Looney Tunes and Wile E Canyon
Plus What's Up Doc and Sufferin Succotash
The Cutthroat riding area lies south of Jordanelle and Highway 32. The
trailhead connects to the Wile E Canyon Loop and to the Coyote
Loop. Wile E Canyon can be a stand-alone loop ride, but has two ways of
connecting uphill to the Coyote Loop -- Sufferin Succotash and What's Up
Doc. The
Looney Tunes trail joins two limbs of the Coyote Loop, and can be used for
a shorter version of Coyote, or as a destination trail by looping two
sections of the Coyote Loop.
In Wile E Canyon near the southern apex of the loop.
Photos and trail review by Bruce on June
7, 2022.
The Cutthroat trailhead is 4 miles east of US 40 on SR 32. On the south
(uphill) side of the road, there's a strip of dirt parking along the fence with
room for 8 to 10 cars. A climb-over wooden ladder is your access to the
connector trail, which takes you uphill to Wile E Canyon or Coyote.
You can also ride into the area from other trailheads off the Coyote Loop.
See the trailhead information at the bottom of the page.
Here's the climb-over at the trailhead, with the
connector trail on the left.
The riding starts at 6600 feet elevation. The top of Looney
Tunes is at 7350, and the Coyote Loop tops out at 7600. Because this area
lies on a north-facing slope, the riding season at this elevation will be
June through October.
Wile E Canyon is groomed for fat biking during the winter. It may be
closed during the early spring from the time the snow begins melting until
the riding surface is dry.
Looking north toward the Jordanelle Reservoir.
The terrain is dirt with an occasional outcrop of igneous
rock. On the lower slopes, sage brush is punctuated by groves of gambel
oak. As you pedal higher in elevation, this gives way to maple forest,
then aspens. In this area, much of your ride will be in the shade.
Climbing up to Looney Tunes on Coyote.
Wile E Canyon
Wile E Canyon is a lariat loop ride that starts on the
Cutthroat connector trail just uphill from the trailhead. It has a cutoff
trail that can be used to bypass much of the climbing when doing the ride
clockwise. Wile E Canyon is 3.7 miles with 400 vertical feet of overall climbing.
It can be done in either direction, and there seems to be an equal number of riders each way.
It's quick enough that you can do the loop twice, once each way, and
decide for yourself.
Cruising through the aspen and maple forest on the
eastern side of the Wile E Canyon loop.
Wile E Canyon forks to the left away from the connector trail just 100 yards
from the highway. After a short stem of 0.1 miles, you enter the loop. You can
ride either direction.
Arriving at the trail fork to Wile E Canyon when
coming uphill from the Cutthroat trailhead.
If you're a beginning rider and intend to skip the tougher
climbing, go to the left at this trail fork rather than starting uphill.
You'll traverse around the hill.
Traversing around the hill, heading for Wile E Canyon
on a clockwise ride.
When done clockwise, you'll enter the canyon heading gently
downhill. You'll cross some areas of open rock, which provides the only
roughness on this ride. The rock appears to be an igneous
breccia composed of ash and broken granite. You'll then drop through the
bottom of the canyon and begin climbing south uphill.
Cruising into the area of open rock.
There really aren't any technical areas on the trail. The
volcanic rock is a bit bumpy if you're determined to keep your butt on the saddle. There are a couple of optional stunts. But overall,
the trail is simply smooth XC riding.
Looking downhill at a table jump on the eastern side
of the loop. To hit this, you'd be riding the loop counterclockwise.
You'll now cross the bottom of the canyon and begin climbing
uphill.
There's a bit of sage and grass meadow on the eastern
side of the loop.
At mile 1.1 of the clockwise loop, keep left as you pass the
Leghorn (as in, Foghorn Leghorn) bypass trail.
As the loop hits its
apex on the southern end and heads back downhill, the Sufferin Succotash
trail forks to your left uphill (mile 1.6). You'll reach the western side of the
Leghorn bypass
at mile 2.2. If your plan is to bypass the harder climbing, you can fork
to the right and take the bypass for 0.1 mile and return to the eastern
side of the loop for the return back to the trailhead.
Shady forest near the southern tip of the loop.
On the western side of the loop at mile 2.4, you'll stop
descending to cross the ravine and climb through a series of turns. You'll
gain 100 feet in 0.2 mile. The trail levels out between the turns, so it's
an easier uphill than you'd think when you look at the topo map.
Rolling a turn on the slope of the western side of the
loop.
(When riding counterclockwise and using these turns as a
downhill, it's a fairly controlled descent. The tightness of the turns,
with flatter sections between the turns, forces you to keep your speed in
check. It's not a "bomber downhill.")
Looking downhill through a turn on this
"wiggles" section.
After climbing through the wiggles, you'll reach a traverse
near the top of the ridge. The trail will head back to the north, with
some nice views over Jordanelle and the valley below you to the right.
At mile 2.9, the What's Up Doc trail is on your left. Many riders turn
here to head further uphill to the Coyote Loop. Keep straight if you're
going back to the trailhead.
Looking north toweard Highway 32 and Jordanelle.
