PIKE and SAN ISABEL NATIONAL FORESTS Antelope Creek (6,900 Acres)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

PIKE and SAN ISABEL NATIONAL FORESTS Antelope Creek (6,900 Acres) PIKE AND SAN ISABEL NATIONAL FORESTS Antelope Creek (6,900 acres) ......................................................................................................... 3 Aspen Ridge (14,200 acres) ............................................................................................................ 4 Babcock Hole (8,900 acres) ............................................................................................................ 5 Badger Creek (12,400 acres)........................................................................................................... 7 Boreas (10,200 acres)...................................................................................................................... 8 Buffalo Peaks East (5,700 acres) .................................................................................................... 9 Buffalo Peaks South (15,300 acres) .............................................................................................. 10 Buffalo Peaks West (8,300 acres) ................................................................................................. 12 Burning Bear (19,300 acres) ......................................................................................................... 13 Chicago Ridge (5,900 acres) ......................................................................................................... 14 Chipeta (28,700 acres) .................................................................................................................. 15 Cuchara North (8,200 acres) ......................................................................................................... 16 Cuchara South (7,700 acres) ......................................................................................................... 18 Elk Mountain-Collegiate North (32,100 acres) ............................................................................ 19 Elk Mountain-Collegiate South (6,600 acres) .............................................................................. 20 Elk Mountain-Collegiate West (6,200 acres)................................................................................ 22 Farnum (11,100 acres) .................................................................................................................. 23 Green Mountain (11,100 acres) .................................................................................................... 24 Greenhorn Mountain: Badito Cone to Dry Creek (2,300 acres) ................................................... 25 Greenhorn Mountain: Cisneros Creek to Upper Turkey Creek (2,100 acres) .............................. 26 Greenhorn Mountain: Graneros Creek to Section 10 (4,800 acres).............................................. 27 Greenhorn Mountain: Little Saint Charles Creek to Greenhorn Creek (5,200 acres) .................. 29 Gunbarrel (7,700 acres) ................................................................................................................ 30 Hardscrabble (7,800 acres) ........................................................................................................... 31 Highline (22,700 acres) ................................................................................................................. 32 Holy Cross (9,100 acres)............................................................................................................... 34 Hoosier Ridge (2,900 acres) ......................................................................................................... 35 Jefferson (10,900 acres) ................................................................................................................ 35 Kaufman Ridge (10,200 acres) ..................................................................................................... 37 Kreutzer-Princeton (43,300 acres) ................................................................................................ 38 Little Fountain Creek (7,700 acres) .............................................................................................. 39 Lost Creek East (14,900 acres) ..................................................................................................... 40 Lost Creek South (5,900 acres) ..................................................................................................... 41 Lost Creek West (14,400 acres) .................................................................................................... 43 Methodist Mountain (6,900 acres) ................................................................................................ 44 Mount Antero (38,700 acres) ........................................................................................................ 45 Mount Elbert (22,100 acres) ......................................................................................................... 47 Mount Evans (15,400 acres) ......................................................................................................... 48 Mount Massive (1,400 acres) ........................................................................................................ 49 Pikes Peak East (13,700 acres) ..................................................................................................... 50 Pikes Peak West (13,900 acres) .................................................................................................... 52 Porphyry Peak (3,900 acres) ......................................................................................................... 