Author Archives: Debora

Unknown's avatar

About Debora

I take pictures of stuff and talk about my feelings.

DOT by Bike and Rail: Golden, Blunn Reservoir, Arvada

On the last day of last August, I resumed my quest to bike all 177 miles of the Denver Orbital Trail. To recap: there are 28 segments, each meant to be walked in a day. Since I’m on a bike instead of on foot, I always covered several segments at a time, beginning and ending at a light rail station. I began this project in early May 2024, starting halfway through Segment 15 in Aurora and traveling counterclockwise. As of my last blog post I had made it to the end of Segment 26 at Majestic View Park in Arvada, and then rolled down a really long, fun hill to the Olde Town Arvada rail station.

For my sixth loop, I decided against picking up the trail where I’d left off. Instead I started at the Golden rail station, connected with the trail partway through Segment 1, and then traveled clockwise through segments 28 and 27 until I was back at Majestic View Park. This way it was mostly downhill and I got to do that long descent into Olde Town again!

This billboard greeted me as I made my way from Golden Station to the DOT. The little paraglider in the picture made me look up, and sure enough…

…there he was!

Next I came to this little building. What could it be?

So apparently there’s a trail here where you can see dinosaur tracks and stuff. I didn’t have time to explore it on my ride, but one of these days I’ll go back and check it out.

Golden is full of beautiful public art. This lifesize sculpture was near the bike trail:

I connected to the DOT near where it crossed Clear Creek.

Saw lots of people out floating. That looks like a fun way to spend a day.

The DOT follows Clear Creek for a while. There’s some nice public art along the trail.

Clear Creek runs though the Coors Brewery…

…so to avoid being Augustus Glooped, but with beer instead of chocolate, this is as far as the floaters can go.

The DOT crosses the Golden Freeway and climbs up Table Mountain. My commuter bike is not made for such off-road shenanigans, so I stayed on Clear Creek trail and traveled parallel to the DOT route.

Table Mountain:

I passed the Colorado Railroad Museum…

…and then made my way back toward Table Mountain to reconnect with the DOT as it comes down. This part of the trail is still dirt and gravel, but my bike handled it okay. Nice pastoral views here.

I came down out of the hills on the Ralston Creek Trail, which finally changed from dirt to pavement at the junction of Segments 27 and 28 near Blunn Reservoir.

Farther down Ralston Creek Trail I discovered the Colorado Tap House, which has cleverly installed a bunch of trail-facing signage and bike racks.

I saw a lot of families with kids who had ridden their bikes there for lunch. I might do that myself sometime.

This tree apparently has an appetite for kites.

More pretty scenery on my way back to Mountain View Park…

…and then that long, giddy roll back down to Olde Town Arvada.

I stopped for lunch at a food trailer…inside a building, which seems like it defeats the purpose of a food trailer, but whatevs.

Took the G line from Olde Town Arvada back to Union Station, where I saw this fancy guy.

This loop covered about 28 miles, not counting train rides. Next up, the 470 Bikeway and Chatfield Reservoir.

 

Categories: A Plethora of Parks, Artwork, DOT by Bike and Rail, environment, food, Life, trees | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Prairie Life

During the week my friend came to visit last August, we went in search of prairie wildlife for her to photograph. My two favorite natives of these eastern plains are the prairie dogs (they’re everywhere!) and the pronghorns (they are elusive).

We visited the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, but didn’t see any pronghorns.

 

Next we tried the Plains Conservation Center, which is normally a surer bet. Got some nice shots of an old warplane near Buckley AFB, but alas, no pronghorns.

We visited the Morrison Nature Center. Not much chance of seeing pronghorns there, but the trails are nice. The prairie grass was humming with little insect lives.

We checked out some local prairie dog villages. This is one of her pics, it’s cuter than any of the ones I got:

I was sad that she didn’t get to see pronghorns on her visit.

A few days after she left, I was driving out to see Mahogany and saw a bunch of them in the field next to the road. All I had with me was my phone, which takes terrible pics, but here is photographic proof that pronghorns do roam the plains of Colorado:

 

More to come!

Categories: A Plethora of Parks, Animals, environment, Friends, Life, Wildlife | Tags: , , | Leave a comment

Rocky Mountain National Park

My second-favorite thing we did when my friend came out to visit last August was to drive Trail Ridge Road through Rocky Mountain National Park, from the Estes Park side to Grand Lake. This is such a scenic drive. We got out for a short hike or two, and saw some wildlife on the trails, but if all you have time for is the drive, it’s still worth it.

I wish I’d gotten better shots of the wildlife, most of the ones I did get are blurry. But we saw bighorn sheep,


deer and elk,

lots of birds,

lots of insects and wildflowers,

a curious chipmunk,

and a moose.

We also saw some pikas and a mink, but I wasn’t quick enough with my camera to capture those.

