In the Steps of Pioneers
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1: Montville Nature Trail and Mosca Pass Trail (Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve)– The self-guided Montville Trail is a half-mile loop that parallels Mosca Creek and leads past the remnants of a historic toll station. For a longer hike, visitors may take the Mosca Pass Trail, which winds through aspen and evergreen forests to the summit of a pass in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range. Mosca Pass served as an entrance to the valley for nomadic hunters, Spanish soldiers, homesteaders, and traders carrying goods bound for Plains Indian tribes. In 1807, Zebulon Pike, author of the earliest known written description of the Great Sand Dunes, passed nearby with his men, enroute to the river and the valley floor. Summer: 9am-6pm | Spring and Fall: 9am-5pm | winter: 9am-4:30pm| Great Sand Dunes Homepage | View on Interactive Map

2: La Sierra Blanca - Towering 6,000 feet above the valley floor, Colorado’s fourth highest peak (elevation 14,345’) commands attention. Native Americans ascribe special significance to this landmark peak. The Navajo count it as one of the four sacred mountains, as it marks the eastern boundary of their traditional homeland. They call it Sisnaajini, meaning “white maid mountain”, perhaps due to the snow that frequently persists into late Spring. | View on Interactive Map

3: Fort Garland Museum– Designed as an outpost to facilitate settlement in Ute country, Fort Garland served many purposes in its 25-year history. The command of Kit Carson from 1866 to 1867 brought peace with the Utes and food for the impoverished tribes. During the Civil War, Union troops trained here. After the war, Buffalo Soldiers were stationed here for several years. The Fort was abandoned in 1883, but later restored by the Colorado Historical Society. April-October: daily 9am-5pm| November-March: Thursday-Monday 10am-4pm | 719.379.3512 | Fort Garland Museum Homepage | View on Interactive Map

4: San Luis People’s Ditch and La Vega–Two landscape features near the town of San Luis illustrate traditional land uses. Built in 1852, the San Luis People’s Ditch is the oldest irrigation system in continuous use in Colorado and was teh result of the first water right application in the state. The Spanish translation for ditch is acequias. Another unique landscape feature in San Luis is La Vega, a public commons. La Vega continues to be used for its originally intended purpose–communal grazing. | View on Interactive Map

5: Rio Grande – Vargas Crossing– In 1694 Don Diego de Vargas, the governor-general of New Mexico, led a band of Spaniards north into the San Luis Valley to avoid ambush by Pueblo tribes after he raided the corn stores of several villages to feed hungry Spanish settlers in Santa Fe. On the way back to Santa Fe, his party crossed the Rio Grande at an island near the current CO Hwy 142 bridge. In pioneer days, the site became heavily used as the Costilla ferry. A marker at the bridge commemorates this crossing. | View on Interactive Map

6: Pike’s Stockade - Soldier and explorer Zebulon Pike led the first major U.S. expedition into the Southwest. In 1807 Pike’s men erected a stockade at this site on the banks of the Conejos River and raised the American flag, though the stockade stood on Spanish soil. A replica of Pike’s stockade, reconstructed from notes in his journal, now stands on the site, which is designated as a National Historic Landmark in recognition of its exceptional historic significance. 719.379.3512 | Pike's Stockade Homepage | View on Interactive Map

7: Conejos Plaza / Courthouse Square – In 1854 Lafayette Head, who later became Colorado’s first lieutenant governor, built a fortified plaza on the banks of the Conejos River. Now known as Courthouse Square, this plaza in the center of Conejos is the site of Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, the oldest parish church in Colorado, and other historic buildings. | View on Interactive Map

8: Old Spanish Trail Markers– In several places, the roads and highways of the Valley intersect the Old Spanish Trail, a historic trade route linking Santa Fe, NM with Los Angeles, CA. This route followed even earlier routes established by Native Americans. In 2002, the Old Spanish Trail became part of the National Historic Trails system. Old Spanish Trail Homepage | View on Interactive Map

9: Frémont’s Christmas Camp – John C. Frémont entered the San Juan Mountains in the harsh winter of 1848-49 while exploring a transcontinental railroad route. Using map and compass, hikers may follow U.S. Forest Service trails from camp to camp to experience firsthand this remote wilderness that became the scene of Fremont’s disastrous 4th expedition. The hike is 4.5 miles long and is rated moderately difficult USDA Forest Service, Rio Grande National Forest, 1803 W. Hwy 160, Monte Vista, CO 81144 | 719.852.5941 | Fremont's Christmas Camp Homepage | View on Interactive Map

10: Colonel Pfeiffer’s Grave – Colonel Albert Pfeiffer, a comrade of Kit Carson, was well known and respected in southern Colorado and northern New Mexico for his bravery. He established himself as fur trapper, pioneer, soldier, and Indian Agent. Pfeiffer secured Pagosa Springs for the Utes by fighting and beating a Navajo warrior. Pfeiffer’s fringed buckskins are on exhibit at Rio Grande County Museum. His gravesite is near the town of South Fork on land given to him in tribute by his Yutah (Ute) friends. To reach the gravesite, go west from Del Norte on US160 8.4 miles, turn right on Rio Grande County road 18, go 1.3 miles, turn left go 0.4 miles and there is a sign on the right side of the road and a path going to site | View on Interactive Map

11: La Garita– La Garita, meaning “The Lookout,” was founded as Carnero Plaza. A variety of settlers have left their mark on the town since the mid - 1800s. La Garita’s population never recovered after the flu epidemic of 1918 killed nearly half the town’s residents. A visit to the old plaza and its one remaining business, La Garita Store, feels like a visit to an earlier era. | View on Interactive Map

12: Saguache County Museum- Among its many historic displays, the 50-year old Saguache County Museum houses Ute artifacts in the Indian Room, and exhibits of memorabilia from the earliest Saguache settlers. The display in the 1908 jail depicts Alferd Packer watched over by Sheriff Wall. In 1874 Packer was held in a dungeon outside of Saguache after he was stranded in heavy mountain snow and survived by dining on his dead comrades. Memorial Day-the 3rd Saturday in September: 9am-4pm | 719.655.2805 | Saguache County Museum Homepage | View on Interactive Map



