It was supposed to be a secret, a trail built in his backyard for the joy of a quick blast on a mountain bike.
Behind his home at the foot of Whitewater Road outside Nelson, Andrew Martens set about building a trail. He’d previously built mountain bike paths in Lethbridge and Kimberley, and shortly after moving to the West Kootenay in 2007 decided to make another on his own time.
It took about a year and a half to build the modest kilometre-long trail. Even in a place with nearly 200 mountain bike trails, word spread about Martens’ little project.
“Next thing you know I go up there and there’s cars parked there, people all at the trailhead and at the bottom. It was really something.”
Martens, who now owns his own company Epic Trails, is part of a small community of professional trail builders in the Nelson area.
Every path a hiker walks, every bridge a bike rattles over, was hand-crafted by people who carefully part the forests and maintain a network of trails with the eyes and hands of artisans.
A good trail spreads through a forest naturally, like it had always been there waiting to be walked. In practice, this means working with the landscape instead of against it, using boulders instead of bulldozing through them, watching for where water might erode the path or steering a trail toward what Martens calls positive control points like waterfalls that can turn a hike into a memorable experience.
“Every artist has their own style,” he says. “You could take two very experienced trail builders and say find a route to the top of this mountain here. And they probably come up with two very different yet equally as awesome routes.”
Colin Davies (left) and Atli Bokstrom are two of the eight trail builders who work for the Nelson Cycling Club. Photo: Tyler Harper
A labour of love
In the forest behind Nelson, where a web of bike trails weave down an area called Mountain Station, the three-person crew of Atli Bokstrom, Colin Davies and Chris Woikin are at work.
The majority of trails in the Nelson area are made for mountain bikes. The Nelson Cycling Club maintains over 180 trails that in total stretch approximately 270 kilometres. The club currently employs eight builders who set out in the spring and work through the fall clearing debris, rebuilding features like bridges or filling in ruts and potholes.
The work is Davies’ dream job. He used to work as a commercial industrial painter who would sometimes remove asbestos and mould from houses.
“This is amazing compared to that. I went from the worst to the absolute best possible situation.”
Bokstrom calls it a labour of love. He grew up in New Denver making trails with his brother. Now, at 29-years-old and in his third season working for the club, he gets paid to craft trails for an entire community.
That means being able to, as he describes it, see the ground and decide on a trail’s character.
“The vibe of trail is very important, whether it’s a downhill specific trail or you’re making a harder trail,” says Bokstrom. “It’s all very, very subjective.”
And everyone has their own opinions about how they should be built.
Woikin, a self-proclaimed bike shop nerd, has been working for the club since 2005 and had found his own perfectionism sometimes clashes against the builders that came before.
“Today up there we shoved over one of the old bridges because it’s all a rotten. Everybody’s like, ‘You guys waste too much time, it takes you three days to build the bridge,’ but then it lasts that much longer.”
There’s also a constant push-and-pull within the bike community about how difficult a trail should be. The harder to ride, the thought goes, the more authentic a trail is.
“People always say we’re churching things up, making things easier, and taking the jank away and making Nelson soft,” says Davies.
But that’s by design.
The weird turn pro
Any conversation about bike trails in Nelson always includes at least one nod of respect in Mark Holt’s direction.
Holt moved to Nelson in 1992 and loved the landscape, but was confused by how few trails there were. He started building his own at Mountain Station for what he remembers now as a community no bigger than perhaps 30 bikers.
“Ironically as soon as I put the one trail in, holy moly it was popular.”
At the time, he says, no one cared if a trail was built on Crown or private land. That’s no longer the case.
Cycling club president Deb MacKillop describes the trail network as a vast facility, similar to a soccer field or hockey rink, that requires a close relationship with the Regional District of Central Kootenay, City of Nelson, BC Parks, forestry ministry and private land owners.
Gone are the days of rogue builders scratching out their own trails without permission.
“We’ve all seen the world change. There’s liability, there’s rules, everything has become so much more complicated,” says MacKillop, who adds this isn’t necessarily bad for the sport. “It’s neat to see how it’s evolved from the thing that you kind of knew was out there into being very mainstream.”
No study examining the economic impact of mountain bike trails on Nelson exists. One metric, however, is provided by the club’s automated trail counters.
In the summer of 2016, a trail counter at nearby Morning Mountain noted 11,000 bikes accessing the club-managed location. Last year, as people turned to outdoor recreation during the pandemic, the same counter recorded 33,000 users.
The club relies on grants to hire trail crews, but MacKillop wishes governments provided stable funding to manage what she sees as a community asset.
“Can you imagine running the pool if you were allowed to have lifeguards but not a cleaning staff? That’s kind where we’re at.”
As trail building professionalized, so did Holt.
He became the club’s first paid employee in 2004, and owns Sacred Ride bike shop in downtown Nelson. In the nearly 30 years since he first arrived in town, Holt says the sport has changed. Bikes are wider now, wheels are bigger, speeds are faster.
That in turn has changed the composition of trails from what he says used to be “weird” up and down paths at slower speeds to new, fast trails that require rounded corners and less obstacles.
“Myself being an old school mountain biker, I like the weird, I like the old, and that’s all going away,” says Holt. “But that’s OK. It’s just the evolution of biking.”
Devon Brook (left) and Kat Brinovec have spent the summer building new hiking trails at Whitewater Ski Resort. Photo: Submitted
Under the snow, shovels find rocks
Kat Brinovec and Devon Brook spent the summer looking at a familiar mountain in a new way.
