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Upper Snyder Trail -

The Best Santa Barbara Mountain Biking

Overview
Access/Parking
Ride Log
On the Ride

Overview

Difficulty: Moderate to Difficult • Paved or Dirt: Dirt Path • Mileage: 14.5
Elevation Gain: 2000 ft. •

The ride to Knapp’s Castle provides a good combination of beautiful views and a great workout that ends at one of Santa Barbara’s finest attractions, the historic ruins of Knapp’s Castle. Snyder Trail leads from the castle down to the Santa Ynez Valley, providing a great loop trip that can be combined with a stop at Cold Springs Tavern.

Ride Details

  • Use Fees : None
  • Length : 3.5 miles to the ruins; 7.25 miles to Paradise Road via Snyder Trail; 14.5 miles for complete loop.
  • Gain : 700’ gain from the Cielo Store to the Knapp turnoff; 50’ loss to the castle; 900’ loss from there to the powerlines; 1,000’ loss from the powerlines to Paradise Road; 1,300’ gain on return back up to the pass via Paradise Road.
  • Difficulty : Moderate to moderately strenuous, depending on distance; Level 2 single track on the lower half of the Snyder Trail.
  • Path : The road to the castle is open and easy riding. Below, the road is rougher riding but not too difficult to the powerlines. Beyond the powerlines it is all single track, with several sharp drops at the start but mostly Level 2 riding the rest of the way.


Find Other Similar Trails

Difficulty: Moderate to Difficult
Points of Interests: Swimming HolesPicnickingViewpoint
User Types: Hikers

Links & Resources


Get Directions To The Knapps-Snyder Bike Ride Trailhead

Driving Directions
Get Directions to Upper Snyder Trail which is located at 34.52,-119.794.

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Print Directions

Gallery

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Access / Parking

Follow Highway 154 for seven miles to San Marcos Pass. Turn right on East Camino Cielo and park near Cielo Store. Please park along the road rather than in the store’s parking area. 

 

Ride Log

Expectations for Riding Santa Barbara Area Trails
Country trails are multi-use trails and as such are used by several thousand users each week. If you are riding downhill on these trails, expect to encounter them on your way. Your cooperation will help make everyone's experience a safe and pleasant one.

Ten things every mountain biker who rides the front country trails is expected to do:

  1. Have a bike bell so other trail users know you are approaching.
  2. Keep your speed down; practice riding techniques that minimize impacts.
  3. Good braking means never having to skid. Do not lock up your brakes.
  4. Approach switchbacks with caution and brake well before you reach them.
  5. Stay on the designated tread. The front country trails are multi-use, not a race course.
  6. Ride with other trail users in mind and enhance rather than interfere with their enjoyment.
  7. Always assume there is another trail user around each corner.
  8. Yield the right-of-way to uphill trail users. Stop and dismount if necessary to allow them to pass.
  9. When approaching equestrians, dismount and ask them what they want you to do.
  10. Be courteous. Smile and say something friendly to everyone you encounter.

Background

On The Ride


One of the beauties of West Camino Cielo rides is the number of options available. Rides can be made as out-and-back excursions or as loops, with the Snyder and Forbush trails and Arroyo Burro and Angostura roads creating a variety of possibilities. You are limited only by your condition.

Snyder Trail makes it possible to enjoy the historic beauty of Knapp’s Castle, single-track riding, and an afternoon of music at Cold Springs Tavern, all in the space of a 14.5-mile loop. 

To make the ride a bit easier, shuttle a second car to the Santa Barbara Ranger District office near Sage Hill beforehand. From Cielo Store pedal 3.5 miles (.75 beyond Painted Cave Road) to a locked Forest Service gate on the left. This is the tough part of the ride.

From the gate an easy downhill ride to the castle offers not only a glimpse of the past but the most spacious views of the Santa Ynez Valley possible. Please watch out for and be courteous to any hikers you might see. Several hundred yards before the ruins, Snyder Trail cuts off down and to the left, continuing three miles on a combination of dirt road and trail to Paradise Road. 

The first 1.5 miles are actually Knapp’s old road, built to provide access to his bathhouse near Lewis Falls. You’ll find the old road down to the falls marked on the topo, but today it isn’t easy to find. Not only is the last section down into Lewis Canyon grown over, there is a lot of poison oak.

