Hiking, camping, and Bishop’s Castle

The Wet Mountains aren’t dramatic by Colorado standards, rising above the prairie like a nondescript green wall, with only the southern tip reaching past the timberline. They might be more at home in the Appalachians than the Rockies.

But don’t be fooled — this area is as full of outdoor recreation opportunities as anywhere else in Colorado. Plus, it’s within an easy drive of the Front Range. Other highlights:

  • A battle occurred here in 1779 that sealed the fate of a great Comanche chief.
  • Home of America’s first national forest campground, it’s where America fell in love with camping.
  • Few people outside of Pueblo know about this mountain range, so opportunities for solitude abound.

Use this guide to explore the Wet Mountains this summer.

Take a hike

“Smaller in stature than their sister mountain range, the [Sangre de Cristos], the ‘Wets,’ in local shorthand, aren’t short on wonderful hiking and outdoor adventures, plus many treks provide amazing 360-degree views,” wrote Herb Kober, author of the Hiking Guide for the Sangre de Cristo and Wet Mountains.

There isn’t even a National Geographic Trails Illustrated — the gold standard of hiking maps — for the range. So, the nonprofit Trails for All published that book a few years ago.

“The Wet Mountains are thought to be named for the amount of moisture and heavy snow that happens in winter compared to the arid plains to the east. At about 12 miles across from east to west, the Wets basically run north to south an estimated 40 miles from U.S. 50 to Walsenburg, topping out at 12,346 feet.”

The high point is Greenhorn Mountain, named for the Comanche chief Cuerno Verde, who wore a green horn on his head and dared to defy the Spanish in the 1770s, raiding settlements and stealing horses. (Photo special to The Denver Post/R. Scott Rappold)

That high point is Greenhorn Mountain, named for the Comanche chief Cuerno Verde, who wore a green horn on his head and dared to defy the Spanish in the 1770s, raiding settlements and stealing horses. They caught up with him somewhere in the vicinity and killed the chief.

That peak offers the most scenic hiking in the region.

“You can walk around Greenhorn, with the most spectacular views of the Wet Mountain Valley on one side, and you go around to the other side, where you have spectacular views of Pueblo and Pikes Peak,” said Deb Adams, chairwoman of the Custer County Tourism Board.

The easy way to hike it is from the end of Forest Service Road 396, a 5.5-mile round-trip stroll through the tundra.

The hard way is the Bartlett Trail, which starts in the town of Rye and climbs a lung-busting 3,880 feet to the summit through all of the high country’s ecosystems.

“That’s the beauty of the Wet Mountains, that there are easy to moderate hikes and also more challenging hikes, whatever a person is looking for,” Adams said.

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