The Melt

This winter we got about 120 inches (10 feet) of snow at our house.  It snowed a lot in December followed by the cold months of January and February so the snow never had a chance to melt.  It just compacted and settled in for the winter.  It covered everything in the yard with a white glittery blanket – pure simple beauty. 

Then, typical in April, it starts to melt.  In a period of a few days, the edges of the yard begin to appear, while the center of the yard remains a pile of bulletproof white stuff.  Then it gets covered in fresh snow, then it melts, fresh snow again, more melt.  Soon all the snow is ringed in mud.  Mud everywhere – so much mud that you can’t even see your car from all the mud on it.  During the day, huge icicles form off the roof and all the pavement becomes wet from the melt.  At night the icicles freeze into place and the pavement becomes a skating rink.  Then the icicles melt again, then freeze again creating lumpy icicles. 

At first glance, this seems like a dirty, sad part of the year.  But there is a lot of beauty in the melt.  Sitting outside you hear everything dripping, soft patter of moving water.  There are more birds arriving every day chirping and fluttering as they look for food and start making nests.  The sun is bright, the sky is blue.  The air feels warm in comparison to the past few months.  I enjoy knocking off all the icicles I can reach trying to avoid injury from impalement.  I love to hear them crash, shatter and skitter on the ground.  If they happen to hit snow instead of ground, they make a dull thud sound instead as they embed themselves in the snow.  Everything is shiny even the air.   Everything is moving and making soft sounds.  The patio furniture re-appeared from under the mountains of snow.  The aspen are budding.  The column of ice hanging from the gutter is starting to reveal the rain chain it formed around. 

If you look past the mud, you will see the beauty in the details of the melt.   

Throwing Rocks at Ice

I have decided that my new favorite pastime while hiking is to throw rocks at ice.  The rivers and lakes are trying to freeze over so ice is forming in some places.  Sometimes it’s thin enough to break through and splash the water below it.  Sometimes the rock just skids across the surface.  Rarely does the rock go where I want it to.  It often takes a few tries.  I had seen a video about people that like to skate on thin new ice.  If the ice has covered the whole lake, but is still thin, it acts like a drum and makes other worldly sounds.  We went for a hike to Columbine Lake and found it frozen.  I didn’t realize we had come upon it at just the perfect timing in its freezing process to be able to experience these sounds.  But, since throwing rocks at ice is what I do, I found a rock and threw it.  It skidded across the ice and pinging sounds radiated out from where the rock landed.  I was instantly reminded of a video I had seen about this and became very pleased with this good fortune.  We should have been going back so we wouldn’t get back to the car in darkness, but it was so much fun that we stayed for 20 minutes or so throwing rocks and icicles at the ice and delighting in the various sounds that the frozen lake gave back to us.

Post blog note:  Throwing rocks at ice is only a fall activity (it might be a spring activity, but no research has been done on this yet).  Once the snow starts falling and the temperatures don’t freeze and thaw, the rocks become frozen to the ground or buried under feet of snow so you can no longer get rocks to throw at ice.

Here is the video where I first heard these sounds of thin ice:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3O9vNi-dkA

And here are my pictures and videos:

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Ice Lake

Ice Lake is a very blue lake near Silverton.  I tried hiking to it in the summer but didn’t even make it half way.  It was a very steep trail and was a longer hike than I had time for.  I did make it to Ice Lake Basin which was an amazingly beautiful basin.

In the fall 4 of us hiked up to Ice Lake.  The hike went by multiple waterfalls and a couple lakes.  When we got to Ice Lake Basin, I almost backed out of doing the full loop.  The hike had already been difficult for me and there was so much more to go.  But I pushed on.  The first lake we got to was Island Lake.  It was an unreal deep green like an emerald.  It was very windy and cold up there so we hid behind some rocks for lunch.  At this point we were done with the steep uphill so at least I knew I was going to be able to make it now.

Then the trail traversed over to a higher portion of the Ice Lake Basin and off in the distance I could see the bright blue of Ice Lake.  It seemed to be glowing from inside the lake.  It looked like the blueness of the lake was just a trick of the lighting as it was a richer blue than the sky.  As we got closer, the shade of blue did not change as I expected it to.  I’ve never seen a lake that color before.  It’s not the blue of glacial water, but a richer darker blue.  It looked like blue Kool aide.  It’s from the minerals in the area.  The creek coming out of the lake was a combination of silver and white.  The rocks near by were covered in a white chalky looking mineral.  As you looked off in the distance the creek snaked through the basin like a silver ribbon.

