Tuesday, September 22, 2009


A week ago, some of us explored the area around Mt Herman. The area is not well documented anywhere I could find but it appears most of the trail that we used is known as the Monument Trail but the last part after rounding Rasperry Mountain back to the trail head is not shown anywhere. There is also some references to the area fronting Mt Herman as the Monument Preserve and it appears like there is ongoing efforts to define the usage in this area. Lots of references to too many social trails and the need to control trail usage.

Aside from this, the trail is narrow and rocky but my main point here is that as we ran it, you could sense that fall was coming quickly. Behind Mt Herman which is Limbaugh canyon, a small furry caterpillar displayed its furryness as to say that this winter will be a colder and snowier one.

Since that day, the temperature has dropped dramatically and yesterday, the rain was mixed with snow. As I look out to the front range, there is a lot of snow in the higher elevations. While an early snow can be a false promise, with the amount of rain we have had, I feel a lot of snow may be in the offing this winter. To look at the bright side, this may mean that I can actually do some cross country skiing and snowshoeing without having to travel up the pass. Cross training without having to travel...sounds good to me.

Typically, we can expect a lot of nice days for the next several months even if we get spells of snow and rain. A perfect opportunity to enjoy our abundance of trails. Happy running...

4 comments:

HappyTrails said...

Bob-

Those trails in the Monument Preserve are great - we have Mtn Biked there for years and have run several times there. We were actually thinking we might go up there this week. Limbaugh has had some land access disputes, but the trails in the Forest Service Hot Shots area are great - most of that singletrack was cut by fire jumpers as practice for fireline cuts.
Steve

Farrunner said...

Hi Steve,

Saw your writeup on the Monument Area, As alway..great pictures. I did not see any issues with access with the backside of Mt Herman, I am assuming that the valley we went through was Limbaugh canyon. I think there is a spot where if you continue on the trail you enter private property. This was where you turn around to the frontside of Limabaugh. There is a trail that takes off to the right that avoids this. We were following the hoof prints of a local rider plus one of the people in the group had taken this wrong turn last time he was there so we avoided it this time. There was another spot just beyond the rock area where we lost the trail and ended up near some housing but using the GPS and heading towards the starting point we found the trail again. I am making it a point to try some of the front side trails next time I am up there.

HappyTrails said...

Bob-

I am not sure how it works but I think you can at least look at the satellie/map area on Garmin Connect for that run we did to get a bird's eye view of the trail network on the front side.
http://connect.garmin.com/activity/14530728
I don't know if I can send any of the info from SportTracks or not?
Steve

Farrunner said...

Steve,

I think the front side of that run is where the Monument Preserve people have been trying to organize the trails. I think the worry is that social trails will proliferate if there is no clear trails defined.

Where we lost the trail was in a treed area so it was difficult to trace with Google Earth. Garmin Connect is always a good way to see where others have gone.

Altho I haven't tried it yet, I think I can download a gpx file from there then load it into my GPS as a course then track my progress against that course.

I like using Connect for checking out where locals run when traveling.

As far as Limbaugh, A recent National Geographic map shows that it is a left off the back side trail just about the point of entering that backside valley.