backpacking

Louisville ⇨Valley View Hot Springs

Labor Day: unofficial start to Autumn.  For us snow lovers…almost made it thru another summer 🙂

3 day holiday.  Staying ‘local’ this year, road trippin’ Colorado’s Western SlopeTrip highlight: hiking in scenic Telluride – yep, another high-elevation ski town mountain-etched by massive canyons [the San Juans].  Aspen, Crested Butte & now Telluride – been an outstanding Colorado summer.

Friday 5pm.  Work ends, holiday begins.

Packed, picked up the Pup, on the road by 6 – along with most of my Front Range neighbors.  Argh.  Camping holiday.  Needed to check into my site by 10pm.  Valley View folks were mighty nice to hang around ‘til 20-past.  Otherwise would have started my adventure with a hefty night hike, parked on the wrong side of a chained cattle-gate.  As it was, struggled to pitch-tent in the dark.  Mighty remote.

Woke Saturday morning to quiet Colorado paradise.  Dry arid landscape, mix of evergreen & cacti.  Natural hot springs tucked between the Great Sand Dunes & Gunnison National Park.  Hiked thru fields of sunflower, lapsing 30-45 minutes at each naturally heated pool.  Meadow Pond, Waterfall Pond, Top Pond, Party Pond…whole lotta warm-water bubbling.

Pupster begged, no one around.  I relented.  Happy dog-paddling pup.

Valley View Hot Springs ⇨Telluride

 

Our most remote ponds are up a short, but steep trail. Most take about twenty minutes to trek the ¼ mile trail to the Top Ponds. Guests agree these peaceful, bubbling warm waters make it the trip well worthwhile. It’s a series of three (almost four) ponds flowing one into the next. The top-most pond fills about two feet deep and offers ample space to find a corner to one’s self. Its water cascades down to join more warm source water beneath a large tree providing shade throughout the day. Water temperatures vary dramatically as these ponds mix with more snow-melt and runoff than our other sources. In recent months, temperatures ranged from 98°F to 107°F.

Showered, on the road by 1pm.  Quick detour in Villa Grove.  Small 3-building town – but one of those buildings advertised pie.  Never miss an opportunity for pie ❤

3 hours of winding byway.  Poncha Springs, Gunnison, fuel/sanity break in Montrose.  Ridgway, Placerville, Sawpit, Telluride.  Campground, no room in the Inn.  Soooo many people…Telluride Film Festival.  Who knew?

Opted to drive toward Bridal Veil Falls – tomorrow morning’s hike launch.  Mile-half of dirt & boulders (4WD trek).  Secured an overnight pull-off, clouds grayed, evening skies opened.  RAIN.  Car-camped high above Telluride.  Nite 2 elevation: 10,000ft+.

 

 

 

AMAZING morning sunrise.  Watched for half-hour before rustling up breakfast – eggs & chicken-apple sausage (sadly, warm runny eggs/pan-fried 20 minutes).  Brushed teeth, shut up the tent, tethered Ro to my belt – HIKE day!

Mile/mile-half drive DOWN from my camp site.  Secured parking near Rotary Park, short tenth-mile walk to Garden Creek Falls.

Previously trekked this trail, day-before the Casper Marathon 2015.

[June 2015] …hiked Casper Mountain.  Not the Rockies experience of the Bighorns, but a good 5-mile day hike.  Probably not the best prep, day before a marathon but…I’m a lover of mountains.

Bridle Trail: 5 mile loop up/over the Falls.  June 2015 vs August 2017?  Today, whole lotta hikers.  Whole lotta COLORADO hikers.  Appears much of the Front Range arrived in Wyoming overnight & were doing what Coloradans do – get OUTDOORS.  Literally met only ONE Wyoming-based family on today’s trail.  [Thanks to Ro – everyone stops & says hi.  He’s a very pet-able Pup. 🙂 ]

Englemann spruce, Rocky Mountain juniper, Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir, Green Ash, Cottonwood, Chokeberry, Quaking Aspen.  This trail’s a tree BONANZA, landscape more reminiscent of Boulder County than Central Wyoming.

Bridle hiked counter-clockwise, finishing over the Mountain’s rock-canyon outcropping.  WIDE-OPEN Casper 2800 feet below, today’s WOW shot (‘though skyline bit hazy due to BC/Western Canada forest fires).

Picnic’d by the Falls, then drove into town before roads closed for tomorrow’s eclipse.  YMCA-showered (FREE/very much appreciated!), check’d out the Cowboy Code of Ethics, shopped Wyoming’s (dog-friendly) Eclipse Festival.

