New Wooden Features Added to Morningside Park

Double Roller - 2 ft. high, 36 in. wide

With a grant from Roanoke Outside Foundation and in cooperation with the City of Roanoke Parks and Recreation, BROC has installed three super fun wooden features on the loop trail at Roanoke’s Morningside Park.

The new features are designed to help mountain bike riders of all abilities improve their skill levels and have fun on a beautiful wooded loop of single-track trails located in the heart of the city and accessible to the Roanoke River Greenway and the Mill Mountain Trails. They are the only features of this type in the region and are adjacent to the Boys and Girls Club of South West Virginia.

A-Frame - 2 ft. high, 12 in. width

The purchase of these three new wooden features, manufactured by American Ramp Company, was made possible through a grant from Roanoke Outside Foundation and with the cooperation of Roanoke City Park and Recreation. Volunteers from the Blue Ridge Off-Road Cyclists (BROC) sited and assembled the structures.

Rolling Byway - 24 in. width

The addition of these wooden features is the second phase of a mountain bike skills area being planned and developed by BROC at Morningside Park in cooperation with the City of Roanoke Parks and Recreation. The Mountain Bike Capital of the East keeps getting better.

The Explore Park Trail Building and Maintenance Workshop is a huge success

Thanks to all the trail enthusiasts who attended last weekend's training/work session on building and maintaining trails from assessment to completion using hand tools. The sessions were led by Chris Kehmeier of C2 Recreation, an internationally acclaimed natural surface trails planner and builder.

The event drew nearly 20 participants from Roanoke, Salem, Bedford, Clifton Forge, Botetourt, and Pulaski.

After a half-day of classroom trail building school on Saturday morning, participants went into the field Saturday afternoon and all day Sunday to apply what they had learned. They built re-routes to four sections of existing Explore Park trails to make them flow better and be more fun to ride.

All together this weekend, BROC volunteers contributed more than 160 volunteer hours to Roanoke County's Explore Park to enhance the mountain biking experience there.

Best of all, we now have a group of more highly trained and experienced mountain bike trail builders who can lead future projects in the region.

Lunch on both days was provided by Visit Virginia Blue Ridge. Thanks to Roanoke County Explore Park for the meeting facilities and the trails.

Special thanks to Frank and Chris for planning a great weekend.

The workshop fee for all participants was covered by a grant from Roanoke Outside Project Outside.  

Youth Mountain Biking Race Series

Roanoke Parks and Recreation is teaming up with Star City Cycling Club and East Coasters for the return of Roanoke’s FREE mountain biking race series. Riders will compete on a short, spectator-friendly course against youth their own age and skill level. Medals will be awarded to the top three kids in each age group. At the end of the series, overall winners will be named for each group. 

The Youth Mountain Biking Race Series is aimed at novice riders from ages 2 to 14. Riders will compete on a short, spectator-friendly course against youth their own age and skill level.

BROC Volunteers are encouraged to assist. Just show up, tell them you are with BROC and ask to help.

Fridays

5:30-8:30pm

April 22: Washington Park

April 29: Morningside Park

May 6: Eureka Park 

Morningside Park Second Jump Line Awaiting Final Approval

BROC designed plans for a second, more advanced jump line at Morningside Park in Roanoke have received approval from the City of Roanoke Parks and Recreation officials. Construction will begin pending the completion of environmental permitting. 

This news coincides with the City officially approving the BROC constructed beginner jump line and with the conclusion of a substantial rework of the existing loop trail in the park. Spoiler Alert: Even more features are on the way! Stay tuned.

Morningside Park has become a destination for mountain bike riders of all ages and skill levels. The jump line and the wooded loop trail feature tabletops, berms, rollers, rocks and roots that can be enjoyed by kids on strider bikes all the way up to advanced riders looking to improve their overall skills or just get in a good workout. 

If you haven't been to Morningside lately, you haven't been.

Thank you, Tyler Teer, for your dedication to this project.

Explore Park Trail Workshop April 23 & 24 - Spaces are Filling up Fast!

