes sections of tech and traditional feel back-country trail, catches slickrock playgrounds, and sections of extreme exposure. Crossing Lands End Rd for a final time at ~15 miles, the Plunge descends into Whitewater Basin, crosses Whitewater Creek, drawing riders into more desert environs. The “Otto’s Wall” switchback section of the trail is not for the faint of heart – ride carefully!įrom that descent into the flank of the Kannah Creek drainage, the trail traverses through dense Aspen groves, skirting the monstrous volcanic boulder fields from the rim above, and challenges riders back-country epic riding flavor unique to the region. At Shirttail Point, the trail begins its first substantial descent through a reconstructed section of the historic trail pioneered in the early 1900s by local legend John Otto, champion of the nearby Colorado National Monument.

The route begins at the Mesa Top Trailhead on Hwy 65 at over 10,730′ altitude, and covers nearly 12 miles of the topmost stretches of the Grand Mesa, moving through mixed forests and meadows to reach Shirttail Point Trailhead on the western rim of the Mesa.

The Palisade Plunge provides ~32 mi of trail atop the Grand Mesa and along its stunning west flank as it traverses and descends to the Colorado River and the Town of Palisade below.
