NoCo/Indian Peaks

Spicy Northern Indian food enjoyed with friends on a Friday afternoon made for a ROCKSTAR weekend start.  My friend Kimberly flew in from Salt Lake so we kicked off the weekend early with Chicken Makhni at Curry n Kebob in Boulder.

Hike #42 Plan – needed to limit my drive time to hour, hour and half (Saturday night plans) AND make the most of an usually warm October day. Fort Collins is slightly more than an hour north of my home; Horsetooth Rock is only 7,300ft elevation (below treeline so temps remain unaffected by surprise, high altitude weather fronts).  Done and done 🙂

Makes you wonder what goes through Ro’s mind.  Last weekend we braved blowing snow at Woods Mountain on the Divide; this Saturday we hiked in t-shirts on a trail lined with evergreens near Wyoming.  LOVE LOVE LOVE my Colorado life!

Hike was approx 5 miles roundtrip so today was much more about the journey than the end destination.  Super pleased to see today’s trail not marred by past summer’s disastrous fire (Greyrock Mountain & much of Poudre River Canyon were not so lucky).

Enjoyed lunch amongst massive granite boulders peppered with quartz & mica – canvassed against snow-capped Longs Peak.   WOW, WOW, WOW!   Begging chipmunks kept Ro at ‘full alert’.  My pup’s downed 2 birds and 2 rabbits thus far; however this day, Chip n Dale lucked out and escaped Ro’s trophy ‘kill’ tally.

All smiles from trailhead to summit – FAAAANNNNTASTIC day!

 

Abandoned 2 hikes this year – Mount Evans & Lake Dorothy (both unfinished due to weather-related excuses).

Summited Mount Evans last weekend (my 5th 14er of the year) and this weekend Lake Dorothy SUCCESS!

Inspired to get these hikes banged out before the snow flies, so planned this weekend’s lower altitude climb (12,000ft+) during an East Coast (flatlander) friend’s visit.

Hindsight…thinking maybe I could be the only one who enjoys our thin air – is that possible?  Nah.  🙂

Drove to ‘4th of July’ trailhead from Nederland over 5 miles of rough dirt road but the Prius did not let me down this day. Didn’t really have too many options though.  How would I explain to a Flatlander that our 8 mile hike starts after a 5 mile walk to the trailhead?  LOL>

FAANNNTASTIC sunshiny day hike!  And the great thing about returning to an unfinished hike, is that you unequivocally 1000% remember to stay LEFT at the trail junction this go-around…no getting lost, again!

I was losing my passenger soon after treeline. ‘I don’t see a lake’ – HA!   Honestly, he was a good sport.  2 miles of rocky incline and BAM just over the ridge, we looked down upon glacier-fed Lake Dorothy.  The wind was blowing cold (YES!) but the sun was still burning strong.  Lied back against the tundra to soak up its gathered heat.

What a beautiful day, what a blessed ROCKSTAR life!

 

 

 

ROCKSTAR hike!

Ro and I started out early – destination Isabelle Glacier.  Like the concept of playing it safe but 2 weeks from the Audubon strike, needed some altitude.  And who doesn’t want to see snow in August?  Come on.

Trailhead parking was already full at 730am, but alternative parking was less than a mile away.  Step out of the car, backpack up and think – dang it’s cool.  Check the temperature gauge – 52 degrees.  YES!  Pull on a fleece and off we go.

Long Lake, then a treeline hike through green valleys, tall pines, amazing mountain scapes, and random waterfalls. This is one of those days where I get super spiritual – sight, sound & smell are all firing competing endorphins.  It’s just so visually stunning, coupled with rushing water and crisp high altitude mountain air.  WOW moment!

Another mile & Lake Isabelle, mountain lake just under 11,000ft elevation fed by glacier runoff.  Blues, emerald greens, hugged between two 13er peaks, Mt Apache & Mt Shoshoni. End destination for many hikers (& their dogs) so let Ro socialize and get in a quick swim.

Once our trail hit rock, started watching for cairns.  One left where I should have went right.  ‘Nuf said.  Frustrating.  31 different unique hikes though haven’t allowed me to learn a particular trail well – but happily have been exposed to many many Colorado destinations this year.  Been logging hike mishaps mentally to guide me over my next 40 years 🙂

I can see our glacier destination, UP UP from the waterfall riverbed.  So…Ro & I do just that — start bouldering UP, thankfully not so much shale.  Put Ro on a retractable leash this week – gives him 20 feet of run (vs 6 on his rope leash) and allows me to carabiner clip to my pack, freeing up both hands while scaling rock.  I DID learn from Audubon.  UP, UP, we climb until I can see Mt Shoshoni peak on my horizon.  Stop for a bean burrito break and hear folks making noise on Isabelle Glacier – approx 1,000 feet & 3 glaciers below us.  ARGH!

I can 100% manage this – just a mental stretch after the strike.  Focus, take it slow and think through the down climb.

I let Sno Ro enjoy an August run at the first glacier.  To the top of this small glacier he darts, then purposely slides to the bottom. Up and down like an 8-year-old child.  Inspired by his love of life, found myself laughing out loud.

Second glacier was HUGE but icy from the summer sun. Additionally I notice it spills over a cliff — yeah, a cliff.  No play on this one – instead we scale laterally over rock until I spot a good exit to boulder down.  Rocks were weathered smooth so searched for crags and breaks to safely descend.  Back up, lateral over and down again.  It’s a process, no lie – and all with a dog – but success!  One gash on my left ankle but nothing like Audubon.  Sting [from cut] actually keeps one alert, human, more in the moment.

We see our first hikers again – on the other side of Isabelle Glacier.  Scale across the glacier and pick up a trail on the other side.

Back up – ‘scaled across a glacier’.  Yeah, my Colorado life ROCKS!

 

Sno Ro glacier slide (video short)