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Routt National Forest OHV

Routt National Forest OHV

The Routt National Forest encompasses 1.1 million acres of northwest Colorado's Yampa River highland country in Routt, Jackson, Grand, and Moffat counties — the mountain terrain surrounding Steamboat Springs, one of Colorado's most celebrated ski towns and an increasingly prominent year-round mountain recreation hub, centered on the Park Range and Flat Tops that form the drainage divide between the Yampa and White River basins. The OHV trail system operates on designated routes across the forest's Hahns Peak/Bears Ears, Parks, and Yampa Ranger Districts, with the forest road network on the Park Range flanks and the high plateau country of the Flat Tops Wilderness margins providing the primary riding terrain. The Park Range — the Continental Divide spine running north-south through Routt County — reaches 12,180 feet at Mount Zirkel and supports a dramatic alpine landscape above treeline on the divide crest; designated OHV routes traverse the forested eastern and western flanks of the range through lodgepole pine and Engelmann spruce forest, with the Elk River valley north of Steamboat providing a particularly scenic riding corridor. The Flat Tops Plateau to the south — a high basalt tableland at 10,000-11,000 feet — forms one of the most distinctive landforms in Colorado, a broad forested mesa incised by the headwaters drainages of the White River on its southern face; designated OHV routes on the plateau margins provide access to this mesa-top terrain outside the Flat Tops Wilderness boundary. Steamboat Springs provides full-service resort infrastructure for OHV riders combining trail riding with ski-town amenities in the summer. Colorado OHV registration required. Hahns Peak/Bears Ears Ranger District at Steamboat Springs (970-870-2299) manages current Park Range OHV trail conditions.

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Routt National Forest OHV location
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Accessible approximately June through October; Gore Pass and Continental Divide routes close under snow. No day-use fee. Colorado OHV registration required.

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Alpine Loop 4WD Scenic Byway

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The Alpine Loop Back Country Byway is a 65-mile BLM-designated 4WD scenic route traversing the heart of the San Juan Mountains in Hinsdale and Ouray counties, connecting the historic mining communities of Lake City, Ouray, and Silverton across three high mountain passes and through the ruins of the Colorado silver mining era. The loop crosses Engineer Pass (12,800 feet) between Lake City and Ouray, Cinnamon Pass (12,620 feet) between Lake City and Silverton, and passes through the ghost town of Animas Forks — a remarkably well-preserved high-altitude mining settlement at 11,200 feet that operated as an active silver camp through the 1880s and 1890s. The Alpine Loop is Colorado's premier high-alpine 4WD destination and one of the most photographed off-road routes in North America: the route crosses above treeline for miles at a stretch, traverses the exposed tundra and talus slopes of the San Juan high country, and provides 360-degree views of the 14,000-foot peaks that surround the route on all sides including Wetterhorn Peak, Uncompahgre Peak, and the Sneffels Range. The terrain demands genuine 4WD capability — not all-wheel-drive or crossovers, but dedicated 4x4 vehicles with low range; the rocky shelf roads on the pass climbs and the water crossings in American Basin and Picayne Gulch require real clearance and traction. ATVs, UTVs, dirt bikes, and full-size 4x4s are all accommodated on the byway. Colorado OHV registration is required. Dispersed camping is available throughout the BLM and national forest land. BLM Gunnison Field Office (970-641-0471) manages the byway; Lake City and Silverton each have full visitor services, lodging, fuel, and trailhead parking for trailered rigs.

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Alpine Loop Backcountry Byway

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Arapaho-Roosevelt NF OHV

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The Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests encompass 1.5 million acres of the Colorado Front Range in Boulder, Clear Creek, Gilpin, Grand, Jackson, Larimer, and Grand counties — the mountain terrain directly west of the Denver-Fort Collins metropolitan corridor, providing the closest national forest OHV access for the Denver metropolitan area's three million residents. The combined forest stretches from the Wyoming border in the north (Poudre Canyon country above Fort Collins) to the Guanella Pass area south of Idaho Springs in the south, covering the entire Front Range uplift from the plains edge to the Continental Divide. The OHV trail system operates on designated routes across the forest's Canyon Lakes, Boulder, Clear Creek, Sulphur, and Pawnee Ranger Districts, with the Poudre Canyon, Laramie River, and North Park districts providing the most extensive designated OHV networks. The Canyon Lakes District north of Fort Collins on US-287 provides the most accessible OHV terrain for the Northern Colorado corridor: the Cache la Poudre River canyon, the Laramie River headwaters in the Rawah Wilderness margins, and the open sagebrush parks of North Park near Walden provide varied terrain from canyon riding to high-elevation plateau. The Sulphur District west of Denver on US-40 provides the Fraser Valley, Grand Lake, and Williams Fork areas — the high-altitude riding country adjacent to Rocky Mountain National Park that serves the entire Denver metro market. Colorado OHV registration required. Canyon Lakes Ranger District at Fort Collins (970-295-6600) manages current northern district OHV trail conditions.

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Dolores River Canyon OHV

Dolores River Canyon OHV

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