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Cache la Poudre - North Park

Length: 101 miles - Driving Time: 3 hours
Special Considerations: Livestock on the road, heavy summer traffic
Special Features: Roosevelt National Forest, Colorado State Forest, outstanding fishing

The Cache la Poudre-North Park Scenic Byway crosses the Continental Divide, linking Fort Collins with Walden in North Park. The road follows the Cache la Poudre River canyon, once a transit corridor for Native Americans, then for European explorers and trappers, now for hunters, fishermen, leaf-watchers and other lovers of the great wild outdoors. Cache la Poudre is Colorado's only National Wild and Scenic River and, in season, tends to be swamped with rafters and fishermen. Cameron Pass (10,276 feet) on the Continental Divide is the eastern gateway to the Colorado State Forest, a 70,000 acre preserve of large evergreen thickets among heavily glaciated mountains. North Park is a grass-filled, bowl-shaped valley full of deer, pronghorns, elk, moose, beaver, coyote, and waterfowl, all flocking to the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge to hang out with the ever-growing hordes of people trying to escape the cities...

You'll find most traffic on the Cache la Poudre-North Park Scenic Byway during the fall when the leaves are changing and big game hunting season is on. Fall colors tend to peak around the third week of September but colors up high start changing earlier. Between aspen, cottonwood and gambel oak, there's usually a full spectrum of color available in season. Spring sees the river flowing high with snowmelt, then summer rolls in on an incredible carpet of wildflowers... There are several picnic areas along the way, the fishing is excellent and the Arapaho-Roosevelt National Forest offers camping, hiking and wilderness just beyond the edge of the pavement.

Cache la Poudre-North Park Scenic Byway crosses the mountainous region of north-central Colorado with the Medicine Bow and Laramie Mountains to the north and the Mummy Range and Never Summer Mountains to the south. From the Byway you can get access to the Cache la Poudre, Neota, Rawah, Never Summer, and Comanche Peak Wilderness Areas. On the western side of the Colorado State Forest is the Arapahoe National Wildlife Refuge. The 26 lakes in the region are usually well stocked with brook, cutthroat and rainbow trout. And in winter, many of the Forest Service roads become cross-country skiing and snowmobile routes.

Photo of the moose is courtesy of the National Forest Service. Topo map courtesy of National Geographic Topo!
Text is available for re-use under the terms of the
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