.....WAY OUT in the MOUNTAINS....So much to See...so much to Learn!!
When the War Department decided to establish a unit of mountain troops
trained in skiing and
winter warfare in 1942,
the Tennessee Pass area of Colorado was chosen and Fort Hale was created. If you are interested in more of this historic tale, click here.
There is a huge low area that once contained Ft. Hale and some large photo markers telling the story. There are a few large relics left, but not enough to tell what was there if you do not stop and read. I never knew.
This is the Ft. Hale area as it appears today...
A continental divide is a line of elevated terrain which forms a border between two watersheds such that water falling on one side of the line eventually travels to one ocean or body of water, and water on the other side travels to another, generally on the opposite side of the continent. This is the Great Divide of North America....separating the watersheds of the Pacific from those of the Atlantic or Arctic Oceans. I guess if I learned that, I had forgotten it.
Leadville, The little mining town was on the way to our lunch stop in Buena Vista- but my husband just blew right through it, saying that if we stopped at everything photo-worthy, we would never get to Colorado Springs.
We choose a tiny a hamburger place that had been in business 25 years....a hole in the wall that was over-run with people...thus indicating a great place to eat..... and adjacent to a park for the kids to run off some energy in Buena Vista. They were closed November, December and January, probably because of that average temperature of 2 degrees that I quoted earlier!
Doesn't this give Cheeseburger in Paradise a whole new meaning???.....LOOK at that view! In the background were the Collegiate Peaks.....
The Collegiate Peaks area includes much of the Sawatch Range and has the highest average elevation of any wilderness area in the United States. Several of the area's 14,000-foot (4,300 m) peaks are named for famous universities and colleges, including Mt. Harvard, Mt. Oxford, Mt. Yale, Mt. Princeton and Mt. Columbia. These peaks are the source of the name for the wilderness. In mountain climbing terminology , a fourteener is a mountain that exceeds 14,000 feet (4,267.2 m) above sea level. The importance of fourteeners is greatest in Colorado which has the majority of such peaks in North America. Climbing all of Colorado's fourteeners is a popular pastime for climbers. Mt. Massive was also along the route we followed, another fourteener. It was massive and awesome.
I just like to look at a fourteener- from the bottom.
Who knew I would learn so much on a vacation????
Comments
Very informitive post. Enjoyed reading!