The Snakepit Trail joins the eastern and western sides of the Stucki
Spring trail. The Snakepit Rim trail parallels Snakepit on a shoulder of
the bluff above, joining Snakepit near each end.
On the eastern side, Snakepit forks off Stucki Spring about
1/4
mile from the beginning of Stucki Spring just southwest of Clavicle Hill. On the western
end, Snakepit rejoins Stucki
Spring as it heads along the western side of the Bearclaw Poppy preserve,
about 2/3 of the way between the Cottonwood Wash overlook and Stucki Springs itself.
View on the trail as Snakepit climbs
up the wash. Photos December 8, 2011 by Bruce.
The Snakepit Trail itself is 2.3 miles long. But it
must be combined with other trails in order to reach it, so your minimum
mountain bike ride will be around 10 miles. The eastern two miles of the Snakepit Trail lie in a branch
of Cottonwood Wash. There may be occasional spots of standing water in the
winter and early spring. On the western end, it curves and dips through a
scrub desert.
Looking to the east, near the point
where Snakepit forks off the Stucki Springs trail. The red mesa is
Bloomington Hill.
The trail surface is easier intermediate technical. It's
suitable for experienced beginners. (There's one steep side-slope that can
be avoided by taking the southern fork in the wash -- see the map.)
Beginners can start from Bloomington and ride the easy Bearclaw Poppy
uphill trail directly to Stucki then Snakepit for an easy cruise.
Cruising along in the wash on Snakepit.
The Snakepit Trail can be used as an easier alternative
climb to the southern side
of the Stucki Spring loop. You can insert this trail into just about any
ride that uses Stucki Spring. In late winter, Snakepit (or Snakepit Rim)
may be ready to ride when the southern limb of Stucki is still a bog of
wet white clay. Do NOT ride these trails when muddy -- the
white clay trail sections especially are easily damaged.
I
recommend riding the Snakepit loop in the clockwise direction (up Snakepit and down
Snakepit Rim) because the sight lines are limited in the wash. If you turn
it loose downhill, you'll hit somebody.
For a simple ride, start at Bloomington and take the
Bearclaw Up trail to the Stucki Springs trail. About 1/10th mile later,
keep to the right on Snakepit and veer toward the wash. Next comes a fork.
Stay left in the washbottom. (The trail on your right climbs up to a small
ridge to join the Snakepit Rim trail.)
Shortly after you climb out of the wash, you'll find the Snakepit Rim
trail on your right. Turn 180 degrees and fly down along the colorful
shoulder of the bluff. Watch for the connector back to Stucki and Bearclaw,
and take Bearclaw back to the trailhead.
Near the western end of Snakepit, the
trail begins to pull out of the wash.
On this page I describe a longer ride that uses Snakepit and
the Snakepit Rim trail. I'm calling it the Snakepit Pretzel Ride.
See the by-the-mile description below. It starts on Bearclaw
from the Green Valley trailhead, then turns east on the Stucki Connector
to reach Stucki Spring. Then it follows Stucki to
Snakepit and drops down Snakepit to rejoin Stucki. From there, it proceeds
to Clavicle Hill.
Lots of fun riding in the wash.
At Clavicle Hill, the route forks west on the Snakepit Rim,
which parallels the northern edge of the wash in which Snakepit runs. It
will rejoin Snakepit in two miles. When Snakepit reaches Stucki, fork hard
left and follow Stucki to the Cottonwood Wash overlook, then continue on
Stucki all the way back to Clavicle Hill. This time, climb up the Acid
Drops to head home on the Bearclaw Poppy trail. This ride is 17.1 miles
total.
After taking Snakepit to Stucki
Spring, we're going to descend from the Cottonwood Wash overlook on a
high-speed run along the edge of the wash.
The most certain way to find the Snakepit Rim trail is
on the western end. Ride the Snakepit Trail from the west side of the Stucki Spring trail.
You'll be heading east. After 1/2 mile on Snakepit (before you head into
the wash), you'll reach a trail fork. The trail on the right
is the continuation of Snakepit; the left trail is Snakepit Rim.
The connection from Snakepit Rim to Bearclaw at Clavicle
Hill can be a little hard to navigate. There are several interconnecting
outlaw trails branching on the west side of the Acid Drops. If you're
bound for Clavicle Hill, keep heading directly east. But may I suggest
taking the connector on your right back to Stucki Spring, then climbing to
the base of Clavicle Hill to Bearclaw.
Heading east on the Snakepit Rim trail, returning
from the short loop.
