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Trooper Traverse Route Details from Lou Dawson
(accuracy not guaranteed -- for reference only)
[Trooper Traverse
introduction]
The best ski mountaineering routes take spectacular terrain,
have a foundation of known history, are easy to access, and perhaps
most importantly, are safely repeatable. The Trooper Traverse
has every one of these qualifications. I highly recommend repeating
it.
Be warned, however, that this is an advanced level ski route,
with no huts, taking extreme avalanche terrain. Navigation is
difficult. Following the exact soldier's route may require previous
experience with parts of the trail, especially the Hunter Creek
section. Consider hiring a guide familiar with the area. At least
one group has tried the route and failed because of inexperience
with route finding, steep snow, and lack of local knowledge.
I only recommend trying the route during the spring snow season,
when the snow is more compacted. This season lasts from some time
in early May, through the first part of June. Early May is recommended
as you'll have more snow for the lower elevation parts of the
trip. But don't leave until the spring snow season has begun.
If you're serious about repeating the Trooper Traverse, but need
help with planning or route finding, consider hiring me as a consultant.
Please contact me for
details about how my consulting work can insure the success of
your trip.
Roads and Trailheads:
After snow melt-off begins in the spring, the Halfmoon
Road (dirt, medium clearance 2-wheel-drive) leads deep into the heart
of the Northern Sawatch Mountains on the Leadville side of the
range.
To reach the Halfmoon Road, start on
Harrison Avenue (Highway 24) in old-town Leadville. Drive S
out of Leadville 3.7 miles on Highway 24 to the Fish Hatchery
Road (State Road 300). Take a right (W) on to the Hatchery
Road, drive .8 mile, and take a left turn onto County Road
11. Drive 1.1 mile S on Road 11 to the actual Halfmoon Road
(good sign). Take a right on Halfmoon Road (enjoy a good view
of Mount Massive straight ahead) and drive 4.4 miles to Halfmoon
Campground. (Don't confuse this with Halfmoon Campground near
Mount of the Holy Cross). From Halfmoon Campground, continue
about 2 miles and look for Mount Elbert Trailhead’s obvious
parking and signboards on the left (S) side of road. Continue
.3 miles and look for signboards to your right indicating the
the Mount Massive Trailhead, The Halfmoon Campground is huge,
so the mileages referenced from the Campground are approximations.
The trailheads are obvious.
From the Mount Massive Trailhead continue
up the main drainage and road 1.9 miles to an obvious fork
(possibly marked with a Forest Service road stake with the
number "110.3A").
This is the South Halfmoon Creek Trailhead (10,330’) --
but is not your route. Do not take the left fork. Again, continue
up the road that follows the main drainage with the creek to
your left. At .6 miles from South Halfmoon Creek you'll see signs
to your right indicating the North Halfmoon Creek trail. Do not
take this trail. Again, stay on the road in the main drainage.
Continue a few hundred yards up the road. You'll notice the road
bears left and crosses the creek. Take this important creek
crossing that leads you into the main Halfmoon Creek drainage
and Champion Mill area. During heavy snow years you may find
a snowbridge for the creek crossing. If not, wade it in your
boot shells without liners so as not to risk injuring your feet.
A cabin used to be located to the right about 100 feet past the
creek crossing, and research indicates the troopers may have
stayed in this cabin during their first night out. Sadly, the
cabin burnt down in 2004. Continue up the drainage to the Champion
Mill area and Darling Pass (see route description below).
Snow closure varies on the Halfmoon Road.
Early winter snow closure can be as far as Halfmoon Campground,
with the road again open to Halfmoon Campground by mid May. Winter
and early spring closure may be several miles from Halfmoon Campground
and trailheads, frequently just after the turn from County Road
11. Melt-out is complete by mid or late June. Mining activity
or cabin owners can change this. The Halfmoon Road is a designated
multiple use trail shared in winter by skiers and snowmobilers.
Check road conditions with the Forest Service in Leadville.
On the Aspen Side things are even more convoluted.
