Mountain Bike Leader Award terrain types
Overview
There are specific terrain specifications for each level of Leader Award within the National Mountain Bike Leader Award Scheme.
This ensures:
- Leaders remain within safe riding capacity
- The security of groups can be maintained
- Qualifications are focused on the specific environment to be encountered
- Group members riding skills can be developed to suit the terrain
Terrain types are named to match to their Leader Award, for clarity.
Factors that apply to all Mountain Bike Leader Awards
The four factors below are requirements of all effective mountain bike rides and should be applied in addition to the relevant terrain specifications
- CTC Mountain Bike Awards are purely cycling and mountain bike qualifications
- They are not intended and do not cover contexts outside of cycling and mountain biking other than in the event of an emergency preventing the use of bikes where leaders and group members will remain on defined accessible routes as outlined in the Terrain specification, but which may not necessarily be cycle based right of way or approved routes
- The Awards remain valid only where the group has set out with the intention of completing a mountain bike ride in full
- Where other qualifications superseed the held Mountain Bike Leader Award in terms of weather conditions only, the group may continue outside of this specification. Other qualifications do not superseed other elements of the specification
Trail Terrain
for the Trail Mountain Bike Leader Award
Overview
Trail terrain is non-technical. This means that it does not involve specific route selection (for example between rocks, roots or
other obstacles) in order to ride on it. It can be as narrow as handlebar width. Typical trail terrain includes: forest tracks,
fireroads, cycleways, and other smooth ground. Public highways and roads also fall within trail terrain.
UK specification:
| Limiting factor | Specification |
|---|---|
| Height limit: | Less than 600m above sea level |
| Remoteness factor: | No further than 2.5km (30 mins walk) from a road or accessible landline telephone and shelter |
| Weather conditions: | Only one of the below can apply to remain in scope (if 2 or more apply, it is beyond the level of the award):
|
| Trail terrain: |
|
Specification outside of the UK: The Trail Leader course is designed principly for the UK, however it may be used further afield with the following provisos:
- The holder is equipped with knowledge, experience and appropriate locally recognised qualifications to act as a mountain bike leader for the area they are using. These factors should include at least language, culture, weather and emergency procedures and may be covered through the CTC International module.
- In addition for locations with similar weather patterns to the UK, the Leader should remain within the specification of limits as stated above. These locations might include for example Scandanavia and northern Europe.
- Where a more settled weather pattern exists, for example southern Europe, the Trail Leader may extend their riding to above 600m, but must at all times remain less than 2.5 km from a road or land based telephone or contact point (e.g. top of a manned lift station), via a trail terrain rideable route.
Where you remain within the height and remoteness factors, but make use of more technical terrain, you will require the Technical Mountain Bike Leader Award.
Technical Terrain
for the Technical Mountain Bike Leader Award
Technical terrain is, as it's name suggests, technical. It includes singletrack and routes with obstacles which require technical skill to be ridden over or avoided, such as roots, rocks or holes. It does not necessarily mean big drops or seemingly unachieveable sections, but the sort of terrain that most mountain bikers may come accross on a normal ride.
Typical technical terrain includes: singletrack, farm and moorland tracks and paths and other mountain bike accessible rights of way with sections requiring line selection to ride. Technical Terrain also includes trail terrain and public highways and roads.
There is an enormous amount of technical riding out there, most of the riding available to us in fact is technical. It is best suited to the leading of groups with some previous mountain biking experience and abilities.
UK specification:
| Limiting factor | Specification |
|---|---|
| Height limit: | Less than 600m above sea level |
| Remoteness factor: | No further than 2.5km (30 mins walk) from a road or accessible landline telephone and shelter |
| Weather conditions: | Only one of the below can apply to remain in scope (if 2 or more apply, it is beyond the level of the award):
|
| Technical terrain: |
|
Specification beyond the UK: The Technical Leader course is designed principaly for the UK, however it may be used further afield with the following provisos:
- The holder is equipped with knowledge, experience and appropriate locally recognised qualifications to act as a mountain bike leader for the area they are using. These factors should include at least language, culture, weather and emergency procedures and may be covered through the CTC International module.
- In addition for locations with similar weather patterns to the UK, the Leader should remain within the specification of limits as stated above. These locations might include for example Scandanavia and northern Europe.
- Where a more settled weather pattern exists, for example southern Europe, the Technical Leader may extend their riding to above 600m, but must at all times remain less than 2.5 km from a road or land based telephone, via a technical terrain rideable route.
Where you remain within the height and remoteness factors, but make use of less technical terrain, you may only need the Trail Mountain Bike Leader Award.
Advanced Terrain
for the Advanced Mountain Bike Leader Award
Advanced terrain is that beyond the limits of both trail terrain and technical terrain.
UK specification:
| Limiting factor | Specification |
|---|---|
| Height limit: | No limit, except where weather conditions are exceeded, where the limit is no higher than 600m above sea level |
| Remoteness factor: | No limit, except where weather conditions are exceeded, where the limit is no further than 2.5km (30 mins walk) from a road or accessible landline telephone and shelter |
| Weather conditions: | Where none or one of the below can applies, the unlimited height and remoteness factors apply. Where two or more conditions apply, the award is limited to Technical Leader specification:
|
| Advanced terrain: |
|
Where this terrain is used in the UK, you might need an Adventure Activities Licence to lead certain types of groups.For more details, see the Adventure Activities Licencing Authority website.
Specification outside of the UK: The Advanced Leader Award is designed principally for use in the UK, however it may be used further afield with the following provisos:
- The holder is equipped with knowledge, experience and appropriate locally recognised qualifications to act as a mountain bike leader for the area they are using. These factors should include at least language, culture, weather and emergency procedures and may be covered through the CTC International module.
- In addition, the leader should be appropriately qualified through other means where required by the local state for the environment and conditions encountered.
Where you remain lower than the height and closer than the remoteness factors specified, it may be more suitable to use either the Technical Leader Award for a technical environment.
For clarification on this subject, please contact CTC MTB.