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Third Party
Booking Requests

 

We offer all our Ultimate Packages as well as our fully customised service to third party vendors.

Select half day or full day to check availability and make a booking request. Provide us with as much information as possible.

Please ensure that your client is aware of the terms and conditions and risks associated with mountain biking.


 

Trail Etiquette

Riding or walking the Queenstown Trail requires you to share the track, cycleway or road with others – fellow cyclists and walkers, but also dogs, horses, other animals and vehicles.  Here are a few important pointers to foster positive attitudes between different trail users and remember we are lucky that many local landowners have given us access to their private property.

Mountain Bikers’ Code

The following Mountain Bikers’ Code has been developed by the Mountain Bike Association of New Zealand (MTBNZ) in liaison with key stakeholders including the Department of Conservation.

Respect others

  • Stay in control, so you can safely avoid others and keep yourself intact.

  • Give way to walkers.

  • Use a bell or greeting when approaching others. Most negative feedback from walkers on shared-use tracks concerns being surprised by bikers approaching without warning.

  • Ride shared-use tracks in small groups. A ‘bike-train’ with a dozen riders displaces other users. A better number is 6–8, or less.

  • Be patient behind slower riders and pull over where practical to let faster riders pass.
     

Respect the rules
 

  • Ride only where permitted – keep off closed tracks, including those that are seasonally closed to protect the surface or minimise conflict with other users.

  • Be prepared (take food, water, tools, first aid and warm clothes) and plan for the unexpected (a change in the weather, an accident or getting lost).

  • Leave gates as you find them – either open or closed to keep stock where they are intended to be.
     

Respect the track
 

  • Don’t skid, cut corners or make new lines. Skidding creates water channels that cause erosion (use both brakes to slow down as you approach corners). Cutting corners is cheating and damages fragile ecosystems.

  • Avoid riding in the mud and rain, where possible. Both bikes and walkers damage soft, wet tracks.

  • Take your rubbish home – leave only tyre prints.

  • Clean your bike to prevent spreading weeds like gorse and didymo.
     

Respect public access easements
 

Some mountain bike rides travel along public access easements through private land. All easements and tracks are well marked. 

  • Stay on the public easement track.

  • Leave gates as you find them.

  • Do not disturb stock – cycle slowly through livestock areas.
     

Sharing the Road

  • Follow the road rules – stop for red lights and at pedestrian crossings.

  • Ride predictably, in a straight line and signal your intentions clearly in advance.

  • Ride no more than two abreast and only where safe and appropriate.

  • Try not to slow the flow of traffic – where practical pull over to let vehicles pass.

  • Courtesy works – a wave and a smile to other road users will help foster a more positive attitude to cyclists and vice versa.

MTB SKILL LEVELS

BEGINNER

You are not very comfortable ascending, descending or riding rough terrain and sharp corners
EXPERIENCED BEGINNER
You’ve been riding a mountain bike for a while and you’re most comfortable on smooth single-track and wider, forgiving double-track.
INTErMeDIATE
You like riding most types of terrain, and you’re comfortable both climbing and descending on single-track trails with smaller technical features
ADVANCED INTERMEDIATE
You’ve got a few years of riding on singletrack trails of all sorts with features such as rock gardens, steep sections, rolls and drops, roots, and small jumps.
EXPERT
You love steep terrain,  jumps, rock gardens, techy trails, long descents, big ascents and discovering new terrain.
 

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