Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest!

REVIEW · DENVER

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest!

  • 5.0758 reviews
  • 3 hours (approx.)
  • From $151.19
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Operated by Denver Adventures - Zipline Tours · Bookable on Viator

You’ll trade Denver traffic for foothill air and long, fast cable runs. This 6-zipline Colorado adventure runs about 30 minutes from the city, with a total of 6,000+ feet of cable and a small group capped at 12.

I especially like how the day is built for first-timers: you get safety training, proper gear, and guides who stay patient and upbeat. I also like the practical extras, like HD photos and video captured for each person, plus snacks to keep your energy steady.

One consideration: the zipline hike is short but uphill and can feel steep, and the experience is strict about weight limits before you ride.

Key Things That Make This Zipline Stand Out

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - Key Things That Make This Zipline Stand Out

  • 6 ziplines with more than 6,000 feet of cable for a long ride streak
  • Small groups (up to 12) means more attention and fewer delays
  • Beginner-friendly training with safety gear and step-by-step instruction
  • HD camera included for each person, so you can focus on the ride
  • Rain-or-shine operation, with rerouting or rescheduling only when conditions are unsafe
  • Strict weight rules (40–245 lbs) checked before you start

A Denver Foothills Break From City Time

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - A Denver Foothills Break From City Time
If you want a Colorado day that feels like a mini-vacation, this is a strong pick. You’ll start in Conifer (meeting point: 26267 Conifer Rd, Conifer, CO 80433), then head into the Rocky Mountain foothills for your zipline course.

The timing is also friendly. You can choose a morning or afternoon tour, and the whole thing runs about 3 hours. That makes it easier to build a day around it—either pair it with a relaxed morning in Denver or keep your afternoon open for dinner and a brewery stop afterward.

And yes, you’ll swap city noise for fresh air fast. The day is designed so you’re not just standing around waiting. After check-in, you’ll move through training and outfitting, then get hiking and riding.

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6 Ziplines and 6,000+ Feet of Cable: What You’re Really Buying

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - 6 Ziplines and 6,000+ Feet of Cable: What You’re Really Buying
This tour is all about “long enough to feel it.” The cables total over 6,000 feet, and you’ll run six zipline segments during the adventure. That matters because short ziplines can feel like a quick thrill and then you’re done. Here, the ride time is long enough to settle into a rhythm: clip in, glide, and enjoy the view while your guide keeps things flowing.

You’re also not just getting height. Between lines, you’ll hike short stretches to reach the next platform. That gives you a little activity beyond the cable itself, and it helps the day feel like an actual adventure, not a single ride and out.

Scenery is part of the deal too. Even when weather is moody (think overcast or damp conditions), you still get the open-air rush. One big upside: this is built for a range of experience levels. You don’t need to have zipped before to understand what’s happening.

The Real Itinerary: What Happens From Check-In to Final Ride

The day centers on a single main starting stop: Denver Adventures – Zipline Tours, and it ends back at the same meeting point.

Here’s the flow you can expect, in the order it usually feels like you’ll experience it:

Check-in, Suit Up, and Get Your Gear Fit

First you’ll arrive, check in, and get outfitted. Safety equipment is included, and the fit matters. You’ll also get your HD camera (or camera package) information so the team can capture your rides on the course.

This is one of those “do it right once” processes. When the harness and setup are solid, it makes the rest of the day feel smooth. Guides also seem to push the practical stuff: fast rules, clear body positioning, and what to do with your hands and legs.

Safety Training and Video

Before you ride, expect a safety briefing and a safety video. That part is important even if you’re excited—because ziplining has a rhythm. Once you understand how to clip in, what the posture should feel like, and how the line operates, you stop thinking about the fear and start thinking about the glide.

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The Course: Six Lines, Line to Line

After training, you’ll move through the zipline course. Each section is its own rush, and the lines feel different as you go—angle, speed, and the “whoa, I can see forever” feeling vary by run.

