Fastest for now - kokopelli FKT
Fastest for now.
Directed and Produced by Cort Muller
Cinematography by James Adamson
Featured on Outside TV
Traversing 148 miles of majestic high-desert, the Kokopelli Trail is one of the most iconic long mountain bike routes in the West. Wrought with as much challenge as beauty, the rugged Kokopelli provides passage from Moab Utah’s LaSal Mountains to Loma, Colorado. The trail is popular with day riders, bike packers, and guide groups, and once in awhile, a rider will attempt to complete the full trail in a single day. Athletes have tested their endurance on this trail for more than 2 decades, occasionally redefining the possibilities with Fastest Known Times (FKTs) that may have previously seemed impossible.
FKT culture grew substantially in 2020 as Covid-19 cancelled most organized races. Long-standing records were being challenged around the world, and the Kokopelli Trail inspired many to test themselves across its desert miles. On a cold November morning in 2020, ultra-endurance mountain bike athletes Kait Boyle and Kurt Refsnider both crossed the figurative Kokopelli starting line but set out upon journeys all of their own. Having established an FKT on the Kokopelli once before (and witnessed that record broken just months earlier), Kurt knew that this effort would require a faster ride than he once thought possible.
The storied evolution of the record both fascinated him as well as provided formidable challenge in the miles ahead, and his love of the ColoradoPlateau landscape added to his desire for another fast ride on the trail.The women’s FKT stood strong for nearly 8 years, and Kait had yet to successfully finish the trail in its entirety. Two years prior to this ride, Kait won the 24 Hour World Championships but was shortly after involved in a car crash that put into question her ability to ever race bikes again. But as her challenging recovery progressed, she eventually set her sights on the Kokopelli as her first competitive goal. Simply starting this ride was a milestone in itself, but her focus was now on the opposite end of the trail and the mountains and canyons in between.No matter how their rides end, the high desert will leave an imprint on these riders, and the story of the Kokopelli will continue to evolve.