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Although the
seat of extreme mountain biking lies just across the Lions Gate
and Second Narrows Bridges from Vancouver and Burnaby on the North
Shore, Vancouver itself has very little in the way of challenging
fat-tire trails, aside from those in Pacific
Spirit Regional Park.
Everett
Crowley Park is located in Vancouver's Champlain Heights neighbourhood.
Although the park has only been in existence since 1987, it has
already gained a reputation as a place to ride a bike, be it skinny
tire, fat tire, or BMX. In July 1997, the park served as the venue
for the mountain-bike races for the BC Summer Games. Burnaby actually
won the right to host the games, but as cycling is prohibited in
all its parks, the city refused to sanction a location for the mountain-biking
events, even though, for example, Burnaby Mountain is a latticework
of trails and would have made the ideal choice. In casting about
for a site as close to Burnaby as possible, games organizers arranged
for the use of Everett Crowley Park, which lies just a few
handlebar lengths inside Vancouver near Boundary Road and SE Marine
Drive. Named after the founder of Avalon Dairy, who was also president
of the Vancouver Parks Board in the 1960s, the park occupies what
for years was the Kerr Road dumpsite and is splendidly overgrown
with brambles and alder.
The focal point of the park for mountain bikers is a steep-sided
mound of compacted soil dubbed Mount Everett. As seen from the top
of this lone, cone-shaped promontory, Boundary Bay's intertidal
surface glitters to the south. To the west across the Strait of
Georgia, the ghostly forms of Malahat Ridge on Vancouver Island
seem pencilled into the horizon. Not far below, the Fraser River
flows by, flat as a plate. The mound is treetop tall and is covered
in Scotch broom. There is an interesting demarcation that can only
be discerned from the top of the mound. Most of the open ground
below is completely overgrown with evergreen blackberry, which meets
the forest head-to-head but goes no further. It makes you wonder
if there is an eternal contest between the two to gain the upper
hand. The single-track bike trails that weave through the thickets
leave little room for pilot error. If you were to tumble into the
blackberries, you'd burn for sure.
Easy riders
(and easy walkers) don't have to concern themselves with suffering
a similar fate. The bark-mulched pathways are broad and level, and
loop around the 96-acre (39-ha) park, touching on several viewpoints
along the way. At one, a handmade sign nailed to an old tree trunk
points to Mount Baker. You'll find enough trails in Everett Crowley
Park to keep you content for more than one visit. If you aren't
completely satisfied, bike a short distance downhill on Kerr Street
to Riverfront Park. You can see the park's piers, which jut out
into the Fraser from Everett Crowley. Bike paths run a long way
west beside the river but provide little of the views that make
its counterpart up the hill so special. The entrance to Everett
Crowley Park is located on the east side of Kerr Street near E 63rd
Avenue across from Fraserview Golf Course. There's room for a dozen
cars to park beside the unassuming trailhead. Riverfront Park is
located nearby at the intersection of Kerr and Kent Avenue East
and extends west to Gladstone Street.
The trails on
Burnaby Mountain (elevation 1,340 feet/403 m) are not open
to mountain bikes, but try telling that to the mountain bikers who
regularly make their way along one of the dozens of trails that
crisscross the mountain. Its high usage stems in part from the fact
that students attending Simon Fraser University at the top of Mount
Burnaby want alternate paths up to and (especially) down from school
other than the two roads that wend their way up Mount Burnaby (more
often referred to as Burnaby Mountain): Gaglardi Way from the east,
and Curtis Street (which becomes University Dive) from the west.
The use of
the challenging trails around Buntzen Lake by those on mountain
bikes is currently under discussion by a mixed group of hikers,
equestrians, and mountain bikers. Some trails are open, such as
the service road along the east side of the lake, while others aren't.
The wheel's still in spin, as it were.
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