I spent five years finding all of the ones north of Yosemite - when I lived in Folsom. The ones south of Yosemite were all ridden during a 1000 mile week when I stayed at my daughter's home in Clovis overnight, then headed out to find the next new set of roads.ScottRNelson, just got done adding all of your road suggestions. Holy crap, there's a ton out there in the Sierras!!
How on earth do you have the time to ride them all? Do you only work 2 hrs/wk or something? It would take me like a month of solid riding to do even half the roads justice.
the sweepers around Briones Reservoir are smooth? :wtf did they repave?
it used to be big sweepers and lots of bumps
I spent five years finding all of the ones north of Yosemite - when I lived in Folsom. The ones south of Yosemite were all ridden during a 1000 mile week when I stayed at my daughter's home in Clovis overnight, then headed out to find the next new set of roads.
And since the middle of 2015, I work zero hours per week, unless you count all of the stuff I'm doing to get my home ready to sell in a couple of months, then it's maybe 20 hours a week. :cool
there's a Skyline in Oakland too :rofl
but Slow Goat's post mentions Briones Reservoir so it's pretty clear which one he means
Retired and own two homes - outright. That's why I have no spare money right now. Selling this one in Pleasanton will give me the funds to do a lot of traveling and buy a new KTM 790 Adventure when they finally come out. My "new" bike is ten years old currently.Retired and own a home? Gah, two things I don't think will be possible for me, or most kids my generation for that matter.
Are you selling to move somewhere else?
Retired and own two homes - outright. That's why I have no spare money right now. Selling this one in Pleasanton will give me the funds to do a lot of traveling and buy a new KTM 790 Adventure when they finally come out. My "new" bike is ten years old currently.
I spent decades being poor and keeping track of each dollar spent before I finally got on top of things. You can spend money while you're young and have not much when you get older, or scrimp and save and eventually have something.
I'll be living in Idaho by the end of June and intend to explore the entire state, including as many dirt roads as possible. In a few years I hope to have a decent list of the good roads up there.
Can you add?
11 Pines Road
9 Mile Canyon Road
Adobe Canyon Road
Alamitos Road
Alba Road
Alderpoint Road
Alisal Road
Alpine Road
Annette Road
Arroya Seco Road
Artichoke Road
Auberry Road
Austin Creek Road
Avery Sheep Ranch Road
Back Ranch Road
Bald Hills Road
Bay Hill Road
Bean Creek Road
Bean Hollow Road
Bear Creek Road
Bear Gulch Road
Bell Springs Road
Berryessa Knoxville Road
Bitterwater Road
Black Bear Road
Black Mountain Road
Black Road
Blackrock Road
Bloom Grade Road
Blue Lakes Road
Bohemian Highway
Bohlman Road
Bolinas Road
Bonetti Road
Bonny Doon Road
Breckenridge Road
Browns Valley Road
Burr Trail Road
Buzzard Lagoon Road
.
.
.
Still haven't done kings mountain? It's how you get from Woodside to skyline very quickly. Jump over skyline and get to another decent road from there too.
Best midweek during midday. Weekdays gets some commuters. Weekends gets morons and lots of raging cyclists.
I think it's a crap road for motorcycling tho. Even for sporty cars, it's a bit sketchy. Some of the turns corkscrew so fast that you'll scrape violently on the way up or down at speed. Same with the bumps... Not an issue on a bike so far.
Just be wary of the bumps. The shade hides them well and that road changes every year with new bumps. Going modest speed, not an issue. It's when you're going fast that you'll lose some teeth.
Great to hill climb or smoke your brakes on the way down! I've definitely come down with my brakes smoking all over the place. Thought they caught fire! ��
The first few miles of Skyline = 35 is a single lane road that is very narrow and windy, and probably not fun to ride (most curves are blind, and there is significant traffic).