After crossing under the power lines, look on the left for the trail, which is marked by a small sign. The trail drops steeply downhill and is somewhat rutted. Unless your single-track skills are proficient, it is best to walk your bike down this stretch. 

The remaining 1.5 miles consists of precipitous drops down grassy knolls and winding trails through oak forest. Near the bottom of the trail you’ll pass a water tank ,and the last few hundred yards is dirt road. A locked gate announces your arrival at Paradise Road. Turn left, either to your shuttle car at Sage Hill or to continue along Paradise for four miles to Cold Springs Road. From there the uphill is steady for four miles to San Marcos Pass. Halfway up you’ll find Cold Springs tavern, a welcome spot to rest and one of the great spots to relax and savor the intriguing mix of music and personalities.

Though the road is steep right at the start, most of the uphill is fairly moderate. It is 6.7 miles to the crest, and there are excellent views and exciting riding due to ample exposures of Coldwater and Matilija sandstones. This makes the ride a trials adventure, though as more and more people ride it the trail is becoming smoother and smoother.

From the locked gate, follow the dirt road straight up the grade for a half-mile. This is the steepest section. It is loose and somewhat rutted, making you wonder what you’ve gotten yourself into. Once you are beyond the bridge, however, things get much easier.

The best is ahead. In a bit, the road levels out and then splits. The left turn takes you up to the power lines—and the steepest grade in town. Curve to the right and cross Romero Creek. The first two miles from the creek to the power lines is well maintained and easy to ride. For the next mile the road gradually curves back to the left and around a large peak formed from Matilija Sandstone. There are lots of places to stop for views of Montecito and, as you curve farther around, Toro Canyon.

Eventually you come to a saddle which takes you back into the Romero Creek drainage. The next two miles of riding are wonderful as the road makes a complete circle of the drainage. The road is almost completely level for a half-mile to the last of the power line towers; then as you round a corner and head up into the canyon the vegetation suddenly closes in, and from here on out it is single-track riding. Though the route isn’t too steep, the riding is tricky in places, but with the exception of a short hill or two created by slumps you will be able to ride all the way up.

At a fork of Romero Creek a small creek bubbles up and crosses a cement apron near the upper end of the canyon. This is a great place to splash water over your (probably) sweat-drenched face. Another half-mile brings you to an intersection with the Romero Canyon Trail. 

It is 2.7 miles beyond this point to Romero Saddle. From the trail intersection the riding gets steeper again, but most of the single track can be negotiated and the views are excellent. Once you have curved west around the last mountain the old road leads through a saddle, and then in a quarter-mile you’ll spy the cement water tank which marks Romero Saddle.

Just before the saddle, look for an old road leading to the left, up toward Camino Cielo. This is a remnant of the old roadway built by George Owen Knapp and was once a shortcut for those who were heading up to Camino Cielo and over to Gibraltar Road. Look for this road to be opened up again soon. If you are planning on looping back down to town via the San Ysidro or Cold Springs trail, this will make it much easier to do.

With a bit of judicious planning you can continue on into the back country on one of the trails leading down to the Santa Ynez River. My personal favorite is the Cold Springs Trail. From Romero Saddle, this trail is 2.8 miles west. I drop down it, stop for a few minutes at Forbush Flats, then continue down to the Gibraltar Trail and then past the Sunbird Mine to Red Rock, where I have a shuttle car waiting for me. 

Another great ride can be made by continuing even farther west on Camino Cielo to Angostura Pass and then down the backside to the North Tunnel Trail, which is about 0.8 miles below the pass. This trail leads down through the chaparral for 1.5 miles to a trail intersection where you can continue on the Matias Potrero Trail to Live Oak picnic area or take the Devil’s Canyon Trail to the Red Rock area. 

There is another option for those who are out for a long day ride but want to end up at your car at the bottom of Romero Canyon. When you are at Romero Saddle, you’ll notice a trail heading steeply up the eastern ridge. You’ll have to push the first fifty yards of the trail, but once up on top of the ridge you can follow the Island View Trail for three-fourths mile to a saddle where the Romero Canyon Trail crosses the top of the mountains. From there you’ll have nearly five miles of single track on the Romero Trail back down to your car.


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Last Updated: Monday, December 15, 2014