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San
Juan Silver Stage Online RAILROADS TO SILVERLOADS Vol. 14, 2009. Serving Colorado and the Four Corners since 1996 |
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| Seasons: Six Cripple Creek Sisters by James Burke Ridgway, Colorado Seasons
of The San Juans are a glorious
four—Waterfall—Thundershower—Color—Fireside.
Waterfall Season is spawned in late snows of March as the traversing
sun
swings up from the south sending subtly suggestive streamlets of
snowmelt
giggling into the still frozen shadows. Ushering in
sparkling cascades through warm April days
its triumph is thundering waterfalls beyond Memorial Day. Thundershower
Season rides nicely in on this tide wit showers of rain to
sustain
the Cascades to September. The season’s trademarks are towering
thunderheads
billowing in full bloom in later June and July. Thunder goes rumbling
down
from crest to canyon like billions of barrels down a stairway to hell
—While
lightning grazes granite craigs and stabs into the shadows. The
Stalwart
San Juans stand undaunted —patient—And in the freshly washed rays of a
new day’s sun spread marvelous carpets of Columbines across the
meadows.
The brilliance of the new born sun belies the nature of the day but the
thunderheads poking into the blue above the peaks by noon predict
another
spectacular performance—“Thundershowers.”
Slipping into September the highest aspen open the show with every shade from green to gold aglow in sunlight from a sky of such faultless blue that knows no other home. Just when
the splendor seems unsurpassable the scruboaks come flaring
up with reds incredible and flurries dust the heights with caps of
white.
The spectacle peaks in the high country’s mid-September then slips
slowly
away to the Southern Canyons October where golden The Fireside Season sweeps in with December snow giving cause to draw up closely to the fireside with those books toted years down all those roads. San Juan snows are made for fireside reading. But many suns of this season rise into blue skies above fresh sparkling blankets of white and the urge to explore this crystal world will win. The lure of these mountains in their least friendly season is legendary.— Extraordinary experiences are addictive. A
friend of mine sets by a different San Juan fire
—A fire in the guts of a fearless Iron Horse who steams up the snow covered track to Cascade Canyon trailing a train outfitted with such as hot buttered rum —The essence of Fireside Season in full stride —I think I’ll take a ride. James Burke, railroad historian and photographer is the associate publisher of the "San Juan Silver Stage." His railroad photographs and writings have appeared in a variety ofpublications throughout the United States. |