53 Puma Hills (8,800 acres) ............................................................................................................... 55 Purgatoire (16,800 acres) .............................................................................................................. 55 Pike-San Isabel National Forest Roadless Area Profiles Rampart East (28,300 acres) ......................................................................................................... 57 Rampart West (28,800 acres) ........................................................................................................ 59 Reveille Canyon (7,000 acres) ...................................................................................................... 60 Romley (7,300 acres) .................................................................................................................... 61 Saint Charles Peak (11,200 acres) ................................................................................................ 62 Sangre de Cristo: Alvarado Campground to Music Pass (8,000 acres) ........................................ 63 Sangre de Cristo: Blanca Peak to Slide Mountain (4,100 acres) .................................................. 65 Sangre de Cristo: Lake Creek to Hermit Creek (11,400 acres) .................................................... 67 Sangre de Cristo: Medano Pass to Carbonate Mountain (7,000 acres)......................................... 69 Sangre de Cristo: Silverheels Gulch to Hunts Creek (6,000 acres) .............................................. 70 Sangre de Cristo: West Creek to Big Cottonwood (7,400 acres) ................................................. 72 Schoolmarm Mountain (6,000 acres) ............................................................................................ 73 Scraggy Peaks (16,700 acres) ....................................................................................................... 74 Sheep Rock (8,000 acres) ............................................................................................................. 76 Silverheels (8,300 acres) ............................................................................................................... 77 Spanish Peaks (7,400 acres) .......................................................................................................... 78 Square Top Mountain (7,100 acres).............................................................................................. 80 Starvation Creek (7,600 acres) ...................................................................................................... 80 Tanner Peak (17,700 acres)........................................................................................................... 82 Thirtynine Mile Mountain (11,800 acres) ..................................................................................... 83 Thunder Butte (7,400 acres) ......................................................................................................... 85 Weston Peak (17,800 acres) .......................................................................................................... 85 Page | 2 September 12, 2011 Pike-San Isabel National Forest Roadless Area Profiles Antelope Creek (6,900 acres) 1. Description The Antelope Creek CRA is located on the San Carlos Ranger District in Custer County. It is about 12 miles southwest of the community of Westcliffe. There is only limited public access to most of the Antelope Creek CRA. The principal public access points are located on the east flank of the CRA from NFSR 396 (Little Froze Road) and from NFSR 401 (Deer Peak Road). This CRA is within the Southern Parks and Rocky Mountain Ranges Eco-Section (M331F). Elevations range from 9,200 feet on the western boundary to over 11,000 feet along the eastern boundary. Antelope and Breece Creek valleys and several large upland parks form the dominant landscape
Recommended publications
  • Department of the Interior Miscellaneous Field Studies United States Geological Survey Map Mf-1628-A Pamphlet
    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR MISCELLANEOUS FIELD STUDIES UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY MAP MF-1628-A PAMPHLET MINERAL RESOURCE POTENTIAL OF THE BUFFALO PEAKS WILDERNESS STUDY AREA, LAKE, PARK, AND CHAFFEE COUNTIES, COLORADO By D. C. Hedlund and G. A. Nowlan, U.S. Geological Survey and R. H. Wood, n, U.S. Bureau of Mines STUDIES RELATED TO WILDERNESS Under the provisions of the Wilderness Act (Public Law 88-577, September 3, 1964) and the Joint Conference Report on Senate Bill 4, 88th Congress, the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Mines have been conducting mineral surveys of wilderness and primitive areas. Areas officially designated as "wilderness," "wild," or "canoe" when the act was passed were incorporated into the National Wilderness Preservation System, and some of them are presently being studied. The act provided that areas under consideration for wilderness designation should be studied for suitability for incorporation into the Wilderness System. The mineral surveys constitute one aspect of the suitability studies. The act directs that the results of such surveys are to be made available to the public and be submitted to the President and the Congress. This report discusses the results of a mineral survey of the Buffalo Peaks Wilderness Study Area, Pike and San Isabel National Forests, Lake, Park, and Chaffee Counties, Colo. The area was established as a wilderness study area by Public Law 96-560, December 22, 1980. MINERAL RESOURCE POTENTIAL SUMMARY STATEMENT During 1981 and 1982, the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Mines conducted field investigations to evaluate the mineral resource potential of the Buffalo Peaks Wilde-ness Study Area.
