I have done you share if iconic rides, Dragon, Beartooth, Blue ridge and others but the ride up and down Piles Peak is the most exciting ride I have been on. What a thrill.
You must have gone on a off day!
I went up Pike's Peak on August 27th, a Saturday, with a group of ST-Owers.
It was slow going do to so many people going up (and I'm not talking about our group, either!)
I found Beartooth Pass a lot better, very few cages in the way!![]()
I have done you share if iconic rides, Dragon, Beartooth, Blue ridge and others but the ride up and down Piles Peak is the most exciting ride I have been on. What a thrill.
I have done you share if iconic rides, Dragon, Beartooth, Blue ridge and others but the ride up and down Piles Peak is the most exciting ride I have been on. What a thrill.
Bob, I went on a Monday, passed cages below treeline, many pulled over, but nobody I front for last push to summit, and it sure was cold up there.
How was your breathing? I couldn't stay up there too long, I didn't feel like riding down being that long without air!:
Love the thin air. Builds stamina. Can't stand all that thick air down in the Flats. Gotta get my Rocky Mountain High somehow.![]()

How was your breathing? I couldn't stay up there too long, I didn't feel like riding down being that long without air!:
You ought to do Trail Ridge in the RMNP, or MT. Evans, or Independence Pass, or Cotton Wood Pass, or Red Mountain Pass above Ouray on 550. Just saying.O and then don't forget about all the 4x4 dirt Passes. Black Bear, Engineer, ETC.
I did Mt Evans eons ago on a Honda CB500 four. It is a fantastic ride.You ought to do Trail Ridge in the RMNP, or MT. Evans, or Independence Pass, or Cotton Wood Pass, or Red Mountain Pass above Ouray on 550. Just saying.O and then don't forget about all the 4x4 dirt Passes. Black Bear, Engineer, ETC.
I live in Colorado Springs, and my house is just a tad above 7,000 ft, but I was still feeling it a little at the very top.Just did Pikes Peak last month from WeSTOC. It was on my road bucket list. Traffic wasn’t too bad and the road was reasonably clean, some snow melt drainage and gravel though. The key is to keep your momentum around the switchbacks.
Regarding altitude, I only noticed a little dizziness when paddling my bike backwards to park at the top. Wandered around the visiter center, up and down some stairs and didn’t really have any issues. It probably helped being Cañon City, at ~6000 ft., a few days prior to acclimate a little.