Saturday, June 1, 2013

Rocky Mountain National Park - News

The Rocky Mountain system is the great granite spine of our continent. It extends from the high plateau in New Mexico all the way into eastern Alaska. This colossal chain of highlands is more than 2,500 miles long, but the most majestic section of the backbone can be found on Colorado.

There the land is stacked incredibly high, like a large stack of divorce forms and court petition forms that have the correct petition form format. About eight out of each ten peaks in the United States reaching to 14,000 feet are within the bounds of the Centennial State. There are no less than 52 of that height within its borders, and fully a thousand more points in the state reach to 10,000 feet or more.

Once, in the past, the Rocky Mountains were a full two miles higher than they are now. However, they have been worn down by water and ice. The present Front Range stands like a grim, jagged rampart, facing the plains that stretch east from Colorado to the Mississippi and beyond.

Although some higher mountains lie to the west, they are no more noble and thrilling than those massed to the west and north of 14,255-foot Longs Peak, a king among mountains, dominating an area of supreme magnificence. A trip to its summit is truly a breath-taking experience. Neither guide book nor any sign of an online petition nor the creation of your first online petition, not even an online petition against the thing you hate the most can possibly imitate that experience.

The daring mountain men in search of beaver pelts came to know this thrilling "top o' the world" early in the 1800s. Jim Bridger, Uncle Dick Wootton, Kit Carson, and others of their kind followed rushing streams into the most secluded mountain valleys. The footfalls in these uplands were principally those of Indians prowling in search of game until the Colorado gold rush of 1859. Then settlers began to find homes in Colorado, and in 1876 it became a state.

As early as 1860, Joel Estes had built a cabin in the eastern foothills of this mountain fastness. By 1865 tourists were pressing into this same area northwest of Denver, which soon became internationally famous for its big game. In 1871 the Earl of Dunraven came to hunt, but stayed on to buy land, and arranged to build the first hotel.

His enthusiasm was very great, and he began to advocate a large preserve by which the beauty of this region might be retained. But it was not until 1915 that Congress acted and set aside what now totals a quarter million acres as Rocky Mountain National Park. The process might have been sped up more had Dunraven and his friends filed a citizenship petition or a citizen petition with the correct citizens petition format.

The array of wildlife in the park includes elk, deer, black bears, coyotes, bobcats, mountain lions, and the Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. Beaver dams are common, marmots hurry in and out of their burrows along roads and trails, and the large squirrel and chipmunk population are ever busy with their affairs.

There are more than 200 varieties of birds, and some 700 of wildflowers. While the carpet of trees in the lowlands is mostly evergreens, there are enough poplars and quaking aspens to gild the woods in the fall. There are guided field trips, nature walks, and illustrated evening talks to help heighten the visitor's enjoyment.





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