NP, E & Bjorn with South Park in the background
MLW, Rudy & I with our backpacks
Early Am Saturday while the other campers slept
We broke camp then had a nice breakfast sitting overlooking the lost park valley. Shortly thereafter we packed up and were off. We traveled about 2 miles when we noticed the aspen trees we were walking through had a weird red tint. With some investigation we noticed it wasn’t natural. We saw it had drip marks and it came from a specific direction. Some of you may have already figured out what we found, but we were walking through a section of trees that had at some time, and not this year, had fire retardant dropped on it during a forest fire.
We continued on and about noon we came to the largest of the streams we would cross and we filled our water bottles either filtering or treating the water to ensure we didn’t get sick. We were about half way and the day was beautiful so we ate lunch and relaxed for a couple of hours in the shade. Then it was time to get moving.
Loaded down with water, our packs were heavy as we took off across the mountain. We went through a few meadows for the first part of the hike and then found ourselves in a deep pine forest on a slope. It was our goal to get about 2-3 miles from our exit point and make camp. With our pace we would cover a little over 2 miles every hour and as the day moved into mid afternoon we were hoping to make camp in an area called Black Canyon. When we finally got to Black Canyon the terrain flattened out a bit and there was a stream that ran through a thicket there. With all the foliage it was a buggy. Luckily it was also filling up with hikers so after some discussion and referencing our map, we saw that another 20 minutes of hiking would take up to the top of a saddle where the land would flatten out. We walked our final 20 minutes and when we reached the saddle it was an area of pine and aspen trees with many aspen trees down on the ground. There were a few campsites right off the trail, but we don’t back pack to camp on the trail, so we worked our way about 80 yards back into the woods, cleared the small dead trees and made ourselves a wonderful campsite.
When backpacking a good campsite is often halfway up a hill, that way you stay warmer than the valleys and you’re not exposed to the wind and storms on hilltops. Our site turned out to be perfect, not buggy, warm and when the sun rose on Sunday, it was bathed in sunlight. But I’m getting ahead of myself.
We made camp and sat down to enjoy our half liter of wine. E & NP also brought a half liter and we visited and enjoyed the beautiful weather. Then we made our dinner. After a day of hiking, a little wine and big dinner, I was ready for bed by the time the sun went down as was the rest of our crew. We climbed into our tents and fell sound asleep.
In the morning I was again the first to get up so Rudy our dog and I grabbed all the water bottles we could find and hiked back down to the stream we crossed the previous evening and filled them with water for our breakfast. As I descended to the stream side campsites the temperature dropped about 10 degrees and more campers had arrived and made camp. I greeted them in their down jackets as I filled the water bottles and walked the 15 minutes back up the hill to our warm sunny campsite.
With extra water I enjoyed a cup of coffee while our campers roused and woke up. The 4 of us had a leisurely breakfast, relaxing and enjoying the beauty that surrounded us. Then we finally cleaned up broke camp and headed out mid morning.
E & a red-stained tree
Cocktail Hour at Camp
Leasurely breakfast
Trailhead in view!
Almost there!
As expected the walk out was about an hour. We arrived at our car before noon, drank the extra water we had stored in the car, had a snack, loaded up and headed off to the car on Kenosha Pass. Once there we separated our gear and made plans to have a Father’s Day beer at Mad Jack’s Brewery in Bailey, CO. As we gathered at Mad Jack’s all of us talked about what a wonderful trip we had. We hiked about 15 miles in total. There are those that will say we could have done more and gone further. But this weekend wasn’t about the destination, it was about the trip. It was about sharing the trail with 3 people I love very much, and seeing the beautiful world not only through my eyes, but theirs.