Baltimore Sun Sunday

Visit largest flat-top mountain in world

Grand Mesa in Colorado described as ‘super magical’

- By Seth Boster

Spencer Christense­n is conflicted when he talks about Colorado’s Grand Mesa.

“As a person who likes the Grand Mesa for personal reasons, I want it to be kept secret,” he said. “But as a business owner who has the Grand Mesa Lodge, it’s just the opposite. The more people find out about it, the better.”

The world’s largest flattop mountain, the landmark looming in view just about anywhere you go in western Colorado, is a “secret?”

It can indeed feel that way, said Melissa Newell. A scenic byway, the paved Colorado 65, runs from enveloping canyons off Interstate 70 outside

Grand Junction to the lesser-known portal of Cedaredge, Colorado. This town of apple orchards is Newell’s home.

The town is a “hidden gem,” she said — not so unlike the mountain lining the sky above.

“It’s definitely a hidden gem still,” said Newell, who has avidly explored the Grand Mesa since moving to its base seven years ago. “People who’ve been around longer will say it’s getting a little bit busier, but it’s still pretty remote and takes quite a bit of effort to get here for a lot of people. So it still has that sweetness about it.”

Sweet like the fruit of the valley, one might say. Generation­s of farmers have thanked irrigation canals and other diversions that have delivered water from lakes spotting the mesa spanning some 500 square miles above 10,000 feet.

“This is truly a land of lakes,” reads one U.S. Forest Service sign perched at one spectacula­r viewpoint, overlookin­g the San Juan and West Elk mountains above 14,000 feet, the Book Cliffs and, yes, waters like blue strokes of a paintbrush across the canvas.

The Forest Service counts more than 300 lakes across Grand Mesa National Forest. They have been credited to the mesa’s unique, natural forces — not glaciation, as is the case for other alpine lakes. Rather, groundwate­r has filled compressio­ns formed over millennia by the mesa’s ever-shifting volcanic rock.

The benefit of the lakes reaches beyond growers — to driving, hiking and mountain biking sightseers and anglers like Christense­n. His lodge is situated by the Grand Mesa’s largest lake, Island Lake, teeming with rainbow and splake trout.

Along with the lakes, “there’s all the little creeks that connect them,” Christense­n said. “You could literally fish up on the Grand Mesa every single weekend for 10 years and fish a different place every single time.”

Just as varied are the opportunit­ies on foot and bike. Most promoted is the Crag Crest Trail, a loop covering 10 miles, the lower part of which is open to bikes. The upper part straddles a thrilling ledge between steep drop-offs.

Another destinatio­n: Lands End Observator­y, a lookout built by the Work Progress Administra­tion in the 1930s. Aptly named, the building is perched by a cliff, overlookin­g the mingling land and sky. Utah’s La Sal Mountains appear to float out in the distance.

When the desert below gets notoriousl­y hot in the summer, the Grand Mesa’s lakes and altitude offer a cool escape. In the fall, the colors are unrivaled across the region.

In the winter, the mesa packs snow more synonymous with other parts of Colorado.

“We tend to have earlier, better snow than a lot of other areas,” said Newell, who helps lead Grand Mesa Nordic Council. “You’ll see a lot of Aspen and Vail ski teams coming up here around Thanksgivi­ng when we have better snow than they have.”

The Nordic Council grooms a little over 31 miles of trails between midNovembe­r and mid-April. The Grand Mesa’s wideopen terrain is ideal for snowmobili­ng, too.

Maybe you’ll spot those training athletes on the trail network. The best part, otherwise, Newell said, “You can get out there and not see anyone for miles.”

The mesa feels far removed from resorts up and down I-70, she said.

But it’s not without its own downhill retreat: a much smaller ski area called Powderhorn. With its establishm­ent in the 1960s, founders picked a name to honor the Western heritage here; powderhorn were horns of an ox or cow storing gunpowder.

The Grand Mesa was a classic backdrop of that old era. Tales are told of “fish wars” — of hired guns defending preferred waters — and of wars between cattle ranchers and sheepherde­rs.

Another tale regards an episode in the wake of the Meeker Massacre. Following the infamous uprising by Ute fighters confined to a reservatio­n, it is said Nathan Meeker chased the band to the mesa to retrieve his captured wife and child.

There are other Ute tales. Of “thunderbir­ds” said to rule the sky above the Grand Mesa. Of ritualisti­c farewells to lost kin, giving the mountain another name: Thigunawat, roughly translatin­g to Home of Departed Spirits.

It’s a reflection that might come to one amid the mesa’s prevailing silence. At Grand Mesa Lodge, Christense­n regularly observes the surprise of visitors.

“Everybody’s awestruck,” he said. “They come up here and say this place is super magical.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? The towering, awe-inspiring Grand Mesa looms over Riverbend Park in Palisade, Colorado.
DREAMSTIME The towering, awe-inspiring Grand Mesa looms over Riverbend Park in Palisade, Colorado.

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