Cherry Creek Trail Changed How I See Denver (Bike Route Inside)

Cherry Creek Trail with bikes and trees
22 miles of trail that shows you the real Denver

I lived in Denver for two years before discovering Cherry Creek Trail properly. Not just the downtown part everyone knows.

The whole thing. 22 miles from Confluence Park to Cherry Creek Reservoir.

Now I bike it weekly. It completely changed how I see the city. Here’s why you need to ride this trail.

The Trail Nobody Talks About

Everyone knows about the downtown section. Confluence to Cherry Creek Mall. That’s like 3 miles.

But the trail keeps going. Through neighborhoods tourists never see. Past country clubs. Under highways. Into actual nature.

It’s Denver’s secret highway for bikes. No cars, few pedestrians, just smooth concrete for miles.

My Favorite Route (And Why)

Bike path along creek with city skyline
The trail shows you every side of Denver

Start: Confluence Park

End: Cherry Creek Reservoir

Distance: 11 miles one way

Time: 45 minutes there, forever to explore

Mile 0-2: Downtown to Speer

Start at Confluence. Follow Cherry Creek southeast. This part’s busy but sets the mood.

Pass under bridges. REI on your right. Denver skyline behind you.

Mile 2-4: The Fancy Neighborhood Stretch

Country Club area. Massive houses. Private tennis courts. Different Denver.

The trail is tree-covered here. Feels like a secret passage through rich people’s backyards.

Mile 4-6: Cherry Creek Shopping Area

Pop up at the mall if you need anything. Otherwise stay on trail.

This section has actual creek views. Ducks everywhere. Sometimes deer.

Mile 6-8: The Forgotten Middle

Tree-lined bike path
The middle section feels like you’ve left the city

This is where casual riders turn back. Their loss.

Trail gets quieter. More nature, fewer people. You forget you’re in Denver.

Mile 8-11: The Reward

Dam comes into view. Trail opens up. Cherry Creek Reservoir appears.

Beach area, marina, massive views. This doesn’t feel like landlocked Colorado.

What Makes This Trail Special

It’s Below Street Level

Most of the trail runs below the city. You’re in a green corridor while Denver happens above.

Traffic noise disappears. Just birds, water, bike tires on concrete.

No Road Crossings (Mostly)

Underpasses everywhere. You rarely stop. It’s continuous flow for miles.

Compare that to street biking where you stop every block.

It Shows Denver’s Layers

Homeless camps under bridges. Million-dollar homes above. Office workers on lunch walks. Kids feeding ducks.

You see how Denver actually fits together.

The Bike Rental Strategy

BCycle stations: Along the trail but only downtown section

Better option: Rent from Campus Cycles or SloHi Bike Co

E-bikes: Game changer for the reservoir ride

Don’t use those scooters. Trail rangers will yell at you.

When to Ride

Morning light on bike trail
Early morning rides are magical

Best: Weekday mornings. Empty trail, cool weather.

Good: Sunday before 10am. Beat the family crowds.

Okay: Weekday evening. Busy but manageable.

Avoid: Saturday afternoon. Zoo.

Seasonal Reality

Spring: High water, muddy spots, gorgeous green

Summer: Hot but shaded, crowded, creek is perfect

Fall: Leaves are insane, perfect weather, best season

Winter: Often rideable, icy patches, completely empty

Trail Stops Worth Making

Mile 2: Creekside Park

Hidden park. Benches. Good bathroom. Water fountain.

Mile 4: Whole Foods

Right off trail. Grab snacks. Use real bathroom.

Mile 5.5: Pulaski Park

Pond with turtles. Picnic tables. Kids love it.

Mile 8: Garland Park

Baseball fields. Playground. Last bathroom before reservoir.

Mile 11: Cherry Creek Beach

Yes, Denver has a beach. Swim, rent kayaks, or just stare at water.

The Local Sections

Neighborhood section of bike trail
Each neighborhood section has its own personality

Confluence to Speer: Tourist Denver

Speer to Colorado Blvd: Rich Denver

Colorado to Monaco: Regular Denver

Monaco to Reservoir: Suburban Denver

Reservoir: Wait, this is Denver?

My Actual Weekly Route

Tuesday mornings. Leave home at 7am.

Bike to Confluence (warm up). Trail to reservoir (workout).

Coffee at reservoir marina. Sit by water. Pretend I live somewhere coastal.

Ride back different pace. Stop at parks. Take photos.

Home by 10am. Whole day still ahead.

Why This Trail Matters

Denver feels disconnected sometimes. Neighborhoods separated by highways. Downtown isolated from suburbs.

But this trail connects everything. You can bike from downtown lofts to suburban reservoir without seeing a car.

It’s the Denver nobody shows tourists. The in-between spaces. The quiet parts.

Tips Nobody Mentions

Goose poop season: June-July, path gets gross

Homeless camps: Under some bridges, never had issues

Flash floods: After rain, trail can flood, check conditions

Wind: Afternoon headwind going east is brutal

E-bikes: Technically speed limit but nobody cares if you’re reasonable

The Combo Routes

Cherry Creek + High Line Canal: 30+ mile loop option

Cherry Creek + Platte River: Make a full city loop

Cherry Creek + City Streets: One way trail, different way back

What Changed for Me

Denver skyline from bike trail
You see Denver differently from the trail

I used to think Denver was just downtown and mountains.

The trail showed me the in-between. The neighborhoods. The hidden parks. The actual creek that named everything.

Now when people visit, I make them bike this. Not the touristy stuff.

Because this is how Denver actually lives. On trails, by water, between the city and nature.

That’s the real Denver. And it’s been here all along.


Do you bike Cherry Creek Trail? What’s your favorite section?

Bikes parked at Cherry Creek Reservoir
The reservoir doesn’t feel like it’s in Denver

Related: Why Confluence Park Is Denver’s Best-Kept Secret for Families – where the trail begins.

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