These four trails are former railroad routes, so they are mostly flat. Below you'll find the West-to-East elevation profile for the full 101 mile length, and then closer looks at each of the four trails/sections.
Because the first chart shows all 101 miles compressed into a single chart, the elevation changes will look smaller than in the charts for the individual sub-sections.
As you can see, most of the trail appears as striped in the charts - this represents crushed limestone surfaces. The few portions that appear as solid are paved surfaces.
These four trails are former railroad routes, so they are mostly flat. Below you'll find the West-to-East elevation profile for the full 101 mile length, and then closer looks at each of the four trails/sections.
Because the first chart shows all 101 miles compressed into a single chart, the elevation changes will look smaller than in the charts for the individual sub-sections.
As you can see, most of the trail appears as striped in the charts - this represents crushed limestone surfaces. The few portions that appear as solid are paved surfaces.
Trail elevation for
Onalaska to
Sparta Wisconsin - La Crosse River Trail
Trail elevation for
Sparta to
Elroy Wisconsin - La Crosse River Trail