This rocky riverbed has a story behind it:

So back in 1903, some Loveland farmers hired an irrigation company to build a small dam where Lawn Lake empties into the Roaring River, to create a reservoir for watering their farms down in Loveland. The dam embiggened Lawn Lake’s surface area from 16.4 acres to 48 acres.

In 1915, when Rocky Mountain National Park was established, Lawn Lake was within its borders, but the irrigation company was allowed to retain ownership of the dam and its associated water rights. In 1931 the dam was raised to 24 feet high.

In mid-July of 1982, the dam failed due to neglect, dumping 674 acre-feet of water into the Roaring River. Lawn Lake emptied in half an hour, just an absolute tsunami. Four decades later you can still see the alluvial fan of rocks and debris that the floodwaters left behind when they poured into Horseshoe Park.

After continuing across Horseshoe Park and into the Fall River, the flood destroyed a second dam and a state fish hatchery before washing through the town of Estes Park and eventually being absorbed into Lake Estes. Millions of dollars in damages and three lives lost. Insanity. You can read more about it here.

This next pic is kind of grainy because I took it with my phone, but I like it because it did a better job of capturing that golden shade of meadowgrass in the valley.

Even in August there were still patches of snow up at the higher altitudes.

Trail Ridge Road is the highest continuous paved road in the United States.

It tops out at 12,183 feet of elevation, up in the rocky tundra.

There are two small lakes in this pic, but I don’t know their names:

They look like pure snowmelt.

It’s chilly at that altitude, even in August.

And then down the other side.

Near this bridge is where we saw the mink.

This was a little village we saw in Grand Lake on the way home. So pretty!

And that was our drive through Rocky Mountain National Park. I’d like to camp up there sometime and do a real hike, but we still need to upgrade our tent and sleeping bags so we don’t freeze.

More to come!

Categories: A Plethora of Parks, Animals, environment, Friends, Life, Road trip, trees, Wildlife | Tags: , | 1 Comment

Pikes Peak by Rail

Luke keeps asking when I’m going to update my blog. He says the easiest way to keep track of his road trips and other adventures is by looking them up here. I keep meaning to, but between work, house projects, recreational reading and getting into political arguments on Twitter, there never seems to be time for blogging.

But next month will mark a full year of unblogged adventures. I need to either catch up or admit that I’m never going to. So I’ve made a new rule for myself: every time I finish reading a book, I can’t start a new one until I have written and published a new blog post.

So where were we? Last August a friend I’ve known forever (since middle school!) flew out to spend a week with us. I think my favorite thing we did that week was take the Broodmoor Cog Railway to the summit of Pikes Peak.

That was on August 13th of last year. Elizabeth had the Tuesday off and came with us. Luke was saving up PTO for a solo trip to Alaska, so he was at work that day.

The Cog Railway Depot is lovely. The current cog trains were shipped out from Switzerland, and the depot embraces that Swiss aesthetic.

The depot sits roughly between the foot of the Manitou Incline and Barr Trailhead in Manitou Springs. As we rolled out of the station, the first views were green and lush.

The views get more rugged as you get higher.

This majestic marmot was hanging out above the tree line, up in the tundra.

At one point we rolled off onto a side track to let another train descend.

The tundra gets rockier near the top.

There is an active gold mine in the background of this photo, on the top right:

It takes about an hour and ten minutes to reach the summit.

The new visitor center sits next to the ruins of the old visitor center from the 1800s.

We went in and ate lunch and got some famous Summit House donuts.

The peak was cold and windy, but we walked around and took in the views.

There’s also a road you can drive up. I think it would be fun to take a car or train to the top and then ride a bike back down.

After about 40 minutes we were called to reboard. The operator relocated to our car, which had been at the back of the train during the ascent, and was now at the front.

And back down we went!

After disembarking, we decided to check out a couple of the local naturally-carbonated springs.

I’m kind of obsessed with them now. If I lived closer to Manitou Springs, I’d be taking gallon jugs to fill up with that spring water every week.

And on the way home–a double rainbow!

Whew. Now I can read another book.

And when I finish that, I’ll be back!

Categories: Animals, environment, Family, Friends, Life, Travel, trees, Wildlife | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Resolution 2025

No rhapsodic prose for this year’s resolution post. I’m embroiled in a renovation project, covered in paint and not feeling particularly poetic.

I have two resolutions for the coming year. One is straightforward — get some sort of garden started — and the other is so complicated that it’s a secret.

Hopefully unrelated anecdote: the last time we picked up Chinese food, my fortune cookie had no fortune. Everyone else got a fortune; I got an empty cookie. I am choosing not to take that as some sort of omen.

Happy 2025 to all, and may this troubled world find some measure of peace in the coming year.

Categories: Celebrations, Holidays, New Year’s Resolutions | 1 Comment

Blog at WordPress.com.