Ride the Rockies
Ride the Rockies is an annual week-long recreational bicycle tour across Colorado that's been organized and conducted since 1986. Sponsored primarily by the Denver Post newspaper, the event brings together cycling enthusiasts from across North America and internationally to traverse varied terrain spanning the state's mountain ranges, high plains, and valleys. The tour typically covers approximately 300–360 miles over seven days, with daily segments ranging from 40 to 70 miles, and accommodates participants of varying skill levels through a fully supported structure including rest stops, meal services, and overnight camping facilities. It's become one of Colorado's longest-running cycling events and serves as a significant economic driver for the rural communities it passes through annually.
History
The Denver Post launched Ride the Rockies in 1986 to promote cycling tourism and showcase Colorado's natural landscape to a broader audience. The inaugural tour attracted approximately 2,000 participants and covered a route through central Colorado's mountain passes and valleys. Throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s, the event expanded steadily, growing in both participant numbers and geographic scope, with routes adjusted annually to highlight different regions of the state while maintaining consistent standards for safety and logistical support.[1]
Peak participation hit in the early 2000s. Between 2,000 and 2,500 cyclists showed up annually during those years. The tour suspended operations briefly in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic but resumed in subsequent years with modified protocols and continued organizational support from the Denver Post. What started as a single event has become a model for similar multiday cycling events in other western states, with its operational framework widely studied by event organizers seeking to create sustainable, community-focused recreational cycling experiences. The consistent management of logistics, volunteer coordination, and route planning over more than three decades has established Ride the Rockies as one of the most professionally administered cycling tours in the United States.
Geography
Routes vary annually, but all iterations traverse Colorado's diverse topographical zones, which include high alpine peaks, intermountain basins, and high prairie regions. The starting point rotates between different Colorado cities—including Denver, Boulder, Fort Collins, and western slope communities—while ending points similarly vary to distribute economic benefits across multiple regions. Daily route segments challenge participants with elevation gains ranging from 1,500 to 4,500 feet, with notable climbs including passes such as Vail Pass (elevation 10,662 feet), Cottonwood Pass (12,026 feet), and various ascents through the Elk, Sawatch, and Sangre de Cristo mountain ranges.[2]
Historically, routes have traversed the Front Range foothills, crossed the Continental Divide at multiple locations, and descended into the Colorado River basin and San Juan mountain regions on Colorado's western slope. Riders get exposed to Colorado's varied ecosystems, ranging from montane forests to alpine tundra, as well as views of significant peaks including Mount Elbert, the state's highest elevation at 14,440 feet. The western slope routes pass through regions of significant geological interest, including areas showcasing Precambrian granite formations, Cenozoic sedimentary deposits, and evidence of extensive glaciation. Each annual route is carefully surveyed and tested by Denver Post staff and local cycling organizations to ensure road conditions, safety, and logistical feasibility, with particular attention to seasonal weather patterns, avalanche risk during early season iterations, and accommodation of gravel road segments in less developed areas.
Culture
Ride the Rockies has become a significant cultural institution within Colorado's recreational cycling community, serving as a foundational experience for many state residents' engagement with bicycle touring and long-distance cycling. The event embodies values central to Colorado's outdoor recreation culture, including emphasis on personal challenge, environmental stewardship, and community connection through shared athletic pursuits. Participants range from professional and semi-professional cyclists to recreational riders, families, and individuals undertaking their first multiday cycling experiences, creating a broadly inclusive social environment that spans age groups, geographic origins, and cycling experience levels.[3]
Many Colorado cyclists spend months training specifically for the event and use it as a benchmark for fitness and endurance. Participants establish temporary communities at nightly campgrounds, where they congregate for meals, social interaction, and shared recovery from daily cycling efforts. The event has inspired the creation of numerous regional cycling clubs and training groups throughout Colorado that coalesce around Ride the Rockies participation. It's influenced regional identity narratives, becoming referenced in state marketing and cultural discourse as emblematic of Colorado's outdoor lifestyle and accessibility to recreational activities of high quality and professional organization. Media coverage by the Denver Post and regional broadcast outlets has elevated the event's cultural prominence, making it recognizable to many Coloradans who don't directly participate as cyclists.
