Seventh Annual Hassey "Goat Vacation" Day 1:
Well, no one guessed our location from the photo I posted ten days ago. I was prepared to offer a large cash prize to the lucky winner, but you all missed out and I get to keep the cash. HA!
We left late Thursday afternoon October 4th because our first stop was not very far--only about a 3 1/2 hour drive. Our destination was Wagon Wheel Gap, situated between South Fork and Creede, CO. Our cabins were only a mile from Pool Table Road, which would take us to our trailhead next morning. I was on a quest. Not only did I want to see Wheeler Geologic Area again (I hadn't been there since 2004), but I was scouting for a potential spot for a future NAPgA Rendezvous. In that sense, I was disappointed. The area was not as ideal as I'd remembered, and pine beetles have made it temporarily even less suitable until the dead trees fall and the new ones can attain some height. But it was a perfect day for a hike.
The morning was clear but cold. We started off at 8:00 in the morning, and that was almost too early because our road was still in shadow at that hour. It was 12 miles from our cabin to the trailhead and the goats had to ride in the open truck bed with no sun to warm them. Luckily the 11-mile Pool Table Road had recently been graded. When I was there fourteen years before, it was a very slow, bumpy ride because of the terrible washboards. We parked where the 2-wheel-drive road ended. From there, you can 4-wheel to Wheeler, but it's a very slow, very rough 14-mile drive. The hiking trail is only 7 miles by comparison, and by all accounts it's easier and takes less time to walk.
Phil and I had a lot of miles to cover, so we kept up a pretty brisk pace. It was seven miles to the Wheeler area, but another mile to actually get to the formation, and more distance still if we wanted to walk around on it. The first few miles of our hike were frosty. We were mostly in the trees and the sun was also mostly blocked by a high ridge. It's around 10:00 in this photo but there's still frost on the ground.
Around noon, we came in sight of Wheeler Geologic Area. This was Colorado's first National Monument, declared by Teddy Roosevelt himself in 1908. Wheeler was a far more popular tourist destination 100 years ago than it is today. It was known as the "Bryce Canyon of Colorado" was the most popular tourist attraction in the state after Pike's Peak. Now a century later, very few people have heard of it and even fewer have ever seen it.
And here we are on this bizarre formation of petrified and eroded volcanic ash. It's very difficult to describe because it rises out of the trees like an incongruous scar. In Utah, the land changes gradually to the point where you almost of expect this kind of thing around any corner. But not here, emerging out of a spruce forest in Colorado. Like Devil's Tower in Wyoming, you look at Wheeler and think to yourself that it just shouldn't be there. And it certainly shouldn't be that big.
I love this giant stone torch.