Sunday, February 14, 2016

A bend of the Colorado


Early morning sun.

I have heard about this place for years. DH went here back when it was a fishing camp (soldiers after a training exercise sometimes wake in the night.*)  MC's scout group canoed and hiked there many times. DH and brother RF have camped there recently. Friends have shared photos. So, I was happy when DH recommended we hike at Colorado Bend.

Our oldest joined us and added wry comments and perspective.

This park offers a large number of trails of varying difficulty (easy, moderate, challenging, and very challenging). DH looked at the map and showed us some short hikes he assured us were easy.** I suggested we walk to Gorman Falls. We walked, climbed, crawled, and slid along the mostly rocky paths.

Highway is almost empty in the early morning.
Red dirt means something in our family.
Some of the trail was narrow and shady.
DH heads out.
Lichen covered rocks are seen on the river side of the trail.
Holes in the trail hint at the many caves below.
We suggested to OC that we lower her into this crack. She declined.
Stopping to check the map at a trail crossing. We hiked Cedar Chopper Loop. That name seems to be a bit loaded using a pejorative name, but then no one asked me.
On this trail there were few overlooks. Here you can see lots of dead cedar.
DH and OC keep a steady pace.
Some of the limestone ledge.
We start climbing.
The trail continues up and gets rougher.
The limestone is smoothed in spots - from thousands of feet passing over.
Then we headed down towards the river. Not much of a trail here.
As we got closer to the waterfall convenient cable allowed a balanced descent.
The entire cliff face was dripping - a waterfall "under construction" according to signage.
Gorgeous.
Viewers were kept at a distance to protect the area.
It must be stunning after some rains.

A poured concrete step had a backwards and upside down message. Of course I read it wrong initially - an anagram of "this."  I think it says something like "THIS AREA" and "TO PARK."
Barbed wire fencing
Lily pads in the creek that feeds the falls.
 
It's red dirt, limestone shelf, cedar, oak, caves, cactus, cactus, and cactus. And the waterfall was unusual and lovely. We saw a few deer as we drove in, heard a few birds along the river,*** and saw evidence of wild hogs. Otherwise the only creatures we observed were early yellow butterflies, flitting through the brush.

Some lovely cedar stumps.
While I am sure it has a specific name, we called of this type of cactus "devil's pincushion."
Pitted limestone - like the surface of the moon.
Cedar log.
Lady finger cactus fruit.
Yucca
Fern growing on the path to the falls.
Prickly pear.
Milkweed seed pod
Live cedar and dead cedar.

Three hours and 3.5 miles later we were back at the car and headed to Lampasas for lunch.

You know you wanted to see it.

Then it was time for home, ibuprofen, and a nap.


NOTES:

* DH swears he got up for the loo and saw a mountain lion across the river. He told his story (and still tells it) and was teased unmercifully. Later, when the unit was training in Germany, one man had a Lampasas newspaper that included a story about a rancher shooting a mountain lion. Vindication - or so he claims.

** The legend was on the back of the map. I only saw it after the hike. DH lied. We were on a moderate and then challenging trails. It's okay. I am used to "march or die"  DH. And he is used to me - I stop to take photos and stop to rest.

*** Including a raven (I am making the call. It was a crow or raven and who will argue?).

4 comments:

  1. one of my favorite places. It was Lemon's Camp when I was young. I went there many times with my dad and later with Ann and the boys. Great memories.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was Lemon's Camp when DH was there as a soldier. We will go back and try more trails, but not the "extra challenging one." We will also go back after a rain.

      Delete
    2. I remember hiking here with backpackers. It was one of the more beautiful places to which we traveled. The variety of hiking surfaces, flora and geology made the trip for me. I'd love to meet here for a senior get-away.

      Delete
    3. There was so much dead cedar throughout the park, I am afraid of the potential for a devastating fire. I wonder if, after Bastrop, we are doing any controlled burns in the parks.

      Delete

Thanks for coming along on the walk. Your comments are welcome.