Come join fellow trail enthusiasts to learn how to build and maintain trails from assessment to completion using hand tools. Even if you have been volunteering for years, chances are you will learn new skills and have a better understanding of how the natural dynamics of trails play out. The focus will be on improving the trails for mountain biking, but the skills and techniques you will learn are applicable to all natural surface trails.

Please bring water and wear long pants, gloves, and sturdy shoes. Tools will be provided. The cost is free, but you must register as space is limited. Click below to register.

This workshop is made possible by a Roanoke Outside Project Outside grant.  

Grant Will Help Build More Bike Trails at Morningside Park

The Roanoke Outside Foundation received a $25,000 grant from the Virginia Outdoor Foundation’s Preservation Trust Fund and its new Get Outdoors grant program. Funds will be used to build more trails and features in the City of Roanoke’s Morningside Park.

The Get Outdoors program funds projects that serve communities that have been inadequately served, overlooked, or harmed by unfair zoning, housing, and land-use practices or other systemic discrimination.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed a great deal about the importance of open space for not only our physical and mental health, but also for the strength of our communities,” said VOF Executive Director Brett Glymph. “We are pleased to be able to award these grants that will advance projects in communities all across the Commonwealth, resulting in greater, safer, and more equitable access to the outdoors for thousands of Virginians.”

In 2019, the Roanoke community crowdfunded and built Phase I of the Morningside Bike Park, a 1.25-mile beginner loop trail, and thanks to the Get Outdoors grant. Phase II will start soon.

Phase II will be managed by Blue Ridge Off-Road Cyclists (BROC), our local mountain bike club, and will include several different types of bike trails including beginner jumps, intermediate flow trails, and technical rock trails. These trails will be built in a series that allows a person to progress in skill level from beginner to advanced. Trail work will be built by volunteers with grant funds used for purchasing materials, renting equipment, and hiring any subcontractors needed for work beyond the scope of volunteers.

Want to get involved and help? Follow BROC on social media or contact them through their website.

Volunteer group builds trails, momentum for mountain biking at Roanoke County’s Explore Park – Roanoke Times

Luke Weir , Roanoke Times

With a leaf blower strapped to his back, Ian Bongard walks through the woods of Explore Park, blasting aside fallen leaves blanketing the forest floor.

It’s a Saturday morning trail work day for volunteers of the Blue Ridge Off-Road Cyclists, the new name for the group formerly known as the Roanoke chapter of the International Mountain Bicycling Association.

“We can build basically anything we can dream up,” said Bongard, BROC trails coordinator. “We’ve got the knowledge to be able to figure out how to build any trail.”

Following Bongard along his leaf-blown trail through the wet winter woods, four fellow volunteers push a pair of wheelbarrows packed with shovels and other digging tools, fire rakes and buckets.

“We’re coming out here and doing a job someone would be paid to do for free,” Bongard said. “We do it because we love it.”

The volunteers stop their wheelbarrows, wield hand-tools and start digging away at a notch in the hillside, where previous trail work stopped. Bongard marches onward, blowing leaves over the hill, buzzing away into the distance.

BROC President Stuart Lamanna swings a hoe, etching a narrow mountain bike trail out of the cold ground.

“BROC is a group of mountain bike activists and advocates that want to support and enhance mountain biking,” Lamanna said. “We’re here to build trails, and support mountain biking.”

The nonprofit is volunteering its expertise to construct new mountain bike trails for Roanoke County, part of early first phase construction on a bike skills park expansion at Explore Park.

“We have an abundance of shared-use backcountry natural trails, which I personally love to death,” Lamanna said. “But we don’t have many trails that are specifically designed for mountain biking.”

BROC is filling the need for bike-specific trails at the 1,100-acre county park, planning routes with boulders, corners, bumps and jumps where intermediate and advanced riders can put to use techniques picked up at the future bike skills park.

“Mountain biking specific trails are not cheap,” Lamanna said. “They are expensive, but volunteers can do a lot to mitigate that cost.”

