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Cheeseman Canyon  Hot PDF Print E-mail
Outdoor Activities Trails
Saturday, 17 November 2007
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1 User reviews
Trails
Location: Two miles north of Deckers on hwy 126
Elevation Gain: 600
Difficulty: Easy
Trail Uses: Hikers
Highlights: Rivers
Directions to Trailhead: Drive Colorado Highway 67 north from Woodland Park to Deckers. Go north on County Road 126 for two miles to a trailhead on the left.
Geographic Region
Region: Pikes Peak / Colorado Springs Area
Here’s a hike in the mountains that doesn’t get too high. The trail follows the South Platte River as it cuts through the granite domes of the Rampart Range. Few hikers explore the spot, thinking it’s only a short fly fisher’s path. Nothing could be less true. The trail is long and swimming with great views.

To get there: Drive Colorado Highway 67 north from Woodland Park to Deckers. Go north on County Road 126 for two miles to a trailhead on the left.

Trip log: One to three boots; eight-mile round trip with many shorter variations; 600 feet elevation gain.

The hike: Start at a clearly marked trail that gradually climbs through a dry, ponderosa forest. In half a mile, the path crests at a low ridge and comes to a fork at a sign. Go right and begin the quarter-mile descent to the river.

For the next three miles, the path parallels the raucous current of the South Platte River, eventually leading up to the Cheesman Reservoir dam. Ambitious hikers can follow a road up to the reservoir.

Hikers don’t need to go the full distance to realize the full charm of this canyon. A few minutes of walking leaves the road far behind. The granite canyon walls move in, cupping countless golden-green pools lined with granite boulders. These perches are a perfect place to watch the current and the dark, darting fish below.

Details: No bikes Info: Pike National Forest, 636-1602 Dogs: On leash Rating: A scale of one to four boots. One is easiest, with little elevation gain, and it is at a reasonable altitude. Four is most difficult, with severe elevation gain, difficult terrain or extreme length or altitude.

Source: The Gazette

 

(photos courtesy of John Bauer)

 


User reviews

Average user rating from: 1 user(s)

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful

Sunday, 18 November 2007

Written by Gropler   -  View all my reviews  - Top 10 Reviewer

Rating
4.0
Great Hike! I followed the shortcut down to the river right behind the WigWam Club and followed the river upstream for hours. The official trail stays up on the canyon wall for the most part but there are a plethora of "fish trails" along the riverside that allow you a close up view of the fish themselves! When you take this path, be prepared for ALOT more ups and downs as you can't stay right along the river in many places with out waders and you are forced to scramble back up to the main path to get around huge boulders etc. My dog loved it though and I saw a number of other hikers with dogs as well. Great views of the canyon with the river rushing through it and it was fun to watch the fisherman fly fishing on this Gold Medal River. I also have a number of pics if I can figure out how to post em.


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