2007 05 26 – Big Trip – Day 26 – The Road to the Rockies

Mary’s Lake Campground, Estes Park, Colorado. Tachometer – 2909 miles

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Near Adams Falls, Rocky Mountain National Park

We woke up at 6am to Orr’s crying. Noting calmed her down and she woke Shir up too. Paola tended to them while I tried to sleep some more but in vain, too much noise. How Ron slept through this is unclear.

We left the campground before 9am for a long day of driving. Shir and Orr fell asleep immediately. Highway 24 took us north through Leadville, a town sitting at 10,200 feet. We drove on route 9 till we hit the main Interstate 70 and then stopped to refuel and rest at Dillon. We spent 20 minute in a reservoir where the kids ran to the lake to throw some rocks into the water. There was an elderly group of fishing ladies that let Ron and Shir take a close look at the one rainbow trout they had caught so far.

We continued northward on route 9, passing through Silverthorne and some beautiful houses and ranches along the way. All along we were escorted by the majestic snow capped peaks of the rocky mountain chain. We reached Kremmling (Sportsman’s Capital) around noon and had lunch in the RV. It was windy and eventually rainy outside.

We the drove eastward on route 40 until the turnoff to the west entrance to Rock Mountain National Park about an hour later. Most people enter the park from Estes Park on the east, the side that is closer to Denver. The drive up to the park from the turnoff was beautiful – several lakes to our right, densely decorated with green orange and red colored trees as their backdrop and topped with whipped cream mountain tops of snow and clouds. Ron enjoyed the drive as well, watching the Piglet movie on his portable DVD.

We stopped near the park entrance and took a short half mile hike to Adams Falls, which were small and nice, but no big deal. But the air, the fresh scent of pine forest, what it does for the soul…

It was 3:30pm and we still had 40 miles of mountain driving inside the park to get to the eastern side and our campground. We drove no more than a mile before we saw to our left a herd of deer lazily munching on meadow grass. We stopped for the photo opportunity and the kids got a great view from the RV window. When we left 3 minutes later, there were at least 5 more cars parked in the temporary tourist attraction. We would see several more of these ad-hoc parking sites along the road.

The drive through the park was beautiful, reaching alpine heights of 12,000 feet, above the tree line. Snow in some places was several feet deep. Trail Ridge Road, which connects the east and west sides of the park opened yesterday after being closed all winter long. Excellent timing for us, otherwise we would have had to take a huge detour.

We reached the nice town of Estes Park tired and hungry and chanced upon a really great Italian restaurant before heading off to our campground.

In the past five days we drove almost 900 miles. It’s time to rest a bit. We’ll hang out here in the Rockies for at least the next 3 days, maybe more.

Good night

Hemi

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