Having never been to Colorado Springs, we figured it was a good place to stop before we went through Denver.
I must say, the hiking in this area is Amazing.
Our campground of choice was the local Elks lodge, but they had no sites available, so we dry camped in their parking lot for 4 days.
The weather was not particularly cooperative so when we set out to hike, we had to make it a short one. We chose Pulpit Rock.
With our outing cut short we headed to the nearest REI. I needed new waterproof hiking boots to bring to Europe, and I wanted to get them in time to break them in. There's me in my new boots...
In keeping with our idea of not hiking too many days in a row, we took a day off to do some more shopping. A few months ago I dropped my iPad and it has never been the same. It was time to suck it up and buy a new one...which we did. We spent two hours in the Apple store, but walked out with everything from my old iPad already moved over to the new one.
What was really cool was that I needed a cover for it, but of course we are traveling. Well, turns out there is an Amazon locker very close to the Elks lodge. I ordered it, 2 days later it was at the locker, and when I held the bar code on my phone up to the scanner, a door popped open and there was my cover! Amazingly easy! We were both impressed.
In the same plaza as Apple was a sporting goods store we'd never heard of- Scheels- so we walked through it...admiring the Ferris wheel and the fish tank, complete with a diver who was cleaning the tank. We didn't buy anything.
There is a park in Colorado Springs that I wanted to hike, but the park has hundreds of interwoven trails, so in order to choose a length that suited us, Paul and I used one of our hiking apps to plot a trail.
We drove to Garden of the Gods, realizing as soon as we looked for a parking spot- that it was Father's Day- and every dad and his kids were at this park.
We were ready to drive off, but did manage to find a parking spot. We had to adjust our trail plan a bit, but we had a great hike, with great weather.
We drove as far up as we could- mile 16 (out of 19) and while we waited for the road to clear, we socialized, took pictures, and watched a skier ski about 50 ft down a hill before he ran into the road.
About an hour later, the ice melted, and the shuttle bus took us to the top. Lucky for us, the skies were reasonably clear and we had great views.
It was cold but not bone chilling cold so we could walk around outside for a bit. My favorite memory of a mountain peak is Mt. Washington in New Hampshire. The last time we were there, the wind was whipping and it was frigid. Winds there can top out at almost 200 mph.
Our guide here told us they close this mountain if the wind hits 40 mph. So different!
On the way down there is a mandatory brake check. Brake temperature has to be below 300* in order for you to continue down the hill. Paul was happy ( OK, gloating) over the fact that his brake temperature was 126*.
Our shuttle bus driver told us if we had any leftover time, we should head to Cripple Creek, CO. It's a small, picturesque town that has a Gold Mine Tour (it also has at least two museums, but we didn't have time). Well, he had Paul at the word "Mine". This area actually has a lot of active gold mining going on, which is unique.
After grabbing lunch at a local pub with surprisingly good pizza, we headed to the Molly Kathleen Mine.
The toughest part (so they say) is the 1000 ft drop in the "elevator". I think it's 3 ft by 3 ft, and would carry nine miners down the shaft. We had 6 people in it and it felt like 20. Once at the bottom, things opened up.
The woman who was our tour guide is a 5th generation miner. When not giving tours, she actually works in the mines. That was really cool because she told us stories of her grandfather and what mining was like when he was working versus what she does today. Having been on quite a few mine tours, I am always on the lookout for a few nuggets of new information.
"Back in the day" the miners had to work by candle light- and since candles were expensive, they didn't want to waste them. They discovered that if they started out with a candle, they could blow it out, and their eyes would remember what they saw, kind of like a ghost picture, so they worked in total darkness, based on that picture. Um, no thanks.
While showing us the "elevator" she described it's use. A rope attached to a bell at the surface would signal the operator that men needed to go up, or come down, how many men, etc. A signal of 3 pulls, then 1 pull, and another single pull, meant someone needed to go up to the surface (going up). She cleverly explained that now when someone asks her "what's up' she replies "3-1-1". Corny but fun.
Anyway, she was a great tour guide and the mine was fun, as long as I could forget I was underground.



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