​​In The Shadow of Longs Peak

Williams' Fork

Williams' Fork in Summit County is a favorite both for backpacking and car camping


Monday 06 August 2018

An uneventful hike out followed by lunch at the Dam Brewery in Silverthone.

Williams' Fork

05 August 2018

It started to rain overnight and still raining this morning at 7am.  We decided to stay put until 8 am and assess.  Still raining.  8:15, still raining.  8:30, still raining. 

8:45 rolls around and we are getting stiff enough to entertain getting up despite the rain.  I open the fly and blue sky is in the distance so we may be in luck.  Whenever we backpack, the 2nd days tends to be a ‘day-hike day’ and spending it in the tent does not have much appeal…should we pack up and go for a hike or pack up and hike out?

By the time we get up and have breakfast, there is enough blue sky to convince us to stay and hike.  We pack up and are underway, up the trail.

There is a new tree obstacle to negotiate.  On Saturday when we got here, Gary hiked uphill a ways.  He wasn’t gone 5 minutes when I heard this huge crashing sound and wondered if he was ok.  Turns out, a tree had fallen across the trail!  I was sure glad to see him after that.  This is the 2nd time I have been in the vicinity of a falling tree, the first time was at Forlorn Lakes, near Trout Lake in Washington with Kari.

Anyway, back to our hike.  We round the tree and continue up the trail which stays high above the creek, winding thru small meadows, aspen groves and pine forests.  There is lots of beetle kill here and lots of fallen trees to negotiate.

For the first hour or so, the trail stays on the north side of the creek.  Then we drop down, cross a small creek, then hike back up what appears to be a divide between the two.  The divide is actually a wall holding back a marshy pond.  We are on the north side of the main creek but appear to have wondered into another drainage and hike down into a large open meadow.  This would be a cool place to camp but would require another 2 hours of humping the packs up increasingly steep trails.

We have lunch.  Noticing the sky overhead, it turns into a really quick lunch and head back.  There is some rain, enough for a rain jacket; and thunder overhead but no visible lightening unlike last year when I hiked back in lightening.

It takes about 90 minutes to hike back.  The storm passed pretty quickly!

Once back, it was nice to sit in camp and enjoy.