Mountain Bike Five-Day offers a five-day ride through New Mexico’s high country and desert cliffs, anchored by a meeting point in Terlingua, Texas. Beginning at the Far Flung Adventures Boathouse at 8:00am, the group makes a one-hour drive to the trailheads around San Antonio Mountain and the Continental Divide Trail. Over open sage flats, alpine meadows and aspen-lined slopes, the route threads together maintained Forest Service roads and singletrack that reveal a striking geological contrast: volcanic peaks that give way to the red sandstone canyons of Georgia O’Keefe country near Abiquiu and the Chama River valley.
Days average roughly 15 miles, with mileage adjusted to match group ability. Early legs climb wide, rideable plains around San Antonio Mountain; mid-trip sections run through fir and aspen groves where you’ll watch for elk, turkey and golden eagles. The longer four- and five-day itineraries descend from high alpine country into the high desert, exposing narrow, sandstone-walled corridors and sweeping mesa viewpoints. Expect varied surfaces—hard-packed road, rocky singletrack, and loose desert bends—so technique and steady pacing are rewarded.
This trip’s strength is its layered landscape and wildlife opportunities. Riders trade open volcanic flats for forests and then for the sculpted cliffs that inspired generations of painters. The guides know local backroads and rural communities such as Vallecitos, offering cultural stops and insight into the region’s ranching and Pueblo-adjacent history. Van support for longer days, on-route meals, professional guides, and optional bike rental make the logistics simple: you ride, they handle the rest.
Why book this when visiting the region? It’s a practical way to absorb broad New Mexico geography in a single progressive outing—high alpine vistas, ribboned aspen stands, and desert sandstone in sequence—without the guesswork of planning remote transfers. Families and intermediate groups find the pacing deliberate and accessible; advanced riders can push distances and technical sections on a van-supported plan.
Prepare for changing weather, especially at altitude: mornings cool and afternoons warm fast. Respect wildlife viewing protocols—stay a safe distance from elk and bears—and pack out all trash. The route is an authentic cross-section of Northern New Mexico’s public lands, riding trails that cross the Continental Divide and finish among the red cliffs that define northern New Mexico’s skyline.
Guides bring bike tools, first aid, and route radios; camp is set with lightweight tents and hot dinners at established sites. Riders should expect altitude changes—pack a warm layer and strong sun protection—and consider a pre-trip ride to confirm comfort with sustained climbs and technical descents. Optional bike rental is available; reserve sizes early. Choose the two- or three-day sampler for a concise taste, or commit to the full five-day traverse to stitch public-land trails and quiet ranch roads into one continuous ride.