Colorado day 9-12: Silverton

Julu 31-August 3

Day 9

San Juan Mountains where we are hiking are of volcanic origin, Sangre de Cristo Range we visited earlier was formed by uplifting. Clear difference in scenery. Mineral deposits brought mining, results of which are still visible in many places. Silverton is located at the bottom of a caldera (part of large San Juan volcanic field). Animas River cuts through it and then flows down to Durango, railroad runs along it.

Staying in Silverton at 2850 masl helped with aclimatization, even if only marginally, and we knew we had to go higher. Next day-hike: 12 km loop, 800 m total ascent to 3790 masl to Island and Ice Lakes. This is far better training before multi-day trek than anything we could do in Chicago. We followed the same strategy that worked for us in the past. The initial plan was to go just to Ice Lake, but we felt well and listened to other hikers recommending Island Lake detour. No regrets. Now in beautiful mountains, valleys and creeks, alpine meadows in full bloom, no heavy backpacks. We also got some training in rain showers, hail and thunders.

Day 10

The weather was not too good in the morning bringing rain and lightnings to the area. Not good for hiking, not above tree-line. We decided to visit local mines which there are many around Silverton. We started with self-guided tour of Mayflower Gold Mill: old buildings filled with machinery and tools. Plenty of interesting artifacts from 1929-1945. Gold, silver, lead, zinc and copper ore was brought here for processing, some by aerial tram connecting mines higher on mountain slopes. Next stop was guided tour of Old Hundred Gold Mine which history goes back to 1872 (last gold dreams finally shattered by 1973). We visited tunnels drilled into the mountain to collect ore dropped down through vertical shaft from mines above. We finished the afternoon milling around Silverton and then at Gatorfest organized by owners of Columbine Roadhouse.

Day 11

Quite rested after more lazy day, we were ready to push it harder again to Highland Mary Lakes with return via Sector 24 of Colorado Trail and Continental Divide Trail. 13 km loop, 640 m total ascent, to 3840 masl. Bad road to trailhead and again we parked before particularly damaged part. There were many people until the lakes and almost nobody further on, where mountain views were even better. Not a bad scenery for a workout. Kind of boring at the end to follow well established trails, so we looked for and found a shortcut with wet-crossing to get back to our car parked along the road.

Day 12

Keeping with “on and off” strategy, we stayed at our base in Silverton for entire day to rest and prep for the trek. We knew from our road trip to Canada and Alaska (we managed only one short 3-day backpacking there) that switching from “road trip” to “trekking” requires extra time (a day). Mostly to pull all necessary stuff out of the car storage and pack our backpacks. Surprisingly, we had everything we needed. We attended Gatorfest in the evening with music, food and controlled burning of gator sculpture.

Colorado dy 5-8: Great Sand Dunes and to Silverton

July 27-30

Day 5

Great Sand Dunes National Park was on our radar for a while. Finally we had full day to explore and a plan what to do, so just took off from our campsite at 7AM, crossed dry Medano Creek and started walking up the mounds, along ridges, across valleys and steep peaks. Bright sand contrasted with blue sky and dark green mountains on the horizon. Our 8 km included one of the highest points (High Dune) 175 m above the creek bottom. It was great experience somewhat reminiscent of free roaming on Root Glacier. Some mounds looked pristine in the morning, with no human footprints, but with quite a few different tracks of other creatures. Then there was a more crowded area full of people walking and sand-boarding. Under full sun and up to 90°F heat often on steep, sinking sand – darn good warm-up.

We moved to a different campsite and rested during hot midday hours getting ready for evening walk upstream Medano Creek which looked more like a wash with little water still flowing in places, but then disappearing into sandy bottom. To save time, we started from Point of No Return, a short car ride from the campground, towards Sand Pit and Castle Creek. On the way back, we spent 1.5 hr on small shoulder dune waiting for complete darkness to watch stars.

In very friendly environment, we enjoyed off-trail navigation training using GPS and traditional skills, first across muddy terrain with dense vegetation, and at the end in almost complete darkness (did not meet any pumas or bears, but more bugs than we expected).

