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Stakeout Trail System, upper trails
"Dell" trails and connectors, climbing route to Buffalo Peak
The Stakeout Trail System is located in the cooler glens just east of Kyhv
Peak. Each of the trails can be done as a nice out-and-back, or combined
into a climbing route to the Kyhv
Peak DH trails.
The lower trails of Stakeout, called Lacey's
Loops or the Kyhv Peak Circles, are discussed on another trail page.
This page covers the "Dell" trails plus
the Overlook Connector trail.
The trails are unmarked. From the Kyhv Peak Road, they're often impossible to
see, even if you know exactly where they are. A good map and GPS
navigation is recommended -- if you don't have a friend who knows the area
and will give you the guided tour. (Note: Kyhv Peak was formerly known as
"Squaw Peak." Kyhv is pronounced "kive" and is the Ute
word for "mountain.")
View of Timpanogos from the upper Erindell Trail.
Photos and ride review by Bruce on June
24, 2018. |
The Stakeout Trail System begins at 5300 feet elevation in
the Kyhv Peak parking area, one mile up the Kyhv Peak Road from US-189.
It extends through a series of trails to 7700 feet elevation near Buffalo Peak.
Although not particularly technically difficult, the trails are narrow and
sometimes bumpy, so I recommend the ride for experienced intermediates
with strong legs and good aerobic conditioning. The riding season will be
June through September.
Typical terrain: Maple and occasionally oak
groves with small meadows. |

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The trails can be accessed from the main Kyhv Peak
Trailhead by riding uphill on the BST Access Trail to the Bonneville
Shoreline. After turning right on the BST, it's 200 feet to a subtle trail
on the left, the Lacey's Connector. This will take you 0.4 miles uphill to
Lacey's Loops. After navigating (or blundering) through the loops to the
uphill end, the Erindell trail continues uphill as the first in this
series of trails.
You can also get onto these trails at several points where they approach
or cross the Kyhv Peak road. See the Lacey's Loops page for several
lower-canyon access points from the road.
Sample of a road entry. The two rocks guard the upper
Erindell trail from trucks and ATVs. |
This page will describe a climbing route from Lacey's Loops
to Buffalo Peak, with a couple of options. And although I've described the route as a climb up to the
DH trail,
it's a beautiful and fun ride as a descent.
Simply FINDING the continuing
trail will be your greatest challenge, so again, GPS and map.
Meadow of Mules Ear at their peak on the Overlook
Connector trail. |

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The trails, bottom to top |
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Erindell Trail
First, you need to arrive at the top of the loops. See the Lacey's
page if you need more information.
The Erindell Trail begins on the southwest uphill corner of Lacey's
Loops. It winds back and forth as it climbs 300 vertical feet in 0.8 miles
before hitting the Kyhv Peak paved road. I refer to this section below
the road crossing as
"lower Erindell" and the portion above as "upper Erindell."
Meandering back and forth through forest of maple and
oak. |
The narrow track meanders through small meadows and groves
of oak and maple. As it nears the road crossing, Erindell enters a fir forest
for a short time. This segment is different in character from the rest of
the system, which features small leafy trees alternating with meadows with
plenty of sunshine.
Dark and moody in the tall fir forest as we approach
the road crossing.
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Upper Erindell
As you reach the paved road on Erindell, go to the left
about 100 feet on pavement, then leave the road to the right on what looks like doubletrack. It
quickly turns into the singletrack upper Erindell trail at the boulders.
0.1 mile uphill, there's a meander loop option that will add about 1/2
mile to your ride. Most riders won't see this bit of trail and will simply
pedal past.
Upper Erindell is a riot of wildflowers in small
meadows as you meander through fir, maple and occasional aspen. |
Upper Erindell will wind back and forth as you climb 300
vertical feet over 1 mile. Then it makes a final short-but-steep run up to
the paved road. Erindell reaches the road right at the corner of the road
fork where the connecting road to the Overlook branches away from the main
Kyhv Peak Road.
Looking east at Cascade Mountain from Erindell.