Guides also keep the group moving. With a max of 12 travelers, you’re not stuck waiting around for a long time between lines.

Return to the Meeting Point

When you finish the last ride, the adventure ends back at the meeting point. The day is planned to be about 3 hours total, which is great for keeping your schedule intact.

Getting Set Up at 26267 Conifer Rd (and What It Means for Your Day)

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - Getting Set Up at 26267 Conifer Rd (and What It Means for Your Day)
Meeting at 26267 Conifer Rd keeps this from becoming a complicated logistics puzzle. You’re not bouncing between multiple pickup points. You’ll likely either drive yourself, or take an Uber/ride-share from Denver.

A practical tip from real-world planning: ride-shares from downtown can be pricey, so budget for it. One guest-style planning note you can take seriously is that a one-way car trip can cost around the $50 range depending on timing and demand.

Also know this: hotel pickup and drop-off aren’t included. If you want that convenience, it’s available for an extra fee.

Once you’re there, the structure takes over. You check in, hop into vans for the short transfer to the mountain park, and then the day starts in earnest.

The Short Uphill Hike: Your Only Major Physical Hurdle

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - The Short Uphill Hike: Your Only Major Physical Hurdle
This tour includes hiking between zipline segments, including a short uphill hike to reach the top. The hike isn’t a full day trek, but it can be steep and it can surprise you if you’re used to flat walking.

If you’ve ever gone from “I’m fine” to “wait, why is this angled?” you’ll recognize the feeling. It often takes about 10–15 minutes for the steep part, and it can feel tougher at altitude, especially if you’re sensitive to breathlessness.

Here’s what I’d do if you want to show up feeling good:

  • Wear shoes with grip. This is not the day for slippery soles.
  • Plan for a steady pace. You’re not racing.
  • Bring water or buy water on site. Water helps, especially if the day runs damp or cool.

If you have mobility limitations, asthma, or anything that makes uphill effort hard, it’s worth thinking hard about whether you’ll be comfortable with that hike.

Guides, Safety, and the Small-Group Advantage (12 Max)

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - Guides, Safety, and the Small-Group Advantage (12 Max)
The best part of this tour is how the guides turn a scary activity into a controlled, fun one. People who want to ride the long lines tend to care about safety first, and that’s where this operation shines.

You can expect professional guides to:

  • Provide safety training
  • Fit you with gear
  • Explain what you’ll do on each line
  • Keep the group moving so you don’t waste your day waiting

Names come up a lot in the guide mix, including Tony, Pokey, Bradley, and also Todd, Johnathan, Mikey, B-Rad, Cooper, and Amy. Whoever your team is, the vibe is consistent: patient instruction plus humor. That combination matters, because it helps nervous riders focus on the steps instead of the fear.

With no more than 12 travelers, you’re not lost in a crowd. You’re more likely to get quick answers and individual attention when you need it.

Camera, Snacks, and Why the Extras Matter More Than You Think

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - Camera, Snacks, and Why the Extras Matter More Than You Think
This is one of those activities where you should care about what’s included. You’re flying through the air and it’s over fast. The value is: you get a lasting record without turning the day into a phone-handling project.

Included items:

  • Snacks
  • Pictures and video
  • An HD camera package for each person

That last point is huge. If you’re trying to capture your best moment, you usually end up spending mental energy aiming your phone at the right time. Here, the camera work happens during the course, so you can just ride.

A small practical note from on-the-ground experience: sunscreen and basic comfort gear help. ChapStick is also a popular choice because harness straps, wind, and sun can dry lips quickly. Sunglasses can help too, especially if skies clear.

Rain or Shine, But Don’t Ignore Conditions

Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure on CO Longest and Fastest! - Rain or Shine, But Don’t Ignore Conditions
One selling point is that the tour operates rain or shine. That means you’re usually not stuck waiting for perfect weather.

