august 1-3, 2014, friday raggeds wilderness, gunnison...
TRANSCRIPT
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August 1-3, 2014, Friday
Oh-be-joyful Creek
10,115’, north 38° 55’ 40”, west 107° 05’ 42”
3.7 miles, 721’
Raggeds Wilderness, Gunnison National Forest
Gunnison County, Colorado
Elaine met at my house at 7 am. I was packing my
stuff in the truck when she arrived. We left at about
7:30. I drove the truck to US-285 to US-24 to
Chaffee County 306 over Cottonwood Pass, to
Forest Service Road (FS) 742 to the Jacks Cabin
Cutoff (FS-813) to CO-135 to Crested Butte, the
Wildflower Capitol of Colorado. Then it was northwest on the gravel FS-734 to the Oh-be-joyful
Campground along the Slate River, and then through Slate River and up a 4WD road about a mile to where
the road got really 4WD and we parked. It took 5 hours. We started hiking at 12:30. It was cloudy. We
hiked in for two hours along Oh-be-joyful Creek. It was a gradual uphill hike and relatively easy hiking on
the good trail. We crossed into the Raggeds Wilderness about a half mile from where we parked the truck.
We got rained on and stopped to put on rain gear. The rain stopped shortly after that. We found a place to
camp at 10,115’ along Oh-be-joyful Creek very close to its confluence with “Blue Lake Creek”, almost
800’ in elevation higher than the truck. The skies did not look like they would clear up any time soon. We
set up camp, including the kitchen tarp. The skies didn’t clear up, but there was no more rain for the entire
three days. In fact, the weather was great.
After we set up and pumped water for cooking and drinking we did a little exploring up the trail. We
walked the main trail (FS 836) past the confluence and found a couple of water falls on the ‘Blue Lake
Creek’, at about 10,230’. The creek, unnamed, flowed out of Blue Lake, about two miles from camp on the
trail and a thousand feet higher.
Water falls on the south fork of Oh-be-Joyful Creek
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The area had obviously been receiving a lot of rain. The
ground was lush with wild flowers and deep green bushes.
By the water falls and at camp spruce and fir provided
ample shade under the cloudy skies. The ground was moist.
Timber line occurred there at about the ten thousand foot
elevation, but in this part of the valley the conifers were
thick up to over ten thousand five hundred feet. The Oh-be-
joyful valley curved around the massif of Peeler and
Garfield Peaks (12,227’ and 12,005’, respectively) on the
south. On the north the valley rose to Schuylkill Mountain
(12,146’). The south facing slopes of Schuylkill Mountain
were close to treeless, but still covered with green grass and
brush. The north facing slopes of Peeler and Garfield were
thick with spruce and fir up to timberline where green grass
and brush covered the slopes up to the rock and tundra, even
higher up. Numerous streams cascaded down the steep
slopes from the higher basins on both sides of the valley into Oh-be-joyful Creek. The water in all the
streams and creeks was crystal clear. Oh-be-joyful itself flowed down the valley through steep rocky
canyons in the higher elevations to the west and into a mix of meadows and rocky canyons in the lower
elevations to the east. We both started to photograph flowers and landscape. We explored and took pictures
until about six PM. Then we started down toward camp.
At the confluence of the two creeks the trail had been washed out more than a couple of times and more
than a few trail options could be taken. We took one that involved an easier crossing of the shallow creek.
It took us parallel to and a bit lower than the main trail. It came out on the main rail at a meadow. We
followed the main trail about five minutes more before we realized we had already walked past camp. We
turned around and walked back up and found camp again. The optional trail had skirted the point where we
left the main trail and made camp, so we missed it. We made better mental notes of the area for the next
time.
We were back in camp at about 6:30 and prepared dinner.
It was still cloudy but beginning to clear up. We ate
Mountain House potatoes and cheese with broccoli, and a
garlic flavored potato cup. We topped it off with a cutie
(tangerine) and some apple crisps. Elaine had tea and I had
some chicken broth. Clean up was a snap and well before
dark we were watching deer in the meadow just east of our
camp. We were tired though and I went to bed. Elaine took
some more photos of the clouds and the sunset and then
she retired to the tent.
Saturday morning we were up by 7:30. While lying in the
sleeping bag I heard an elk chirp, and it sounded close. I commented to Elaine that the sound was an elk. I
wasn’t sure if she heard the elk, if she heard me, or if she was even awake. I thought I should get up and see
if I could see elk and I got up.
The inside of the tent was damp from condensation of our breath on the tent walls. I thought to myself we
would have to open more windows at night to alleviate that problem. I crawled out of the tent and put my
boots on. That was about 7.
I did a quick check of the area and saw nothing in the meadows on either side of the stand of trees we were
camped in. I started water for coffee and breakfast and then I walked out from under the trees to the edge of
the meadow just east of camp. I took more time checking out the north slope, across Oh-be-joyful Creek
and below Garfield Peak. Up at the top of the slope in the thick brush and sparse trees I spied a couple of
elk grazing. I went and got binoculars out of the tent for a better look. Elaine joined me just about then and
we checked the two elk out for a while – before they disappeared over the lip of the bench. They were not
close to camp, but we got a good look through the binoculars.
