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Pothole Arch Trail
The Pothole Arch Trail is an out-and-back trail that forks off the
Amasa Back trail near the top. The trail is short -- only 2.2 miles each
way -- but it's a fun and scenic pleasure to ride. It will almost make you
forget the suffering of climbing Amasa Back to get to it. Plan on an
advanced tech ride with over 2000 feet of climbing.
Looking west over the canyon of the
Colorado River from the Pothole Arch Trail. Photos and ride description
from a ride by Bruce on March 24, 2011.
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The Pothole Arch Trail offers some alternatives to a simple
out-and-back. You can reach it via a slickrock route (called Domes?), from
near Amasa Back's end-of-trail viewpoint. On the way back from the arch, you
can fork onto Rockstacker for a short loop, or make a long loop all
the way to the bottom by adding Jackson. Note: Rockstacker and the Jackson
Singletrack are very technical and dangerous. They should only be
attempted by highly skilled and adventurous riders.
We're beginning to climb uphill on the
Amasa Back trail, looking back east at the fins of Navajo sandstone of
Kane Creek Canyon. |

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This ride description assumes you'll climb Amasa and go to
the viewpoint at the end of the trail. Then you'll backtrack to the
official start of the Pothole Arch Trail, ride to the arch and the
viewpoint a bit beyond. Then you'll head back via Amasa.
Some mellower riding surface as we
climb the Kayenta sandstone toward the top of Amasa. |
Our ride starts from the Amasa Back parking area, just up
the Kane Creek Canyon road. Hop back on the gravel road heading uphill.
0.6 miles later, fork right and drop down the ugly stair-step slope to
Kane Creek. Cross the creek and begin climbing the Amasa Back trail. This
first part of the trail is ugly. It gets better. If you want to avoid the
brutal ledges of the main Amasa jeep route, hop onto the Hymasa
singletrack for a lovely climb.
Sun breaks through the storm clouds as
we look north toward the potash plant on the Colorado. The cliffs to the
left are Jackson Not-Hole; to the right is the viewpoint at the end of the
Amasa Back trail. |

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The Amasa Back trail climbs from 4100 feet to 4700 over 1.9
miles. 300 vertical per mile average doesn't sound like much, but there
are some nasty rough little climbs scattered between mellower sections.
There will be some rough rock outcrops to test your uphill skills as you
climb the ledges of Kayenta sandstone.
Riding along the edge of the cliffs,
we're looking at Jackson Hole, with the rincon Not-Hole on the right.
There are occasionally hairy spots between sections of mellow riding. |
After cresting the hill at mile 2.7, the trail turns from
west to northwest and begins descending. You'll hug the edge of the
cliffs, looking toward Jackson Hole on your left, with occasional glimpses
of the Colorado River. You'll pass the connection to the Jackson Hole
portage (an up-the-cliffs scramble from the Jackson Hole area of the
Colorado River valley carrying your bike) at
mile 3.5.
We've reached the trail fork. The
little ledge starting in the center of the photo is the Pothole Arch
Trail. |

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Shortly after passing the under the wires of the power line,
you'll reach the Jackson singletrack connector at mile 3.7. Keep left on
the main doubletrack route.
Ride on another 1/2 mile or so. At mile 4.4, the Pothole Arch trail
forks off on your right. For this ride, we'll go to the Amasa viewpoint
(and climb a bit) first. Keep left and begin climbing again. Follow Amasa
to the viewpoint at mile 5.1, then backtrack to the Pothole Arch Trail.
(There's a shortcut across the rolling sandstone if you know how to find
it. I've heard it called "Domes" but I'm not sure if it's an
official route. I didn't see any signs during my ride. See the GPS track
file.)
Continuing on, the trail narrows into
desert singletrack with occasional technical spots. |
Back at the Pothole Arch fork, turn left and head northwest
along the edge of the hill. The route quickly becomes singletrack during a
short climb, then begins descending.
Around 0.4 mile from the beginning of Pothole Arch, the singletrack
reaches open slickrock (to your left). This is where the alternate
shortcut joins.
We're descending the slickrock area,
looking north. The trail is the white stripe of rock. |

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The trail will alternate between slickrock and singletrack.
The riding here is pretty easy compared to the challenges of the Amasa
Back trail. You'll enjoy the cruise. There are views in every direction.
Looking east toward the Colorado
River. |
In the sandstone areas, the trail is marked by an old red
stripe of rolled paint. When you come to the junction with Rockstacker at
mile 7.0 from parking, keep straight as Rockstacker forks hard to the
right. This intersection is marked with a trail sign.
The trail is now rolling Navajo
Sandstone. Easy riding. The paint stripe is the trail. |

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Keep rolling over domes of Navajo sandstone. In a little
hollow as you descend a dome, you'll spot Pothole Arch in the dome to your
left. This is the official end of the line. Most riders will backtrack 100
feet from the arch, then continue north about 0.2 miles to an awesome
viewpoint.
As we near the arch, the up-and-downs
get a little more prominent. |
Riding notes, Amasa to Pothole Arch:
0.0 Exit parking, uphill on road N38 31.710 W109 35.705
0.6 Drop R off road N38 31.435 W109 36.096
0.8 Cross creek N38 31.589 W109 36.080
2.8 Top of climb, for now N38 31.079 W109 37.115
3.5 Pass Portage connector, keep straight
N38 31.721 W109 37.678
3.7 Keep L at fork to Jackson ST
N38 31.761 W109 37.756
4.4 Keep L on Amasa at Pothole fork
N38 31.876 W109 38.369
5.1 View - End of Amasa - backtrack
N38 31.678 W109 38.871
Pothole Arch. |

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5.8 Back at Pothole Arch Trail,
fork L
6.2 Alternate joins on L, unmarked
N38 32.047 W109 38.661
7.0 Keep L and straight (R=Rockstacker)
N38 32.533 W109 38.449
7.8 R 100 ft to Pothole Arch N38 33.115 W109 38.447
then back and go north
8.0 Viewpoint, turn around N38 33.228 W109 38.545
10.2 Rejoin Amasa, head back
14.6 Back at parking
View west over the Colorado River. |
Getting there: Head south on Moab's Main
Street. When you reach the McDonald's on your right, turn right onto Kane
Creek Blvd. After 0.6 miles, go straight where the road seems to turn
right (500 West). Drive along the Colorado River about 5 miles until the
road turns to gravel, and head uphill about 2/3 mile. Watch for the "Amasa
Back Parking" area at GPS N 38° 31.329' W 109° 35.501'. Head
further up the gravel road 1/2 mile, and turn right onto the trail at the
sign.
Riding resources:
Printable one-page
riding guide
GPS track files (right-click and select "Save Target as..."):
Area trails GPX
Amasa/Pothole ride Pothole
Arch only
Topo map for printing: High-Res
Lodging, camping, shops:
Link to Moab area
resources
Bike services: Moab
Bathroom: Kane Creek parking, Amasa Parking
Camping: Kane Creek sites
Water: Campgrounds |

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