Economy
Substantial economic activity flows across Colorado's rural communities through direct expenditure by participants and support personnel, local business revenue from provision of goods and services, and indirect spending through sponsorship and organizational activity. Towns along the annual route benefit from increased lodging demand in the nights preceding and following the tour, restaurant and retail patronage, and fuel purchases by participant support vehicles. The event typically attracts cyclists who remain in Colorado for extended periods before and after the tour week, extending the economic multiplier effects throughout the regional tourism economy.[4]
Local chambers of commerce and tourism boards throughout Colorado actively compete for inclusion in annual Ride the Rockies routes, recognizing the event as a reliable generator of tourism revenue and positive community visibility. Corporate partners and local businesses provide financial support in exchange for promotional visibility, creating revenue streams that support event operations while generating marketing value for participating companies. Hundreds of community members provide unpaid labor for course marshaling, rest stop operation, and campground management. Documentation shows the event contributing between $3–5 million annually to Colorado's rural economy, though precise calculations vary based on methodology and the specific route chosen in any given year. The professional management by the Denver Post ensures consistent economic benefits and prevents the boom-bust cycles that characterize some less-established cycling events.
Attractions
Ride the Rockies is designed to provide participants with direct access to Colorado's most significant natural attractions and scenic vistas, with daily routes constructed to maximize opportunities for engagement with the state's recreational resources. Riders encounter mountain passes offering panoramic views of the Continental Divide, traverse river valleys including those of the Arkansas, Gunnison, and Colorado Rivers, and access alpine meadows and forest ecosystems that define Colorado's high country character. Routes frequently pass near Colorado's major ski resort areas, including Vail, Aspen, and Telluride, allowing participants to observe winter sports infrastructure and the broader landscape context of these destinations during summer cycling season.
Mining towns such as Leadville and Georgetown are integrated into Ride the Rockies routes, preserving evidence of Colorado's nineteenth-century mineral extraction economy. Many routes traverse areas of geological significance, including the Maroon Bells near Aspen, ranked among the most photographed mountain formations in North America, and zones of active geological study related to glaciation patterns, erosion processes, and mineral formation. State Parks and National Forests constitute primary landscape contexts for the tour, providing maintained road systems while preserving environmental character. Annual route selection allows organizers to rotate featured attractions and ensure that cycling communities receive equitable distribution of tourism benefits across Colorado's diverse regions and conservation areas.
Transportation
Ride the Rockies provides comprehensive transportation infrastructure including support vehicles, course marshaling, mechanical assistance, and coordinated logistics for managing participant movement across Colorado's varied road systems. SAG (support and gear) vehicles accompany the tour to provide mechanical repairs, first aid, hydration stations, and transportation for cyclists unable to complete daily segments. Professional cycling mechanics operate mobile repair stations at rest stops and overnight camps, addressing mechanical issues ranging from flat tires to drivetrain problems that emerge during the week-long tour.
Individual cyclists and their support networks handle transportation to and from Ride the Rockies' starting and ending locations, though the Denver Post coordinates information regarding parking facilities and transportation logistics at tour termini. Within the multiday tour structure, all participant transportation is managed through the SAG vehicle network and organized campground operations. What makes this different from typical individual cycling experiences is the emphasis on cycling as the primary transportation mode, combined with comprehensive support infrastructure. Publicly maintained highways and secondary routes comprise the tour roads, with the tour generally following established cycling routes such as the Bikecentennial Trail and state-designated scenic byways. Planning for Ride the Rockies involves coordination with Colorado Department of Transportation and local road maintenance authorities to ensure that routes remain viable and safe throughout the tour period, which typically occurs in June when mountain roads are reliably clear of snow and weather conditions favor extended cycling efforts.