Lakes in the Sky With Sunsets

Posted July 31, 2020 – Narrated by Carmen
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“I have found a dream of beauty at which one might look all one’s life and sigh.”

High Country in Colorado panned out all of the golden nuggets we desired for this historic Summer Of COVID: cool air, shining lakes, mountain trails, and quaint and cozy villages with outdoor seating at charming restaurants and top-notch breweries.

Colorado

Kayaking and hiking are important to us right now.

Staying fit during the pandemic is crucial, but I haven’t had a good pool workout since January. So kayaking has become a substantial part of our summertime fitness plan, and Colorful Colorado‘s abundance of cool and serene high-country mountain lakes is the solution.

Steamboat Lake

Leaving Colorado Springs, we drove the rig through downtown Denver toward Loveland. Before the coronavirus, driving through Denver pulling a 5-ton 30′ trailer in midday traffic would be a nightmare – but the highway was tolerable and we enjoyed this first glance of the city.

Our destination: the location of the cancelled 2020 Airstream International Rally where we had been scheduled to speak. Later we accepted an invitation to make a video of our presentation.

Our reservation (made months in advance) was at Boyd Lake State Park. Just a couple of weeks before we arrived, we received notice of the campground’s reopening.

Boyd Lake State Park – Loveland – Elevation: 5,000′

Loveland is nearby Fort Collins, where we briefly ducked in three years ago for Beast repairs. The city was welcoming and beautiful, and the residents, neighborly. With the feeling that this is an area where we could, someday, settle down, we explored as much as possible given the restrictions of the pandemic.

As soon as we settled into our electricity-only campsite, we detected signs of a hitchhiker onboard. Jim set the humane trap.

The next morning our hearts melted when we met this sweet little wide-eyed creature who looked like a character from The Hundred Acre Wood. We let her (him?) take a little nap in the sunshine and then, choking up a bit, released her in a lovely field surrounded by cottonwoods. We will miss her.

Taking a snooze before being released into the wild

Afternoon thunderstorms guided our daily schedule. Mornings were for kayaking, or cycling and walking the bike trail. Afternoons, we drove into town to visit our favorite haunts …

and also, AKA Kitchen

A.K.A. Kitchen
Huevos Rancheros at AKA Kitchen!

and Rock Coast Brewery

Rock Coast Brewery
Excellent IPA

and the Sunday Farmer’s Market at Fairgrounds Park…

and Benson Sculpture Garden

Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden
Benson Sculpture Garden

and just walking around downtown Fort Collins while our computer keyboards were replaced.

Boyd Lake Reservoir is a favorite day-use area for locals. It is situated in a valley surrounded by homes, businesses and farms.

Boyd Lake

Families set up day-camps around the lake and urbanites from Denver cycle the Loveland Bike Trail.

Loveland Bike Trail
Loveland Bike Trail

The boat launch is bustling – especially on weekends. This is bass fishing and Big Mable Country. Yet, the lake is sorta small for all that activity. So, every weekday morning I rolled my kayak to the shore, hoping to find an uncrowded spot to put in – then, hugged the shoreline as closely as possible.

boyd lake

On a good day I was able to circumnavigate the lake in about three and a half hours.

Boyd Lake
Boyd Lake
Boyd Lake
Boyd Lake

One day the helpful and always cheerful seasonal staff at Boyd Lake Marina suggested I visit Horsetooth Reservoir west of Fort Collins in Larimer County.

Boyd Marina

Horsetooth Reservoir

Thanks Guys! This lake is huge with gorgeous red-rock formations. Another fabulous Colorado State Park with lake-side camping and many other recreational opportunities.

Horsetooth Reservoir
Horsetooth Reservoir
Horsetooth Reservoir
Not Pico! This is his lady doppelgänger gliding on the water like Venus on the half shell.
Horsetooth Reservoir
Colorado Beach Scene
Horsetooth Reservoir

We left the Fort Collins area with the same impression we had years ago. This beautiful city is on our short list of long-term and permanent future locations.

We pulled out of Loveland and followed the spectacular Cache la Poudre River as we headed up higher into the mountains.

Cache la Poudre River
Cache la Poudre River
Cache la Poudre River
Whew! Squeezed through!

Special thanks to our friend Dane who recommended we stop at Mishawaka for lunch. Great suggestion! Lunch and entertainment.

Mishawaka
Mishawaka
Mishawaka
Mishawaka
Mishawaka

Driving these curvy Colorado mountain roads is an exercise in awareness – the dangers are obvious – but you never know what you might see around the bend.

