Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Monday, October 30, 2023

Colorado Station to University Station


First snow hike of the autumn!

This was a pleasant hike. There was about six inches of snow on the ground. The air was chilly but not freezing and the cloud cover kept the sun from blazing down. The above photo is Little Dry Creek Trail. I was on my way out. I had to detour down to the pharmacy to pick up a prescription before I hit the trail.

The hike began at Colorado Station and retraced a stretch of my last hike down to the Schlessman YMCA.
There is a variety of churches and church architecture along the way. This is the Most Precious Blood Catholic Church of Colorado Boulevard.
Most of Colorado Boulevard looks like this, gas stations, shopping centers, and office buildings, typical urban fair.
Here's what the weather was doing.

29.86 inches mercury (1.011 bar, pretty much normal sea level barometric pressure.) 41.4 ° Fahrenheit is a comfortable chill. The reason the snow is sticking around is that it's such a good insulator that the snow on top keeps the snow underneath from melting and the snow underneath keeps the snow on top cold. 43% humidity is pretty wet for Colorado. The consistent cloud cover helped to keep things stable. I didn't expect any storms and only got a few occasional flakes of snow.
If you look back in the blog, you can find other pictures of the University Hills Library (I demonstrated the difference between weight and mass in their elevator!). This photo is just for nostalgia.
And this is the real start of my hike. Here, Harvard Gulch emerges from underground as a storm sewer. It's pretty high right now with snow runoff. The water looks clean but I wouldn't drink it. It's not like there's stuff from toilets and washing machines but melted snow carries a lot of surface materials like street debris and leakage from cars. Still, a surprising amount of tiny plants and animals live there.
The gulch provides storm drainage and recreation (Harvard Gulch Trail runs from the emergence of the gulch to where it disappears underground near Broadway. I saw kids sledding on the broader banks). Less obviously, the stone reinforced banks and many water features inhibit erosion and the natural bed helps to cleanse the water before is pours into the South Platte River.
Harvard Gulch borders the University of Denver Campus. I've spent a lot of time there as there's a lot to see. Here's a picture of the sundial on the southern side of the Newman Arts Building. I hadn't seen some of the new buildings on campus so I decided to cut through on the way to University Station.

Much of the space between the buildings are gardens and malls.
Dan's Garden is a visual highlight of the Daniel Felix  Ritchie School of Engineering and Computer Science. In the winter, it transforms into a wonderland of snow and cascading waters.

The campus is quiet now on this snowy Sunday. There are certainly students and faculty strolling around, but the traffic is reduced and the snow muffles a lot of the usual noise.

The Chester M. Alter Arboretum with its water gardens is similarly subdued. 
The new student union building actually looks new. I didn't go in....I should some day. I like that glossy dark red exterior.

The art at the University of Denver Station is a blue metal plate cut out to show the off white concrete underneath. It's called "Reflective Discourse" and it was constructed by John Goe and Larry Argent. Argent is also the creator of the Big Blue Bear at the Colorado Convention Center.
Many of the shelters at the RTD light rail stations have the cable support design shown above. It's the same principle as the cable support bridges except what's being supported is a roof instead of a footpath.

There are not a lot of accessible observation platforms in the Denver skyline but there are plenty of parking garages and some of the best views in the area are on the top decks. So here's the requisite shot of the Rockies.
Oops.... where'd they go?

Well, it's not all bad. This area relies a lot on the snow packs on the mountains for it's year round water and those clouds are packing the snow in. Here's a picture I took near home a couple of days later on a grocery run.
Here are some more shots from the top deck.
The Denver skyline

The plains

Colorado Center

The University of Denver carillon Tower

The University of Denver

and more University of Denver

The next station-to-station "hike" will be more of a homecoming. This area used to be one of my past neighborhoods and I have good memories of the church I used to attend. I'll be getting up really early so I can make a morning service, and then I'll make a first-or-the-month supply run.

There are just two more station-to-station hikes on the E/H lines before I turn my attention to Cherry Creek 

Monday, March 4, 2019


--- Highline Canal: Winter ---

Before I even get started, let me warn any through hikers on the Highline Canal Trail that there is currently no easy way around Plum Creek on the trail. You can walk a long way up Titan Road and north on Santa Fe, both heavily trafficked much of the day with little shoulder to walk on, or you can walk across the entire width of Chatfield Lake State Park, a large and hilly expanse, to Mineral Road and take the Mineral Trail up to reconnect the the Highline Canal. As detours, I wouldn't recommend either although Chatfield State Park and the little parks along the South Platte River are at least scenic.

