Flying High on the San Juan Skyway

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FLYING HIGH ON THE SAN JUAN SKYWAY
By Linda Ballou

 

ON BIG BLEND RADIO: Travel writer and author Linda Ballou shares her adventures along Colorado’s spectacular San Juan Skyway. Watch here in the YouTube player or download the episode on Podbean.

The San Juan Skyway is a 236-mile loop through the most sublime scenery Colorado has to offer. The drive takes you through sage-littered plains up vibrant river valleys to lofty peaks streaked with snow and tops out at glacier cirques at 11,500 feet. My mission: Hike and horseback ride around this historic byway making stops at Mesa Verde, Telluride, Ouray, and Silverton.

A whistle blast from the Durango-Silverton steam engine sounded and I was off on the first leg of the journey. This train has chugged up the rugged Animas canyon framed in craggy spires at twenty miles an hour for the past 130 years. Most passengers will take the 90-mile round trip to Silverton, but I planned to hop with other hikers at Needleton (9,000 ft) to explore the pristine roadless Weeminuche wilderness. Two hours into the canyon the train stopped where trails radiate deep into the mountains. Backpackers headed for Chicago Basin on a steady bun-burning climb. I opted for a day hike on the Purgatory trail that sticks close to the Animas River. The train is an effortless way to get into the heart of the wilderness where you can stroll, hike, or just enjoy a picnic.

Hollywood discovered Durango in the 50’s. Western heroes, like John Wayne and Jimmy Stewart, found the Rochester Hotel in the heart of historic downtown Durango to be a good place to hang their six-gallon hats while filming. After a country breakfast in the cozy dining room of the Rochester, I was off to Mancos to hook up with Rimrock Outfitters. Owner, Lynn Lewis, loves nothing more than riding out her back door through high country meadows brightened by swaths of yellow rabbitbrush to lodge pole pine forests overlooking Mesa Verde.

A couple of cowboys looking for stray “doggies” stumbled upon what is the most significant archeological site in North America in the 1880s. The entrance to Mesa Verde National Park is six miles up the highway from Mancos. Complex dwellings built by indigenous peoples from 900-1250 AD are scattered throughout vast mesa.  Spend a night at the Far View Lodge in the park and have your own cliff dwelling overlooking the vast Colorado Plateau. The Metate Room enjoys this view as well and boasts fresh local ingredients and southwest seasonings in gourmet offerings. After taking a tour of the Cliff Palace, check out the Spruce House, and the museum, and hike on the Petroglyph Trail for a more personal experience of the canyons held sacred to the amazing people who called them home.

The stretch of the skyway up the verdant Dolores River corridor was once a route for the Ute Indians to their summer hunting grounds. It ascends to Lizard Head Pass past alluring Trout Lake to overlook three majestic “Fourteeners” that dominate the scene. You drive under the stern face of Ophir peaks and then begin the glide down to Telluride—famous for its many festivals and black diamond ski runs. The mountains surrounding the town are honeycombed with tunnels built by miners during the gold rush in the late 1800s that lasted into the early 1920s. A 4×4 trip to the Tomboy Mine perched at the top of the box canyon above gushing Bridal Veil Falls is a popular outing.

Josh, the owner of San Juan Adventure School, drove us up a rocky jeep trail overlooking the San Miguel Park historic park to meet our trailhead. The undulating path meandered through a grove of aspen just beginning to turn gold. Josh picked a few wild raspberries for me to try. He pointed to mighty Mt Wilson (14,000) in the distance where he guides advanced climbers to the top. The trail deposited us near my lodging at the Aspen Tree Inn located a block away from the gondola station where guests can enjoy a free lift to the Mountain Village and the trailhead to the River Walk— a delightful three-mile easy amble into the mountain park. 

The head-spinning stretch of the Skyway between Telluride and Ouray traces an energetic river.  I pulled over at the Dallas Divide unable to pass by the breathtaking sweep of rust-colored grasses at the base of pine-clad peaks tugging at the heavens. I breathed deeply of a scene out of our vanishing American Heritage before heading on to the healing waters at Orvis Hot Springs.

 

The picturesque hamlet of Ouray, framed in the amphitheater of rock, invites the traveler to stay awhile. A favorite pastime is “benching it” on Main Street and enjoying an ice cream while watching visitors stroll by. The four-mile Perimeter trail wraps the town and affords fantastic views of the village, as well as Cascade and Box Canyon Falls.

The best way to explore this soul-stirring scenery (if you are not acclimated to the altitude, of 9,500) is on the back of a good horse. Action Adventure Trails offers rides in the high country. I clambered higher and higher up switchbacks until we crested a ridge with a heart-pounding view of the Uncompahgre River Valley—a patchwork of green pastures framed in gallant spires.

The Million Dollar Highway, an engineering marvel blasted out of rock through Red Mountain Pass, takes you to Silverton. A white knuckler for some, I found it to be a well-maintained byway through alpine splendor. Ironton, a mining ghost town along the way to Silverton is worth a stop with easy trails to explore.

During the gold rush, Silverton, resting in a caldera at 9,600 feet, was the boisterous mining capital of the San Juans—famous for gunfights and brothels. Today, it is a gateway to outdoor adventure.  A 4×4 jeep tour with San Juan Outback up precipitous mining roads is a great way to go. We bounced up a rutted, rock-strewn road past sparkling cascades to views of mountains spreading to eternity.  

When we arrived at our destination, Clear Lake, a transparent body of water at 11,500 feet mirroring red barren slopes, it was summer—In September! A profusion of flowers and shrubs including a rare burgundy paintbrush lined the shore. Our explorations ended when clouds swarmed in, and rain began to fall. Soon, the shops in Silverton would be shuttered and closed for a long winter’s nap. After a quick stop at the Pitt for a belly full of the best ribs on the western slope, I high tailed it back to Durango, just an hour south, where the sun was shining in bluebird skies.

Plan Your San Juan Skyway Adventure:
https://www.durangotrain.com/

https://www.telluride.com/

https://tellurideadventures.com/

https://sanjuanbackcountry.com/

https://www.rochesterhotel.com/

https://www.rimrockoutfitters.com/

https://www.nps.gov/meve/index.htm

https://horsebackadventures.com/

Linda Ballou is a Southern California-based travel writer, and author. You will find a host of travel articles on her site www.LostAngelAdventures.com. For more about her novels and travel books go to www.LindaBallouAuthor.com.

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Linda Ballou is a Southern California-based travel writer, and author.

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