After a hard day of skiing, kick back at revamped Durango Hot Springs

After a hard day of skiing, kick back at revamped Durango Hot Springs

Durango Hot Springs

Visitors soak in pools filled with naturally heated water at Durango Hot Springs & Resort. Pam LeBlanc photo

I consider myself a bit of a hot springs connoisseur.

I love bobbing in a naturally heated pool of water (kind of like a dumpling in a bucket of soup), especially after a rigorous day of skiing, hiking or mountain biking.

I’ve dipped a toe or 10 in geothermal springs across the western United States. The best are springs that burble up at the side of otherwise cool rivers, in the back country. They’re not developed, other than the rocks that someone stacked around them to trap the warmth.

Some require a long hike in, like one I stumbled upon while backpacking the High Sierra Trail in California. The small, hidden soaking pools tucked among pine forests in the Jemez area of New Mexico rank at the top, too, as do the more developed springs like Strawberry Springs near Steamboat, with its hippie vibe, and Pagosa Hot Springs & Resort, just down the road in southwestern Colorado.

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I’ve spent blissful hours soaking at Glenwood Hot Springs, Ouray Hot Springs, Mount Princeton Hot Springs, and Salida Hot Springs, all in Colorado; Boquillas Hot Springs in Big Bend National Park in Texas; and Heise Hot Springs in Idaho, too.

Durango Hot Springs

A bucket of steamy water splashes over Jordan Rane of Los Angeles at Durango Hot Springs & Resort. Pam LeBlanc photo

This week I added a new one to the list: Durango Hot Springs and Resort, located not far from Purgatory Ski Resort.

If you’ve visited Durango before, you may remember funky old Trimble Hot Springs. I never visited the place but know a few folks who loved it and were sad to see things change.

Changes at Durango Hot Springs

A new owner took over in 2019, turning the once humble destination into a much fancier resort. Today Durango Hot Springs features 41 soaking pools and water features, including what looks like a giant mining bucket near the entrance that slowly fills with water and tips over, gushing what looks like a bathtub full of steamy water over anyone standing beneath it, every 7 minutes.

Read more: After skiing hard, soak your legs in this natural hot springs

Unlike some hot springs, these don’t smell like sulfur, but they are loaded with minerals. In all, 32 minerals, including lithium, magnesium, calcium, sodium, fluoride, silica, and iron are found in the water. The resort’s website describes the benefits of each.

Temperatures in the soaking pools, staggered along a hillside, range from the mid-90s up to 112 degrees. The owners tout a special filtration system that infuses the water with oxygen bubbles. (Don’t worry, it’s not like soaking in Topo Chico – you can’t feel a difference.)

Durango Hot Springs

Visitors soak in geothermal pools at Durango Hot Springs in February 2023. Pam LeBlanc photo

Indigenous people used the geothermal pools hundreds of years ago. Later, pioneers soaked in the warm water, and the first hotel went up in 1882. A newspaper ad in 1884 described the old springs as a health resort – with a bar and billiard parlor on site. (It later burned, as did a building that replaced that original structure, according to the Animas Museum.) Marilyn Monroe visited in 1950s.

I made two visits to the hot springs last week. Nothing’s better than sitting in an outdoor tub filled with naturally heated water while snow sifts down on your head after a day of cat skiing in waist-deep powder.

If you go to Durango Hot Springs

The resort is located just north of Durango near the intersection of Highway 550 and Trimble Lane.

Proper swim attire is required. Remove jewelry or it might tarnish. Admission is $39 for adults or $15 for children. A special “club area” that includes private changing rooms, shows and private soaking tubs, costs extra.

The springs is open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Reservations are recommended. During the summer, bands perform each Tuesday and Thursday from 6-9 p.m.

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At the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, scientists work to save frogs, whales and more

At the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, scientists work to save frogs, whales and more

 
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute’s Punta Culebra nature center is open to the public. Pam LeBlanc photo

A three-toed sloth dangled from a tree outside the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute’s Punta Culebra Nature Center earlier this week, when I dropped by for a visit.

The long-haired hippie was on the move, too, slowly making its way along a branch. I like to think it was there to greet our group of 20 passengers making a field trip to the center during a week-long cruise aboard Le Bellot on a Smithsonian Journeys cruise.

The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute operates research facilties all over Panama, but this is the only one regularly open to the public, and the exhibits there give a glimpse into some important research that the organization is doing in Central America.

Panama is one of the most biodiverse places on the planet. It’s home to roughly 2,300 species of trees, 1,700 species of fish and 1,800 species of butterflies.

Trying to save Panama’s iconic amphibians

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

Scientists at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute house frogs to protect them from a fungus. Pam LeBlanc photo

Some of the center’s most important work involves the country’s iconic frogs. Since the 1990s, a fungus that dries the skin of amphibians has decimated frog populations across the country. Through the Panama Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project, scientists are creating a sort of “ark” collecting individuals and keeping them in tanks to protect them from the fungus.

A few of those frogs are on display at the center. I peered into a tank and got a glimpse of a Panamanian golden frog, which is now functionally extinct in the wild, tucked in some lime-colored leaves.