    [Show full text]
  • Land Areas of the National Forest System, As of September 30, 2019
    United States Department of Agriculture Land Areas of the National Forest System As of September 30, 2019 Forest Service WO Lands FS-383 November 2019 Metric Equivalents When you know: Multiply by: To fnd: Inches (in) 2.54 Centimeters Feet (ft) 0.305 Meters Miles (mi) 1.609 Kilometers Acres (ac) 0.405 Hectares Square feet (ft2) 0.0929 Square meters Yards (yd) 0.914 Meters Square miles (mi2) 2.59 Square kilometers Pounds (lb) 0.454 Kilograms United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Land Areas of the WO, Lands National Forest FS-383 System November 2019 As of September 30, 2019 Published by: USDA Forest Service 1400 Independence Ave., SW Washington, DC 20250-0003 Website: https://www.fs.fed.us/land/staff/lar-index.shtml Cover Photo: Mt. Hood, Mt. Hood National Forest, Oregon Courtesy of: Susan Ruzicka USDA Forest Service WO Lands and Realty Management Statistics are current as of: 10/17/2019 The National Forest System (NFS) is comprised of: 154 National Forests 58 Purchase Units 20 National Grasslands 7 Land Utilization Projects 17 Research and Experimental Areas 28 Other Areas NFS lands are found in 43 States as well as Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. TOTAL NFS ACRES = 192,994,068 NFS lands are organized into: 9 Forest Service Regions 112 Administrative Forest or Forest-level units 503 Ranger District or District-level units The Forest Service administers 149 Wild and Scenic Rivers in 23 States and 456 National Wilderness Areas in 39 States. The Forest Service also administers several other types of nationally designated
    [Show full text]
  • VGP) Version 2/5/2009
    Vessel General Permit (VGP) Version 2/5/2009 United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) VESSEL GENERAL PERMIT FOR DISCHARGES INCIDENTAL TO THE NORMAL OPERATION OF VESSELS (VGP) AUTHORIZATION TO DISCHARGE UNDER THE NATIONAL POLLUTANT DISCHARGE ELIMINATION SYSTEM In compliance with the provisions of the Clean Water Act (CWA), as amended (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), any owner or operator of a vessel being operated in a capacity as a means of transportation who: • Is eligible for permit coverage under Part 1.2; • If required by Part 1.5.1, submits a complete and accurate Notice of Intent (NOI) is authorized to discharge in accordance with the requirements of this permit. General effluent limits for all eligible vessels are given in Part 2. Further vessel class or type specific requirements are given in Part 5 for select vessels and apply in addition to any general effluent limits in Part 2. Specific requirements that apply in individual States and Indian Country Lands are found in Part 6. Definitions of permit-specific terms used in this permit are provided in Appendix A. This permit becomes effective on December 19, 2008 for all jurisdictions except Alaska and Hawaii. This permit and the authorization to discharge expire at midnight, December 19, 2013 i Vessel General Permit (VGP) Version 2/5/2009 Signed and issued this 18th day of December, 2008 William K. Honker, Acting Director Robert W. Varney, Water Quality Protection Division, EPA Region Regional Administrator, EPA Region 1 6 Signed and issued this 18th day of December, 2008 Signed and issued this 18th day of December, Barbara A.
    [Show full text]
  • BACKCOUNTRY CACHE a Newsletter for Members of CMC Backpacking Section
    BACKCOUNTRY CACHE A Newsletter for Members of CMC Backpacking Section May 2021 CHAIR'S CORNER - Uwe Sartori Members often ask what do trip leaders do in getting a trip built and across the finish line? Tied into the answer is the awesome value CMC members receive each time they sign up and do a CMC trip. (Think about it. If you go to a guide service, you are likely paying hundreds of dollars a day.) The chart below shows my investment for an upcoming backpacking trip. This personal investment is repeated by many of our trip leaders regardless of the recreational activity. For this 2 day backpacking trip, there are 24 hours of prep/debrief/admin work and 20 hours of trip activity time; 44 hours total. You can begin to understand why the BPX Section is super keen on having our members keep their commitment and help us AVOID ROSTER CHURN. Having trips cancel due to CMC members dropping out is the bane of trip leaders. Show respect and community by keeping your commitment when signing up for a CMC adventure. I guarantee you will not regret it. BPX TRIPS FOR NEXT 2 MONTHS E=Easy M=Moderate D=Difficult June - July Trips With Openings* Jun 1-3 Tue-Thu M Camping, Hiking, Fishing at Browns Canyon Nat'l Monument Jun 9-11 Wed-Fri E Mayflower and Mohawk Lakes, White River NF Jun 11-13 Fri-Sun M Just-in-Time Wigwam Park, Lost Creek Wilderness Jun 25-28 Fri-Mon D Colorado Trail - Collegiate West Exploratory Jun 29- Tue-Thu D Willow and Salmon Lakes, Eagles Nest Wilderness Jul 1 Jul 1-2 Thu-Fri D Macey Lakes and Colony Baldy, Sangre de Cristo Wilderness