If you're planning on hiking into Aspen (recommended way to finish)
you'll figure it out. Here are directions for Aspen and Hunter
Creek trailhead access
if you wimp out and someone is picking you up (no cruds for you).
Stay in cell phone contact with your pickup person, as this area
is incredibly confusing.
To reach
the Hunter Creek trailheads (note the plural), start in the
town of Aspen. Follow Main Street in Aspen to Mill Street (the
stoplight near the center of town, next to the Hotel Jerome).
Turn N on Mill and drive a short distance down a hill, then across
a bridge over the Roaring Fork River (.25 miles). Bear left after
the bridge and follow the Red Mountain Road 1.2 miles to its
second switchback. Just before the switchback, turn right and
downhill on the Hunter Creek Road. Drive approximately .5 miles
on Hunter Creek Road, then take a hard left on an unpaved driveway
that leads up past a water tank 300 feet to a parking area. The
actual trailhead is farther up the mountain (see below), but
this is the lesser regulated overnight parking and is a good
pickup for the Trooper Traverse.
For the highest elevation "Upper Hunter Creek
Parking Area" follow Hunter Creek Road up Red Mountain and go
NE through the stone pillars continuing up Red Mountain Road
for approximately 6/10th of a mile to a 3-way intersection. Take
a very hard tight turn, and continue E 1/10th of a mile through
two sharp swithbacks. Continue to the well signed parking area
and respect private property. If you can find this trailhead,
it's the best pickup for the Trooper Traverse.
Trooper Traverse ski route description:
Day 1: Start on Halfmoon Road near
Leadville, Colorado (see road details above). Drive to snow closure,
usually just a few miles off the paved Fish Hatchery Road but
you may be able to drive much farther (rough, high clearance
mandatory, four-wheel-drive recommended). Hike a long slog up
the road to camp in the head of the Halfmoon Drainage, at the
base of French Mountain. Where you camp here is not critical.
If you feel strong camp higher, near the old mining structures
of Champion Mill. See the road description above for exact route
up Halfmoon drain.
Day 2: This is your first day in the Alpine. Climb over
Darling Pass, drop into the head of North Fork Lake Creek, and
continue West to camp on a rock shelf perched just under the
Continental Divide near what I like to call John Jay Peak. If
weather dictates, camp lower.
Day 3: The soldiers took a tricky
route over the Divide, to avoid the steeper pass that forms
a direct link to the head of Lost Man Creek. I suggest using
the soldiers route, to honor them and spice up the route finding
a bit. Climb part way up John Jay Peak, then cross the Divide
via the "Soldiers
Variation," drop
into Lost Man Creek, and ski a long, low angled run to the South
Fork Pass area and base of Williams Mountains. Climb a broad
avalanche safe ridge to a bump on the Williams ridge, south of
the big jagged peak that defines the Williams. From the bump,
head N along the Williams crest ridge for a few hundred feet,
then ski down the Trooper Couloir into Hunter Creek. Head down
the Hunter Creek Valley and camp in the timber. (No cell phone
service in upper Hunter Creek, but amateur radio can contact
local repeaters.)
Day 4: Continue down Hunter Creek. Eventually leave Hunter
Creek by heading north through Hunter Flats, then head west
again on old logging roads, eventually intersecting the main
roads leading into Aspen. You'll pass south of the 10th Mountain
Hut Association McNamara Hut, which can be used by reservation
when it's open (it closes in spring). For the last part of the
route the soldiers used the old logging road perched high on
the north side of the Hunter Creek valley. Cell Phone for a taxi
or friend pick-up at the top of Red Mountain (a high-end residential
area), or walk down into Aspen as the soldiers did. Make a beeline
for the Hotel Jerome, and quaff Aspen Cruds.
Colorado USGS Maps required to cover route, from east to west:
Mount Massive; Mount Champion; Thimble Rock; Aspen.
download
medium quality topo map of entire route
download
higher quality topo map of entire route (large file)
download
detailed map of Williams Mtns. crossing (large file)
download detailed map of Continental Divide crossing
(large file)
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