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Ellendell
To continue further uphill on the Ellendell trail, pedal about 50 feet
west on the road toward the Overlook, then turn left uphill on a faint
singletrack. As with almost every road-to-trail transition in this trail
system, you probably won't see the trail unless you're standing on the
road looking straight into it.
Getting started uphill on Ellendell. |
Ellendell continues the winding character of the lower
trails, alternating between small meadows and groves of oak and maple. The
first half of this trail tends to be steeper and more taxing. Overall,
you'll add 500 vertical feet of altitude over the 1.4 miles of Ellendell.
Looking back down toward the Overlook road spur, with
northern Utah County, Utah Lake, and the Kennecott mine in the background.
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Ellendell will reach the Rock Canyon Back Trail (known as
the Rock Canyon DH) at 7050 feet elevation. Fork to the left (uphill) to
continue climbing. If you're done, you can turn left and start downhill.
Riding through some stout maples, headed for the next
little meadow. |
Rock Canyon Back (upper Rock Canyon DH backwards)
You'll spend only 1/10th mile on a relatively flat portion of the Rock
Canyon DH trail, pedaling south. When you reach the now-gravel Kyhv Peak
road, turn to the right and follow the road around the turn. Immediately as you complete
the turn, the Overlook Connector trail is on your right.
To use the Little
Rock Canyon trail as an uphill, watch for it on the right 0.1 mile further
up the road. Both of these options involve some steepish climbing. If you want to
skip that, you can grind on uphill on the road and catch further trail on
your right 0.3 miles uphill.
Looking south uphill on Rock Canyon DH.
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Overlook Connector
The Overlook Connector will climb over 200 vertical feet in 0.3 miles, so
it's a bit of a grunt. But it's pretty, with Mules Ear flowers and groves
of maple.
The alternatives are climbing lower Little Rock Canyon (very steep), or
taking the road (dusty and automobile-y). If you decide to head for
Ashleedell, you'll find the entry to the trail on your right 0.3 miles
further up the road.
Just getting started on the Connector. Not too steep
here. |
The trail gets a bit steeper as you climb. At the top, the
lush forest gives way to a bald hilltop. There are fabulous views from the
top of the hill. It may make you glad you fought your way to the top.
Now the trail will turn to the south and descend steeply to join the
Overlook Trail. Keep straight at a "real fork" and a
"sucker fork" as you coast downhill.
The beautiful stuff just won't quit!
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Overlook Trail
You'll spend 0.3 miles on the Overlook Trail southbound. When you reach an open area with evidence of campers and
picnics, it's time to find your continuing route.
A hard 180-degree left will take you down the lower portion of the
Little Rock Canyon trail. 90 degrees left takes you out to the gravel
road. Straight ahead is the Little Rock Canyon trail, which is your route
to Ashleedell.
Looking south. You can barely see the southern end of
the Overlook trail as it reaches the junction with Little Rock Canyon in
the saddle. |
Little Rock Canyon
From the clearing near the road, keep straight and find a wide
well-used trail heading south uphill.
After 0.1 miles climbing, it's time to leave Little Rock Canyon. (It
will get impossibly steep soon.) The trail fork is right at the big gap
jump (see photo). Keep wide to the left as you ride past it, and you'll find
yourself on narrow singletrack heading uphill.
Looking at the gap jump on Little Rock Canyon from
the entry to Ashleedell.
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Ashleedell
The Ashleedell trail is 1.3 miles long and will climb 700 vertical
feet. There will be some navigation challenges as the trail hits some
forks. In general, that means keeping to the left when you have an option.
If all else fails, follow an eastbound trail out to the gravel road. (On
the day of my latest ride, moron four-wheelers had driven around in a large
flat meadow, basically erasing the narrow trail. I had to ride up the road and
re-enter the trail from above to find where I should have gone.)
Riding southeast, with Cascade Mountain as a
backdrop. |
The goal is to continue working south until you arrive at
the trailhead for the Buffalo Peak trail. Use any combination of trails
and road that gets you there.
Buffalo Peak starts right at the spot where the Kyhv Peak road reaches
its highest point.
Lovely grassy meadows tend to erase trails quickly if
there's not constant traffic in late spring.