The hike down was steep and rocky until it got to the bottom of the Ice Lake Basin and then caught back up with the trail we took up.  There was a small waterfall where the creek came down from the lake.  When we were about to cross this portion of the creek, the couple in front of us stopped.  The guy was quite excited to dip his water bottle in the creek and take a drink.  What?  The rocks are all a ghostly white and you just saw the unnaturally colored lake above.  Why would you drink that?  His girlfriend asked how it was and he said “It tastes likes rocks”.  We stood there in disbelief unable to move.  How does he know what rocks taste like?  Is he going to be sick later?  We will never know.

The rest of the hike down was just as beautiful as the way up.  Overall, the hike was a bit more than I was physically prepared for and I was feeling beat up by the time we got back to the car, but I’m very glad I did the whole hike.

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Silverton Again

When I went to Silverton this summer, I had a great time going four-wheel driving, but there were so many people on the trails that it was a little disappointing.  I thought it might be great to go back in fall when there were less people out and about and the fall colors would be at their peak.  I had some friends that wanted to go as well so we planned a fall trip.

The town was so much quieter than it had been in the summer.  It was almost deserted and it was real nice.  We had a beautiful day exploring the jeep trails and only saw a few other people on the trails.  We were able to drive a big loop that took us to the tops of some amazing mountain passes, down into Lake City and back to Silverton.

We did another day where we drove over Ophir pass.  I remember years ago when I found this great backcountry camping area by accident.  As we were leaving the small town of Ophir, I wondered if we could find the camping area again.  I saw a road turn off that looked familiar so we took it.  We drove through a rural residential area for a little bit.  It all looked familiar.  When we came to the ghost town of Alta, I knew we were close.  The camping area I was looking for was Alta Lakes and we found it.  We explored Alta Lakes for an hour or so.  We had lunch in Telluride and then did a short hike up to Bridal Veil Falls.  The falls were really cool and we spent quite a bit of time throwing rocks at the ice near the bottom of the falls.  We finished up the day in Ouray for dinner and some time at the hot springs.

This is such a beautiful area of the state.

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Sandbox

There is a small area of sand dunes in northern Colorado called the North Sand Hills Recreation Management Area.  I had no idea they were there.  They are only an hour and a half from where we live.  Three of us took atv’s up to play around in them.  On the way there, we had another cow traffic jam.  This seems to be becoming a thing that we run into everywhere we go.  It’s uncanny how many cow traffic jams there have been this year.  I should do a photo series of cow traffic jams.  It was a very windy day and the fall coolness had settled in the air.  This probably helped us to almost have the place to ourselves.  I imagine it is very busy in summer.  It is a giant adult sandbox.  It is such a foreign landscape of sand and small trees.  Our atv’s were not set up for sand so we had to be careful to not get stuck.  The sand was so much fun to play in.  It was beautiful to watch how it moved and shifted.  And of course, the photo opportunities were many.

The videos are far from professional and might even be considered bad, but they give you an idea of what it felt like.

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Fuck You Lake

When I first moved to Granby I bought a hiking book for Grand County.  The book is horrible.  Almost every time I’ve tried a trail in there, it gave me old or false information and the whole hike I wondered if I was on the right trail.

The worst one of these was a trail that went along Stillwater Creek up to a lake.  The lake was not named in the book.  It wasn’t named on google maps or in my gps either.  The first time I tried the trail, I barely found the start of the trail.  It was winter so the trail was not obvious.  I hiked for about an hour crawling over logs and shuffling though the deep snow.  I thought I was on the trail, then I wasn’t, then I was.  Is this a trail?  It was one of the most beautiful winter forests I’ve been in, but maybe not a trail.  I gave up after an hour.  I tried two more times in winter, but never got near the lake.  The trail must only be visible when the ground isn’t covered in snow.