It’s not just frogs. Scientists at the institute studying humpback whales, which migrate off the coast, worked to convince authorities to create traffic lanes for ships, to lower the chances of whale-ship interactions. The solution, simple but effective, has reduced such interactions by 95 percent.

sloth

This sloth hung in a tree outside the Smithsonian Tropical Research Instittute. Pam LeBlanc photo

We spent some time in an interactive section of the facility, where we looked through microscopes and touched some whale bones. Outside, we watched green iguanas that live on the grounds and spotted more sloths, including a mother with its baby.

Visit the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute’s Punta Culebra center

The center is open to the public Wednesday through Sunday. Admission is $5 for residents and $8 for non-residents, $2 for children and retirees. For more information go here.

 

 

 

 

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Cruising through the Panama Canal on an inflatable unicorn

Cruising through the Panama Canal on an inflatable unicorn

Smithsonian Journeys cruise

Two sailboats share a lock with Le Bellot during a Smithsonian Journeys Panama Canal cruise in February 2023. Pam LeBlanc photo

In one of the more surreal moments of my life, this week I climbed atop a unicorn-shaped inflatable toy and floated, in a swimming pool at the back of a cruise ship, through a set of locks in the Panama Canal.

It was an interesting perspective.

Smithsonian Journeys cruise

Pam LeBlanc floats on a pool toy at the back of a ship as it passes through the Panama Canal. Chris LeBlanc photo

Our ship, Le Bellot, was tethered to two train-like vehicles called mules that ran on tracks alongside the massive steel-gated chambers. Once we were in position, the water level in the chamber slowly dropped, and we proceeded to the next lock.

The entire 51-mile trip, from Atlantic to Pacific, took about eight hours and took us through six locks. And no, I didn’t ride the unicorn the entire time.

I’ve learned a lot since I boarded Le Bellot, which is carrying about 150 passengers on a week-long Smithsonian Journeys cruise round Panama and Costa Rica. We boarded in Colon, Panama. After a day in the San Blas Islands, we transited the canal. Now we’re motoring toward Costa Rica.

Smithsonian Journeys cruise Panama Canal

Entering the Gatun Locks in the Panama Canal. Pam LeBlanc photo

Ten interesting things I learned during a Panama Canal cruise:

  1. France began construction of the canal in 1881 but stopped due to high worker mortality and engineering problems. The United States took over in 1904 and the canal opened for business in 1914.
  2. American officials originally thought Nicaragua, not Panama, was the most feasible location for the canal.
  3. More than 25,000 people died during construction of the Panama Canal. Accidents like rockslides, plus mosquito-borne diseases like malaria and yellow fever all took a terrible toll.
  4. Ships pass through a series of six locks that lift them 85 feet up to Gatun Lake and then, on the other side, lower them back down.
  5. The U.S. controlled the canal until 1977, when it handed over partial control to Panama. In 1999, the Panamanian government took over full control and now operates the channel.
  6. The original locks are 110 feet wide and 42 feet deep. Newer, 180-foot wide and 60-foot-deep lanes opened in 2016 to allow larger ships to pass through.
  7. Some ships were built to what is called “Panamax” size – the maximum size that fit through the original locks. Now we’ve got Post Panamax ships.
  8. Annual traffic on the Panama Canal was about 1,000 vessels in 1914. Today, between 30 and 40 ships transit the canal daily.
  9. The toll for a yacht less than 125 feet is a few thousand dollars. Cruise ships and cargo ships pay much (much!) more, based on boat type, size, and cargo.
  10. Explorer Richard Halliburton, who was born in Brownsville in 1900, paid 36 cents to swim through the canal in 1928.
Panama Canal

Between 30 and 40 ships transit the Panama Canal daily. Pam LeBlanc photo

 

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Port Aransas gears up for Whooping Crane Festival

Port Aransas gears up for Whooping Crane Festival

whooping cranes

The 26th annual Whooping Crane Festival takes place Feb. 23-26 in Port Aransas. Photo courtesy Whooping Crane Festival

Whooping cranes, take a bow.

Port Aransas is gearing up to celebrate the arrival of some of its most famous winter residents. The 26th Annual Whooping Crane Festival is set for Feb. 23-26, with bird-watching boat tours, bus tours, lectures, bird identification clinics and photography workshops.

The cranes’ story is an inspiring one. The population of whooping cranes, the tallest birds in North America, dwindled to about 20 in the 1940s. Fifteen of those animals migrated between Canada and Texas, and the rest lived in Louisiana. The Louisiana population went extinct, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, but the Texas population has since grown to about 800 individuals that migrate from Canada to the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge.

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They’re impressive. Adults, with snowy white feathers, black tipped wings, and a red patch of skin on their head, stand up to 5 feet tall. They move with a stately gait and have a loud call. Their courtship ritual includes a sort of dance – jumping, kicking, head bobbing and wing flapping. Their wingspans stretch up to 8 feet and they weigh 15 pounds.

whooping cranes

Whooping cranes are the tallest cranes in North America. Photo courtesy Whooping Crane Festival

More than 1,100 people attended last year’s festival. They spotted whooping cranes as well as 115 other species of birds.

Keynote speakers at the festival include David Newstead, director of the Coastal Bird Program; professional nature photographer Kathy Adams Clark; well-known birder Mikael Behrens; and Dr. George Archibald, founder of the International Crane Foundation. Representatives from conservation organizations and nature-related vendors will also be on hand.

 

 

Information on free and ticketed events can be found here.

For more information go to www.portaransas.org

 

 

 

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

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