Is there anything more restorative than a walk in the woods? This past week I was able to hike for a few days in the area around Aspen, Colorado, and I lapped up every minute of it.
From loading my backpack for the day (does anyone else find this an oddly satisfying task?) to spending hours at a time with no other human in sight, I allow time to fade from my consciousness. I’m in a zone I can only find on a woodsy trail, and a Rocky Mountain high is a real thing (even without legal-in-Colorado help). I hike by myself the first two days and feel the deep joy of being out in nature, alone with my thoughts and the sights and smells of the mountains.
The aspen trees sport feathery leaves at an elevation of 8000’ but at 10,000’ they are still naked soldiers lined up in ranks up and down the sides of the mountains. (The aspens intrigued me; please indulge me this gallery of trees!)
Some paths are still blocked with snow, while others are beginning to grow a spring carpet of colorful mosses and tiny wildflowers.
The trails are wonderfully diverse; I start on a shaded path alongside a stream, emerge into some prairie-like flats, then climb on exposed red rock one morning.
A hike at a higher elevation begins at lake’s edge, climbs gently through dense aspen thickets, then rises steeply over rough root systems and rocks until I am forced to stop when the route is fully snowed over.
My obsession for the four days I am there is to get a great shot of the Maroon Bells, (supposedly) the most photographed mountains in North America. I go after breakfast one day, but the three-peaked mass is partially shrouded in cloud cover. They are visible – and impressive – but the color palate is drab and cold, with water, trees, stone, and sky all a similar dark gray-blue-green. I am not completely disappointed (and get in a fantastic hike on the almost-empty Crater Lake Trail), but I do have that familiar feeling of seeing my target mountain in less-than-perfect conditions.
I return that afternoon to find even thicker clouds, but the peaks and the swoop are in slightly sharper relief. I snap away, hoping the wind will die down enough to allow the iconic reflection of the massif in the lake. It is not meant to be, and I leave the White River National Forest feeling better about the clarity of my new photos but still not very satisfied.
Unlike my usual self, I decide I simply must have a better photo and set my alarm for 4:15 am to try to catch the sun rising on the face of the Bells. The next morning, four of us bundle up and head to the lake once more. Hopeful and shivering cold, we walk the shore of the lake, pacing up and down the beginnings of several trails, then set up with a few other hardy souls for the spectacle to come. The sky is clear and slowly turning orange behind us and pinkish blue in front.
Ten minutes after official sunrise, the crests ignite! We are all clicking away as the rosy light gradually lights up the whole face. Suddenly … jubilation! The lake grows still and flat, and the fire on the mountain is mirrored in the water. It is this amateur photographer’s dream come true, and I snap away with both Nikon and iPhone until my batteries fail. (I did say amateur.)
If you search for images of the Maroon Bells, you will find photos that blow your mind. Mine are no match for those, but I am happy with them, and happier still that I made the effort to capture to the best of my ability a place I may never get to see again. I was indeed jubilant as the rising sun hit those peaks, but the whole time I spent in the mountains was a source of deep joy that will sustain me until I can escape the flatlands again!
Gorgeous photos!
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Thanks – I went a little nuts with the camera last week!
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Wow, beautiful words and photos Lex! Having grown up in Colorado, it’s nice to see landscapes that remind me of home. I love your perseverance in getting the best photo you can. So happy your patience and effort paid off this time!
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Thank you! I actually thought you still were in Colorado, but maybe I got things mixed up! It’s such a gorgeous state; we spend a lot of time there because our son is in Denver, but even if he weren’t, I’d gravitate there a few times a year for my mountain fix!
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The Maroon Bells shots are lovely – especially the last one, but the ones of the aspens watching you are even more memorable. It must have been an inspiring hike.
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Yes, the Maroon Bells were a photography challenge thrown at me, but the aspens were actually my favorite part of the week. I have dozens of photos of them; they were like sentinels everywhere I went, some fluffy and quivering, some ramrod straight with no leaves yet. Beautiful.
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In answer to your first question: Nope! I love hiking alone, and I usually end up doing so. The only reason I try to go with a partner is for safety concerns. Congratulations on getting the images you were trying for. I can feel that fresh mountain air in my lungs.
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I agree on the safety part and, in fact, I was a little nervous for part of one day when I saw a sign saying there had been “active bear encounters” in the last few days on my trail! I whistled and sang from then on but really, I’m not sure my husband or any other hiking partner could fight off a bear anyway if it really wanted to be “active”! I feel lucky to have the Rockies so relatively close, but you have such great mountain access in Europe also. Happy trails!
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Can you believe you made me feel the same just by looking at those incredible pictures? So worth waking up so early dear, thanks! I miss the mountains and moreover the forest so much, this post was like a massive dose of 😀 and oxygen, thanks again.
I love those pic of the trees too, I noticed the eye too, there is something so very grand and powerful that comes with wandering in those scenaries. I think I got our honey moon destination 😉
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Yes, you can do a backward honeymoon! Most people would kill to have their honeymoon on one of your beaches there, but you can get bundled up and head into the woods and mountains for yours! Didn’t you just get your Alpine fix a month ago?!
