Is Bear Saddle Trail dry and rideable today? Here is the current mud, dust, and snow read, the 10-day forecast, and the best time to ride, refreshed every morning.
0.12" rain Sun; SW-facing mixed; rain Tue → softening
Bear Saddle Trail is a mountain bike trail in the Idaho Backcountry area of Idaho. This page tracks its current riding conditions, whether it's hero dirt, dusty, soft, or too muddy to ride, alongside the ten-day outlook and the best time of day to ride. We build the read from real weather, soil, terrain, and snowpack data and refresh it every morning, so you can decide what to ride before you load up the bike.
Conditions change daily. The live reading at the top of this page shows whether Bear Saddle Trail is hero dirt, tacky, soft, or too muddy to ride today, refreshed every morning from local weather, soil, and terrain data.
The best window depends on heat, shade, and how wet the dirt is. Open the live forecast to see the recommended time of day to ride Bear Saddle Trail today and across the next ten days. Open the live forecast →
It comes down to recent moisture. Bear Saddle Trail rides as hero dirt when the soil holds a little moisture and turns dusty and loose once it dries out or sees heavy traffic. The live reading at the top of this page shows today's dirt quality, hero dirt, tacky, dusty, or soft, refreshed every morning.
Bear Saddle Trail is about 3 mi, sitting between 6,102–7,280 ft. It is a mountain bike trail in the Idaho Backcountry area of Idaho. See the elevation profile →
Bear Saddle Trail is a mountain bike trail in the Idaho Backcountry area of Idaho, between about 6,102–7,280 ft. Open the live map for the trailhead location, a GPX download, and today's conditions. Open the live map →
Yes. Use the Download GPX button on this page to save a GPX track of Bear Saddle Trail, built from real OpenStreetMap trail geometry and ready for your GPS unit, bike computer, or phone. The live map also has the trailhead and today's conditions. Download GPX →
Bear Saddle Trail is mostly mixed soil, which varies from trail to trail. That is a big part of why the live mud reading reacts the way it does after rain, and why some nearby trails dry out faster than others.
Bear Saddle Trail tops out around 7,280 ft. Higher Idaho trails hold snow later into spring, so this page tracks snow coverage and the estimated melt-out alongside the dry-dirt read. Check the current reading and the 10-day outlook before you head up. See the 10-day outlook →