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Meeting & Exposition Annual
    Vol. 9, No. 6 June 1999 GSA TODAY A Publication of the Geological Society of America 1999 Annual Meeting & Exposition Colorado ConvenConventiontion CenterCenter HyattHyatt RegencyRegency HotelHotel MarriottMarriott CityCity CenterCenter HotelHotel OctoberOctober 25–28,25–28, 19991999 Denver,Denver, ColoradoColorado Table of Contents Crossing Divides Abstracts with Programs . 32 Convenience Information . 26 Employment Service . 22 World Wide Web Exhibits . 20 Visit the GSA Web site to obtain more details and to get the latest information on the Annual Meeting. Field Trips . 13 www.geosociety.org Graduate School Information Forum . 23 Guest Activities . 24 Deadlines Hot Topics at Noon . 9 Abstracts due July 12 Housing . 28 Preregistration and Housing due September 17 (forms(forms enclosed)enclosed) How to Submit Your Abstract . 12 Institute for Earth Science and the Environment . 22 For More Information Call: (303) 447-2020 or 1-800-472-1988 International Program . 6 Call: (303) 447-2020 or 1-800-472-1988 Fax: 303-447-0648 K–16 Education Program . 18 E-mail: [email protected] Membership . 30 Web: www.geosociety.org Registration . 30 Short Courses . 16 Cover photos by John A. Karachewski: Large photo shows the Special Events . 23 Continental Divide—Sawatch Range, Collegiate Peaks Wilderness, Special Programs . 22 Colorado; small photo taken near James Peak, Colorado Technical Program . 3 Travel . 25 Crossing Divides Annual Meeting Committee General Co-Chairs: Mary Kraus, David Budd, University of Colorado Technical Program Co-Chairs:
    [Show full text]
  • Mesa Cortina / South Willow Falls
    U. S. Department of Agriculture Dillon Ranger District 680 Blue River Parkway Silverthorne, CO 80498 (970) 468-5400 MESA CORTINA / SOUTH WILLOW FALLS - FDT 32 / 60 Difficulty: EASY TO MODERATE Trail Use: Moderate Length: 2.7 miles one-way to the Gore Range Trail (FDT 60) 4.2 miles one-way to the South Willow Falls Elevation: Start at 9,217 feet and ends at 10,007 feet (highest point 10,007 feet) Elevation Gain: +1,043 feet - 253 feet = +790 feet Open To: HIKING, HORSE, X-C SKIING, SNOWSHOEING Access: From I-70 take Exit 205, Silverthorne / Dillon, and travel north on HWY 9 to the first traffic light at the intersection of Rainbow Drive / Wildernest Road. Turn left onto Wildernest Road / Ryan Gulch Rd. Continue through two stoplights onto Buffalo Mountain Drive. After 0.8 miles, turn right onto Lakeview Drive. Travel 0.45 miles and turn left onto Aspen Drive. The Mesa Cortina trailhead and parking area will be on your right in 0.15 miles. Trail Highlights: This trail enters the Eagles Nest Wilderness Area. There are great views of Dillon Reservoir and the entire Blue River Valley from the trailhead. The trail winds through aspen groves into a meadow which offers a good view of the Ptarmigan Peak Wilderness. After the meadow is the Eagles Nest Wilderness boundary. The trail then travels through lodgepole pine forests and crosses South Willow Creek just before intersecting the Gore Range Trail (FDT 60). Continue left (west) on the Gore Range Trail toward South Willow Falls. Eventually you will come to a junction which is the dead-end spur trail to the falls.
    [Show full text]
  • Colorado Fourteeners Checklist
