Plan with
Confidence
Path Type
There and Back
The first half mile of trail is the steepest - don't get discouraged right off the bat. It starts in a dense aspen grove;a great place to enjoy the colors if you do it in the fall. Over the next couple miles, you'll pass through grassy meadows, stands of lodgepole pine (many are dead from the pine bark beetle epidemic), and get close to the creek a few times. At about 2.5 miles - halfway to the top - you'll get a good view of Pitkin Falls. Enjoy the view and get ready for several more bench sections that have alternating steep climbs and then beautiful meadows that will be filled with wildflowers in July and August. Break out of treeline just as you reach Pitkin Lake at 11,360'. Your return journey will be equally as spectacular, as you'll have views all they way down the narrow drainage that you've ascended, and beyond.
If you look carefully, you'll see the remnants of several glacier moraines that result from the retreat of glaciers that sculpted this valley long ago.
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