Hiking the minor bucket list

It was a milestone that passed without fanfare; a sort of minor bucket-list item I had been working on since May of 2012.  I began work at the Colorado National Monument Visitor Center in mid-May last year.  At the interview, they asked me if I was familiar with  the many trails in the Monument.  I assured them I had hiked Serpent’s Trail and Devil’s Kitchen. Looking back, I am surprised they didn’t laugh at me outright.  There are at least 22 trailheads.

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Walking is a favorite activity. I love mountains, Nature’s beauty, the out-of-doors. My first year on Facebook (2008), the end-of-year stats wrap up indicated “walk” was my most used word.  Not bad for a musician.  Not bad for a writer.  Walking is my meditation and inspiration time, an hour or so devoted to ironing out the kinks in my thinking or feeling. Somewhere around the time I moved from beach to high desert, my walks turned into hikes. It helped that my house was located on rigorous mountain bike trails. Then came the cashier job in the heart of National Park Service public lands.

As I drove to my job on Saturdays and Sundays last year, I became fascinated with the various historic trails and scenic sites I passed. Curious, I took detours on the way home and began to seek out new hikes on my days off.

Two weeks ago as one of our recent Colorado monsoons ebbed, I sat out to explore Upper Liberty Cap Trail – my last frontier. Seated back in my car 3 1/2 hours later I realized I can now say I have hiked every marked trailhead in Colorado National Monument. That is a milestone! Without further ado, here is picture proof.

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Upper Liberty Cap Trail after the rain
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Monument Canyon from Canyon Rim Trail
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Independence Monument from Upper Monument Canyon Trail
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The view from Otto’s Trail
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Ute Canyon Trail
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No Thoroughfare Canyon – above the first pool and heading toward the waterfall in May
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Monument Canyon from The Island
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A peek inside Devil’s Kitchen
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Black Ridge in the winter
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Liberty Cap from lower Liberty Cap Trailhead

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