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Oups yes, it was a month ago! I guess my body has landed in the Philippines far before my mind 😉
and honestly, even if we had just been back on the rock, I would gladly endure more jetlag and less degrees to find myself wandering in those beautiful places .. Not that I am complaining of our 90 F 😉
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Beautiful! Thank you for taking us there.
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Thanks! It was so refreshing and rejuvenating … now I have to make the effects last a while!
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Gorgeous photos! The knots on the trees that look just like eyes are a little eerie though… but perhaps I’m just watching too much Game of Thrones these days. 😉
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Kind of spooky, aren’t they? But the bark was so pretty and the ones with leaves were so fluttery and green.
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Those eyes… maybe those trees do move at nighttime. 🙂 And the reflection of the Maroon Bells is just sublime. You couldn’t have asked for a calmer water really. Great shots, Lex! I wish there were more trees in Jakarta to help reduce people’s stress.
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I really miss trees (in large groups) now that I am living in the middle of a big city. This trip was such a relaxing break for me. And yes, those eyes are crazy, aren’t they? Thanks for the nice comments on the photos … I’m usually not so relentless and/or patient!
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Wow you were really adamant at getting those shots! What a wonderful trek too and gorgeous photos. This place is totally new to me 🙂
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Really, the trees and the hiking were the overall highlights, but that shot of the peaks just became something I had to get! Believe it or not, the Maroon Bells were new to me, too, and I’ve been to Colorado dozens of times!
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Lucky you! I’d give an arm for some ‘me-time’ away from work and other issues, even only for a weekend… And even luckier for bagging those incredible pictures, well done! I can definitely relate to the itching for the perfect picture, since I tried getting Mount Ararat for three days straight, but didn’t…
By the way, I’ve got the very strong feeling that the Maroon Bells featured in a poster that was hung on the wall of my local parish church’s youth centre when I was a brat, back in the 1990s. It was a splendid autumnal photo, taken probably at dawn, and I’ve been wondering where on Earth this place was. Now I know!
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I did feel quite lucky to get to take this trip, so I get your longing; it was so great to be on my own out on a trail for a few days. I think I had seen photos of the Bells also, but I never knew anything about them before this trip. After three trips to the lake to see them, I know them well now!
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Lexi how lovely! I would love to be out hiking in the mountains. I love the last shots and of course all the ones of the aspens. How beautiful!!!
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Thanks, Nicole! I really needed that nature break! Jeff had a forum at the Aspen Institute and I tagged along and hiked on my own for a few days … it was awesome!
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I would love to do that! Did you see any bears???
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On one trail there were signs about recent “active bear encounters” so I sang and whistled to keep them away from me! So, no bears – and I’m glad about it since I was on my own!
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I think I would freak out if I saw a bear!!!
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Wow! Absolutely beautiful.
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Thank you! It was one of my favorite places in Colorado!
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I could feel your joy at being in the mountains, being in nature, hiking alone, I know that feeling, it’s so deeply nourishing. And to finish off with a picture-perfect moment – exhilarating! I felt I was with you.
Alison
PS I love the eyes in the aspens.
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I was so taken with the natural beauty on this trip! I’ve been to Colorado many times, but this just seemed like a perfect confluence of factors: the aspens in new leaf, the brisk spring weather and bright sun, and of course the imposing mountains all around. Getting out of DC and into all that felt like a huge gift!
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Beautiful photos. Love the eyes that were watching you in the trees. The reflection of the Maroon Bells must have been breathtaking!
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Thanks! Those aspens were so cool – the eyes, the slender white trunks, the pale new leaves. I couldn’t believe I got that great reflection after two days of wind-whipped waters and clouds at the peaks. My lucky morning!
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beautiful pictures…Never knew you can show the jubilant mood of tress as well!
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Thanks! I had not thought of the trees as jubilant also, but they were, waving their arms so happily!
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True… 🙂
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Wow these are some astounding reflections. I love your determination to get the magical image. Wonderful being out in the Rockies whether they be in the US or Canada. 🙂
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Thank you, Sue! I agree – we are so lucky to have that long stretch of beautiful mountains through the western U.S. and Canada. They are magnificent.
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Beautiful shots! Although… all those “eyes” on the trees are a little creepy, don’t you think?
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Thanks! The eyes are creepier in photos than they were in person. The tree bark is so pretty, especially when there is a nice clump of the trees all together, but when I focused in on the eyes (which intrigued me), they did look a bit spooky!
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Amazing photos! And I can’t believe those tree eyes! Very cool
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Thank you! Kind of strange, aren’t they? The trees were really pretty overall; it was only up close that those eyes popped out at me!
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Yeah, really weird! I’ve never seen that before!
