The unicycling adventures of Jamey Mossengren have always included a certain zany cuteness. If you’re familiar with the “Unicycling Unicorn,” it’s probably through his stage or street performances, where he wears a colorful unicorn costume and rides a 12-foot-tall unicycle while juggling swords — among many other jaw-dropping tricks.
This 46-year-old Minnesotan has also made a name for himself among outdoor athletes by conquering tough trails that challenge even experienced hikers and bikers, like unicycling his way through the entire 800km Colorado Trail.
But this year was different. On January 1 this year, Mossengren’s sister took her own life. Her passing “left a hole in my heart that felt impossible to fill,” he told our sister site, GearJunkie. Consumed by grief, he soon canceled several of his regular summer gigs.
“I’m a professional performer, and it was hard to make other people happy when I wasn’t happy,” he said.
It wasn’t long before Mossengren latched onto a new idea: escape to the mountains. So this summer, he tackled what could be one of the most intense endurance challenges ever accomplished on a unicycle. Adorned with his trademark rainbow mohawk-and-unicorn-horn helmet, Mossengren pedaled more than 1,600km of the rugged Continental Divide Trail.
“I used the trail to help heal me,” he said. “I had to learn how to forgive myself for not helping her, and how to forgive her for doing what she did.”
Unicycle the Continental Divide
If you’re wondering how, exactly, one would unicycle the Continental Divide Trail (CDT) — you’re not the only one. Though Mossengren is an experienced hiker and endurance athlete, taking on the CDT with a unicycle presented a host of new challenges.
The 5,000km trail traverses the Rocky Mountains from the southern border in New Mexico to the Canadian border at Glacier National Park. In 2023, Mossengren hiked about half of the trail with some friends, but it wasn’t a continuous route. They skipped snowy or impassable sections of the trail by hopping back in a vehicle and driving to their next preferred entry point.
So, Mossengren came up with a creative idea: What if he went back to finish off those missed sections of the CDT, but using his unicycle? He liked the idea, but it presented some immediate problems. Many portions of the CDT cross wilderness areas, where the use of a bike (or unicycle, in this case) is prohibited.
And when he could use the unicycle, he’d have to keep everything he needed for backpacking strapped to his single wheel or stashed in his small backpack.
‘Seven-wheel strategy’
Off-road unicycling
Memories & trail magic
Looking to the future
This story first appeared on GearJunkie.