    Colorado Fourteeners Checklist Rank Mountain Peak Mountain Range Elevation Date Climbed 1 Mount Elbert Sawatch Range 14,440 ft 2 Mount Massive Sawatch Range 14,428 ft 3 Mount Harvard Sawatch Range 14,421 ft 4 Blanca Peak Sangre de Cristo Range 14,351 ft 5 La Plata Peak Sawatch Range 14,343 ft 6 Uncompahgre Peak San Juan Mountains 14,321 ft 7 Crestone Peak Sangre de Cristo Range 14,300 ft 8 Mount Lincoln Mosquito Range 14,293 ft 9 Castle Peak Elk Mountains 14,279 ft 10 Grays Peak Front Range 14,278 ft 11 Mount Antero Sawatch Range 14,276 ft 12 Torreys Peak Front Range 14,275 ft 13 Quandary Peak Mosquito Range 14,271 ft 14 Mount Evans Front Range 14,271 ft 15 Longs Peak Front Range 14,259 ft 16 Mount Wilson San Miguel Mountains 14,252 ft 17 Mount Shavano Sawatch Range 14,231 ft 18 Mount Princeton Sawatch Range 14,204 ft 19 Mount Belford Sawatch Range 14,203 ft 20 Crestone Needle Sangre de Cristo Range 14,203 ft 21 Mount Yale Sawatch Range 14,200 ft 22 Mount Bross Mosquito Range 14,178 ft 23 Kit Carson Mountain Sangre de Cristo Range 14,171 ft 24 Maroon Peak Elk Mountains 14,163 ft 25 Tabeguache Peak Sawatch Range 14,162 ft 26 Mount Oxford Collegiate Peaks 14,160 ft 27 Mount Sneffels Sneffels Range 14,158 ft 28 Mount Democrat Mosquito Range 14,155 ft 29 Capitol Peak Elk Mountains 14,137 ft 30 Pikes Peak Front Range 14,115 ft 31 Snowmass Mountain Elk Mountains 14,099 ft 32 Windom Peak Needle Mountains 14,093 ft 33 Mount Eolus San Juan Mountains 14,090 ft 34 Challenger Point Sangre de Cristo Range 14,087 ft 35 Mount Columbia Sawatch Range
    [Show full text]
  • COLORADO CONTINENTAL DIVIDE TRAIL COALITION VISIT COLORADO! Day & Overnight Hikes on the Continental Divide Trail
    CONTINENTAL DIVIDE NATIONAL SCENIC TRAIL DAY & OVERNIGHT HIKES: COLORADO CONTINENTAL DIVIDE TRAIL COALITION VISIT COLORADO! Day & Overnight Hikes on the Continental Divide Trail THE CENTENNIAL STATE The Colorado Rockies are the quintessential CDT experience! The CDT traverses 800 miles of these majestic and challenging peaks dotted with abandoned homesteads and ghost towns, and crosses the ancestral lands of the Ute, Eastern Shoshone, and Cheyenne peoples. The CDT winds through some of Colorado’s most incredible landscapes: the spectacular alpine tundra of the South San Juan, Weminuche, and La Garita Wildernesses where the CDT remains at or above 11,000 feet for nearly 70 miles; remnants of the late 1800’s ghost town of Hancock that served the Alpine Tunnel; the awe-inspiring Collegiate Peaks near Leadville, the highest incorporated city in America; geologic oddities like The Window, Knife Edge, and Devil’s Thumb; the towering 14,270 foot Grays Peak – the highest point on the CDT; Rocky Mountain National Park with its rugged snow-capped skyline; the remote Never Summer Wilderness; and the broad valleys and numerous glacial lakes and cirques of the Mount Zirkel Wilderness. You might also encounter moose, mountain goats, bighorn sheep, marmots, and pika on the CDT in Colorado. In this guide, you’ll find Colorado’s best day and overnight hikes on the CDT, organized south to north. ELEVATION: The average elevation of the CDT in Colorado is 10,978 ft, and all of the hikes listed in this guide begin at elevations above 8,000 ft. Remember to bring plenty of water, sun protection, and extra food, and know that a hike at elevation will likely be more challenging than the same distance hike at sea level.
    [Show full text]
  • 2011, Winter – Bikepacking the CT
    News from the Colorado Trail Foundation WINTER 2011 Bikepacking (and Hike-A-Biking) the Colorado Trail By Judd Rohwer (Rohwer, of Sandia Park, New Mexico, is a member of that’s NUTS. Back of the Pack Racing, a team of riders that describes But then the wheels started turning. And I’m not itself as “a fundamental movement that supports the talking about the 29 inchers on my Black Sheep single- theory of ‘me against mainstream.’ Our team attempts speed. I started thinking about the adventure, the to do everything the ‘right way,’ but not your way. We glory ... and the risks. I started thinking about the are a group of engineers, pilots, dreamers and UFO mental preparation, the physical training, the gear ... chasers. One thing is certain. If the race is long enough, and the danger. we will catch you – maybe.” What follows is his The challenge of The Colorado Trail seemed so description of his bikepacking adventures last summer massive compared to the usual 24-hour mountain on The Colorado Trail.) bike races that we train and live for at Back of the Pack Racing. But I wanted to face the challenge head on, so I made a commitment to myself and started planning for a 2011 attempt at the CTR. Then reality hit: the reality of a 500-mile self- supported race hit me straight in the face. Racing myself to the edge of exhaustion and beyond didn’t sound like much fun. So, I quickly convinced myself that the best way to experience the CT was to approach the adventure as a self-supported tour, not a race.
