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Tortolita Mountains Loop

Mountain Biking Trail

Details
16.33 mi
3,162 ft
Pedal through a beautiful, undeveloped mountain range to the north of Tucson.

The Tortolita Mountains are located on the north end of the Tucson Metro Area. While this ride departs directly from a subdivision and a Ritz Carlton hotel, you'll quickly climb into a wild, undeveloped mountain range, prompting you to quickly forgetting that you're right next to the city.

This loop is unusual in that the sections of trail closest to the city and the Ritz Carlton are the most difficult and most technical, but the most isolated trails are actually the easiest to ride. The most remote trails in the far reaches of the trail system would only receive a "Moderate" FATMAP rating, whereas the trails closest to the Ritz Carlton would receive "Severe" and "Extreme" Ratings. To keep riders getting in over their heads, this entire route has been assigned a "Severe" rating.

After departing the trailhead, you'll pedal through sandy washes before reaching a mandatory hike-a-bike. This rocky stair-stepped ascent is pretty damn brutal, but rest assured: it's over rather quickly. After cresting the initial hike-a-bike climb, you'll be back on the bike pedaling through up-and-down technical singletrack on your way to the far reaches of the loop.

After turning right onto the Ridgeline Trail, the trail character changes dramatically to bike-optimized expertly-constructed singletrack. With flowy turns, manageable climbs, and swoopy descents, this intermediate-friendly stretch of trail is an absolute delight to ride! Despite the lack of technical difficulty, this trail is quite remote, running through the middle of the mountain range and gaining thousands of vertical feet to crest and run along the ridgeline (shocker). From the ridgeline, you'll enjoy expansive views of the Tortolitas, along with glimpses of the city off the other side. After rolling along the ridge for a few miles, you'll rip back down a long descent and cross the wash.

On the other side of the wash, the route ascends a steep, technical climb on its way to the marquee descent down Wild Mustang and Upper Javelina. Some riders will be able to pedal this climb, while others may resort to hike-a-biking.

Based on the steep hike-a-bike that you began the ride with, you might fear that Upper Javelina will be downright unrideable. But rest assured: while this is no doubt a challenging black diamond descent, Upper Javelina is quite achievable, with well-built corners, fun rock gardens, slabs, and drops. It's an excellent tech-gnar rip back down to the valley floor.

Once at the bottom, turn left to pedal back to the parking lot where you began.

This loop gets a fraction of the traffic of other trails in the Tucson area due to the difficulty and remoteness, but the beautiful mountains and rad descents are well worth the effort required! Written by Greg Heil
Created By
Strava Routes

Route and Elevation

Segments

NameDistanceElev. Diff.Avg. Grade
N Secret Springs Dr Climb1.52 mi650 ft8.1%
W Cush Canyon Loop Climb0.65 mi272 ft8.0%
West Cush Canyon Loop Climb0.42 mi285 ft12.8%
N Dove Canyon Pass Climb0.88 mi377 ft8.1%
down hill to hike a bike1.24 mi-240 ft-2.9%
down hill zipper1.64 mi-407 ft-4.3%
Wild Burro Trail West (Goat Corral to Wild Mustang)2.38 mi-269 ft-1.7%
Burro Blast0.58 mi-177 ft-5.7%
Untamed Stallion3.70 mi-860 ft-2.2%
Untamed horses and feral pigs 5.03 mi-1,430 ft-3.7%
N Secret Springs Dr Climb0.61 mi387 ft11.7%
Aquabarrio Mucho Ascent0.70 mi374 ft10.0%
The Long and Chunky Road: Descending to Ritz---------(from Wild Mustang apex to Upper Javelina trailhead) 3.86 mi-1,417 ft-6.9%
Wild Mustang DH2.05 mi-774 ft-7.1%
Keep Wild Mustang Wild0.20 mi-154 ft-13.1%
The Flying Dutchman 0.41 mi-200 ft-9.1%
UJT Downhill Shred1.09 mi-636 ft-10.9%
Upper Javelina Descent0.96 mi-538 ft-10.6%
switchbacks0.47 mi-289 ft-11.6%
Boulder Bridge Pass E from dirt0.35 mi46 ft2.4%