| When you get to the junction to the
picnic grounds the entrance to Fall River Road is the left branch. Once
you make the decision to go there is no turning back The road is only
one way and single lane between eight and fourteen feet wide. It is very
narrow in places with tight corners and switchbacks. In places as you
wind your way to the top you can look straight down from the edge.
The posted speed limit is 15 mph
which in itself tells you something. Be prepared however in the summer
tourist rush to drive the whole trip closer to 5 mph. I recently drove
the road in late August after the full summer season was over at about
10mph.
Following the same trail as the
Native Americans used to get over the 11,796 foot mountain pass the
first major stop or pullout is Chasm Falls. There is parking here for
about 15 to 18 cars. The trailk follows the river down as you can view
the river falling and pooling in many spots. This trail can be steep to
those who have physical problems or who are bothered by altitude. Be
careful, pay attention.
Along the way you are not more
than a few feet from fall river as you wind your way across sheer
mountain faces and in to beautiful grass filled meadows. There are many
places to stop along the way to let the family explore.
Along the road you are liable to
see various forms of wildlife that live in the park. There will be many
marmots, a few deer and near the top there could be a great many elk
visible especially in the summer. The elk migrate every summer starting
in about June to spend the summer in the tundra above 10,000 feet. Not
every elk migrates but the vast majority do. I August especially
at twilight keep you eyes open for the large lone male bulls which are
preparing for the rut season by staying by themselves. During this time
they hone their antlers getting ready for the big show in September and
October. Also keep your eyes
open for the coyotes which follow the elk into the high country. They
are not as visible at the top as they are down in the lower valleys but
I have seen them near the top of Fall River Road in Willow Valley and at
the very top just below the visitors center at over 10,000 feet. They
are highly adaptable and seemingly can live anywhere from the city
streets of Fort Collins to the high mountain tundra.
The head waters of Fall River are in the Fall River
Cirque a large bowl just below the visitors center. On a recent trip
there was still snow in fairly good quanity still clinging to north
facing slopes. The cirque used to be the birth place of the large
glaciers which formed the moraines in the parks far below. History says
this whole Fall River basin was once a huge 11 mile glacier.
When you reach the top you can
visit the visitors center which has a nice display building with a great
many exhibits. There is a building which houses a nice gift shop and
restaurant as well. This building has all glass on one side looking down
into the fall River Cirque and all the way down to Willow Park.
Across the road you will see the
continuation of The Ute Trail which winds its way all the way to Grand
Lake Village and the Grand Lake which the Utes called Spirit Lake. If
you turn left out of the parking lot the road leads down to Grand lake
and if you turn right The Trail Ridge Road leads back to Estes Park and
the finish to the best circle drive in Colorado.
Written by Dan Keating |