Our National Parks: Rocky Mountain National Park Estes Park, CO 80517 The Big Picture: It doesn’t have a catchy name, it doesn’t have a photogenic centerpiece, and it barely outranks the District of Columbia in size. But this little rectangle of mountain country north of Denver contains one of the grandest combinations of geology and scenery this side of Yosemite. And logistically, it’s uniquely sensible: It sits Where Everyone Goes: Most traffic streams through the park’s eastern entrance from Highway 34 and the town of Estes Park, then heads for the aforementioned paved wonder known as Trail Ridge Road, a 50-mile switchback that runs above 12,000 feet for four miles and passes through montane, subalpine, and alpine life zones. Bear Lake is popular enough to warrant a shuttle bus, and if the Park Service Where You Should Go: The western and southwestern reaches of the park, kitty-corner to the Estes Park entrance and away from the bisecting swath of Highway 34, tend to be the least trampled by virtue of poor access by road. If you’re determined to do your touring in the car and don’t mind 14 switchbacks in nine miles, try the Old Fall River Road, The ominously named Never Summer Range, on the west side of the park, is a good place to spend a weekend. From the Green Mountain Trailhead (just off the south branch of Highway 34) you can make the 7.5-mile hike from lodgepole pine forest through moose country to the Haynach Lakes, tucked under the Continental Divide at 11,000 feet, or check out 12,216-foot Nakai Peak, a rough The more ambitious (and experienced) might want to head farther north to the Mummy Range (so named for its reclining profile), one of Rocky Mountain’s 48 leave-no-trace backcountry areas and home of the Chapin Creek Trail, a narrow thread that cuts along the wildflower-strewn contour of the range. Downed timber at lower elevations can make travel tough, but the place is so wild Don’t Forget: Much of this park lies above 10,000 feet, otherwise known as snowstorm-in-June country. So pack all the supplies you need, then toss in two extra sweaters. And if you’re planning on doing any climbing, go slow. Each year, about 40 percent of the 10,000 people who attempt to climb Longs Peak end up failing, many because they succumb to Where to Bunk: If you like to hobnob with climbers and don’t mind spartan digs, try the Colorado Mountain School in Estes Park, which has 18 spare beds, as well as bathrooms with showers. It’s open year-round, offers a range of hiking, climbing, and winter sports lessons, and usually has an empty bunk ($16 a night; 303-586-5758). For more Food Is: Whatever you happen to have in your backpack or pockets, as there are, to Rocky Mountain’s credit, no concessions, except a small snack bar at Fall River Pass on Trail Ridge Road. In Estes Park, you can always fuel up on the grilled rainbow trout at the Sundeck Restaurant or the bison-size cinnamon rolls at Johnson’s Caf茅. Park Lore: In the quiet summer days just after World War II, the park’s rangers enlisted a young woman to roam the backcountry naked in order to create publicity and boost sagging visitation. For a while, it worked–the mysterious figure was dubbed Eve by the national press, and curious onlookers flocked to the park in droves, hoping to catch a Your Park Service at Work: With 350 miles of trails to maintain, it would be hard to fault them for not keeping every mile in tip-top shape–but they could at least try. The approaches to many climbs have been seriously eroded, visitation is on a steady upswing, and trail crews are half the size they were in the sixties. As one disaffected ranger Where the money goes: Flashlight Reading: A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains, by Isabella Bird (University of Oklahoma Press, $7.50); Rocky Mountain National Park Hiking Trails, by Kent and Donna Dannen (Globe Pequot, $12.95). Fun Index: Can you fault a national park for being too accessible? Well, yes. 3 |
Our National Parks: Rocky Mountain National Park
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