Henry Coe is the largest state park in Northern California, but it’s second in all of California. Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is larger. It’s amazing that we have this huge park to explore so close to the Bay Area. It’s the perfect park for an ebike. Snakes?! What about that Poison Oak!
There are plenty of climbs in Henry Coe that are similar to Ollason Peak, and there are many that are worse. But there are also some gentler climbs as well. He only shows it briefly, but he took Jim Donnelly Trail (long but moderate climb) to Steer Ridge Road (old ranch road with many short, steep climbs and descents) to Willson Camp. From there, he descended Bowl Trail (mostly flat contour trail) to Lyman Wilson Ridge Trail (steep descent with grades from 10-30%). The ride is totally doable on a regular bike, but it’s more fun on an ebike.
What kind of ebike do you recommend?
Keep up the good work. It was nice meeting you at the sea otter.
Henry Coe is the largest state park in Northern California, but it’s second in all of California. Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is larger. It’s amazing that we have this huge park to explore so close to the Bay Area. It’s the perfect park for an ebike.
Snakes?! What about that Poison Oak!
I've always wanted to go here, but are we talking Toro Park's Pipeline size of a climb or worse?
There are plenty of climbs in Henry Coe that are similar to Ollason Peak, and there are many that are worse. But there are also some gentler climbs as well. He only shows it briefly, but he took Jim Donnelly Trail (long but moderate climb) to Steer Ridge Road (old ranch road with many short, steep climbs and descents) to Willson Camp. From there, he descended Bowl Trail (mostly flat contour trail) to Lyman Wilson Ridge Trail (steep descent with grades from 10-30%). The ride is totally doable on a regular bike, but it’s more fun on an ebike.
@@travistaylor1195 Thanks, Travis, for that detailed explanation 👍
You need an e-bike!? I'm 60 and I can hike that loop pretty easily.
Splish splash big dawg 💰💸🦦👑
Rest up