At mile 3.1 you'll drop through a series of swooping turns
to arrive back at the loop fork. Now turn around and do the loop in
reverse!
Descending through the swoops toward the loop fork on
the clockwise ride.
Some point-of-view
footage of Wile E Canyon on a counterclockwise ride...
If the above video does not appear on your
browser/device, you can watch it on YouTube by clicking
here.
What's Up Doc
The What's Up Doc trail connects the highest elevation on
the eastern side of the Wile E Canyon Loop to the Coyote Loop. The
combination of Wile E Canyon and What's Up Doc offers an alternative route
for the first part of the climb when doing the Coyote Loop clockwise from
the Cutthroat area.
Looking south from the Wile E Canyon trail. The trail
on the left is Wile E Canyon, and the right trail is What's Up Doc.
The trail is 0.8 miles long with a bit over 150 feet of
climbing when done from east to west -- Wile E Canyon to Coyote.
Climbing uphill through gambel oak forest.
The trail is a bench cut with a generous riding surface, new
in 2022. The
terrain is scrub oak, sage brush and maple.
After crossing the ridgeline on the climb from Wile E
Canyon, we're heading south. To the west is the Jordanelle Reservoir.
The What's Up Doc trail opens up additional loop ride
opportunities. My favorite is Wile E Canyon clockwise, then What's Up Doc
to Coyote, uphill to the top of Looney Tunes, downhill to Coyote and back
to the Cutthroat trailhead.
Almost to the Coyote Loop.
Sufferin Succotash
The Sufferin Succotash trail joins the southern tip of the
Wile E Canyon loop trail to the Coyote Loop on the ridgeline above. The
trail was finished in fall 2022.
Looking down the slope toward Jordanelle Reservoir.
We're still a mile away from the Wile E Canyon loop.
Sufferin Succotash is 1.4 miles long, with 500 feet of
elevation change. It lies on a north-facing slope, so it's shaded by a
forest of aspen, maple, and oak. The trail is an engineered bench cut with rollers and banked turns.
The pitch is
OK for early-intermediate riders. Sufferin Succotash makes a fine climber,
and is great fun to descend.
Bruce rolls through a turn on Sufferin Succotash.
Sufferin Succotash's upper end is on the Coyote
Loop, just 100 yards north from the junction of Chop'd
Coyote with the loop. A left turn takes you to Chop'd Coyote and
the southern side of the Coyote Loop. Right will take you towards the top
of Looney Tunes and the descent back to the Cutthroat trailhead.
A sample turn as seen over the handlebars.
If you're descending Sufferin Succotash, make a left turn at
the bottom if
your goal is to climb to What's Up Doc or to hit Wile E Canyon in the
clockwise direction. To get to the Cutthroat trailhead, the easiest route
is to turn right.
Flying through an aspen grove as we approach the Wile
E Canyon loop.
As a variation on the counterclockwise Coyote Loop -- with
more climbing -- consider dropping down Sufferin Succotash to Wile E
Canyon, taking a left turn, then taking What's Up Doc to Coyote and
climbing back almost to the ridgeline. Drop off Coyote to descend Looney
Tunes, then turn left to resume riding Coyote counterclockwise.
We're now on Wile E Canyon, headed for What's Up Doc.
The trail will descend, then climb back uphill through a series of
climbing turns.
A descent from Coyote on
Sufferin Succotash...
If the above video does not appear on your
browser/device, you can watch it on YouTube by clicking
here.
Looney Tunes
Looney Tunes is 1.7 miles long. It's a two-way trail but most riders will
prefer to ride it downhill. There is a bit more than 350 feet of elevation change
over the course of Looney Tunes. Of course, there's additional climbing required
for any ride that includes this trail.
The photos will follow a clockwise loop from the Cutthroat trailhead up
eastern Coyote southbound to Looney Tunes, then returning east on northern
Coyote.
Rolling through a banked turn as Looney Tunes breaks
out of the forest.
In the downhill direction, Looney Tunes is used
either as a short-cut on the Coyote Loop, or as part of a loop from the
Cutthroat trailhead consisting of eastern Coyote uphill, Looney Tunes, then the
Riverview section of Coyote back downhill to the trailhead.
As an uphill, Looney Tunes "short-circuits" a bit of the
climbing on the clockwise Coyote Loop, bypassing the descent down to the
Cutthroat trailhead and the climb back up. You'll skip around 500 vertical
feet of climbing.
Climbing a zigzag course uphill on Coyote.
When riding the Coyote Loop counterclockwise, the top of Looney Tunes is 14.3
miles from the UVU trailhead, 10.4 miles from the junction of southern Riverview
with Coyote. You'll find Looney Tunes shortly after the loop reaches the north
slope of the mountain above Jordanelle. It will be on your right. If you're
using Looney Tunes to
bypass part of the Coyote Loop -- see the map -- you save a couple of miles (3.6
on Coyote vs 1.7 on Looney Tunes). You'll also skip around 250 vertical feet of
climbing and descending.
Getting close to the top of Coyote as the slope
mellows.
