Houston Chronicle Sunday

Los Caminos Antiguos Scenic Byway is enchanting run through Colorado’s ‘cradle’

- By Dave G. Houser

Any romantic notion I might have had comparing myself to Lawrence of Arabia was rapidly fading as the spongy ridge of sand leading to the summit of Star Dune at Great Sand Dunes National Park in southern Colorado became steeper. Much steeper.

Sweating and gasping for breath, I realized why park rangers urge visitors to wear wide-brim hats, sunscreen and to carry plenty of water.

The park’s 30 square miles of shifting sand comprise the nation’s largest inland dune field. Finally reaching the 750-foot summit of Star Dune, I was rewarded with a spectacula­r view of the towering, snow-capped Sangre de Cristo Mountains rising nearly 14,000 feet nearby, and the sprawling San Luis Valley below.

San Luis Valley is often called the “Cradle of Colorado.” It is a highaltitu­de desert, although its fertile floor is dotted with marshlands, springs and lakes — popular rest stops each spring and fall for thousands of migrating sandhill cranes and Canada geese.

Running through the valley is the enchanting Los Caminos Antiguos Scenic & Historic Byway (Spanish for “The Ancient Roads”). The byway follows in the footsteps of Spanish explorers and Mexican settlers, Utes and Navajos, miners and ranchers.

A friend and I began a tour of the byway on U.S. 285 in the village of Conejos, where we stopped for a look at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, a venerable old mission church that is home to the oldest Catholic parish (1858) in Colorado.

Turning east on Colorado 142 at Romeo, we continued for a few miles to Manassa, home to legendary heavyweigh­t boxing champion Jack Dempsey. Known as the “Manassa Mauler,” Dempsey is memorializ­ed with a bronze statue outside the modest cabin where he was born and that now houses the Jack Dempsey Museum. Sports fans will enjoy perusing the museum’s collection of memorabili­a relating to the slugger’s illustriou­s career.

About a dozen miles east of Manassa, we came to the Rio Grande River and the scene of the socalled Vargas Crossing. As the story goes, back in 1694, Don Diego de Vargas, governor-general of New Mexico, led a band of Spanish soldiers north into the San Luis Valley to escape a Pueblo Indian uprising. The Spaniards crossed the river at a point near the current Colorado 142 bridge.

Continuing eastward, we soon found ourselves in the state’s oldest town, San Luis, founded by Mexican settlers in 1851. There’s not much to the town itself, but it is the site of perhaps the most important cultural attraction along the byway route. High atop a mesa overlookin­g San Luis is the Shrine of the Stations of the Cross.

A series of powerful bronze sculptures by Huberto Maestas are set along a half-mile path that ascends the mesa, depicting the stations of the cross from Jesus’ journey up Cavalry Hill. Atop the mesa sits the Capilla de Todos los Santos (All Saints Chapel), in a setting reminiscen­t of Spain’s Andalusia countrysid­e.

Northbound now on Colorado 159, our next stop was Fort Garland, a partially re-created 1858 adobe garrison once commanded by Kit Carson. Now a museum, the fort is filled with items of the time, including firearms, uniforms and Native American artifacts. Visitors can explore the garrison individual­ly or join a docent-guided tour.

Approachin­g the northernmo­st reaches of Los Caminos Antiguos on U.S. 160/Colorado 150, we paused to watch wranglers from historic Zapata Ranch ride herd on some cattle right beside the highway. This 103,000acre spread is both a National Historic Site and a property of the Nature Conservanc­y. It remains a working ranch but offers 15 guest rooms in three different buildings, including the main lodge and bunkhouse.

Guests can take part in a variety of outdoor/ nature programs. Hiking trails and horse-drawn wagons lead visitors out to view the bison, elk, antelope, coyote and migrating waterfowl that coexist here in what has been described as the “Rocky Mountain Serengeti.”

Not far from the ranch, a short but steep trail leads up along Zapata Creek to Zapata Falls, an impressive cataract embraced by a pinon-juniper forest. A picnic area affords panoramic views of the valley floor and nearby sand dunes.

Next morning, I made my heroic dune climb while my less-energetic companion stayed behind to dawdle in Medano Creek, an amazing stream made up of snow melt from surroundin­g mountains, which flows along the base of the dunes during spring and the early summer months.

Our final day of touring led us about 15 miles west of the park on Country Lane 6 to Mosca, where we turned south on Colorado 17 for the short drive to Alamosa. With a population just shy of 10,000, Alamosa is the largest city on the byway. We did a bit of window-shopping, then tackled some green chiles rellenos at Cavillo’s on Main Street.

Before heading home, we drove out U.S. 160 a few miles southeast of town to have a look at the Alamosa National Wildlife Refuge. One of three national wildlife reserves in the San Luis Valley, this one protects 11,000 acres of Rio Grande wetlands. We followed the auto tour route through a portion of the refuge, hopping out now and then for photos and wildlife spotting. We saw some ibis, egret and a variety of songbirds — plus a wily coyote that turned up (no surprise) just as we were breaking out a snack.

 ?? TNS ?? Capilla de Todos Los Santos stands as a crowning jewel above the Shrine of the Stations of the Cross overlookin­g the historic town of of San Luis.
TNS Capilla de Todos Los Santos stands as a crowning jewel above the Shrine of the Stations of the Cross overlookin­g the historic town of of San Luis.
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