If you're determined to find the eastern end of Snakepit Rim
from Clavicle Hill for an east to west ride, go to
Clavicle Hill. Just below Clavicle Hill (on your left if you dropped
down) is a trail heading west. Below the next drop is another trail to the
west. These trails meet after about 100 yards at a three-way intersection.
At the junction, take the trail on the left that traverses around the
little hill heading west. Don't go up the wash -- this third trail heads
up to connectors that rejoin Bearclaw above Clavicle Hill.
Looking north from the Snakepit Rim
trail.
Once you're on the westbound trail, stay straight and generally left.
Any forks to the right (heading toward the mesa) will go on to join the
Stucki Cutoff trail. Two trails that head straight south at 90 degrees to
Snakepit Rim drop down to the Snakepit Trail. (Note: Please don't follow
faint little trails! This area is a preserve to protect the endangered
Bearclaw Poppy. And it already has enough tracks to thoroughly confuse
riders.)
Nice rolling desert riding. We're looking west on the
western end of Snakepit.
Bottom line:
Snakepit is a fun trail that offers a variation on the desert riding in
the area. If there's water in the wash, Snakepit Rim offers an
alternative path or a loop route. Of the two trails, Snakepit is definitely more
interesting as a climb, while Snakepit Rim offers a blazing downhill. The 17-mile Snakepit Pretzel ride described below lets you
hit both trails, plus the best part of Stucki Springs.
View into Snakepit from a viewpoint on
the Stucki Springs trail just to the south of Snakepit.
Video of the short loop ride (up Snakepit and down Snakepit Rim)...
If the above video does not appear on your
browser/device, you can watch it on YouTube by clicking
here.
Snakepit Pretzel Ride from Bearclaw:
0.0 From upper Bearclaw TH, uphill
N37 05.337 W113 38.431
0.4 L across stepover gate
N37 05.171 W113 38.829
1.1 L on Stucki Cutoff connector
N37 04.788 W113 39.054
1.4 Two trails join on L, stay R westbound
N37 04.770 W113 39.362
2.8 Keep R at three forks over 0.2 mi
N37 05.534 W113 40.241
3.5 At Stucki Spring, L and southwest
N37 05.985 W113 40.561
4.0 L on Snakepit N37 05.661 W113 40.933
4.6 Keep R on Snakepit
N37 05.185 W113 40.833
(L = Snakepit Rim)
6.4 Join Stucki, keep L
N37 04.272 W113 39.590
6.6 4-way, go L on Stucki
N37 04.157 W113 39.391
6.7 Below Clavicle Hill, fork L
N37 04.212 W113 39.313
On Snakepit Rim
6.8 Keep L N37 04.278 W113 39.326
7.1 Keep straight N37 04.361 W113 39.509
8.9 Keep straight, join Snakepit
N37 05.185 W113 40.833
9.6 L on Stucki N37 05.661 W113 40.933
11.2 Cottonwood Wash view, go L
N37 05.232 W113 42.140
13.9 Keep R on Stucki
N37 04.621 W113 40.244
14.9 Keep R as Snakepit joins
N37 04.272 W113 39.590
15.1 4-way again, go L
N37 04.157 W113 39.391
15.2 Climb to top of Clavicle Hill, go N
N37 04.222 W113 39.304
Head back on Bearclaw
16.0 Back at first fork N37 04.788 W113 39.054
17.1 Back at parking
For mile-by-mile of Bloomington-Snakepit Figure-8
ride, see Bloomington Microloop page.
Getting there, Bearclaw trailhead: Take the Bluff Street I-15 exit in St.
George and turn west. Immediately turn south (left). Go over the hill and
turn right on Dixie Drive. Keep straight past the golf
course and some businesses. Turn left at the sign for Green Valley
Spa. (If you reach a "Green Valley Market" with gas pumps, you
just passed it. Turn around and backtrack to the second road on your
right.) Drive past the spa and park at the end of the road to start your
ride, or drive down into the valley to park at the official Bearclaw Poppy
trailhead. From the top of the mesa, head down into the broad valley.
Climb the wide dirt road on the north (right) side of the little sandstone
canyon. About 1/2 mile up the road, keep going through the gate at the
parking area. Bloomington trailhead: Go to the west end of Navajo Drive in
Bloomington. Go across the cattle guard. See the low rail on the fence 100
feet to your right? That's the trailhead. N 37° 03.116' W 113°
37.362'. Start out on Bearclaw Poppy, and fork left on the mini-loop about
1/3 mile later.