SATN Smooth Crew
The SATN Smooth Crew are community volunteers who have organized to maintain nearly 100 miles of singletrack in South Austin Trail Network. Each member has adopted a trail or two and help create and review reports for issues like fallen limbs and head knockers, punji sticks, and sightlines - and then take action or find help when needed.
Currently the SATN Smooth Crew are preparing for the 2023 SATN Social
The 2023 SATN Smooth Crew
Jack Busenbark • Scott Champ • Bryce Cole • David Dalle Molle • Dale Daugherty • John Davis • Kris Dickson • Becky Girand • Smitty Girand • Jon Howell • Trevor Hughes • Greg Klipp • Chris Landry • Jack Landry • Brian Lehnhardt • Travis Loy • Paul McDaniel • Mike Menchaca • Dusty Mills • Tate Noster • Ryan Quinn • Ryan Quinn • Todd Radloff • Brian Raudabaugh • Robert Savage • Zack Sisson • Greg Stevens • Zach Stirling • Travis Wilder • Ben Willkommen • Carl Zapffe • Nic
Updates
If you are on the SATN Smooth crew, please make sure we have your email.
We have a few more trails that need to be adopted! If you would like to volunteer to adopt a trail, please click the adopted trails button above and see what is available. Look for the orange highlights in column G. Once you decide what trail you want, right click and place a comment on that row, or send us an email.
We need three Route Stewards who will communicate with the trail adopters on their route, and we really need this person to have a Trailforks account (a free one is fine) to be able to submit and receive reports. Send us an email if you are interested.
If you adopted a trail, please email Dale with your Trailforks username! If you don’t have one, you can sign up for free; a free account gives you access to everything you would need for this project. Doing this would be really helpful since it gives us a really great way to track everything, and the ability to embed conditions on multiple sites is very convenient. If you don’t prefer to use Trailforks, no worries, I am going to create a “report form” on this page, and one of the route stewards can copy it over to trailforks.