Bear Creek hike shows power of an avalanche

Bear Creek hike shows power of an avalanche

Hikers make their way through the site of an avalanche that occurred in March or April on the Bear Creek Trail in Telluride, Colorado. Pam LeBlanc photo

I got an up close look at the power of an avalanche while hiking the Bear Creek Trail at Telluride in August.

Officials say sometime in March or April a massive slide shot through Bear Creek, about three-quarters of the way up the Bear Creek Trail, which ends at a waterfall not far from town.  As the avalanche raced down the drainage, it swept aspen and pine trees, boulders, debris and massive amounts of snow with it.

The avalanche swept down pine and aspen trees and covered the trail, which crews have cleared. Pam LeBlanc photo

It’s an impressive sight.

I walked up the trail, through patches of purple and white flowers, along the hill above the creek, admiring the views of distant mountains. The trail gets lots of traffic from hikers, mountain bikers and runners.

It took about 30 minutes to reach the debris field, which spanned both sides of the trail for a distance of about the length of a football field. Broken trees and trunks, sliced away by crews clearing the trail after the snow melted, were strewn across the meadow.

The trail has been cleared, and most of it was unaffected by the avalanche. Pam LeBlanc photo

Thankfully, nobody died in this avalanche, but two people were killed in avalanches around Telluride last winter. A man who was skinning was killed farther up the Bear Creek drainage died when a snowboarder apparently triggered an avalanche in February. A back country skier was killed a few weeks later near Lizard Head Pass, 12 miles south of Telluride.

Telluride saw a huge snow year last winter, recording 371 inches for the season.

The views from the Bear Creek Trail are spectacular. Pam LeBlanc photo

Here’s a quick video of the scene:

 

 

 

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She drove us to a trailhead 9 years ago, last week we met for tea in Bozeman

She drove us to a trailhead 9 years ago, last week we met for tea in Bozeman

Pam LeBlanc and Jenny Dalimata pose outside a coffee shop in Bozeman. Dalimata shuttled Pam and five other hikers to a remote area of the park in 2010. Chris LeBlanc photo

In 2010, I backpacked the Northern Traverse at Glacier National Park with my husband and four other friends.

When we got to the park, we needed a way to get to the trailhead, located in the remote northwest corner of Glacier not served by shuttles.

That’s how we found Jenny Dalimata. We found her at a restaurant where she was waiting tables in West Glacier. She seemed nice, so we gave her $100 bucks to drive us in our rental car to the trailhead and return it to a more centrally located parking lot. We crossed our fingers that she wouldn’t disappear, but we were pretty sure it would work out fine.

It did, of course. We got a friendly ride to the trailhead and we got the car back in the end.

Jenny and I have stayed in touch via social media since then. She’s an amazing athlete, who spends lots of time skiing, hiking and trail running in and around Glacier. She and her seven brothers grew up just outside of the park, and she “ran wild” as a kid.

When I headed back to Glacier this year, I tracked her down, and we met at a coffee shop in Bozeman before I caught my flight back to Austin. She still remembers that my backpacking buddies and I all ordered grilled salmon and huckleberry pie the night we met – and did it again after we finished our 65-mile trek.

“When you came out (of the back country) you were like ‘I’ll have another,’” she says.

Pam stands at the entrance of Glacier National Park in July 2019.

These days, Jenny routinely makes a 30- to 50-mile runs through the park and other wilderness areas around Montana for fun and stress relief.

Since it’s grizzly country, she carries bear spray – and three times she’s had to deploy it, once when a grizzly bear charged her. (No worries, the griz spun and fled when she deployed.) Another time, while snow camping in the winter, she saw a wolverine near Lake Josephine.

That never happens on Austin trails, although I did meet a tiny black bear while trail running at Big Bend National Park one morning a few years ago.

The trails at Glacier, Jenny says, are pristine, nicely graded and well maintained, perfect for trail running.

“My heart lives there,” she says. “It’s powerful for me to be there.”

We shared tea and chatted about where our lives have taken us.

The thing about travel that makes it so special is the people you meet along the way. The randomness of who you cross paths with always amazes me. We met Jenny over salmon and pie, and 10 years later we saw each other again.

And I know I’ll see her the next time I get back to Montana.

 

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Love Big Bend Ranch State Park? Put the Fiesta on your calendar

Love Big Bend Ranch State Park? Put the Fiesta on your calendar

Heidi Armstrong and Dan Opdyke ride their bikes at Big Bend Ranch State Park during Chihuahuan Desert Bike Fest in February 2018. Photo by Pam LeBlanc/American-Statesman

 

I first stepped boot in Big Bend Ranch State Park, the largest and most rugged chunk of land in the Texas state park system, more than a decade ago.

Since then, I’ve shredded my calves and bloodied my shins during multi-day bike camping trips there, worn out my legs on endurance trail runs through its canyons, and camped in its scrappy arms under some of the biggest skies I’ve ever seen. It’s one of my favorite places on the planet, and I’ve got the scars to prove it.

This November, park officials and fans will celebrate 10 years since its unveiling with a Fiesta, and the public is invited.

But first, some history.

Chris LeBlanc takes a break during a hike at Big Bend Ranch State Park in January 2018. Pam LeBlanc photo

The park, with more than 300,000 acres of hard-scrabble land in the form of mesas, canyons and a collapsed and eroded volcanic dome that stretches 10 miles across, operated as a working ranch starting in 1905. The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department bought the land in 1988, and a park opened on a limited basis in 1991. It was hard to access and largely undeveloped, though, and the gate was kept mostly padlocked. Starting in 2005, the parks department began developing a public use plan, and in 2009 a Fiesta was held to introduce the park to the public. (The bash was delayed twice – once due to flooding, a second time because of the swine flu outbreak.)

Dan Sholly, then the deputy director of state parks, invited me out for a look see, and I’ve been hooked ever since.

Pam LeBlanc pauses to freak out during a solo ride at Big Bend Ranch State Park in January 2018. Pam LeBlanc photo

In the ensuing years, I joined Sholly to bomb down rocky inclines on a knobby-tired bikes, launch myself face first into a cactus plant and stagger out of a tent a few inches from a huge – and I mean huge – tarantula. I’ve crossed the finish line of the Big Bend Ultra there several times, and just last January spent a chilly night as a cold front whipped through.

It’s a special place. Cyclists appreciate its rolling single track and old Jeep roads. The International Mountain Bicycling Association’s named the park’s Fresno-Sauceda Loop Trail one of its “epic” mountain bike rides.

The rough-and-tumble trails draw adventurous runners and hikers, too, and it’s a history buff’s paradise. You can explore remnants of the park’s ranching and mining history, see crumbling ranch structures, ogle rock art created by Native Americans or cool off by dunking your head in a back country stock tank.

The lunar landscape bristles with prickly plants and tarantulas, bowling ball-sized rocks and abandoned mines. To me, it feels like the last vestiges of the Old West, with more than 50 campsites so remote you can’t see – or hear – another soul when you’re there.

Chris LeBlanc hikes up at creek at Big Bend Ranch State Park in January 2018. Pam LeBlanc photo

You should make plans to attend the party, thrown by the Compadres del Rancho Grande & Big Bend Ranch State Park and the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The Fiesta is set for 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Nov. 3 at the park’s Sauceda headquarters.

Stay tuned for more information.

And if you haven’t visited the place, consider this a good excuse to go. Experts will be on hand to lead hikes and tell you more about its secrets. I’ll be there too, getting another dose of the wide open space that makes me breathe deep and smile.

It’s unforgiving and harsh, but soft and gentle, too. It’s Texas, through and through.

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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