County plans call for a biking skills park in the Explore Park woodland beyond Brugh Tavern, south of Journey’s End Campground. Two interlocking circuits of track at the skills park will take riders over berms, rocks, logs and other features essential to the sport of mountain biking, helping hone cyclists’ skills before they encounter such elements on-trail.

County staff said construction of the skills park and an attached parking lot off Rutrough Road will be contracted using a $382,000 grant from the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation. In the meantime, BROC’s work on new trails surrounding the skills park will supplement the project, relying on labor volunteered by the group of mountain bikers.

“On Dec. 5, we had 15 people show up,” Lamanna said of a recent Explore Park work day. “That’s not typical, but that was a pretty good day. We got a lot of trail built.”

BROC has volunteered for trail work or provided financial support to trails on public land across the region, from Waid Park in Franklin County to Carvins Cove Natural Reserve in Roanoke and Botetourt counties, as well as at parks in Blacksburg, Clifton Forge, Bedford and elsewhere.

“We’ve been doing trail construction on an almost weekly basis now for maybe half a year,” Lamanna said. “We build exclusively on public lands, saving municipalities tens of thousands of dollars on construction costs.”

Lamanna said it will take between 500 and 1,000 volunteer hours to finish a mile-long stretch of bike trail now under construction at Explore Park, whereas contractors charge from $5 to $10 per linear foot of trail, depending on terrain and trail features.

“On a typical weekend, we might volunteer 50 hours on average,” Lamanna said. “That’s just on our recent trail workdays.”

Lamanna said money is hard to come by for BROC, especially during a year when the nonprofit did not receive any proceeds from the annual Roanoke GO Fest, which typically provides a bulk of BROC’s yearly funding.

“This year we don’t have that funding, so right now it comes primarily from our membership,” Lamanna said. “It’s made it much more difficult.”

Visibility during trail work days has driven a membership spike in 2020, with the group’s active numbers increasing by about 50%, now at 170 Blue Ridge Off-Road Cyclists. Even still, recent repairs on BROC’s specialized backwoods excavator cost the nonprofit more than its annual member dues.

“Our expenses are exceeding our membership income, without a doubt,” Lamanna said. “We are hurting for funds, but we’re pushing forward with a lot more volunteer activity.”

For the trail builders of BROC, it is reward enough to expand riding options in the region, said trails coordinator Bongard.

“We get cool trails to ride, that’s all we want,” Bongard said. “We want cool stuff to be challenged by, and to have a good time on. Nobody would mountain bike if it wasn’t for the people you mountain bike with.”

Mountain bikers are a mobile bunch, said Bongard, who has traveled across the country to ride. Roanoke has potential to attract bikers from afar, but only once more challenging trails are established to pique their interest.

“Around here we really need to be able to cater to the advanced riders,” Bongard said. “We’ve got to build the trails that people drive a couple hours for.”

Perhaps those road-trip worthy trails are mere months of volunteering away, beginning with Bongard blasting a path through dead leaves piled in the wintry backwoods of Explore Park.

“We’ve got some good opportunities right here,” Bongard said. “We have lots of opportunities elsewhere in the county as well.”

BROC Board Members are Guests on Mountain Bike Podcast

Roanoke, VA, December 18, 2020 - Two board members of Blue Ridge Off-Road Cyclists (BROC) were recent guests on the Front Lines MTB Podcast. 

The interview, hosted by Brent Hillier, features a discussion with BROC President Stuart LaManna and Trails Coordinator Ian Bongard.

The podcast touched on topics from the politics, funding, and building of local trails to the changing landscape of how people are working and what that means for where they choose to live.

The Front Lines MTB Podcast is described as a podcast for the people that truly make mountain biking happen. Not the riders, racers, or product designers but the builders, advocates, and the often forgotten Board Members of local Mountain Bike Trail Associations.

The Front Lines MTB Podcast can be downloaded wherever podcasts are available, or from the Front Lines MTB website.

About Blue Ridge Off-Road Cyclists

Blue Ridge Off-Road Cyclists (BROC) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Formed in 2012 as the Roanoke chapter of the International Mountain Biking Association, the organization has been instrumental in many efforts to further mountain biking in the Roanoke area. Click here to learn more and to join.