Colorado has one of the oldest highway systems in the world.

Before white settlers arrived, the nomadic Nuche (commonly called Ute) had traveled these roads for tens of thousands of years. From the great basin of Central Utah to the Rocky Mountains and to the plains, The People of The Shining Mountains are the only North American tribe without a migration story.

These mountains are their summer home for the last 20,000 years.

As we drove toward Steamboat Springs I wondered what the Ute call this road and the names of these mountains that we invaders celebrate as, The Switzerland of America.

Steamboat Lake State Park – Steamboat Springs – Elevation: 8,100′

But these colonial musings evaporated when we settled into our flowery alpine dry (no hook-ups at all) campsite …

Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake

and noticed that our fresh water tank had sprung a gusher of a leak.

Fortunately, we had a decent enough cell signal to consult with Vinnie Lamica, our Airstream technician.

First, he gave us the bad news: We need a new tank and it will take weeks for it to arrive to his shop in Wilton, California. The good news is that it could be temporarily patched with silicone. And so far so good – seems to be holding.

Now, enough of the man problems. Back to the flowers. It was Springtime in July. Steamboat Lake gushed with these beauties.

Flowers

I’m a sucker for wildflowers – big ones, little ones, fluted ones, round ones, pink ones, yellow ones …

Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake

It took an entire day just to get over it.

That’s a lie. I never got over it.

Steamboat Lake

Steamboat Lake is so beautiful the trees grow eyes.

Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake

Daytimes, we kayaked at the foot of Hahn’s Peak …

Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake

and relished our home-cooked meals …

and enjoyed the many small pleasures of mountain life.

Samurai Hummer

Moon-lit walks

In the evening, when the hikers, cyclists and anglers went home for dinner, the path around the lake was clear and we took these tranquil moonlit walks around the lake.

Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake
Steamboat Lake

Colorado’s Great Seal bears the latin motto, Nil Sine Numine which translates to “Nothing Without the Divine” The word numine includes any deity or spirit, male or female – and historically, Mother Earth reigns supreme in Colorado.

Steamboat Lake

That profound feminine energy would often cause me to catch my breath as she moved across the valley acknowledging every creature and element in her care.

Steamboat Lake
Walk lightly in the spring. Mother Earth is pregnant. – Ute wisdom

“Everything suggests a beyond”

Steamboat Lake

We celebrated our 45th Anniversary with an early morning two-hour soak at Old Town Hot Springs

… and a fabulous dinner at Mahogany Ridge Brewing.

Mahogany Ridge Brewing
Salmon & noodles!
Mahogany Ridge Brewing
Seared Ahi!
Mahogany Ridge Brewing
Carrot cake pudding!
Thank you to the staff at Mahogany Ridge!
Mahogany Ridge Brewing
A good, honest Stout on nitro! No added coffee or chocolate silliness! Delish!

Later, we took a stroll through Hahn’s Peak Village where we suffered a serious bout of cabin envy …

Hahn's Peak Village
Hahn's Peak Village
Hahn's Peak Village
Hahn's Peak Village
Hahn's Peak Village
Hahn's Peak Village
Hahn's Peak Village
Hahn's Peak Village

then, watched the horses get a brush down at Hahn’s Peak Roadhouse (renamed Steamboat Lake Outpost in 2021) and head home to their evening pasture.

Hahn's Peak Roadhouse
Hahn's Peak Roadhouse
Hahn's Peak Roadhouse
Hahn's Peak Roadhouse

“Truly a good horse, good ground to gallop on, and sunshine, make up the sum of enjoyable traveling.”

The ideal climate at Steamboat Lake – mid 80’s in the daytime and mid 50’s at night – suggested we stay longer. But Jim could secure eight days and no more. Ah well, Lady Luck had run her course. But it was all for the best to say goodbye. What’s the saying? Too much of a good thing …

Steamboat Lake Full Moon
Full Buck Moon, July

So, farewell to Steamboat Lake in the luscious Yampa Valley. A place to love and to be in love.

Hahn's Peak Roadhouse
Hahn’s Peak Roadhouse

If you want to see the exact route we travel, click here.

*photos in this post (unless otherwise noted) were taken and copyrighted by Living In Beauty.


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31 Comments
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Steve Jones
Steve Jones
5 years ago

What a lovely place! We will have to check it out if we can get in someday. Sorry about your tank leak! That’s terrible. Water is everything. Glad you could do an emergency fix to hold until you get to Vinnie’s!