    [Show full text]
  • Pikes Peak 1911 1923 2 William F. Ervin (#1 & #2 Tie) Pikes Peak 1911 1923 3 Albert Ellingwood 4 Mary Cronin Longs Peak 1921 9 1934 5 Carl Melzer 1937 6 Robert B
    EVERYONE WHO HAS COMPLETED THE COLORADO FOURTEENERS (By Year of Completion) 1 Carl Blaurock (#1 & #2 tie) Pikes Peak 1911 1923 2 William F. Ervin (#1 & #2 tie) Pikes Peak 1911 1923 3 Albert Ellingwood 4 Mary Cronin Longs Peak 1921 9 1934 5 Carl Melzer 1937 6 Robert B. Melzer 1937 7 Elwyn Arps Eolus, Mt. 1920 7 1938 8 Joe Merhar Pyramid Peak 8 1938 9 O. P. Settles Longs Peak 1927 7 1939 10 Harry Standley Elbert, Mt. 1923 9 1939 11 Whitney M. Borland Pikes Peak 6 1941 12 Vera DeVries Longs Peak 1936 Kit Carson Peak 8 1941 13 Robert M. Ormes Pikes Peak Capitol Peak 8 1941 14 Jack Graham 9 1941 15 John Ambler 9 1943 16 Paul Gorham Pikes Peak 1926 8 1944 17 Ruth Gorham Grays Peak 1933 8 1944 18 Henry Buchtel Longs Peak 1946 19 Herb Hollister Longs Peak 1927 7 1947 20 Roy Murchison Longs Peak 1908 8 1947 21 Evelyn Runnette Longs Peak 1931 Uncompahgre Peak 9 1947 22 Marian Rymer Longs Peak 1926 Crestones 9 1948 23 Charles Rymer Longs Peak 1927 Crestones 9 1948 24 Nancy E. Nones (Perkins) Quandary 1937 Eolus, Mt. 9 1948 25 John Spradley Longs Peak 1943 7 1949 26 Eliot Moses Longs Peak 1921 7 1949 27 Elizabeth S. Cowles Lincoln, Mt. 9 1932 Wetterhorn Peak 9 1949 28 Dorothy Swartz Crestones 8 1950 29 Robert Swartz Bross, Mt. 1941 Crestones 8 1950 30 Ted Cooper Longs Peak 8 1950 31 Stirling Cooper Longs Peak 8 1950 32 Harold Brewer Longs Peak 1937 El Diente 9 1950 33 Wilbur F.
    [Show full text]
  • Profiles of Colorado Roadless Areas
    PROFILES OF COLORADO ROADLESS AREAS Prepared by the USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Region July 23, 2008 INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 2 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS ARAPAHO-ROOSEVELT NATIONAL FOREST ......................................................................................................10 Bard Creek (23,000 acres) .......................................................................................................................................10 Byers Peak (10,200 acres)........................................................................................................................................12 Cache la Poudre Adjacent Area (3,200 acres)..........................................................................................................13 Cherokee Park (7,600 acres) ....................................................................................................................................14 Comanche Peak Adjacent Areas A - H (45,200 acres).............................................................................................15 Copper Mountain (13,500 acres) .............................................................................................................................19 Crosier Mountain (7,200 acres) ...............................................................................................................................20 Gold Run (6,600 acres) ............................................................................................................................................21
    [Show full text]
  • 2 Days in the Historic Arkansas River Valley 2 Days More Itineraries
    Published on Colorado.com (https://www.colorado.com) 2 Days in the Historic Arkansas River Valley 2 days More Itineraries Spend two days exploring the historic roots of the Arkansas River Valley by train, raft, zipline and hot springs. Sustainability Activity Travel Like a Local: There are special places and unique vistas around nearly every Colorado corner. You can help ensure these places exist for generations to come by staying on roads and trails, keeping speeds in check, leaving campsites and picnic spots just as you found them, and following instructional signs while you?re out and about in our state. Day 1 ACTIVITY Leadville Railroad Spectacular railroad trip in the Rocky Mountains. Incredible views of Colorado's two highest peaks, colorful wildflowers and majestic aspen groves. Escape to the wilderness while enjoying an on... Insider's Tip Head to Buena Vista: Hop into the car for a 40-minute drive to Buena Vista for lunch. LUNCH Simple Eatery & Spoon-It-Up Stop in for for a great burger, soup or salad. Also an all-natural frozen-yogurt bar where you choose your flavor and then top it off with more than 35 toppings. ACTIVITY Hike Lost Lake Trail Lace up your boots and set out to explore Lost Lake Trail in the San Isabel National Forest. The 2.6-mile, easy-graded trail features a stunning turquoise lake beneath the Collegiate Peaks and shocks of golden aspen stands in the fall. Keep an eye out for wildlife, like moose and chipmunks, as you go. DINNER House Rock Kitchen House Rock Kitchen is a fast casual, from scratch, healthy, fun option in Buena Vista.
    [Show full text]