But the important caveat is this: the experience requires good conditions, and if weather turns unsafe, they’ll offer an alternative date or a full refund. So you should still check forecasts and plan for layers. Cool mountain air can feel different once you’re standing still before your first ride.

If it’s damp, expect the day to feel more slippery and your muscles to work a bit harder on the hike. That’s not a reason to cancel. Just a reason to wear shoes you trust.

Price and Value: Why $151.19 Can Make Sense

At $151.19 per person for about 3 hours, this isn’t the cheapest Colorado thrill. But it also isn’t a tiny “try it once” experience.

You’re paying for a combo that adds up:

  • Six long zipline runs with 6,000+ feet of cable
  • Professional guide instruction and safety equipment
  • HD photos and video included
  • Snacks included
  • A small group size (max 12), which often means less downtime

In other words, the price isn’t just “time in the air.” It’s also the training, gear, organization, and media you’ll actually want later. If you’ve ever ziplined and then realized you had no usable pictures, you’ll understand why this inclusion is part of the value.

One more practical value point: you’re close to Denver. The drive from Denver is roughly 30 minutes, which saves both time and money compared to farther-out adventures.

Weight Rules and Kids: The Things to Check Before You Book

Before you fall in love with the idea, check the rules. This operator is strict about weight limits and ages.

Weight limits are enforced

You must meet:

  • Minimum weight: 40 lbs
  • Maximum weight: 245 lbs

You’ll be weighed on a mechanically calibrated scale before the adventure. If you don’t meet the limits, the experience won’t be refunded.

That’s unusual enough to matter. If you’re near the edges, plan ahead rather than assuming you’ll be able to negotiate it at check-in.

Kids and spectating rules

Children 17 and under must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. No unattended minors on the course.

Ages 5–13 must have a paying parent or guardian ziplining with them. Ages 14–17 can have a parent present on the course even if that teen spectates. Spectating costs $15 per person.

So if you’re planning a family day with mixed ages, decide early who is riding and who is watching. It affects the cost and logistics.

Who Should Book This Zipline Adventure?

This tour is a good fit if you:

  • Want a full half-day style thrill without a multi-hour drive
  • Are okay with a short but steep uphill hike
  • Want a beginner-friendly experience with safety coaching
  • Care about having video and photos without managing a camera yourself
  • Prefer smaller groups for better attention

This may not be your best match if:

  • You’re not comfortable with heights and need quiet time to acclimate
  • You can’t handle uphill walking, even briefly
  • You’re close to the weight limits and might not meet them confidently

Should You Book Rocky Mountain 6-Zipline Adventure?

I’d book it if you want a real zipline day, not just one fast thrill. The combination of six long rides, small group size, and HD video/photo included makes it feel like you’re buying the full package.

If you do book, come prepared for the one part that isn’t optional: the hike. Wear grippy shoes, bring water (or plan to purchase it), and layer up so you’re comfortable during the wait and briefing.

If you check the weight rules and you’re good with a short steep climb, this is the kind of Colorado day that stays in your head for the right reasons.

FAQ

How long does the zipline adventure last?

It runs about 3 hours (approx.) from check-in through the end of the activity back at the meeting point.

Where does the tour start?

The meeting point is 26267 Conifer Rd, Conifer, CO 80433, USA. The activity ends back at the meeting point.

What’s included in the price?

You get a certified guide, safety equipment, snacks, and pictures and video (including an HD camera for each person for photos and videos).

Is hotel pickup included?

No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are an extra fee.

Are there weight limits?

Yes. The minimum is 40 lbs and the maximum is 245 lbs, and everyone is weighed before the adventure. The limits are strictly enforced.

Can kids participate, and how does spectating work?

Kids 17 and under must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. For ages 5–13, a paying ziplining parent or guardian must zipline with them. For ages 14–17, the parent/guardian must be present on the course, but doesn’t have to zipline. Spectators pay $15 per person.

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