Holy Cross Wilderness
The Swede
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Photos from a recent trip to the Holy Cross Wilderness, Colorado.
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Waterfall flowing from Upper to Lower Tuhare Lakes [/FONT][FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica](Nikon D50, 18-70)[/FONT]
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Lake Constantine where we made camp [/FONT][FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica](Nikon D50, Sigma 10-20)[/FONT]
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The rest of the gallery is here http://theswede.smugmug.com/gallery/3205132#176723650
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One of the Seven Sisters Lakes after hiking over Fall Creek Pass (Nikon D50, Sigma 10-20)The Holy Cross Wilderness lies immediately west of the Continental Divide, just over the ridge from the Arkansas River Valley. Some among Colorado's conservation community call Holy Cross a "water wilderness" - an odd appellation given its rugged peaks more than two miles above sea level. What they refer to, however, are the innumerable pools and cascades of the area's many streams, the dozens of alpine lakes, and the wide expanses of valleys inundated by spring snowmelt. Holy Cross's abundance of water sets the state for one of Colorado's longest running and most bitter conflicts over wilderness versus water development.
The wilderness takes its name from 14,003-foot Mount of the Holy Cross. The famous photographer William H. Jackson embellished the peak's reputation by doctoring his 19th-century photographs of the perpendicular snow-filled gullies, or couloirs, on the mountain's east face. Jackson's additional white touches enhanced the already strong resemblance of these couloirs to a cross and drew countless thousands of pilgrims in subsequent years. This fourteener is by no means the only high peak in the northernmost extension of the Sawatch Range; more than twenty-five peaks over 13,000 feet in elevation dot the wilderness.
Holy Cross represents the archetypical Colorado wilderness area - soaring ridges and peaks built of 1.7 billion-year-old schist and gneiss tower over immense, U-shaped glacial-carved valleys whose headwaters contain placid emerald lakes. The streams run full of fish, and the area's remote valleys offer refuge for deer, elk and a multitude of other solitude-loving creatures, such as black bear, bobcat and lynx. In fall, hikers sniff crisp air foretelling of winter and shuffle through leaves fallen from the ubiquitous aspen groves, blazing golden amidst dark forests of spruce and fir.
Waterfall flowing from Upper to Lower Tuhare Lakes [/FONT][FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica](Nikon D50, 18-70)[/FONT]
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Lake Constantine where we made camp [/FONT][FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica](Nikon D50, Sigma 10-20)[/FONT]
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The rest of the gallery is here http://theswede.smugmug.com/gallery/3205132#176723650
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