Lake City, CO
interesting choice....i have never been there but seems to have some good locational advantages....how would you compare it to Leadville? i thought it was a cool little town and quickly realized that it sits at over 10,000 ft.SkiMo said:
Buena Vista, CO is a favorite of mine.
- Endless amounts of huge hiking in the Sawatch Range...tons of 14ers.
- Natural hot springs at the base of Princeton just down the road.
- World Class rafting/rapids.
- Good breweries/restaurants.
- Hour and a half to Royal Gorge (more good rafting).
- A little over an hour from Breckenridge.
- Take beautiful Independence Pass (open only in summers) over to Aspen...only an hour and a half.
- Take beautiful Cottonwood Pass (open only in summers) over to Crested Butte, which is another amazing town, in under 2 hours.
Most people don't know much about this place...even people that live in Denver. It's a gem in my opinion.
This is the first time I've seen Meeker on the Travel Board!ursusguy said:
Polebridge, Mt
Bizbee, Az
Ute Park, NM
Granby, Vt
Meeker, CO
Gould, CO
I would venture to say that most people from out of state don't seek this place out. It always seems more like local CO people to me or people really into rafting. Browns Canyon on the Arkansas river is super famous...the most popular rafting in the US I believe. My friend owns a raft and we both used to live in Frisco so I spent a lot of time on that river.Bachelor99 said:interesting choice....i have never been there but seems to have some good locational advantages....how would you compare it to Leadville? i thought it was a cool little town and quickly realized that it sits at over 10,000 ft.SkiMo said:
Buena Vista, CO is a favorite of mine.
- Endless amounts of huge hiking in the Sawatch Range...tons of 14ers.
- Natural hot springs at the base of Princeton just down the road.
- World Class rafting/rapids.
- Good breweries/restaurants.
- Hour and a half to Royal Gorge (more good rafting).
- A little over an hour from Breckenridge.
- Take beautiful Independence Pass (open only in summers) over to Aspen...only an hour and a half.
- Take beautiful Cottonwood Pass (open only in summers) over to Crested Butte, which is another amazing town, in under 2 hours.
Most people don't know much about this place...even people that live in Denver. It's a gem in my opinion.
Great choice!Hincemm said:
Lausanne, Switzerland
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany
I am not sure if they still do, but A&M's Geology Summer Field Camp used to camp outside of Buena Vista up towards Cottonwood Pass for a few days to study the glacial geomorphology around there. We had a good time fishing the creek that ran past the campground and that is the only place I have ever seen a porcupine in the wild.SkiMo said:I would venture to say that most people from out of state don't seek this place out. It always seems more like local CO people to me or people really into rafting. Browns Canyon on the Arkansas river is super famous...the most popular rafting in the US I believe. My friend owns a raft and we both used to live in Frisco so I spent a lot of time on that river.Bachelor99 said:interesting choice....i have never been there but seems to have some good locational advantages....how would you compare it to Leadville? i thought it was a cool little town and quickly realized that it sits at over 10,000 ft.SkiMo said:
Buena Vista, CO is a favorite of mine.
- Endless amounts of huge hiking in the Sawatch Range...tons of 14ers.
- Natural hot springs at the base of Princeton just down the road.
- World Class rafting/rapids.
- Good breweries/restaurants.
- Hour and a half to Royal Gorge (more good rafting).
- A little over an hour from Breckenridge.
- Take beautiful Independence Pass (open only in summers) over to Aspen...only an hour and a half.
- Take beautiful Cottonwood Pass (open only in summers) over to Crested Butte, which is another amazing town, in under 2 hours.
Most people don't know much about this place...even people that live in Denver. It's a gem in my opinion.
I used to work at the Climax Mine which I'm sure you passed if you went to Leadville. 11,318 feet. Talk about some crazy butt puckering winter commutes. Leadville is very historic and there are some killer views from up there. But it's chock full of strange folks. Lots of drugs, etc. People looking to escape. So it's more of a pass thru town for me, but definitely has some great history with the mine and all that.
SkiMo said:
Buena Vista, CO is a favorite of mine.
- Endless amounts of huge hiking in the Sawatch Range...tons of 14ers.
- Natural hot springs at the base of Princeton just down the road.
- World Class rafting/rapids.
- Good breweries/restaurants.
- Hour and a half to Royal Gorge (more good rafting).
- A little over an hour from Breckenridge.
- Take beautiful Independence Pass (open only in summers) over to Aspen...only an hour and a half.
- Take beautiful Cottonwood Pass (open only in summers) over to Crested Butte, which is another amazing town, in under 2 hours.
Most people don't know much about this place...even people that live in Denver. It's a gem in my opinion.
Garmisch is the coolest place I've ever been. I was in the military and got to spend a few months there and was convinced I was going to get a job working on that little base when I got out.Hincemm said:
Lausanne, Switzerland
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany
SwissAgg said:
Zermatt near the Matterhorn
Pirate04 said:
Park City
Coeur D'Alene, ID
Went to Buena Vista a couple times in high school, I would be really interested to see what its like now
Talkeetna isn't a mountain town.malenurse said:
Talkeetna, Alaska
HollywoodBQ said:Talkeetna isn't a mountain town.malenurse said:
Talkeetna, Alaska
I'm from Valdez and Valdez is a town surrounded by 5,000 foot mountains but it's still not a mountain town.
For a mountain town, I like:
- Breckenridge, CO
- Stateline, NV
- Park City, UT
I rode in a tiny plane, short trip, from Talkeetna and landed on a glacier on Denali (a BIG mountain). It seemed like a mountain town to me....HollywoodBQ said:Talkeetna isn't a mountain town.malenurse said:
Talkeetna, Alaska
I'm from Valdez and Valdez is a town surrounded by 5,000 foot mountains but it's still not a mountain town.