Showing posts with label Roosevelt National Forest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roosevelt National Forest. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Volunteer Wildfire Mitigation


On Saturday morning, September 1, I volunteered with the Wildlands Restoration Volunteers (WRV) for a third time to help with a wildfire mitigation project.  This project is located on the Ben Delatour Boy Scout Ranch in the Roosevelt National Forest in north-central Colorado.  The WRV crew consists of experienced sawyers who fell small diameter (12 inches or smaller) ponderosa pines, and "swampers" like me who gather up the limbs, branches, and bucked-up trunks and place them in piles (which I like to call pyres) that will be burned when there is snow on the ground.  This is really strenuous work carried out on very steep slopes, so I'm exhausted when the day is over.

The image accompanying this post was taken at our staging area.  This area was subjected to a prescribed burn in 2017, and some of the trees behind the vehicles were damaged in the fire and may die.  The area where we were working on Saturday is visible in the background of the image on the steep, wooded hillside across the Elkhorn Creek valley.

Friday, August 17, 2018

Lady Moon Redux



 
I hiked the Lady Moon Trail in Roosevelt National Forest last week and liked it so much I got Kali to accompany me on a return visit on Thursday, August 16. She agreed that this likely will become our "go to" hike, although she did fall and scrape her shin pretty badly when the loose grit on the trail slipped from under her and sent her tumbling. We came across two fellows on the trail who live just up the street from us, and we met three representatives of the Poudre Wilderness Volunteers, an organized group of civilian rangers who look out for the trails in the national forest; one of them took our picture.
Kali at Disappointment Falls on Elkhorn Creek
On Lady Moon Trail
Cattle cooling off in the aspens
It's a banner year for currents; the bushes are producing a bumper crop everywhere

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

High in Colorado


Approaching the summit of Middle Bald Mountain
I joined the Red Feather Lakes Library (Colorado) Hiking Group on a short hike to the summit of Middle Bald Mountain ("Middle Baldy") in the Roosevelt National Forest on Monday, August 13.  The hike was short; we drove most of the way to the top, then climbed a few hundred feet to the summit.

The drive to approach the summit was long and challenging.  The route was almost completely on dusty dirt roads, and as the roads ascended, their quality deteriorated.  We ended up driving much more than hiking.

Nevertheless, the 360-degree view from the summit (11,002 feet) was spectacular.
View southwestward from the summit of Middle Bald Mountain
The best scenery lay to the southwest, where we could see snow patches in the mountains of the Rawah Wilderness and a portion of the Cache la Poudre River canyon.
Lunch at the summit.  North Bald Mountain (not bald) is in the distance at the right.
North Bald Mountain and South Bald Mountain (11,003 feet) were each about two miles away.
Yours truly (top left) at the summit with fellow hikers
Yours truly at the summit.  The deep cleft just to the left of me in mid-distance is the canyon of the Cache la Poudre River that rises in Rocky Mountain National Park

View eastward from the summit of Middle Bald Mountain
The east scarp of Middle Baldy is a dramatic, sheer drop of several hundred feet.  It was windy at the top--and more than a little scary to be at the edge.

The distance in the images is hazy because of the fires burning in California and, to a lesser degree, further west in Colorado.
Orange lichens; there were neon chartreuse lichens, too
A pasqueflower in bloom near the summit.  As its name implies, this should be blooming around Easter
After lunch at the summit, we hiked back to the trail and road that brought us near the peak.  This portion of the national forest is criss-crossed with very rough tracks used by off-road vehicles.  We decided to walk one of these woods roads for a short distance, but soon came across several noisy off-road vehicles in the forest.  Our group got discouraged and we retreated back down the mountain--a harrowing repeat of the drive up the mountain a few hours earlier.  Hikers hate ATVers.

Despite the short distance we covered, the view from the top made the trip worthwhile.

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Lady Moon to Disappointment Falls

 
On Friday, August 10, I decided to tackle the Lady Moon Trail in Roosevelt National Forest.  The trailhead is located about eight mile from our house and is one of our closest public trails.  In addition, Internet searches revealed that the trail is scenic and relatively easy, with modest elevation changes.  Sounded good.  Kali declined to accompany me; she told me to "scout it out" and then she'd join me next time if I gave a good review.

The trail is named for Lady Catherine Moon.  She was an Irish working-class immigrant in the early 20th century with a very colorful reputation in our region.  She had four husbands, including Lord Cecil Moon, a British aristocrat who came to the area to seek his fortune in mining.  There is also a small lake in the area named in Lady Moon's honor.

The trail heads south out of the parking lot and almost immediately crosses a large, broad open meadow--Lady Moon Meadow.  Lady Moon Meadow, indeed all grassy areas in our neighborhood this year, are overwhelmed with grasshoppers--millions and millions of grasshoppers.  Dozens scatter with each footstep, and sometimes fly into my face, cling to my legs, and get in my clothing.  Harmless, but irritating. 

Lady Moon Meadow
One of billions
On the opposite side of the meadow, the trail begins to ascend gently and enters open ponderosa pine forest interspersed with aspen groves.  Large granite outcrops encroach on the trail from each side to lend some interest.  After about a mile, the north-south Lady Moon Trail intersects with the east-west Granite Ridge Trail, then diverges a short distance east.  From this point, the Lady Moon Trail begins to descend into the Elkhorn Creek valley.  Near the top of the divide, the Mummy Range in Rocky Mountain National Park, still bearing a few patches of snow, is visible on the horizon.

The Mummy Range bearing snow patches in Rocky Mountain National Park in the far distant haze
This venerable and ancient ponderosa pine was growing near the trail; it is hundreds of years old
As the trail approaches Elkhorn Creek, a spur trail splits off toward the west leading to Disappointment Falls.  Ruins of a homesteader's log structure mark the junction.



Along the trail to Disappointment Falls, I saw this Mountain Bluebird carcass in the grass, out in the middle of nowhere.  Mountain Bluebirds may be the most common birds along this trail.  This unfortunate bird may have been the victim of a predator.


The Internet information about this hike warned that Disappointment Falls would be less than impressive during the summer, but that it could really roar during spring snowmelt.  The cascade was pleasant, but the expanse of bare rocks adjacent to the falls bore witness to the fact that the falls grows in volume in the spring.
Disappointment Falls on Elkhorn Creek
After I enjoyed the falls, I retraced my steps back to the parking lot.  The entire hike was five miles round-trip.  I think this hike might become Kali's and my "go to" hike because it has a lot of varied scenery, it's pretty gentle, and the trail surface is mostly smooth dirt without a lot of rocks and tripping hazards.

Lady Moon Trail in an aspen grove
This was my best day yet in Colorado.  The skies were sapphire, the humidity was low, the scenery was spectacular, temperatures were in the low 80s, there was a nice breeze, and there was absolute silence (except for occasional birdsong and wind soughing through the ponderosas).  Heavenly!