Base Camp Denver: 101 Hikes in Colorado's Front Range. Pete KJ. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Pete KJ
Издательство: Ingram
Серия: Base Camp
Жанр произведения: Книги о Путешествиях
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781945501142
Скачать книгу
alt=""/>Best SeasonSummerPhotoOther UsersBikes, horses, dogsSolitudeNotesToilets at trailhead, thunderstorm exposure above tree linePropertyRoosevelt National Forest, State Forest State ParkJurisdictionU.S. Forest Service, Colorado Parks & Wildlife

      Montgomery Pass Trail (FS 986) begins across the highway from the parking lot, ascending into woods and leveling off parallel to the road. As it approaches a stream, the trail curves uphill along the bank, then leaves the stream and steepens. Soon the grade eases on a forested shoulder where it’s nothing but smooth, easy walking among lodgepoles and firs, some of which have blue diamond markers on their trunks. Before you know it, 1.4 miles have passed and a trail junction appears. The right branch leads half a mile to Montgomery Pass. This jaunt drops to a pretty clearing in the forest before ascending through vast meadows to the broad, formerly cattle-grazed pass.

      Montgomery Pass Trail to Diamond Peaks

      For a bit more of an adventure, turn left instead onto a trail marked as “Bowls”—meaning backcountry ski bowls. This path is steep at first, but mellows as you arrive at a saddle at timberline with a lovely park basin beyond. A strange crater sits in red dirt in the saddle, for no reason I could discern. Aliens? Above to the right are the bowls: the graceful slopes of Diamond Peaks.

      Coyote in Diamond Peaks Bowls

      Across the park, the distant castle formation of Nokhu Crags in the Never Summer Range grabs the eyes, along with range-topping, slate-gray Mount Richthofen, behind it. The Japanese-sounding name of Nokhu actually comes from the Arapaho phrase neaha-no-xhu, meaning “eagle’s nest.” Richthofen was named for an adventurous German baron-scientist, who coined the term “Silk Road” and discovered goldfields in California.

      The park is a great destination, but a higher saddle on the verdant ridge of Diamond Peaks is even better. There’s no established trail, but it’s easy to see where to go, and the stony tundra provides a fine walking surface. On reaching the saddle, conquering the next Diamond peak becomes irresistible. A faint trail takes you to its crest in minutes, and the views are great: Never Summers to the south and east, Clark Peak and other Medicine Bows to the north, and forested slopes of State Forest State Park (in which you are now standing) to the northwest. The state park was formerly the Colorado State Forest, and its west-slope hillsides were heavily logged in the 1900s. The largest lumber camp in Colorado was located downhill west of Montgomery Pass; for a time it used German prisoners of war as laborers.

      Nokhu Crags and Mount Richthofen, from Diamond Peaks Bowls

      From here the next, and highest, Diamond peak practically begs to be climbed. This delectable smooth green pyramid is only 0.75 miles farther and 270 feet higher. First, drop 150 feet to the saddle, then zigzag uphill through grass on the faintest of trails. The reward is a blasting view of Richthofen and its neighbors, including Seven Utes Mountain, which looks tailor-made for a ski resort. Also on view is a rare southward look all across Rocky Mountain National Park.

      Seven Utes was in fact considered for ski resort development—in the 1960s, when Denver was vying to host the 1976 Winter Olympics. Investors ponied up millions of dollars. The games ended up in Austria, and progress on the Seven Utes development slowed under decades of impact studies. In 1993, a California investor tried to build a Vail-scale resort here, but public opposition was vociferous, and the investor gave up.

      And so this remote and gorgeous high place remains tranquil and resort-free. As you turn around and make your way back down into the yawning green Bowls, perhaps you can picture returning in winter and doing it on skis—this time with an avalanche beacon in your pocket!

      From Denver. Take I-25 north to Exit 269B, then CO 14 west and US 287 north through Fort Collins. Turn left to continue on CO 14 (Poudre Canyon Road) and proceed west another 56.5 miles to the parking lot for Zimmerman Lake Trailhead, on the left. 2 hours, 45 mins.

       14 American Lakes

      Some call them the American Lakes, others the Michigan Lakes; all would agree they are beautiful. Children, novice hikers, and seasoned mountaineers alike will delight in this gorgeous walk high in the Never Summer Range.

      At a Glance

DifficultyDistance/Time7.5 miles/3.5 hours
Trail ConditionsTrailhead ElevationTotal Hiking Gain9,800 feet1,400 feet
ChildrenFeaturesSubalpine and alpine meadows, wildflowers, high lakes, majestic peaks
SceneryBest SeasonSummer
PhotoOther UsersBikes, horses, dogs on leash
SolitudeNotesEntrance fee, no toilets at trailhead, thunderstorm exposure above tree line
PropertyState Forest State Park, Routt National ForestJurisdictionColorado Parks & Wildlife, U.S. Forest Service

      American Lakes Trail begins modestly on an old logging road in State Forest State Park, formerly the Colorado State Forest, which originated from a 1930s federal land swap and had a mandate to “extend the practice of forestry.” In those days, that meant ramping up the logging. Timbering peaked in the 1950s as protests grew over the visibly denuded mountainsides. The last of the lumber camps closed in the early 1970s, shortly after this park was established.

      High slopes peek through trees as the road curves in the valley. At 0.5 miles, the spiky Nokhu Crags appear briefly on the right, a titillating preview of scenery to come. At 1.2 miles you’ll cross Upper Michigan Ditch, a canal sending western-slope snowmelt east to Fort Collins. Continue toward the multicolored walls of Thunder and Lulu Mountains, through a meadow so stuffed with wildflowers in July it will blow you away. Lulu was named after an 1880s silver mining town on its other side, which was itself named for a mining bigwig’s daughter.

      Lulu Mountain view from American Lakes Trail

      At just over 2 miles, you’ll cross the stream and make easy switchbacks uphill on a narrower path. The views include rust-colored cliffs and lobes of Iron Mountain to the northeast. As the trail wraps into the upper valley, gray peaks steal the show to the southwest: Mount Richthofen, highest in the Never Summer Range; its box-castle lower partner Static Peak; and, delaying their second appearance for dramatic effect, the spires of Nokhu Crags. Across to the south is the graceful green swoop of Thunder Pass.

      American Lakes

      The Never Summers are younger than most of the Rockies, formed by volcanic action and intrusive processes less than 30 million years ago. The name, like many others in this vicinity, is a result of a 1914 hiking trip organized by the