Brenda Megel
Brenda Megel
5 years ago

What gorgeous pictures!! Especially the ones of your evening walks. Colorado is so incredibly gorgeous. We stayed in SW Colorado in 2018 and just fell in love with the area. And we definitely want to get back to the Fort Collins area.

I am so sorry about the water leak! I hope the silicone continues to hold until you can get it replaced. Will you have to head back to CA for that?

You two amaze me with your boondocking skills, we’re still afraid to boondock. 😉 And please come and teach me how to cook.

Pamela Anderson
Pamela Anderson
5 years ago

All my favorite places in Fort Collins! ❤️

Teresa Lefrancois
Teresa Lefrancois
5 years ago

Happy anniversary you two. So happy that you’re able to travel through all this crazy covid and pandemic. Each place you go to, I suppose is a little different. As we all do, you adapt. I so enjoyed your travels through Colorado. I’ve never been there, so, I travel vicariously through you two. Happy travels, stay safe. Teresa, from Golden Hill West, San Diego, CA

mrsjpvan2
5 years ago

We enjoyed this post so much and were very close to where you were. We also picked up a hitchhiker and just ordered the humane traps from your link. Hopefully we can move it/them to a better place. Do you share your recipe for posole?

Mike and Sylvia
Mike and Sylvia
5 years ago

Beautiful pictures Jim and Carmen

Larry Cook
Larry Cook
5 years ago

Outstanding……hard to believe it’s been 4 years+ since your Dad picked up your Airstream at our house…..life is good!

mcwyant
5 years ago

Our old stomping grounds. We lived in Ft Collins for 7 years. We do miss it. You definitely checked off a lot boxes while you were there! We stayed at Boyd Lake for 2 weeks getting the motor home ready to start our full-time adventure in 2016. It would be a great place to retire.

Felicia LugoRivera
Felicia LugoRivera
5 years ago

Beautiful pix and and an even much more beautiful narration of it! You are truly blessed!!!!

Jeannette Mack
Jeannette Mack
5 years ago

I’m so curious…aside from Fort Collins, what other places are on your short list for long term or permanent living?

reidkarm
reidkarm
5 years ago

We, too, are looking for that “perfect” location for if/when we finish life on the road. Fort Collins is on our short list. I would like to check out some Oregon locations, too. I am thinking that it might be nice to have a place to live in a cool-weather location during the summer months (when campgrounds tend to be busier), and then travel spring, fall, and winter when it is quieter. Our 25-foot Flying Cloud is named Joy and we like to say that we are “traveling with joy!”

Carmela Gersbeck
Carmela Gersbeck
5 years ago

I just started reading your blog a few weeks ago, having found it on RV Lifestyle. I love your writing and photography — both are beautiful! My husband and I will celebrate 45 years of marriage in August. We enjoy camping in our Class C, but have no desire to be full-time. I do enjoy living vicariously through your blog!! Many blessings to you.

Carmela Gersbeck
Carmela Gersbeck
5 years ago

I think you did the right thing for you. I retired two years ago at 62 for the exact same reasons — we wanted to travel and do the things we love — hiking, biking and kayaking, while we are still fit and able to enjoy it. I love your philosophy!

Liesbet @ Roaming About

Beautiful wildflowers! Now I’m officially envious, as Colorado (or Wyoming or Montana) would be our preferred summer destination this year. 🙂 It’s nice to enjoy some virtual travels there through you.

Interesting about Loveland. We have been playing with the idea to check out a few “potentials” as a future home base for us – after being nomads for seventeen years – and Loveland was one of the options our internet research came up with. Except for the cold winters! We will certainly have to check out the places you enjoyed exploring in Colorado.

Susan aka @silversabbatical
Susan aka @silversabbatical
5 years ago

This post brings back fond memories of the two summers our son was employed at Steamboat Lake Marina. What a beautiful place up there at 8,000 feet. Took some getting used to. He rescued many a kayaker from that windy place. Some days you can paddle out, but you can’t get back in. So glad you got to stay for awhile.

Diane Stapleton
Diane Stapleton
4 years ago

Just a small correction from a catholic gal…Nil Sine Numine means “nothing without light” It comes from the miners in Colorado. We bought our Poppy vintage gulfstream cruiser 19 RBS the day the State shut down. March 17th. Because I worked from “home” we were able to spend 60 days tramping in her. We now realize she is our training trailer and will be graduating to an Airstream in the next year. Loving your blog. Any doubts we have about living full time is gone after reading about your adventures. thanks

3441 days on the road


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