 

So I tried it twice in fall.  The second time I went, my roommate came with me.  Almost immediately we had to climb over downed trees.  Where did the trail go?  Then we’d think we found the trail again only to come to a place where there was so much dead fall that the trail was lost.  Then it got steeper with a drop off on one side hundreds of feet down to the river.  We kept the river to our right.  I was on hands and knees crawling over and under downed trees.  We were both concerned with falling toward the river, but the slope above was too steep to hike.  We crawled and fought our way through the mess of trees for about an hour and a half and both my hand and my face were bleeding.  We gave up and turned around to head back.  Obviously, who ever wrote this book never actually did this trail.  It probably was a trail at some point, but no one has hiked it in 5 – 10 years (except me).

I took a closer look a map when we got home and it looked like we could reach the lake from a different direction even though there did not appear to be any trails in that area either.  But no trail couldn’t possibly be worse than the one I had been trying.  At this point my roommate was about as obsessed with finding this lake as I was so we headed out to wander around in a different part of the wilderness.  I parked the car near an atv trail.  Good thing I didn’t try to drive down it.  I would have gotten stuck with no way to turn around.  It was so rough with huge convolutions in the ground that I couldn’t even imagine how you would drive an atv down it with out tipping the atv over.  It was a short trail that ended abruptly at a cliff.  Below the cliff was a valley that probably had been carved by the Stillwater creek.  The creek was not visible.  It was all marshy and wetland like.  This was the upper part of the creek that would flow into the lake.  We couldn’t get down the cliff and it looked like a trail went to the right along the top of the cliff so we followed that.  It was one of the steepest trails I’ve ever been on so we got quite the workout.  When the trail mellowed out it looked like it was going away from the lake so we left the trail to head downhill again toward the lake.  It was steep and there were more downed trees than the other day.  The trees were bigger and almost impossible to crawl over.  About an hour of this and my roommate was cussing up a storm.  There was no turning back now, though. We were both determined to find the lake. Then we could see a clearing in the distance that had to be the lake.  Just 10 minutes more and we’d be at the edge of the trees.  There was no lake.  You can tell there might have been a lake a long time ago.  Now it was just brown marshy land.  I am all scratched up for this.  I bled for this.  And I still have to hike back up through the steep forest of twisted unforgiving dead trees.  I don’t know what the name of this dead lake is, but I’m naming it Fuck You Lake.  We both yelled at it for a little bit.  And then cried a little when we realized there was no easy way back to the car.  We had to go the way we came in.  It was a tough hike out, but we will never wonder what Fuck You Lake would have been like if only there was a trail there.

Aspen

I think Aspen trees are wonderful.  Their trunks are great looking, especially in the winter in a grove of all white and black.  Aspens with leaves are even more wonderful.  The leaves seem so thin and small that the light just runs through them like they are opaque.  This makes the leaves look like they are lit from within.  When there is a breeze, they flutter like tissue paper, like they are barely holding on.  They shine and shimmer as they shake on the tree like glitter.  The sound is a soft shaking sound that doesn’t quite sound like rustling leaves, but a soft murmur.  And then fall, magic.  Most aspen trees turn a vibrant yellow.  As you look out across the mountain, you see a sea of dark green and glowing gold.  Some years the conditions are just right and some of the aspen turn orange and a few turn red.  The landscape is on fire.   Aspen trees are wonderful.

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3 Lakes

The guy I’m dating skis at least once a month.  He asked me to go skiing with him in August.  It was also his birthday.  I have no desire to ski in August, but I wanted to celebrate his birthday with him.  So, the plan was for him and another friend to ski Skyscraper Glacier and I would hike up and down with them.

The hike up was a little rough for me, but only for a little while.  The top of Skyscraper Glacier is at about 12,000 feet so I was huffing and puffing a bit.  I can’t quite imagine doing it with skis attached to my pack.  There were quite a few cool looking rocks along the way.  As often happens, I did end up with a pocket full of rocks by the end of the morning.  It was beautiful being up at what appears to be the top of the world, especially since it was a Wednesday and working was the other option.

After they left me to ski, I headed around the glacier to pick a path down the steep slope and them meet them at the bottom.  I met a really nice marmot on my path.  He stood up on his hind legs and watched me.  We had a little conversation, but it was a pretty one-way conversation.  I spoke and he listened.  I was off any trails that existed at this point and chose a path down the steep slope.  It was steep enough that I had to make switchbacks every few feet.  I thought I might fall many times, but I didn’t.  But the views were great.  I could see three different lakes at the same time – Lakes Betty, Bob and King.  There was also this great boulder field below me.  I got to the boulder field and wow the boulders were huge.  It took quite a long time to get through the boulders as I was on both hands and knees crawling over them for a lot of it.

