Best Mountain Bike Trails in Coppermine
The Coppermine Trail is one of New Zealand's premier alpine mountain bike rides, featuring a 38km loop that starts in Nelson city and climbs to Coppermine Saddle (878m) via the historic Dun Mountain Railway route before descending through rocky terrain and native beech forest. The ride offers grades 2 to 4 difficulty across stunning landscape with panoramic views of Tasman Bay, and is best suited to experienced riders taking 4-6 hours to complete.
Trails
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 trails
Intermediate
30.4m
1161m
-1116m
169h 23m
The Coppermine Trail is one of New Zealand’s most accessible alpine mountain bike rides, all the more memorable for its relatively easy up, exhilarating down, amazing rocky tops, sweet-smelling beech forest, and meandering river trail.Starting amidst Nelson’s cafés and pubs, this stunning day ride should be ridden in one direction (anti-clockwise) starting at Brook Street entrance and finishing at Maitai Dam. The trail heads directly into spectacular hill country via Codger’s Trails area and a long, consistent climb along the historic Dun Mountain Railway route. Broad panoramas of Tasman Bay and the rocky tops of Coppermine Saddle are just some of the rewards. Others are the brilliant 10 km downhill through rock gardens and bush, and the leisurely pedal back to Nelson via the pretty Maitai Valley.The full loop is best suited to fit, experienced single-track riders with full-suspension mountain bikes. For those less confident, simply U-turn at Coppermine Saddle or Third House and enjoy a return-ride the way you came up.From Nelson i-SITE the full loop is 43 km, shortened to 40 km if you start and finish at the Brook Street trailhead.Although the ride time may only be 4-6 hours, we recommend you allow a full day to enjoy this unique environment.You will be a long way from assistance in an alpine environment and mobile phone reception is patchy, so please ensure you have sufficient food, drink, spare tubes, first aid, and wet/cold weather gear to handle any problems you might encounter.Please note NO DOGS are allowed on the Coppermine Trail.
Intermediate
5.3 km
529m
-10m
After leaving Coppermine Trail, Maitai Cave Track crosses Sclanders Creek (not bridged), which is named after David Sclander, an early Nelson settler involved in the mining of Dun Mountain. The track grade is a step down from the well-maintained Coppermine Trail, and you will have to negotiate a few roots, logs and muddy patches. The track follows a natural embankment between Sclanders Creek and Maitai River South Branch, skirting the western fringe of the mineral belt before entering stunning beech-podocarp forest that features rimu, kahikatea and mataī, with Sclanders Creek flowing on the right. This area is known as Cawthron Park, a 1,000 ha piece of bush gifted to the city by Thomas Cawthron in 1913. This is one acts of the many acts of philanthropy by Cawthron, who was also the founder of Cawthron Institute. The gradient steepens a little in the final few hundred metres to the cave.