MyCOLORADOLife.net

DIFFICULT climb today — our second 14er, Quandary Peak.

Clear weather forecast so Ro & I didn’t leave home ’til almost 8am.  Drive took us west past the Continental Divide, through Eisenhower tunnel, south on Colorado 9 through Frisco & Breckenridge to a small town named Blue River.  Crazy me, thought the ‘Quandary Peak’ sign was the trailhead marker.  2 miles later through dense forest we found the ‘other’ road (& trailhead) and started our hike, albeit delayed.

Less than a mile of forest & meadows before we reached ROCK.  Rock is deceptively arduous and hard on the body.  ‘Quarry’ Peak might be a more apt name for this hike.  ROCK — big ROCK, broken ROCK, shale ROCK, boulder ROCK, then more loose ROCK.  

Not our finest hour.  Ro & I went through all 5 bottles of water, felt the altitude and frequently stopped for oxygen.  Clear weather yeah but 40 MPH wind gusts further slowed our pace and dampened my spirit.  Quitter mode was setting in — argh!  Lucky for me we were trekking against 2 groups of 3 hikers (for a while I thought they were the same group – both 2 guys and a gal).  We started to encourage & call out to one another which was the push I needed this day.  Ro & I summited then fast crashed by the far-end summit Inukshuk.  I started incorporating the other hikers into my dream so must have slept hard for 20 minutes.  LOL>
Hung out with Sean, Nicole and Ian — all East Coast transplants, NY PA & FL (panhandle) for an hour.  Food, rest, conversation and my life spirit was back! Our bad selves just completed 2 14ers over two weekends.  Amazing summit shots, a short choppy video (1st time using this feature), my COLORADO LIFE ROCKS!

Wildlife check this hike — marmots, pikas and a mountain goat (snapped a pic of the goat).





Ro’s first 14er!

First off — apologies to all my Flatlander visitors; I now get it.  I felt burning in my lungs this hike, and even a little shortness of breath.

Saturday morning I set my alarm and we shot out by 6am; Mt. Bierstadt is approximately 2 hours away.  I had already checked the day’s forecast, knew that Guanella Pass was open, and thunderstorms were possible any time after 1pm.

Lightning strikes kill more hikers on Colorado’s 14ers than accidents/falls.  Being that high up and close to God should have more folks worried (joking).  Of course, standing on rock with ZERO tree coverage increases your strike chances too 🙂

Beginning at Guanella Pass trailhead, meant our hike started at 11,700 ft — and also, cut 3 hours from our out time.  Parked the car and headed for willow thicket.  Online reviews advised this ‘valley’ continues for a mile, then the next 6+ miles heads UP — first switchbacks, then rock grappling near summit.  Any concerns I had about bringing Ro on a 14er were erased after 2 miles in — when we saw our first snow (glacier).  Sno’ Ro led the charge from there until our last half mile when rock climbing held Super Ro to ‘normal’ dog pace 🙂

Knowing thunderstorms were a probability, Ro and I hit the trail hard.  Steady pace with only 2 brief stops for oxygen; 2:45 hours up — guide says 2 hours (athlete) to 4 hours to summit.  I kept my eye on a tour group who ultimately led our way.  First gave us a target to chase, then provided company & conversation for a mile, and ultimately inspired us to pass and summit first.  Still competitive — even in Colorado. (These super nice folks later snapped a few pics for us.)

Break out a sandwich, bean burrito and doggie trail mix — and KA-BOOM…the sound of thunder, soon followed by thundersnow — snow which comes down like pellets.  Our crowd of 30 summiters soon disperses.  Ro and I start from the back and trail run the next 4 miles.  I stop for air and the winter winds blow in. Our race to the car is slowed only briefly by ‘hiker traffic’.  Ro seemed to understand/sense that the snow, then ice, then rain wasn’t gonna let up.

Triscuits, sandwiches and more doggie trail mix from our tailgate for 10 minutes (food intended for our summit lunch) before rain/snow/slush deluge fell from the heavens.  Oh yeah — 2:45 up but only 1:38 hours down.  Gravity — and occasional thunderclaps — sped our pace.  LOL>

Weekly hikes to date — this ranks in the top 5!

 

https://www.trimbleoutdoors.com/ViewTrip/30977

Per Dr. Glenn — no rock climbing, no Saturday or Sunday hikes (maybe Monday depending on Ro), no baths, no swimming.  That’s a lot of ‘NOs’.  Friday was ‘Happy Sterilization Day’ for Rowan O’Roark.  Couldn’t quite find the ‘right’ card for this occasion 🙂

Memorial Day Monday — Ro and I lazily roll off the couch and lil’ guy heads for the backdoor (an entrance to the garage).  I oblige, open the door and the begging begins.  Days of being cooped up/trapped inside — with ‘the cone of shame’ affixed around his head — my pup wants O-U-T.

A co-worker once bragged about an excellent hike for her & her Huskies nearby — only 30 minutes away in Eldorado Springs.  Quick online research, backpack jammed with water & snacks, and BAM — we’re in the car by 10am.

Eldorado Springs — another ‘hippie’ town who complacently never voted ‘YES’ for paved roads.  That’s 2 so far this year — Ward (shanty town) CO and now ElDo (as known by its natives).

Unofficial start of Colorado hiking season is Memorial Day so shouldn’t be surprised — park is CLOSED to cars due to overcrowding. COLORADO ROCKS!  (Almost) ALL other U.S. states are plagued with obesity, yet my state’s parks are at capacity.  How cool is that?

Ro and I drive back to ElDo, find parking in a shady trailer park, and hike into ElDorado Canyon.  Paid our $3 ‘walk-in’ fee and the attendant hands me a bag of Milk-Bone trail mix for Ro.  LOVE LOVE this place!

Settled on Rattlesnake Gulch — only 4 miles roundtrip and includes burnt-out 1920’s Crags Hotel and view of the Continental Divide. ALSO, on the hike up I noted a cave on the other side of South Boulder Creek — check, doing that 🙂

Bird-watching husband/wife (watching nesting golden eagles) took our picture at Continental Divide Overlook.  Thanks!

Day ended with a dip in the river.  Dr. Glenn said NO to bathing and swimming – nothing specific about wading 🙂

 

Eldorado Canyon State Park