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Democrat Basin, about 11,000’
Another of many small
waterfalls on Oh-be-Joyful
Creek
The water was hot by the time the elk disappeared so we returned to the kitchen and had breakfast. We had
oatmeal with some trail mix in it, coffee, tea and tang. Clean up was quick. By 9 am we had secured camp,
packed goodies for the day and started up the trail toward Democrat Basin. We were hoping to see a lot of
wildflowers and no people.
Elaine had broken her leg earlier in the year and was not showing any sign of issues with that leg. In fact
she was doing extra duty. Before she retired the evening before, she had marked out a path through the
thick underbrush from the Oh-be-joyful Trail to camp. It was a lot easier to follow her markings to the main
trail than to pick our way through the thick brush.
A few hundred yards up the trail we veered off to the right, or north,
toward the sound of a water fall. We easily found it and got some
photos and took a GPS reading for future reference (UTM coordinates).
The falls we had explored the evening before were on the ‘Blue Lake
Creek’, or maybe the south fork of Oh-be-joyful Creek. The falls we
found in the morning were on Oh-be-joyful Creek. Both creeks had
numerous falls cascading over dark rock.
Then we walked west on the trail up to the junction of trails 836 and
404. Trail 404 went south over the 11,840’ Garfield Pass, just south of
Garfield Peak. We took trail 836 north into Democrat Basin. Above tree
line at the west end of the Oh-be-joyful valley included a couple of
basins bounded on the west by the north-south Ruby Range. Ruby
Range was formed by Ruby Peak (12,644’), Mount Owen (13,058’) and
Purple Peak (12,810’) on the south and Afley Peak (12,646’), Oh-be-
joyful Peak (12,325’), Hancock Peak (12,410’), and Richmond
Mountain (12,501’) to the north. All of the area after the trail junction
to the peaks was above timberline.
Wild strawberries grew in most of the lower elevation meadows. We
ate a few.
We spent most of the day on Saturday exploring Democrat Basin below Richmond Mountain and Hancock
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Peak. On the north ridge of the basin we could see the trail through the green tundra ascending to a small
cut between Richmond Mountain and Schuylkill Mountain – Daisy Pass at 11,640’ above sea level. The
basin to the south held Blue Lake at 11,055’. The maps show the Trail 404 traversing the bowl 300 feet
below Blue Lake. We wondered if folks had to make their own way up to the lake from the trail, or if there
was a worn path up. We didn’t go there so we would not find out. Over the rest of the weekend we would
come to realize that a lot of hikers go to Blue Lake, at least relative to Democrat Basin. Apparently the
fishing is good at Blue Lake.
In Democrat Basin we saw one person, a trail
runner, apparently running from either Daisy Pass
or Garfield Pass. We encountered him just before
we got up into the basin while walking north from
the trail junction. We didn’t see any large animals
or many birds in the basin either, but we saw a 250
acre bouquet of wild flowers. When we had started
our hike from the truck I had been thinking that
there weren’t many wild flowers in this Wildflower
Capitol. But the higher we hiked the more
abundant the colorful flowers became. In Democrat
Basin we spent most of the day checking out and
photographing wildflowers. There were so many in fact, that we could not possibly identify or photograph
all of the different varieties. We did get a lot of photographs. Many of the photos would be required in
order to identify the flowers later.
The weather was perfect - bright blue skies with puffy cumulus clouds, some bright white, others with a
hint of gray. Almost no wind blew. In the basin were a number of streams and waterfalls. We explored
those on the south west side of the basin. We experimented with different methods and settings for
photographing the flowers, and the landscape. It seems like a person walking around up there gets used to
the landscape up in areas like that, but the colors and backdrops were just astounding.
We did see some animals in the basin. Mosquitoes were not
among them. After spending hours exploring the basin we
started heading toward the trail to go down at about 12:30.
In one of the creeks we came across a six point bull elk that
had died naturally, probably in the fall of 2013. Animals
had eaten almost all of the body, but the head, complete
with antlers, was partially buried in the soft soil and grass
next to the stream. We theorized that he got stuck in the
creek or maybe broke a leg in the creek, and then lay there
until he died. While walking in a marshy area around a few
ponds we found a small (1½”) frog hopping around in the
grass and flowers.
At about 1:30 we were on the trail again, walking down from the junction. On the main trail (836) we
passed a handful of day-hikers. Most were on the way to Blue Lake. The first guy we passed was carrying a
fly rod and on his way to Blue Lake with his female companion. He said the fishing at Blue Lake was
pretty good, with a reminiscent chuckle. He also commented that Oh-be-joyful Creek was pretty good too.
Before we got back to camp we had counted close to a dozen people out for a day-hike.
We were going to stop at the water falls we had explored the day before and get a GPS reading, but we
walked past it before we realized it. There was no trail or path to any of the falls. We had found them by
their sound.
