Since the 1970s
Stewards of the mountain. A registered BC non-profit dedicated to building, maintaining, and protecting 150+ km of trails through the rugged rainforest of Maple Ridge.
The Blue Mountain Motorcycle Club was formally established in 2003 as a registered BC non-profit society – but the trails we steward have been ridden since the 1970s. We're not a racing club or a social club. We exist for one reason: to keep Blue Mountain open, sustainable, and rideable for future generations.
Our members invest thousands of volunteer hours each year maintaining 150+ km of trails, building bridges, installing drainage, and working alongside BCORMA, BC Forestry Services, and local government. The result is a trail network ranked #1 globally on Trailforks for dirtbike riding – a place that builds champions and humbles everyone.
Blue Mountain is built on glacial till in the rainforest of Maple Ridge – some of the most difficult terrain to ride and build on in the province. Riders come from across BC, Washington State, and beyond. Whether you're a racer or a weekend warrior, this is the place to push your limits.
Our Work
Monthly work parties, 150+ bridges built, drainage systems, erosion control, and trail tread hardening across the entire network.
Winner of the 2025 CMA Environmental Award. Protecting waterways, wildlife habitat, and vegetation through sustainable trail design and rider education.
Working with BCORMA, BC Forestry, Recreation Sites & Trails BC, and local government to protect our right to ride and keep the trails open.
Route of All Evil, Member Appreciation rides, guided tours for new riders, monthly meetings, and a welcoming community that looks out for each other.
Elected Officers
Officers are elected every December at our Annual General Meeting. All members are encouraged to attend and vote.
All club members are encouraged to attend the AGM and vote for their club representatives. The AGM is held every December and is your opportunity to have a say in how the club is run, elect officers, and shape the future of the trails.
Check the Facebook page for news and updates on the next AGM.
Our Story
The trails of Blue Mountain – also known as McNutt – have been ridden since the 1970s, when the first riders cut rough trails straight up and down the rugged rainforest slopes of Maple Ridge. Over the decades, a dedicated community of riders transformed these raw lines into what is now regarded as one of the premiere off-road riding areas in Canada.
In 2003, the Blue Mountain Motorcycle Club was formally established as a registered BC non-profit society, giving the riding community an organized voice and the structure to become true stewards of the mountain. Since then, volunteers have invested thousands of hours and hundreds of thousands of dollars into building a sustainable trail network – constructing over 150 bridges, implementing drainage systems, and bringing the trails up to environmental standards that earned national recognition.
First trails laid by riders in the rainforest of Blue Mountain. The original trails were cut rough, mostly going straight up and straight down.
Classic trails like Canterbury and The Pit established through mature forest, forming the backbone of the network.
Blue Mountain Motorcycle Club formally founded as a registered BC non-profit society.
BCORMA commissions a scientific hydrology report identifying everything needed to bring the 150 km trail network up to sustainable standards.
Volunteers complete the major sustainability overhaul – over 150 bridges built, drainage installed, trail alignments improved.
Recreation Sites and Trails BC provides a proper staging area, located past the gate at the north end of 256th Street.
Legislative victory: BC amends the Forest Planning and Practices Regulation to legally protect established recreation trails from damage by Crown land operators.
Received ~$25,000 from the provincial ORV Trail Fund for Canterbury and The Pit trail improvements. Won the CMA Environmental Award.
Working Together
BCORMA
BC Off Road Motorcycle Association
Our provincial federation representing 30+ clubs stewarding approximately 6,000 km of multi-use single-track trails across BC. BCORMA acts as liaison to the BC government, facilitates ORV Trail Fund applications, and commissioned the hydrology report that guided our sustainability overhaul.
CMA
Canadian Motorcycle Association
Canada's national motorcycle association, founded in 1946. BMMC was awarded the 2025 CMA Environmental Award for the successful promotion of motorcycle use through recognition of environmental stewardship and sustainable trail management.
Recreation Sites & Trails BC
Provincial Government
RSTBC provided our staging area in 2021 and administers the ORV Trail Fund in partnership with the BC Power Sports Coalition. The fund has distributed over $2 million to 160+ trail projects across the province since 2017.
BC Forestry Services
Provincial Land Management
Blue Mountain's boundaries overlap with three active logging woodlots. The club maintains ongoing dialogue with woodlot holders to negotiate trail relocations and protect forest retention areas. A 2024 amendment to the Forest Planning and Practices Regulation now legally protects established recreation trails.
Make a Difference
Monthly work parties are the backbone of trail maintenance. All are welcome – tools are provided by the club. It's hard work, but a great way to meet fellow riders and discover new trails.
Sundays, 9:30 AM at 256th St
Come out to the monthly club meeting to stay informed, share ideas, and connect with the community. All members are welcome to attend and participate.
1st Thursday, Ricky's Country Restaurant
Board positions are elected every December at the AGM. If you're passionate about the trails and want to help shape the club's future, consider putting your name forward for president or director.
Elections held at December AGM