When riding the Coyote Loop clockwise, the bottom of Looney Tunes is at mile
3.5 from the Riverview trailhead. The junction with the Cutthroat connector
trail comes 1.1 miles later (keep straight). The top of Looney Tunes is 2.4
miles uphill from here, at mile 6.9 from the Riverview trailhead.
Trail fork to Looney Tunes, seen as though climbing
up Coyote.
To reach the top of Looney Tunes from Cutthroat, pedal up the connector trail
to mile 0.4 then turn to the left at the T trail fork to begin climbing Coyote
southbound. At 2.8 miles from the trailhead, Looney Tunes will be on your right
heading downhill.
Swooshing downhill through tall trees.
As a lariat loop from the Cutthroat trailhead, it's 5.3 miles with 650
vertical feet of climbing. The trail is non-technical, but recommended for
intermediates (or better) due to the amount of climbing and the nature of the many
turns.
A section of traversing trail with gentle uphill
takes us across a ridge into another canyon before resuming the descent.
Looney Tunes is a machine-cut trail, engineered with swooping banked
turns that ride well either direction. When riding downhill, there will be
short sections of gentle climbing or traversing. The trail is well-built and
a blast to ride.
An S turn in the aspens.
View to the west as the trail breaks onto
a ridge.
View north as we swoop down toward
Coyote's north side.
The bottom can be found 1.1 miles from the junction
of the trailhead connector with the Coyote Loop if you're going to do the
little loop counterclockwise. The bottom of Looney Tunes is on a wide
ridgeline, so this northern side of the Coyote Loop is downhill in both
directions.
Bottom of Looney Tunes on the right, looking west as
if we'd climbed the Riverview section of Coyote from Cutthroat.
This area is a grazing area for sheep during late spring and summer. The
herd is moved daily, so you never know where you'll encounter them. Slow
down to walking speed as you pass through. Sheep are not known for their
intelligence, and they'll bolt from 40 feet off the trail to directly in
front of your tires in a second.
And after many miles of sheep tracks on the trail,
here they are.
When completing a loop ride from Cutthroat it's 0.4 miles
from trailhead to Coyote Loop (turn left), then 2.4 on eastern Coyote
(with 650 feet of climbing), then 1.7 miles on Looney Tunes downhill, then
1.1 miles downhill on Coyote back to the Cutthroat connector trail fork.
From the Highway 32 trailhead, the Looney Tunes loop will be 5.3 miles with 650 vertical feet
of climbing.
Rolling through an igneous boulder field eastbound as
we complete the loop ride.
Downhill on Looney
Tunes...
If the above video does not appear on your
browser/device, you can watch it on YouTube by clicking
here.
Getting there...
Cutthroat (Highway 32) Trailhead: From US 40, drive up
Highway 32 four miles. Just as you exit a deep road-cut, look on your
right for a dirt parking strip with a fence and gate N40 35.430 W111 23.389.
Park and clamber over the fence near the (locked) gate. The singletrack
across the fence will take you uphill to the Wile E Canyon fork, and will
intercept the Coyote Loop after about 1/2 mile.
Bathrooms: No public restrooms
nearby.
Water: Gas stations in Heber, campgrounds.
Camping: Campgrounds at Jordanelle
Bike services: Slim and Knobby's bike shop, Heber
Riverview Trailhead:
From Salt Lake, take I-80 eastbound to Silver Creek Junction (just
past Park City). Go south on US-40, past the Jordanelle reservoir and
descend past the dam. At the traffic light at mile 14.2 from I-80, turn
left on 32 and climb 1.1 miles. When you see the second entry into
Riverview on your left, note the gravel parking area on your right N40 34.403 W111 25.214. That's
your spot.
From Utah County, drive up Provo Canyon to Heber. At the traffic
light on US-189/US-40, turn left and drive north through Heber. 4.7 miles
from the intersection, turn right on Highway 32 and climb 1.1 miles to the
parking area as above.
UVU Wasatch Campus Trailhead:
One mile south of the junction of
Highway 40 and 32 (a couple of miles north of Heber), turn east (toward the mountain) at the UVU campus.
Go to the uppermost level of parking behind the UVU buildings. Look for the
duck-under and kiosk N40 32.798 W111 24.735. A singletrack trail climbs 1.5 miles to the
Riverview Trail.
Coyote Trailhead:
Two miles south of the junction of Highway 40
and 32, turn east (toward the mountain) on Coyote Lane. Just after the
road crosses a canal, turn left into the parking lot. The singletrack
starts at the northeast corner at the step-over, where you'll also find a
repair stand and a kiosk with a trail map. The Coyote singletrack takes
you uphill. After merging with the gravel road to cross the bridge, veer
left onto singletrack then keep generally right and uphill at the trail
forks.
Canal DT trailhead: Just uphill from the light on highway 32, watch
for the canal crossing. Park along the road. Start riding south on the
doubletrack just uphill from the canal.
Bathrooms: No public restrooms
nearby.
Water: Gas stations in Heber, campgrounds.
Camping: Hailstone campground at Jordanelle on US-40, about 6 miles
away.
Bike services: Slim and Knobby's bike shop, Heber
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