The pair have each worked at Whitewater Ski Resort, located just 20 minutes outside Nelson, for over five years during the snowy seasons.
But this year they were hired to build the beginnings of the resorts’ first hiking trails, and found a terrain built on boulders. Brinovec said that’s led to compromise and improvisation as they try to follow the planned route.
“You might have a plan when you start and it’s completely different by the end because of what we come up to every time we go out.”
The Whitewater trails are a partnership between the resort and the Friends of Pulpit Rock Society. The society’s secretary-treasurer Guy Woods had the idea for the trails and has helped secure grants to hire builders.
He said the resort, which doesn’t have any summer programming, made sense for trails.
“From a tourist point of view someplace like Whitewater with an all-weather road and good parking to me was a very attractive and sellable point to these economic people who are trying to promote tourism in the area and keep people in the area for a little bit longer.”
All but a small loop of trails will be restricted to hiking. Whitewater’s outdoor operations manager Colby Lehman said that’s because local grizzly and black bear population would be impacted by mountain bikes, which move too quickly and too quietly. Slower, louder hikers aren’t as likely to startle bears.
The one exception will be a multi-use trail for people with disabilities. Lehman said the trails are designed to be inclusive. Seniors, children and people in wheelchairs, he says, should be able to access Whitewater’s new paths.
“If that’s the only bike trail I created, that’s great. That’s success.”
The work is nearly finished, and Brook said she’s already heard compliments from hikers who in past seasons made their own way around Whitewater.
“The older people who’ve been hiking up here for years, who I think probably put in some of the little goat trails, definitely seem to be stoked that as they get older the trails get a little easier for them.”
Heather Lyon (centre) celebrates with her family after cutting the ribbon on Lyon’s Bluff, a new trail first conceived of by Don Lyon in 2009 that just opened on Sept. 25, 2021. Photo: Tyler Harper
Talking with the trail
Derrick Bint prefers to be alone with a trail.
He doesn’t listen to music as he works. He just wants the sound of the wind in the background as he tries to solve the puzzle of building on difficult terrain.
Bint talks about his job as though he were in an intimate conversation with the trail. Building a steep section over rocks, for example, requires a gentle negotiation.
“I just asked the rocks for their help and they tell me where they want to be as they’re really sensitive. They want to be somewhere where they’re going to be comfortable with the rock beside it. I think they communicate like that, and they communicate to me.”
Bint was one of the main builders who since last year have been constructing Lyon’s Bluff, a new trail on Nelson’s North Shore.
In 2019 approximately 48,000 hikers accessed Pulpit Rock, which is arguably the area’s most popular hike up to a scenic lookout that offers a wide view of the city below.
The hike to Lyon’s Bluff is the same distance from the parking lot at 1.8 kilometres. It’s a little more steep in sections, and includes a number of Bint’s carefully constructed rocky steps. But the payoff is a view of the city as well as the east side of Kootenay Lake that’s more open than Pulpit.
In 2009, Don Lyon had an idea for a new trail that would alleviate traffic from Pulpit Rock. Lyon passed away in 2013, but the idea became a passion for Friends of Pulpit Rock Society president Dave St. Denis.
“Lyon’s Bluff to me is really special, because I’ve seen it from nothing to this beautiful trail that people are praising …,” says St. Denis. “So whenever I go up on that trail, it’s just glorious, just an uplifting experience every time.”
Construction began last year and was taken up by Bint, who helped finish the trail to the bluff before continuing on another path that will take hikers to near the mountain’s peak and eventually connect with Pulpit Rock.
Lyon’s Bluff was officially opened at a small ceremony Sept. 25, during which Don Lyon’s wife Heather and her family cut the ribbon. Even though she is in her 80s, Heather had two hiking poles in hand as she prepared to see the new trail.
“I’m going up a little ways. There’s no way I’m not going up it.”
Bint was also at the ceremony. When asked if he’d hike the trail he helped build, he said no.
LONDON (AP) — With a few daubs of a paintbrush, the Brontë sisters have got their dots back.
More than eight decades after it was installed, a memorial to the three 19th-century sibling novelists in London’s Westminster Abbey was amended Thursday to restore the diaereses – the two dots over the e in their surname.
The dots — which indicate that the name is pronounced “brontay” rather than “bront” — were omitted when the stone tablet commemorating Charlotte, Emily and Anne was erected in the abbey’s Poets’ Corner in October 1939, just after the outbreak of World War II.
They were restored after Brontë historian Sharon Wright, editor of the Brontë Society Gazette, raised the issue with Dean of Westminster David Hoyle. The abbey asked its stonemason to tap in the dots and its conservator to paint them.
“There’s no paper record for anyone complaining about this or mentioning this, so I just wanted to put it right, really,” Wright said. “These three Yorkshire women deserve their place here, but they also deserve to have their name spelled correctly.”
It’s believed the writers’ Irish father Patrick changed the spelling of his surname from Brunty or Prunty when he went to university in England.
Raised on the wild Yorkshire moors, all three sisters died before they were 40, leaving enduring novels including Charlotte’s “Jane Eyre,” Emily’s “Wuthering Heights” and Anne’s “The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.”
Rebecca Yorke, director of the Brontë Society, welcomed the restoration.
“As the Brontës and their work are loved and respected all over the world, it’s entirely appropriate that their name is spelled correctly on their memorial,” she said.