
Durango Colorado San Juan Mountains
The San Juan range forms the southern part of Colorado's Rocky
Mountains and is thought by some to have the best, most varied
scenery of all.
Spanning the continental divide, it has numerous jagged volcanic
summits, 13 of which rise to over 14,000 feet, many lakes, waterfalls
and streams including the source of the Rio Grande, several historic
towns and countless relics from the gold and silver mining era
of the nineteenth century.
Almost all of the land is publicly owned, within parts of the
Uncompahgre, Gunnison, Rio Grande and San Juan national forests.
The western third is the most accessible, and many of the well
known sites are found close to a loop drive ('The San Juan Skyway')
along roads CO 145 and US 550, over 200 miles of dramatic, winding
roads that pass the old mining centers of Silverton, Ouray and
Telluride.
Silverton is the northern terminus of the Durango and Silverton
Narrow Gauge Railway, one of only two remaining stretches of a
once extensive system that criss-crossed the southern Rockies.
The railway follows the deep, forested Animas Gorge for 45 miles
through several tunnels, over high wooden bridges and across the
face of steep slopes, and is a very popular attraction, usually
open from May to October.
Most of the central San Juan Mountains are reachable only on
foot or jeep trails - an area 40 miles square with no paved roads
that includes about 80 miles of the continental divide.
There is one other road across the eastern mountains, where the
summits are a little lower: CO 149 through the small villages
of Creede and Lake City.
These are also former mining towns and both make a good base
from which to explore the surrounding wilderness.
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