Thanks to everyone for you responses! We're really excited about the move, 
and I can't wait to explore the cycling scene. Sounds like thorns may be 
more of an issue for the commuter bike than my all road bike, which I 
imagine I'll be taking up the canyons more often than not, so I'll be sure 
to plan accordingly. 

On Monday, March 8, 2021 at 4:12:36 PM UTC-5 Mark Anderson wrote:

> Brady,
>
> First off, welcome to the neighborhood. I hope you and yours will like 
> living here.
>
> I suppose my experience since moving here a couple years ago is similar to 
> that of Jay, Glen and Robert in that I rarely have trouble with goatheads 
> in the Wasatch bench/front/up-on-the-hill areas and mostly encounter them 
> down in the valley especially through the corridor along Jordan River Trail 
> and connecting trails like the Denver & Rio Grande Western Trail going 
> north towards Ogden.  However, I would note that most of Salt Lake City, 
> its metro area and associated business/government/cultural services (e.g., 
> breweries, bowling alleys, the Bicycle Collective, most but not all of the 
> better Asian takeout food) are in the very same valley where all the 
> goatheads lie.  That is also where I live and do much of my riding and I 
> get lots of goat head punctures.
>
> Regarding armored tires, my partner's 'round-town bike has Schwalbe 
> Marathon green guard (MGG) tires and hasn't had any flats, but it also 
> hasn't been ridden a heck of a lot. The MGGs are heavy, stiff and basically 
> just so damn thick along the tread that thorns can't reach all the way 
> through to the tube. My trike came with Schwalbe Marathon Racers which have 
> a nylon fabric belt under the tread.  Thorns go through the belt pretty 
> regularly, and the local thorns are long enough to get picked up in the 
> sidewalls above the narrow belt.  A Shikoro might fare better, but I recall 
> various kevlar tires getting punctured by thorns in my distant youth in 
> northern California as well.  
>
> My solution on the trike has been to use lightweight tires (Tioga 
> Powerblock/Powerband S-Spec and Compass in ca. 40mm widths)  with inner 
> tubes containing Orange Seal---a solution cribbed from Patrick Moore's 
> posts on this list and on iBOB (thank you Patrick!).  With this setup I 
> occasionally have a puncture which noticeably leaks sealant for several 
> minutes and requires a few stops to add air as it leaks slowly before 
> finally sealing.  In the past year (9 mo. riding, about 4500 mi. on the 
> odometer) there have been two or three times when I had a puncture that 
> wouldn't seal enough while riding and I had to change tubes.  Inspecting 
> the tires and tubes at those times shows that dozens of punctures went 
> unnoticed in that same period.  Unfortunately that meant having to put a 
> new tube into a tire the still had a score or so of thorns still sticking 
> through it, which is about as much fun as it sounds.  A few times I have 
> gone out to the shed and found that a tire has gone flat overnight with all 
> the sealant having leaked out between tube and tire through some hole 
> making a big old mess.
>
> I have not tried a tubeless setup yet.  Maybe after my current tires wear 
> out, though I don't know that any of my current rims are 
> tubeless-compatible.  My suspicion is that at least some of the poor 
> sealing with tubes is due to the hole is the tube becoming misaligned with 
> the hole in the tire, preventing the sealant from spitting out nicely and 
> drying to form a plug.  Also, I find that some of the seals or plugs in the 
> tube can be pulled open upon removing the tube from the tire or even just 
> on fully deflating a tire so that the tube pulls away from the casing.  I 
> imagine a tubeless setup could fix both of those problems. 
>
> I have observed that most of the thorns I pull out of my tires, at least 
> away from the very center, are stuck in grooves/holes/corners of the tread 
> pattern as though the thorn tip was sliding away until grabbed by the shape 
> of the tread.  Thus I suspect that slick tires may fare better w.r.t. 
> thorns.
>
> In short, goatheads can be a real scourge around here if you like to 
> explore the low-lying (4500--5000 ft.) areas, but sealant in tubes can 
> largely solve the problem. In addition, I think that using full-sized tubes 
> (i.e., ones that need not stretch much to fill the tire) improves things 
> further by helping to keep the tube and tire holes aligned, and that slick 
> tread (e.g., as on your current tires) will help even more by avoiding some 
> punctures in the first place.
>
> Mark in Salt Lake City, Utah
>
> On Monday, March 8, 2021 at 10:03:52 AM UTC-7 Robert Hakim wrote:
>
>> I'll echo the others- I only find goatheads a real issue in the central 
>> and western parts of the valley, particularly along the Jordan River Trail 
>> corridor. Most of the cycling on Wasatch Blvd and up into the canyons you 
>> won't have much of an issue with them, thought they do appear occasionally. 
>> I never found any near Park City. Good luck with the move! 
>>
>> On Sunday, March 7, 2021 at 9:11:24 AM UTC-5 Glen wrote:
>>
>>> The only area I am aware of that goat heads are an issue is one section 
>>> of the main north/south multi purpose trail (Jordan River Trail) and SLCo 
>>> has an active eradication program. The trail is usually very clear of them 
>>> but the shoulders can trap them in the cinders/gravel. Your current tires 
>>> will be perfect for most of your riding here. 
>>>
>>> Feel free to DM if you have any questions you'd like to ask a fellow 
>>> mid-atlantic transplant.
>>>
>>> On Saturday, March 6, 2021 at 7:43:51 AM UTC-7 Brady Smith wrote:
>>>
>>>> Looks like the family and I are relocating to Salt Lake City. Question 
>>>> for fellow Utah listers: How big of a problem are goat heads? I was on the 
>>>> verge of ordering a new dynamo wheel a few months ago but held off in case 
>>>> going fully tubeless winds up making more sense. In New Jersey, where we 
>>>> have glass but not thorns, I've been running Rene Herse tires in 700x44 
>>>> with tubes and had no flat issues. I gather that this setup is not going 
>>>> to 
>>>> serve me especially well out west. Do I put sealant in my tubes? Go fully 
>>>> tubeless? Or would something like the Soma Shikoro be enough as long as 
>>>> I'm 
>>>> riding mostly road/gravel?
>>>>
>>>> Best,
>>>>
>>>> Brady in NJ/soon to be Utah
>>>>
>>>

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