Heather and I went up the Fourth of July Road to the Fourth of July Trail to hike to Diamond Lake in the Indian Peaks Wilderness. This is a late fall hike for Colorado. Surprisingly we ran into almost no snow.
The road up to the trailhead is pretty rough. My lowered Subaru Forester XT managed with only a few scrapes of the hard plastic mud flaps. The mountains loom large in this part of the state. I imagine at one point glaciers came down these narrow valleys.
A big waterfall on the other side of the canyon.
Mountains crowding over the shoulder of a ridge on the opposite side of the canyon.
Looking east toward Nederland and Boulder.
Heather on the trail at a water crossing. This trail was very busy and we weren’t even in high season. I would hate to come up here during a peak day in the summer.
Big mountains with a dusting of snow from the last storm.
A cascade of water coming down the middle of the valley.
Heather took a photo of me standing by the water.
Our first real sighting of snow.
Heather crossing a plank bridge section of the trail.
Big mountains to the north.
At the meadow just to the north of Diamond Lake.
Heather about to cross a little bridge across a muddy, but mostly dry creek bed.
Mountains to the north and east.
At Diamond Lake near the outlet.
I went out on a little point of rock looking for a way around the south side of the lake.
We managed to scramble around the steep side of the lake.
From a vantage point in the southeast corner of the lake.
Heather on a little peninsula of grass.
We encountered a rock field below the steep flank of one of the mountains that overlooks Diamond Lake.
Looking north from the south part of the lake.
Almost out of the rock field.
From near the primary inlet to the lake.
One of the big mountains looking down on the lake.
Up that drainage there is a very small lake and a big snowpack that feeds the creeks running down into Diamond Lake.
Looking south and west at the mountains above Diamond Lake.
I headed out onto a little island in the lake.
It’s quite the place.
A small tree clings to life on the rock that makes up the island in Diamond Lake.
On the island.
The water is extremely clear.
There were several large groups with lots of not very well-behaved dogs without leashes at the lake. Colorado’s front ranges are extremely busy. I am still getting used to so many people running around in the mountains. Further west there must be more room to spread out because we don’t have nearly as many people flooding into small alpine areas.
A little cascade coming down a talus chute.
The sound was really beautiful from the babbling cascade.
We finished out the day with a drink at the Very Nice Brewing Company in Nederland before stopping for dinner at the Sundance Cafe. The view there is absolutely outstanding. Nearly 180 degrees of continental divide is visible from the outdoor deck. This picture doesn’t nearly do it enough justice.
It was a nice day with a good little hike. Hopefully we can get another hike or two into the mountains before the snows hit and require more advanced gear to access the high country.