Pacific Crest Bicycle Trail


The Pacific Crest Bicycle Trail is a 2,500-mile-long, road-based bicycle touring route from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada to Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. It was designed to closely parallel the Pacific Crest Trail and the two trails cross 27 times as they pass through the states of Washington, Oregon, and California.
The PCBT passes through the North Cascades National Park, Crater Lake National Park, Lassen Volcanic National Park, Yosemite National Park, Kings Canyon National Park, and Sequoia National Park and is generally routed through the Cascades and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges. The route attains its highest elevation at Tioga Pass in California at approximately 10,000 feet.
Both paved and unpaved roads are used, although most are paved. In several sections where an unpaved road is used, a paved road alternative is offered.
The route passes through terrain as varied as thick evergreen forests, apple orchards, wide river canyons, grasslands, glaciated high Sierra canyons, and high desert.
The PCBT was first publicized by Bil Paul in his 1990 guidebook Pacific Crest Bicycle Trail, which is now out of print.

Route

According to a trip report by Caryl L. Bergeron, the route through most of Washington to Central Oregon included:
The route was changed and field re-researched by Bil Paul in 2008 to use all paved roads. However, more side roads are used. The Adventure Cycling Assn. of Missoula, Montana, published in April 2010 a series of five maps covering the revised route which they call the Sierra Cascades Bicycle Route. A side route to Mount Rainier National Park has been added. The southern terminus of the route has been changed to Tecate, Mexico. At the northern terminus at Sumas, Washington, a connector route allows riding between Sumas and Bellingham, Washington, for an airport route to the Pacific Coast Bicycle Route.