Yesterday I summited Mount Massive (14,421 ft), Colorado's
second-highest peak, with Tom and Fred - both fellow Taoseños. We hit the trail
at 7:30 a.m. via the East Slopes route.
This is officially considered the "easiest" route,
but that's only true if by easy you mean you never encounter really steep
terrain. In fact, the trail is so gentle for the first hour that it almost
feels like you're walking downhill. Of course, what you save in steepness, you
pay back in mileage. This route is nearly 14 miles round trip compared to about
8 miles on the steeper Southwest Slopes. So, pick your poison. Personally, I'm
still not sure which route I'd call easier!
Whatever the route, yesterday was one of those magical
mountain days when every star aligned. Cool morning temperatures, deep blue
skies, and absolutely no wind. What more could you ask for? Maybe slightly
cooler temperatures on the hike down - but that might be getting greedy.
And none of those conditions should be taken for granted.
Tonight's NOAA forecast for 14,199 feet calls for snow showers, patchy smoke,
and even a chance of thunderstorms. We missed all of that thanks to Tom's
excellent planning and his knack for picking the perfect weather window.
From the Mount Massive trailhead, about 20 minutes outside
Leadville, the hike begins in dense forest and keeps you there for an hour and
a half or so before finally opening up above treeline. You follow the Colorado
Trail northeast for roughly a mile before it turns northwest for another couple
of miles. Along the way you cross South Willow Creek and then Willow Creek,
where you leave the Colorado Trail and continue on the Mount Massive Trail.
Even then, you're not quite out of the woods. There's still
nearly another mile before you finally break above tree line. But once you do,
the scenery starts rewarding you long before you reach the summit.
The alpine tundra was simply spectacular. Wildflowers were
in full bloom, painting the landscape with nearly every color imaginable,
including some stunning electric-blue blossoms that seemed to glow against the
green. The mosses carpeting both the soil and the rocks added subtle shades of
green, gold, and brown that completed the picture. Altogether, it reminded me
remarkably of the tundra landscapes of Lapland in Arctic Scandinavia.
As if that weren't enough, the panoramic views across the
Sawatch Range just kept getting better with every step. You spend a wonderfully
long time hiking through this alpine paradise before finally reaching the rocky
summit ridge. From there it's about 20 to 30 minutes of enjoyable Class 2
scrambling over solid rock to the top.
Our ascent took 4 hours and 19 minutes. After soaking in the
views, and taking the obligatory summit photos, we headed back down, reaching
the car 3 hours and 37 minutes later.
Another Colorado fourteener in the books, and one that
reminded me why some of the "easier" peaks can still make you earn
every single step.
| On the summit: Tom, Fred, and Loki. |
| North Halfmoon lakes as seen from the summit. |
| These expansive views of the Sawatch range include Twin Lakes. |
| Another view of the Halfmoon lakes from a bit further down on the summit ridge. |
| Fred and Tom embarking on the long slog down. |
| "Infinite" views including Turquoise lake. |
| Loki the Magnificient taking it all in... |
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