Lost and Found Gravel Grinder

Lost and Found Gravel Grinder Registration Opens January 20

One of America’s top gravel events expands for 2020

Celebrating its seventh anniversary of taking adventurous cycling souls through the remote and rugged beauty of the Lost Sierra near Lake Davis, California, the Lost and Found gravel grinder registration opens on Monday, January 20 at 8pm Pacific time. Offering three course lengths (36-, 67- and 106 miles) through pristine, undiscovered corners of the Sierra Nevada on some of California’s best dirt roads, Lost and Found can be ridden on either a gravel bike or mountain bike. The 2020 edition of Lost and Found will be held on Saturday, June 6, 2020 in Portola, California.

Riders on dirt road in broad alpine valley

For the first time last year, Lost and Found started and finished in downtown Portola at the City Park along the Feather River, a federally designated Wild and Scenic River. This new base camp for the event was a huge boost to the community of Portola. Thanks to camping for participants along the Feather River within walking distance of town, a family-friendly Kid’s Ride on the flow trails through the City Park Saturday afternoon and a free community music concert on Saturday evening, the town of Portola has embraced Lost and Found as its own.

Large group of people on Portola park green with sunsetLost and Found has not only won accolades from Gravelstoke.com as one of the “Top 12 Most Influential Gravel Events” in America, but proceeds from the event also benefit trails, trail building and critically important jobs for economically depressed communities in rural California. Quincy, California-based Sierra Buttes Trail Stewardship (SBTS), a trails-focused 501c3, is the event producer and beneficiary of Lost and Found, reinvesting all proceeds from the event into creating sustainable recreation for mountain communities in Plumas and Sierra County. 

There are several significant projects SBTS is working on to be funded with proceeds from Lost and Found. The Beckwourth Peak Trail will feature 20 miles of new multi-use singletrack, starting from Portola and looping around the volcanic ruggedness of Beckwourth Peak, offering expansive views of the Sierra Valley. The trail will eventually connect through Gold Mountain and over into Mohawk Valley, creating the Mohawk Rim Trail, linking the communities of Portola, Calpine and Graeagle. 

Band playing on stage and dancingThe Beckwourth Peak Trail and Mohawk Rim Trail projects are part of a bigger SBTS vision called Connected Communities. Thanks to a $360,000+ planning grant recently funded through the Sierra Nevada Conservancy, the SBTS Connected Communities vision is becoming reality with the plan of linking together two-dozen remote mountain towns in Butte, Plumas, Sierra and Lassen County via multi-use motorized and non-motorized trails. 

Connected Communities will change the future of these struggling counties for the better, and Lost and Found is an important piece to the puzzle, celebrating community and recreation while raising funds to help create what SBTS likes to call #dirtmagic. 

Riverside campingThe Lost and Found longest 106 mile course features 8,100 feet of climbing on an 80 percent dirt course, while the longer 67 mile course features 5,200 feet of climbing and the long 36-mile course packs in 3,650 feet of climbing. All three distances are filled with vistas and terrific dirt roads, fully stocked aid stations along the way, and all three courses run the final three miles along the Feather River, a great way to end a big day on the bike. 

Participants are encouraged to register as early as possible, as every edition of Lost and Found has sold out months before event day. To register and get more details on Lost and Found, visit lostandfoundbikeride.com and follow #lostandfoundbikeride and @sierratrails on social media.