Colorado 14ers
I was in Keystone, CO this past weekend for a friend's wedding and decided to take a couple extra days to climb some 14ers. This time of year in Colorado is absolutely gorgeous with sunny, cool days-perfect for hiking. In addition, you don't have to worry so much about being off the mountain by lunchtime since there arent too many afternoon thunderstorms this time of year. I was extremely happy not to have to start hiking in the middle of the night.
I found a fabulous website: http://www.14ers.com
The site contains details on every single Colorado 14er including route guides and classifications, trailhead access status, weather reports, detailed photos of each route, driving directions, you name it. You can even create your own checklist to chart your progress on the quest to climb all 58. Has anyone made an equivalent for the California ones?
The first day I climbed Grays and Torreys. Tons of people were out as it was the weekend and a pretty nice day, albeit a bit windy. Grays and Torreys are connected by a saddle so you can climb both in one trip. Supposedly most 14er purists say you need to have 3000' of elevation gain on each peak climb to count it but I didnt feel like hiking all the way down to the trailhead and back up again! Neither did anyone else it seems.
The next day I climbed the highest peak in Colorado- Mt Elbert. This was a gorgeous hike through the forest (which is sadly dying because of the pine beetle) then above the treeline with unlimited views of the rest of the Colorado range. I ended up hiking with Rocky- the awesome Texan who has climbed 37 of the 14ers- and a couple from Scotland-Ian and Jasmin- who were vacationing in the US. We had a blast chatting about everything from guns to Prairie Home Companion.
Only 55 more to go!

0 Comments
Click here to sign up now.