So why Colorado Springs, well the reasons are few actually. We mapped out our route last winter and knew we had to zero in on the 4th of July holiday. I have mentioned in the past that for us full timers the holidays are particularly tough. You need to find somewhere to be, right when every other RV'er, camper, and family decide to come to the campgrounds. We knew from past experience we did NOT want to be in a state or national park. Again this is just for us, they are too crowded, too noisy, too busy, with tons of kids running helter-skelter, so we wanted to find a RV park that we could, even at that seemingly early date be able to make a reservation. We played around with our itinerary and decided on Colorado Springs, specifically Garden of the Gods RV Resort. We figured not only would it give us a spot to be over the holiday, it would also allow us to do several errands at places we could find in a city, i.e. REI, Costco, big grocery stores, Jan's birthday dinner, blazing internet, etc. Little did we know we would also have to deal with the truck:-) When we looked at the campground, we saw they had 6 "Executive Pull-Through sites" slightly away from the rest of the park, looked ideal, and it looked like they overlooked a trail that ran along a small stream. Expensive, but maybe worth it?
A pretty view off Wilkerson Pass, 9,504' halfway to Colorado Springs |
As I said earlier we had parts ordered for the AC unit that we picked up there also. So after our disappointing result with repairing the AC and ordering a new one, we had stuff to do.
Our site was a little tighter than we expected particularly for the cost of it, but it did have a patio and some shade, and we did look out through a wire fence, thankfully, to the trail beside the mostly trashy and polluted stream. As we were enjoying cocktails in the early evening we had the pleasure of watching either drunk or drugged out people staggering by, homeless pushing their carts full of their worldly belongings, and even had the incredible opportunity to watch several people actually defecate along the side of the trail! Really nice.
After that experience, which was the worst for the week we were there thankfully, we were anxious to get out of there and do our thing. Exploring around it appeared that our campground was right on the edge of the bad, and only a mile or so away was Old Colorado City that looked like it was really trying to improve their lot, many shops, restaurants, bars, a touristy place. Another goal of Jan's was to get her Senior National Park Pass, as she says it's one good thing about turning 62. We found a National Forest Office in south Colorado Springs which was more in a normal city like area, but they didn't have one. The man there told us we could go over to Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument and he knew they had some. We had never heard of it, but it looked interesting and only about 30 miles away. We didn't have time that day so we ran up to REI to do some shopping.
We got our Costco fix taken care of, bought a bunch of wine and noted how expensive bourbon was in the fair state of Colorado. We found that the blazing internet wasn't there and we even had trouble with our cell phone coverage. Talking to others there, we all were experiencing the same problem whether AT&T or Verizon, maybe a weird pocket?
We went out for Jan's birthday dinner at Ted's Montana Grill, she had her heart set on bison short ribs. It turned out great, the food was excellent, the waiter was excellent, the free dessert was excellent!
Jan's Birthday dinner |
She didn't like it:-) |
Dessert |
And wow, they even gave us some of those incredible pickles to go! |
One of the enormous stumps, this tree was estimated to be more than 230' tall and 750 years old when buried by the mudflow |
If you look close you can see two saw blades that were broken off by souvenir seekers trying to cut off a chunk of the stump |
Heading out |
View across the meadow |
A gorgeous day! |
Jan at the namesake boulders on the Boulder Creek Trail |
That is huge! That is me up on the top |
Along the way |
One of the tunnels |
So we did come back early on the 4th. We parked in a small picnic area on the other side of the park, we were the only ones there and took off on and out and back that was supposed to be 1.6 miles each way, again when we got to the turn around spot we decided to keep going. It was wonderful, the weather was stellar, temps around 65, and again it was like we were the only people in the whole world. We finally turned around at the 2.25 mile point and made our way back, and passed only 3 people coming in.
A meadow to ourselves |
Through an aspen grove, you can see where the snow reaches in the winter |
What a view! |
Our turnaround spot |
So to sum up our time in Colorado Springs. Jan and I just didn't like it, just felt wrong, but perhaps the majority of that feeling was generated by the location and vibe of the campground, and of course the "ambiance" of the trail. We both felt much better up on the north side of town, and we both think that had we arrived from the north, found a campground up in that area, we would have a different take on the place, but in the meantime, we see no need to ever go back..
6 comments:
Colorado, at least the populated sections is trending downward. Between the liberals in political power and the recreational pot laws. C Springs has been headed that way for a long time. Denver will become the next Seattle with it's homeless population.
Time will tell, there and most everywhere. We really like CO for the most part, but COS just didn't appeal. Oh well, different strokes for different folks:-)
And another thing...we're not paying for empty plate pictures here. If Jan finished her din-din then we should get a desert picture. Clean it up Bill.
And another, other thing...seems like every other new house here is getting an RV garage tacked on to it.
Not paying, huh? I wanted to show she cleaned it up:-)
Are you putting one on?
Nope. Ruins the lines of a house.
Found a nice Lear 35 though.
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