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Lexie, those last two photos are outstanding. You’re a game lass for getting up in the pre-dawn cold to get them. BTW, I know this country and can relate to the Rocky Mountain High (even with a little “herbal” assistance). In college, as a part of my geology curriculum, I had to complete a field mapping course which was held for two months in summer near Crested Butte. Mind you, this was two months living full-time in a tent at 10K ft, with no electricity or running water. It was a tough but fabulous experience that set this backward, untraveled KY boy on a path that even today still determines my course. Your post and photos bring back lots of great memories. Thx for that. ~James
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One needs herbal assistance in a tent at 10,000′! (Notice the deliberately vague third person there 🙂 ) I love that you have this place and experience that colored your life. While CO has not been my own touchstone, I have spent oodles of time there with a brother and now son who have called it home, so I feel a very close connection, too. And thanks for the photo compliments … I am learning that great photos require some work and discomfort, like getting up before dawn – ugh.
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So many good reasons to be jubilant here …every image a winner but those last shots of Maroon Bells is SPECTACULAR. I miss the mountains. And your description of the feeling of walking in the hills/woods is exactly the feeling I have when sailing on the open ocean. My recent week without Internet was delightful.
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Thanks, Lisa! It was such a wonderful escape for me for those few days. I do love cities, but I desperately need a nature fix from time to time. My great loves are forests and mountains, but I do have that same feeling on the ocean as well!
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I hope you escape more often – just magnificent
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Wow…so lucky to get to Aspen this time of year, or any time of year, really. Aspen, I think, is my favorite place in the USA. Your photos have captured it marvelously!! Is that first photo along the Roaring Fork trail? My guess would be that the Bells ARE the most photographed mountains in the world…mostly because they are beautiful and they are soooo accessible, you can drive right to them!!! And once you’re there, even amateurs shoot so many shots their cameras run out of battery!! And I have this dream of taking the perfect shot of an aspen grove…I’ve oodles of shots, but not the grove I have in my mind.
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I might put Aspen right up there with my favorite places in the US, too. I have spent a lot of time in CO, but had only been to Aspen once before and had forgotten how incredibly beautiful it is. It was a heavenly interlude. I went nuts with the aspen tree photos and also had in mind what I wanted to capture but didn’t quite get it. Was that old photo of you and the horse taken in Aspen, now that I think about it?
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Beautiful, and so full of its own kind of energy…a palpable force.
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Oops…And yes, that old photo of me was on the backside of Aspen Mountain.
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looks like a simply divine place to walk
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It really was! There were so many trails, I barely made a dent – I could have walked there for weeks and weeks!
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This looks like such an amazing 4-day hike. The sunset over Maroon Bells look spectacular, and the early wake up call was well worth it. That orange reflection is ace, and the water so flat and clear it looks like a mirror. I’m guessing you could see your reflection there 😀
Wonderful captures of the greenery too. The marks on the tree look like eyes, how eerie and intriguing is that. The trees, and nature, must have been watching you 😀
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The eyes really were kind of creepy, Mabel, but in person they were not as obvious as they are in my photos. The lake was so choppy the first two times I went, so I felt super lucky to get that smooth, reflective surface on my last try!
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Wow your photos are amazing! Colorado is one place in the USA I need to visit, especially since I love the outdoors so much! Greetings from oz x
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Thank you! You have such great natural beauty in Australia, too, but you are right that Colorado is an outdoor lover’s paradise. Hope you can get there someday!
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Your photos are gorgeous. Im sitting in the midst of tall skyscrapers in Hong Kong as I read you and am transported by your visuals and descriptions into the zen calmness and sheer joy that nature brings me too.
Aspens are one of my favorite trees. I remember enjoying and photographing them when were hiking in Boulder years back. Good mempries for sure.
Peta
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Thanks, Peta! I have to say I need to gaze at those photos myself these days while we are living on a very busy urban street corner in DC! It’s exciting and suffocating at the same time, and the trip to Aspen was just the respite in nature that I needed last month. I adored the Aspens – the white trunks and quivering leaves were simply gorgeous; I could not stop taking photos!
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I love the tree gallery and the “eye” on the tree trunk. I take lots of pictures of trees when I go for walks in a forest. I’m always trying to find the right grouping and composition to make it more interesting than just a whole bunch of trees. Thing is, most of the time, that’s what I end up with !
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Thanks! I was doing the same thing – trying to find interesting angles and groupings but ending up with just plain clumps! The good thing was that the aspens looked different depending on light, elevation, leafiness, etc., so I felt like I got a lot of different looks.
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Gorgeous photos 🙂 Maroon Bells was one of my favorite places to visit during my time in Colorado. Just wrote a short piece mentioning the spot, feel free to check it out! https://youthsgonewonky.com/2016/10/29/three-months-of-movement/
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Looks like you found my Maroon Bells shots on both of my blogs! (Thanks for both visits – I left longer comments on your blog and my other one.)
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your photos are gorgeous! Love all the pics of the trees and that you went back multiple times to get different light. Maroon Bells is one of my favorite places. I blogged about it as well:
https://sayyestohappy.wordpress.com/2013/09/19/travel-thursday-maroon-bells-colorado/
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Thanks! I took a look at your post as well; what a shame that you were at the Maroon Bells in the rain and mist, but as you said, the whole state is just filled with beautiful scenery. I think I might have even loved the trees in Aspen more than the Bells, although that lake scene was worth the work and the early rise!
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