I finally got through the boulders and was able to take some pictures of them skiing.  The hike out was so beautiful.  There were wildflowers, the lakes and even a small waterfall.  How beautiful the continental divide is.

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Flattops

I went backpacking in the Flattops Wilderness.  We took a day off work so we could get an early start and not have to `deal with the crowds of people.  We planned to take a trail that was recommended to me when I called the ranger station to get ideas.  I prepared meals ahead of time and packed up all my camping gear.

The trip started off with a cow traffic jam as we were driving to the Flattops.  I think this road may see more cow traffic than road traffic.  We got to the wilderness area and found a car camping spot for the night.  We would head out on the trail the next morning.

Little did I know we would not have to worry about crowds of people.  Either the area is far enough away from Denver or just not a popular spot.  Or the mosquitos killed all the other people.  I haven’t seen that many mosquitos in one place since I left Florida.  We had to re-apply mosquito repellant every few hours and even then, they never went away.

There were signs at the trail head that sheep farmers were grazing their sheep and we might encounter sheep.  It warned not to approach the sheep especially since the sheep dog might not like that as it is protecting the sheep.  About an hour or so onto the trail we heard a weird sound.  We weren’t sure what it was.  We came across a big field of rocks and the sound got louder.  Pretty soon we realized the sound was the sheep.  The rocks moved as they were not rocks at all, but sheep.  As we came closer, they became very interested in us.  Some of the sheep stopped what they were doing to come toward us and check us out.  So much for not approaching the sheep.  The warnings said nothing about the fact that the sheep would most likely approach us.  It was a wonderful little break from the hiking to watch the sheep watching us.  We never saw a dog, though.

We came upon a lake with some good camping spots nearby so we decided to set up camp there for two nights and we would day hike the next day from there.  We started a fire as soon as we had set up camp in hopes that the smoke would chase away the mosquitos.  It really didn’t.  We explored a nearby basin and decided to climb to the top of the basin the next day.

The wild flowers were blooming like crazy.  The only other time I had been to the Flattops, I had experienced wildflowers, the volume and brightness I had never seen before.  I counted the number of different flowers I saw on the way up.  I lost count somewhere around 50 different types of flowers.  Mother Nature is the best artist I know.

The day hike to the top of the basin the next day was great.  The hike out on the last day wasn’t too bad either.  We heard the sheep again, but didn’t really see them.  Despite the mosquitos, it was a beautiful weekend and we only saw 4 other people the whole weekend.  I’d highly recommend some hiking in the Flattops Wilderness.

Silverton Wedding

I have a couple of friends that planned a themed destination wedding.  It was old west themed and planned to be in Silverton, Colorado.  This group of friends never does anything half way and this wedding was no exception.  Plus, if you ask this group of people to dress up, they will do it up right.  If you don’t ask them to dress up, they just might anyway.

We started a couple days before the wedding with anyone that was able to go to Silverton early going 4-wheel driving.  The area around Silverton is covered in 4-wheel drive only roads.  I assume a lot of these roads were old mining roads.  They are steep, treacherous and lead to some of the most beautiful overlooks in the state.  The mountains near Silverton are unbelievably steep, rugged and gorgeous.  We had maybe 15-20 vehicles from razors to jeeps to personal trucks.  It was a full day and so much fun driving down narrow dirt roads, stopping at ghost towns and stopping at the tops of mountain passes.

The day before the wedding a bunch of us went hiking.  We hiked up Ice Lakes Trail.  We didn’t make it to Ice Lakes, but saw many waterfalls on the way up.  A couple of us hiked up a beautiful high alpine meadow where you could see waterfalls all around you.

The town of Silverton is an old mining town.  It pretty much still looks like it did back in the mining days.  Now it is overrun with tourists every summer.  Most of them are up there to go 4-wheel driving.  But some people come up on the train from Durango or drive over for a day from a neighboring town.

The wedding was an old rustic lodge up a beautiful canyon near Silverton.  The road was rough and the lodge had minimal parking so they shuttled us up in atvs.  The outdoor wedding overlooked the river winding through the valley below.  It was a beautiful ceremony and followed by a great dinner, drinks and wonderful conversation.  Everyone was dressed in old west attire and it appeared the all had a magical evening.  I am so glad I got to be a part of this weekend!

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