7pm ‘til after next day’s TOTAL Eclipse (noon-ish) – Mountain gated off from Casper.

Dusk-walked Ro by our camp owner’s wild mustang rescue.  BEAUTIFUL horse.  Another pink, high mountain sunset.  Dinner plans?  Shrimp, mushrooms & olives in a wilted bed of spinach.  Camping B-I-G on BIRTHDAY weekend ❤

 

 

Bridle Trail, Casper WY

 

 

 

 

 

Monday: the first solar eclipse to travel ‘cross the USA since June 1918 (99 years).  Totality – FULL eclipse of the daytime sun – not in Colorado, but only 4 hours away in Casper, Wyoming.  TOTAL ECLIPSE on my Birthday – it’s a sign, right?  This year’s BIRTHDAY CAMPING destination 🙂

Wyoming, America’s LEAST populated state (literally #50, behind Alaska & Vermont).  ALL hotels, B&B’s, hostels – EVERY SINGLE ROOM booked, no exaggeration.  Paid $35/night (3 months ago) to camp in an open field, private land on Casper Mountain – turned out to be the deal of the weekend!

Past 2 weeks: ECLIPSE, the buzz word in the office/neighborhood/weekly run group/gym.

So many people travelling north to rural Wyoming, news media warning Coloradans to carry food, water, gasoline.  Phone carrier bringing in 2 temporary cell towers to handle the volume increase.

Yikes.  Do I stay or do I go-go?

Packed, planned accordingly.  Left home at 4am Saturday morning.

 

 

Wyoming expecting a crush of 600,000 people, most coming from Colorado

 

 

Coloradans hoping to catch the Aug. 21 solar eclipse at the last minute shouldn’t count on catching the moment when the sun is blacked out by the moon. Without a strategy to view the once-in-a-lifetime spectacle, they may find themselves stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic on Interstate 25 instead.

 

When the sky darkens during the much-anticipated event, it will be the well-prepared who get to enjoy its splendor. Among the key tips: leave early, pack extra supplies and arrange a place to stay ahead of time. Otherwise, risk facing bumper-to-bumper traffic and overcrowded campsites at every turn.

 

Some are predicting that up to 600,000 people will travel to Wyoming (2016 population: 585,501), hoping to squeeze into the 67-mile wide swath of darkness — known as the totality — that will cut across the state that morning, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation.

 

About two-thirds of those visitors are expected to flood into Wyoming from the south, putting an incredible stress on roads like I-25, which normally accommodates about 83,000 vehicles a day, CDOT spokesman Jared Fiel said.

 

“When we’re talking about adding that many more people to the roads, it’s going to be intimidating,” Fiel said. “We are fully planning for it be pretty bad. The earlier you can get up there, the better because we really don’t know what’s going to happen.”

 

Traffic and finding a perfect campsite aren’t the only inconveniences in the run-up to the eclipse. Cell phone service may also be hard to come by.

 

“Certainly the cell towers in Wyoming weren’t meant to handle that situation,” CDOT’s Fiel said, suggesting travelers bring walkie talkies.

 

Not a soul on the highway at 4am.  Watched the sunrise just past Chugwater.  Antelope grazed where one normally sees cattle.  Breakfast’d in downtown Casper, then claimed my campsite 20 minutes away on Casper Mountain.

10:22am.  Tented, dog walked/fed/water’d.

No plans today [hike day tomorrow] – honestly, thought I’d still be in traffic.  Google-search’d nearby OUTDOOR activities.

Independence Rock: 40 minutes west, HISTORICAL, dog-friendly.  Check, done 🙂

Dry grass-sparse ranch land, Casper to Alcova.  mid-1800’s, three National Trails crossed Independence Rock: Oregon Trail (infamous Missouri to Oregon trek), California Trail (Gold Rush of ‘49) & the Mormon Trail (Brigham Young migration to Utah).

Independence Rock, first blip on the prairie since Casper.  Going UP?  Absolutely!  Not remotely technical – first glance looked like an impossible climb, no more than a moderate hike.  Rainwater pooled in naturally-eroded cracks on the Rock’s surface.

For emigrants, Independence Rock was a celebrated milestone.  Arrival on or by the Fourth of July indicated the western mountains could likely be crossed before winter snowfall.

Back on Casper Mountain, past few hours/campsite had grown into a community – joined by another 30-40 RVs/tents.  Sunset, temps dropped.  First night’s meal: crab cakes, polenta & kale (pan warmed/previously prepared).   Not bad for camping, right? ❤