I took a Lyft to the Colorado Trail trailhead Thursday, February 28 with the intention of walking 18 miles to the Elati Street trailhead of the Highline Canal, but, as the very nature of adventures is to throw curve balls, I only made it seven or eight miles (maybe further after wandering around looking for a way around Plum Creek). I did, nevertheless, enjoy the hike. I realize that the Rolling Stones were correct - "You can't always get what you want."

Expecting a long walk well into the night, I got up at 6:00 and was out as the sun was rising.


                                                                    [Sunrise]

By the time I reached the trailhead across from the Kassler Center in bright daylight. The foothills were gorgeously speckled with patches of snow from the big snowfall the weekend before.

                                                          [Kassler Center at Waterton]

My plans required a short roadwalk south along Waterton Road to the canal. The Lockheed-Martin plant is ever visible through the first stretch of the trail to Plum Creek.

                                                              [Lockheed-Martin]

It doesn't snow constantly in Denver during winter but it does enough that there is usually snow on the ground. This is probably a pretty typical view of the South Platte in the winter.

                                                   [South Platte at Waterton Road]

There is a reservoir, the Platte Canyon Reservoir,  at the Waterton Road Trailhead that draws water off the canal for storage. It seems to be popular for water birds. I hope these like the ice.

                                             [Platte Canyon Reservoir pumping station]

                                                        [Lockheed Martin, again]

                                                               [Highline Canal]

                                                          [Platte Canyon Reservoir]


[Birds - look like gulls to me, there were also ducks but they were too far out for a photograph]

The first few hundred meters of trail were paved and the canal was dry except for stretches that ran with snow melt.

                                                             [Snow on the trail]

I saw a lot of this rosy leafed plant on the side of the trail. I'm pretty sure that it would have been green during the summer and I'm not sure what it is - maybe a potentilla? I thought it was a red moss at first. Out of all the wildflowers, I think I like the belly flowers most. Those are the ones you have to get down on your belly to see. They are often some of the most intricate, colorful blooms. I'd like to see what the flowers on these look like.

                                                                  [Belly flowers]

Much of the Highline Trail in this area runs through private properties. There are a lot of horses and cattle.

                                                                 [No Trespassing]

This ranch has a log cabin on its grounds.

                                                                   [Log cabin]

And, here, the canal actually looks like a canal with snow melt.

                                                              [Highline Canal]

The power lines that cross the Highline Canal carry lots of juice to Lockheed-Martin which could be considered the gateway to space, since they build rockets.  Denver is very space conscious. The School of Mining in Golden has begun a focus on technology to mine asteroids, for instance.




                                                                  [Power lines]

The trail along the boundaries of Chatfield Lake State Park affords great views of the Front Range. The hills in the foreground hide Conifer and the one in the middle distance is Mount Morrison. Further back is the mountains around Golden and Green Mountain.


                                                            [Front Range]

I didn't see a lot of wildlife (or tracks), but I saw or heard many hawks, like this fellow,

                                                                        [Hawk]

and this herd of deer. They seemed to be used to two-legged pedestrians.

                                                                        [Deer]

This area makes it clear that the high plains butt right up against the Rockies. There's very little transition.


                                                           [Plains and mountains]

On the Highline Canal Trail, mileposts are your friend. They appear every mile and mark mileage from the Waterton end of the trail.

                                                                         [Mile 6]

My original intention was to follow the Highline Canal Trail to the Plum Creek entrance to Chatfield Lake State Park and pick up the Chatfield Internal Trail in the park which meets back up with the Canal Trail on the other side of Plum Creek. Unfortunately, the construction in the park has obliterated the eastern end of the Internal Trail, so Chatfield was the end of the line for this hike.

The views around the lake are nice (if you don't look in the direction of the construction). The water is down considerably and this is definitely high plains.


                                                                [Chatfield Lake]

As advertised (in the Highline Canal Guide), the Denver skyline is visible from the park but, on this day, there was a gray-brown haze around the city that wasn't very photogenic, so I passed that picture up.

The end of my adventure was a long wait at the parking area at Roxborough Road. I won't go into detail about how my phone's battery died at a crucial point and I had to finagle a way back home, but I will say that the other hikers and the Douglas County Sheriff's Department are great and that Call Box at the parking area? It works.

If you live in the Denver area or will be visiting, you might want to check out the 71 mile long urban Highline Canal trail. The canal is a weird tributary of the South Platte that flows away from the river and crosses roads and other streams. You can check it out on the Internet here:

https://highlinecanal.org/?gclid=Cj0KCQiAk-7jBRD9ARIsAEy8mh7NOCA8cED47AFcPvdeZSZuYmsjlSTWE7lFOsSZYl5O50VeH13cj5gaAtGhEALw_wcB

How's winter in your area? Do you have snow? Are there plants that are especially adapted to your winters? Does the wildlife behave differently?