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Buffalo Peak Trail
The Buffalo Peak trail is the wider trail heading south along the log
fence before curving right uphill. It climbs gently for 0.4 miles to a fork with
the Little
Rock Canyon trail. At the fork, you can continue straight 1/4 mile to a viewpoint on the peak
(hike-a-bike ahead!), or fork right on Little Rock Canyon to begin a downhill. Climbing
through a field of Mules Ear on Buffalo Peak. |
Bottom Line!
Great trails if you like solitude and a raw remote feel to your riding.
These trails are uncivilized but not cruel. Narrow and twisty, requiring
good handling skills. Lots of beauty and great riding, but not everyone
will enjoy them.
Mules Ear in front of Mount Timpanogos.
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Bottom to top navigation:
0.0 Kyhv Peak parking, ST uphill far east uphill end
N40 19.393 W111 37.957
0.2 Cross trail, keep uphill
N40 19.276 W111 37.886
0.5 R on BST N40 19.116 W111 37.815
0.55 L on connector trail
N40 19.124 W111 37.868
0.9 L to enter Lacey's Loops N40 18.902 W111 37.682
1.1 Fork L (R = short circuit)
N40 18.852 W111 37.696
1.3 Fork R (L = over to Luna's)
N40 18.751 W111 37.756
1.7 Keep R uphill (Erindell)
N40 18.687 W111 37.609
1.9 Fork L (R = over to road)
N40 18.604 W111 37.617
2.5 L on paved road N40 18.478 W111 37.641
2.55 R on DT to ST N40 18.476 W111 37.617
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2.6 Keep straight N40 18.441 W111 37.644
3.5 Hard R on road at fork, 50 feet
L uphill on ST (Ellendell) N40 18.190 W111 37.568
4.9 L on Kyhv Peak DH N40 17.845 W111 37.089
5.0 R on road N40 17.754 W111 37.052
100 feet, R on ST after turn
(Overlook Connector)
N40 17.733 W111 37.083
5.3 Top of hill N40 17.582 W111 37.152
5.4 Keep straight (Overlook trail) N40 17.551 W111 37.115
5.7 Straight across clearing to ST (Little Rock Canyon)
N40 17.437 W111 36.836
5.8 L on narrow ST at gap jump (Ashleedell)
N40 17.381 W111 36.773
6.1 R (L = to road) N40 17.250 W111 36.559
6.2 East (L) N40 17.168 W111 36.471
6.5 R (L = to road) N40 17.099 W111 36.257
7.0 R on Buffalo Peak at fence N40 16.976 W111 36.315
7.3 R on Little Rock Canyon N40 16.889 W111 36.543 |
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Getting there...
Lower Kyhv Peak Road TH: On US-189 eastbound about a mile up the
canyon, turn right on the Kyhv Peak Road. Drive one mile uphill and turn
left into the large parking area. Return to the road for a pavement climb,
or find singletrack at the uphill east end. N40 19.393 W111 37.956
Kyhv
Peak Overlook: On the Kyhv Peak Road at mile 4.2 from US-189,
go to the right to the Kyhv Peak Overlook. The trail is just west
(downhill) from the road. There's paved parking at the overlook and
roadside parking downhill. N40 18.075 W111 37.514
Kyhv
Peak DH (Back) Trail: Mile 5.6 from 189, on the right as the
gravel road turns
sharply left. N40 17.756 W111 37.052
Upper Overlook/Little Rock Canyon: On the right as the road
turns left at mile 6.1 N40 17.458 W111 36.806. The Overlook trail is the
northbound smaller trail closest to the edge; Little Rock Canyon heads
north into the woods.
Buffalo Peak Trail: On the right at mile 7.7 from 189, as the road
reaches its top elevation and crosses a saddle. N40 16.952 W111 36.312
BST Nunn's Park TH: Eastbound in Provo Canyon on US-189, go two miles up Provo Canyon
to the Nunns
Park exit and turn right into the parking lot. Pedal uphill on paved trail,
then turn right on the BST singletrack N40 20.280 W111 36.475.
Indian Hills: Just before Canyon Road merges onto University Avenue,
and just past the last homes, turn uphill toward the water tank. Go 1/10
mile, then find a northbound trail on your left. |

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