Back at camp we proceeded to unlax. We boiled water for a cup of soup. It was good stuff, a Thai peanut
soup and a Thai curry soup. We watched the slope across the creek for a while and then, individually, made
our way over to the creek. Elaine was exploring and I was filling the water bottles.
We met up by a couple of ponds in the meadow, crossed the creek, and climbed up to a small waterfall we
could see from camp. There were no easy places to cross Oh-be-joyful Creek. Elaine accidently stepped in
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some water deep enough to spill over the top of her boots. My boots were a lot taller, but my boots leaked.
They had leaked a couple of hikes earlier in the year too. I was hoping to test them out again as part of this
trip, and hoping they would not leak. When I stepped in the six or seven inch deep water one of the Rocky
Sport Utility Max Insulated Waterproof Boots leaked – apparently through the toe or tongue area. We both
stopped to wring out socks.
Two streams spilled out of a small 11,000’ basin below Garfield Peak, one on the west side of what looked
like an avalanche chute, and the other on the east side. We could tell that there had not been an avalanche in
that chute for a number of winters because there were a lot of young trees, some ten or fifteen feet high.
There were other evergreens that had been plowed over by a rumbling snow slide and had since grown
around and up toward the life giving sun, yielding a half circle trunk. We got up to where the falls were but
couldn’t get to the falls because of the thick brush and steep slope. We think we were just below them and
just above them, but we could not see them from up on the slope like we could from camp. We went back
to camp, dejected - we did not get to the falls, and our socks were wet.
I broke out a drawing tablet and drew what I thought I had correctly identified as an Actinella (it was
actually an orange sneezeweed flower). I spent a half an hour drawing it. Elaine went to the tent to get her
drawing pad and got stuck on the sleeping bag and it was lights out for her. I walked around the slope on
the north side of Oh-be-joyful Creek near camp looking for a red flower to draw. I settled for a purple
larkspur. I sat on a log right next to it and spent the 30 minutes sketching it, and then returned to the tent.
Elaine was up.
We heated water for dinner, a three-cheese lasagna dri-lite packaged meal. It was pretty good. We also had
a potato cup, cuties and tea. Another good dinner, and easy to prepare and clean up. After dinner we sat on
a log in the meadow next to camp and watched the slope beneath Garfield Peak and reviewed the photos we
had taken. I spied a deer foraging from the west to the east in the big avalanche chute. For twenty minutes
we watched it eat its way across the chute, stopping for a bite, moving a bit, and then munching some more
grass. The slope across Oh-be-joyful had a few avalanche chutes. The big chute that we watched the most
was directly across from camp. Two more, smaller, chutes to the east were separated by stands of huge
evergreens. While we were trying to keep track of the deer in the big trees Elaine spotted a black bear in the
middle of the big chute. The bear was foraging from west to east too, but a little lower on the slope than the
deer, and moving much quicker. We watched the bear for about ten minutes before it disappeared into the
trees to the east. I was glad to see it didn’t come down to the creek - and closer to camp.
It was starting to get dark. I decided to retire and Elaine took some more pictures, of clouds and the sunset
and then joined me in the tent.
We slept in on Sunday until almost 9 AM. Except for the wall that had no window, the tent had no
condensation in it from the night. We slept in the opposite direction as the previous night, because that
direction gave us maybe three extra inches. I crawled over Elaine to get out and put the water on the MSR
propane stove. I checked out the slopes again, but saw no mammals. We had a repeat of Saturday’s
breakfast. We cleaned up and packed some gear so that we could walk up and check out the waterfalls
again. I had not taken the GPS coordinates reading Friday evening and wanted to get a location reading for
that water fall.
We walked up the trail for maybe fifteen minutes and found the waterfalls. Again, we navigated off the trail
by the sound of the falls. I took my readings. There were a bunch of waterfalls along that south fork of the
Oh-be-joyful. After the guy we talked to Saturday afternoon had said that Oh-be-joyful had good fishing, I
was watching the stream for fish. I didn’t see any. We spent an hour exploring more and taking more
photos.
On the way back to camp we passed about six or nine day hikers on the way up. At camp we packed
everything up and were ready to hike out by noon. We didn’t hike directly to the truck. We stopped a
number of times for even more photos. Some stretches of the trail had the flower shop aroma. We narrowed
the aroma down to the abundant blooming lupines. We saw a garter snake, again. We saw a couple
throughout the two days, but this one was not moving too fast. I suppose we could have snatched it up for a
better look, but we left alone. We passed maybe fifteen day hikers, and a trail runner, all going up the trail.
We got to the truck at about 1:45. We loaded our gear in the truck, and had refreshment. I had a cold Bud
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and Elaine had a cold root beer. Then we started down the mile of rough road to Slate River. We used the
outhouses in the campground at Slate River, checked the
(free) campground out and then took off for home.
We drove through a crowded Crested Butte. A couple of
events were in progress so it was slow going through town.
We drove home a different route. This would be a test if the
US-50 Gunnison route was faster than the Cottonwood Pass
route. The US-50 Gunnison route turned out to be a half hour
faster, and we drove with a lot of traffic almost the whole
way. We hit some rain in South Park and got the bugs off the
windshield. We got home at 6:30.