| Glinting Q. Formalize ( @ 2004-06-13 16:12:00 |
hike: Kennebec pass and Taylor Lake
Got out on Saturday afternoon for another hike. This one was a bit of "long approach, short thrill" as we had to drive about 18 miles on a slow Forest Service road (2WD but twisty and rutted) and then it was only about a 1.5 mile hike to the pass and a further 1.8 miles to the lake, then back the way we came. Both pass and lake are around 11,750 ft, with a lovely (although very snowy) basin separating them. Nice wildflowers, particularly glacier lilies which lined the edges of the trail. Didn't see anyone until we got to Cumberland Basin, as there's another trailhead not far from there and several people had come up from that one.
Snowstorm peak to the left and Cumberland peak to the right.

Along the trail; Kennebec Pass is out of sight just to the right of Cumberland Peak.

Still an awful lot of snow in Cumberland basin!

Our destination, the beautiful but artificial Taylor Lake. Installed by the Colorado Division of Wildlife and the Forest Service because there weren't any lakes in this area.

Looking down La Plata Canyon.

Got out on Saturday afternoon for another hike. This one was a bit of "long approach, short thrill" as we had to drive about 18 miles on a slow Forest Service road (2WD but twisty and rutted) and then it was only about a 1.5 mile hike to the pass and a further 1.8 miles to the lake, then back the way we came. Both pass and lake are around 11,750 ft, with a lovely (although very snowy) basin separating them. Nice wildflowers, particularly glacier lilies which lined the edges of the trail. Didn't see anyone until we got to Cumberland Basin, as there's another trailhead not far from there and several people had come up from that one.
Snowstorm peak to the left and Cumberland peak to the right.

Along the trail; Kennebec Pass is out of sight just to the right of Cumberland Peak.

Still an awful lot of snow in Cumberland basin!

Our destination, the beautiful but artificial Taylor Lake. Installed by the Colorado Division of Wildlife and the Forest Service because there weren't any lakes in this area.

Looking down La Plata Canyon.
