https://www.revelstokemountaineer.com/the-spokin-word-treading-the-high-seas/

[More "doublespeak": they say they don't support "unauthorized" trail building, and then in the next sentence, they say "go ahead and do it" (see below). That's so they can claim not to be an accessory to the crime. NICA (high school mountain bike racers) claim not to allow illegal riding and trail-building, but both the riders and coaches still do it. Doublespeak is alive and well in MTB-land! Mike]

The Spokin Word: Treading the high seas

The final 2017 installment of our MTB column The Spokin' Word by Bryce Borlick runs up the Jolly Roger to salute the swashbuckling ways of pirate trail builders.
By
 Bryce Borlick
 -
 Sep 20, 2017
The final 2017 installment of the summer MTB series The Spokin' Word presents a shanty in honour of trail building buccaneers. Photo: Bryce Borlick/Revelstoke Mountaineer Magazine

The Spokin Word, by Bryce Borlick
Illustration: Benji Andringa

Scoundrels, scallywags, rogues, and pirates! Some say these are the characters youll find in the woods! This is the last Spokin Word for the season and Im going to take this opportunity to not only address the taboo subject of unauthorized trail building but to celebrate the efforts of these independent trail builders. Why? Because the sport of mountain biking wouldnt be where it is today without these people. Theyre cornerstones of this sport, and their ongoing contributions, however covert, continue to shape the future of mountain biking. Straight up.

It wasnt long ago that mountain biking was the red-headed stepchild of the outdoor world chastised and rebuffed by land managers and other trail users alike. Trail access disappeared like a disabled parking spot in front of The Modern. Still, some people saw great potential in their machines and they headed deeper into the forests, beyond the regulation and conflict, to create trails that were creative and challenging and immensely fun. They built it, and people came a lot of people, in fact. This is when mountain biking grew pubes and drank its first beer. Its also when biking turned the corner and land management plans started to evolve toward the inclusive and cooperative system that we now take for granted. Not bad for a buncha rapscallions!
The final 2017 installment of the summer MTB series The Spokin Word presents a shanty in honour of trail building buccaneers. Photo: Bryce Borlick/Revelstoke Mountaineer Magazine

Since those times, weve come a long way and today British Columbia offers the best mountain biking in the world, period. And along the way, savvy entrepreneurs have figured out that there are hundreds of millions of dollars to be made. But despite the fact that we have amazing legally-built trails and extensive lift-accessed bike parks, its often something else that sells the sport. Its those damn dirt delinquents again going deeper into the forest to create trails that are even more creative and challenging and fun. The Coastal Crew, Jordie Lunn, Riley MacIntosh just a few high-profile examples from the virtual legion of independent builders. They create features and images that captivate the imagination and fan the flames of a passion that burns brightly in mountain bikers worldwide. For many, its those free and wild images that sell the whole kit and caboodle.

In no way am I minimizing the role of authorized trail building and the immense efforts of volunteer organizations across B.C. If you call yourself a mountain biker, you owe them a debt of gratitude. Nor am I suggesting that anyone break the law. Im saying that the untethered vision of independent builders offers a unique and invaluable glimpse of what could be. So dirty knaves, wherever you are, deep in the forest hoping that no one ever writes a column about you, I salute you. Keep up yarr good work!

This article first appeared in the September 2017 issue of the print Revelstoke Mountaineer Magazine.