Two more yellow sections on the Tahoe-Pyramid Bikewayโs trail map will soon become green and open for the public as progress continues on the ambitious trail project. The intended trail map reaches from Tahoe City to Pyramid Lakeโa 116-mile trip one-way. Since its inception in 2003, the non-profit has completed several large sections of the trail, including the paths from Tahoe City to Truckee, Verdi to Vista, and Wadsworth to Pyramid Lake. A path that begins in Mustang and stretches for nine miles toward Clark Station will open next week, and the Fleish Section, between Floriston and Verdi, is expected to be ready late next summer.
For Janet Phillips, a lifelong cyclist and president of the Bikeway, the trail is a passion project and a needed resource in the community.
โI just thought, โArenโt we missing a really cool attraction?โ said Phillips. โThere are so many environmental changes and a lot of history. Itโs easy to miss the beauty when youโre cruising by in your car at 60 miles an hour.โ
The Bikeway was originally founded as a nonprofit under the Nevada Land Conservancy before branching off into its own group. The organization pays for the trail through private grants and donations, and a core team of volunteers take on much of the planning and outreach. According to Phillips, several regional civil engineering firms have donated their time and skills for free to help design the trail. Once parts of the trail are completed, they are handed over to the local government for maintenance and ownership. The open trails have been well received by local communities in California and Nevada.
โThe areas that are open and in bigger towns are seeing around 200 bikes a day,โ said Phillips. โThe rural areas are dirt so they donโt get as much traffic, but overall the trail is getting a lot of use.โ
But several factors have pushed the completion date back for as much as 20 more years, estimated Phillips.
โI thought when we started in 2003, weโd be done in five years,โ she said. โBut itโs a long process.โ
The two biggest obstacles involve geographical challenges and land use disputes. Many of the geography issues can be solved with enough funding and creative engineering. But finding a way to work with landowners who donโt want a trail through their property has proved difficult.
โThere are two types of landowners weโve heard from: the ones who have a legitimate concern and say, โWe donโt want people camping and starting wildfires,โโ said Phillips. โThe other kind are those who think that homeless people or hippies will be the ones using the trail, and they say, โI donโt want you people in my neighborhood.โโ
Phillips is optimistic about overcoming these issues. She hopes that once reluctant landowners see that the trail wonโt negatively impact their property, they will be more willing to work with the group. She also hopes that supporters will be patient as they find ways to complete the trail.
โTwenty years seems like a long time for many people,โ said Phillips. โBut itโs a big project. Someone said to me, โIf it were easy, itโd be done already.โโ
