
- Distance: 41.7 Miles (67.11 km)
- Rating: 4-C, Although most parts of the road are in good riding condition, the condition may deteriorate to a D and technicality increase to a solid 5 at times. Ratings Explained »
- Travel: North to South for best results
- Start: Estes Park, CO
- End: Blackhawk or Idaho Springs
- Fuel: Lots of small towns if needed.
- Along the Way: More peaks, valleys and basins than you can shake a stick at. Wildflowers in the spring, aspens in the fall, and sweet goodness year round.
- Highlights: Rocky Mountain National Park, Estes Park, Twin Sisters Peaks, Longs Peak (14,255 ft), Mt Meeker (13,911 ft), Mt Niwot (11,471 ft), Great Plains of CO and WY, and Indian Peaks Wilderness Area just to name a few.
- Advisories: Although just over 40 miles the Peak to Peak highway is not a road to be taken lightly. Be vigilant for stray RVs, tourists and wildlife as well as the normal wet spots, and cliffs associated with mountain riding. The best time of year to travel is mid-summer as the snow should be gone. The best time of day is morning or evenings to avoid afternoon thunderstorms.
View Larger Map of Peak to Peak Highway
Summary
The Peak to Peak highway runs along the southwestern border of Rocky Mountain National Park and is a designated Scenic Byway. If the views from Estes Park alone aren't enough, heading south you quickly ascend into mountains heading straight for Longs Peak, the highest peak in Rocky Mountain National Park towering up 14,255 feet. The road is twisty and steep, but levels off and becomes a series of smooth sweepers as you pass by Lily Lake. Hiking trails and wildlife are abundant in this area as you pass between Longs Peak and Mt Meeker to the West, and the Twin Sisters to the East.
As you proceed South towards Allenspark views of the Wild Basin and the Indian Peaks foreshadow what is to come and once past Allenspark the lazy mountain road gets more technical. As you proceed South winding past the Indian Peaks Wilderness area and towards Nederland. The Indian Peaks area is again full of jagged mountain peaks, trails and camping. Hiking Mt Audubon or Pawnee pass is a great way to spend a day. From Nederland the road takes you on a roller coaster of pleasure. Stopping in the casino town of Black Hawk/Central City is a fine place to fill your stomach and talk about the 40 miles of road that have seemed like 100.
Rather than taking I-70 to your next destination, consider Highway 6 back to civilization and hit up the Coors Factory in Golden for your free samples. If traveling from South to North consider camping near Estes Park and taking Highway 34 or 36 back. Camping is available in Rocky Mountain National Park or you can find little gems like the tent only sites at the Long's Peak trail head (elevation 9,000 ft). Bring layers as it can get chilly up that high even during mid summer.
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Rate This Road
Have you ridden this road? How would you rate it? With one star meaning you thought this was a super-lame road with very little value, to five stars meaning that you felt like this was the mother of all roads - a road by which other roads should be judged.
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Ratings Explained
The CanyonChasers road rating is two parts. The first part, numbers 1 through 5, describe how technical the road is, with number 1 being a gently sweeping road and number five being very technical with challenging corners. The second part of the rating is a letter, A, B, C, D and F. The letter describes the quality of the road surface with A being perfect, pristine smooth and F being degraded, bumpy and crumbly. Rolling joints, tar-stips or "gummy worms" will drop the road one letter grade.
This road information is for planning and recreational purposes only. You may find that construction projects, traffic, or other events may cause road conditions to differ from the CanyonChasers ratings. Ratings may not be applicable to all riders, all bikes and all skill levels.