Day 6

After breakfast at the dunes we started driving west across San Luis Valley. Huge, flat pan between mountain ranges filled with gravel, volcanic ash and sand. We stopped at San Luis Lakes and then drove all the way to Wolf Creek Pass. Joanna booked Wolf Creek Ranch Lodge, but it was too early to check-in so we drove to check Lobo Overlook (trailhead for next day’s hike) and then walked half-way around Big Meadows Reservoir on South Fork Rio Grande. Lazy 3 km stroll. We saw and heard (Merlin) a dozen different bird species, including female Ruby-throated Hummingbird and American Three-toed Woodpecker (hard at work and not paying any attention to us watching from several feet away).

The Lodge (recommended) turn out to be a motel (part of a larger complex on relaxing terrain and river) looking old and disappointing at first, but inside completely remodeled, modern with fully equipped kitchen and a lot of character. Very nice.

Three-toed woodpecker

Day 7

We returned to Lobo Overlook for a short hike on Continental Divide Trail, only 7 km and couple hundred meters down and up, but all above 3400 masl. Very nice views and lots of flowers. Altitude slowed us down a bit. We continued to Pagosa Springs. Hot springs were tempting, but it was getting late and we decided to O/N in Durango. Stopped at the station to confirm schedule and ticket info for backpackers morning train to Silverton (we considered leaving our car there and returning from Durango by train after trekking).

Day 8

Durango to Silverton Highway 550 is scenic. Our first short stop was at Pinkerton Hot Springs. We then quickly decided on another day-hike a few miles off the highway. On the way we faced the usual question, if it was worth driving all the way to trailhead through passable, but rocky section of the forest road risking car damage. No, just parked by the side of Lime Creek Road and walked extra km or so. Trail to Potato Lake was easy 7 km return with 200 m gain to 3000 masl. Close to Silverton, we stopped at Molas Pass and took side road to Little Molas Lake Colorado Trail trailhead – our starting point for the trek a few days later.

As we were driving, Joanna was franticly looking for a place to stay in Silverton. Luckily we found Columbine Roadhouse (recommended) just outside town. Very nice room, living-room, fully equipped kitchen, nice owners. Another place with a lot of character. We had a base for 4D/5N.

Colorado day 1-4: Chicago to Southern Colorado

July 25-26

Day 1-3

After driving for more than a day on I80, somewhere in Nebraska, we made first important decision: we are heading to Southern Colorado first. Driving on smaller roads for a change. Made it only to Oakley Kansas on day 2.

Joanna had our first destination already researched: dispersed camping and hiking along Lake Como Road on southern slope of Blanca Peak (4,374 m) of Sangre de Cristo Range. The road gets bumpy as it climbs up, so at some point we decided to stay at a good spot (many were available) with open view of the mountains. Joanna practiced night sky photography after dinner. Next morning we just walked 8 km and 500 m up and down the (4WD) road to stretch legs and get first taste of thiner air at almost 3000 masl. Relaxing hike with great views, no other hikers, few “machines”. Lake Como was too far/high for us that first day.

Day 4

Next destination: Great Sand Dunes National Park. We were quite lucky (weekend) to find campsites for two nights at very good park campground (recommended). In the afternoon we walked a short trail to Zapata Falls. Joanna practiced some fancy footwork on rocks, Piotr just waded through very (refreshing) cold water. All to get a glimpse of the falls. The trailhead is located above the valley floor offering good panoramic view of the dunes at the east edge of San Luis Valley pushed against surrounding mountains of Sangre de Cristo Range. And then we just looked around or starred at the dunes plotting exploration route for early next morning. Had time to plan next move, some idea where to go first to avoid biggest crowds. It was morning walk on the dunes and evening walk in Mendino Creek, with midday fiesta (hot weather).

We were getting into travel rhythm after leaving Chicago in a hurry with just a general plan. Sightseeing: yes, but we also needed several days to warm-up and start pushing to higher elevations on easier day-hikes to trigger altitude acclimatization before Colorado Trail.

Colorado 2025

Finally, we are getting serious about our next, 3500-mile road trip this time to Colorado. Our main goal is to hike 75-mile segment of Colorado Trail from Silverton to Durango. Plus some shorter hikes in the area. We also want to visit Great Sand Dunes National Park which we somehow missed on our previous trips. The rest of the planning is for now just the map below. We are not going to move very fast and will fix details on the go. But we are not going unprepared. Joanna is packing (scientific, but tasty) rations for the trek, light-weight and calorie-reach. Piotr is catching-up with car service and repairs. Car- and backpack-packing should be faster this time as we are building on previous experiences. From time to time we will publish a brief note about our whereabouts on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewanderingspot.

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