



reviewed by djeneration on May 8, 2011
Went up to San Angelo for a weekend with my TPWD Pass, and while the city itself has no draw to me other then Chef Jason's Deli, San Angelo State Park ended up proving to be quite the camp and mountain bike adventure.
All in all, we logged almost 60 miles on our odometers in 48 hours, and I have to estimate that there are 30-40 miles worth of unique singletrack and doubletrack trails here. While some trails converge Equestrian, MTB & Hiking trails into one, there were also many trails that would split the Equine from the MTB trails so you could ride without having to dodge horses (not that there were many!) These split trails also help account for the park boasting 50+ total miles of trails.
Lots of variety of terrain, some very tough, steep climbs, some technical sections, loose rocks and roots, quick scoots up and down old paved boat ramps and neverending cactus patches but all in all plenty of hardpack dirt and lots of long, winding, flat trails where you can rack up some serious mileage at higher average speeds.
Many times we would be heading back to camp and then see another trail we missed, choosing to try it and thinking it would only add another 15 to 30 minutes to the ride. We were most often so so wrong! We spent extensive time out here and really had a blast. We used the Shady Hill trail often as our connector because it had a sweet, fast hill. The Burkett Trail is really fun from either direction, pretty flat and fast but very unique scenery and the best connector to the North and South sides of the park. Other sweet trails of note were the Dinosaur Trail which was pretty flat and fast but with excellent scenic backdrops serving as a great warm up loop that takes about 45 minutes and the River Bend Trail which was seemingly never ending at certain points. Bring a GPS if you have it (we didn't) as larger trail head markers provided coordinates, but don't expect much else for trail markers!
If you like to test your endurance this is the place for you because there are just not many parks out here with this amount of trail mileage. Take your time to explore and bring plenty of water if the sun is out. There are water sources along the way, but you could be (and invariably will be!) out here for several hours.
What at first glance is desolate, even barren with a shrunk up lake (don't come expecting to swim) later becomes wildly beautiful and unique with many different styles of terrain and many opportunites to experience nearly all facets of Texas wildlife. Often you will feel like you're lost in the middle of nowhere in a ghost park with a lake you never seem to find or like you're the only one on the trail; soldier on because the payoff was worth it, every time.
* Review edited 5/8/2011Similar Trail: Government Canyon, McAllister Park, Madrone