Salida makes the list of exceptional small towns with happy people and healthy economies. A loose association of places that I may someday like to live, these towns all claim something special aside from jobs and homes. Salida claims world-class singletrack and one of the most popular paddling spots in the US, the Upper Arkansas River. What it doesn’t have, is a thriving ski industry. That’s why it looks and feels like a real place. Marquette, MI has Lake Superior, rail-trails and nearby forests. Ithaca, NY is Gorges, if a little less happy. State College, PA has access to amazing local forests and trails, but an overwhelming college culture. San Luis Obisco, CA is great, but about 12 miles too far from the beach. I hear Ashville, NC is nice. And Flagstaff, AZ. Leadville is a dream, although living at 10,200ft has both costs and benefits. The more I travel, the more selective I become. I may never settle down.
Salida warrants a week. We found a ride to Interbike with a local shop owner, so we had a week to spare. We waited out some weather, commuted to town every day on singletrack, and went for an epic overnight trip. For a week, we were residents of Salida, doing all the normal things that people do, except working.
The greatest warmshowers host has a home in Salida, but lives in Texas. Imagine the luxury of a house on a hill out of town after three months in a tent. Of course, the outdoor hot tub overlooks the valley and several 14,000ft peaks. Every morning, Lael practiced yoga as I wrote and drank coffee. In the afternoon we would commute to town on singletrack– North Backbone to Lil Rattler, and then the Front Side Trail to downtown Salida. We finished the day making conversation at one of three local bike shops– all amazing– before stopping at the grocery store and riding home at dusk. Every evening, we prepared a feast.
Waiting out some weather, and snow in the mountains.
Commuting to town is fun, until someone gets hurt.
Riding home.
Enraptured in the routine of city life, another commute to town.
Crying makes it better.
Front Side descends right into town, right onto Main Street.
Route planning in town.
Salida, 7083ft. West on County Rte 140, cross Highway 50 to 220, a dirt road. Then a few miles up towards Monarch Pass on Hwy 50 to Fooses Creek. Back on dirt, connect to the Colorado Trail and climb another 3000ft to the Monarch Crest Trail, and the Continental Divide Trail. Push the last 1000ft up to 11,920ft. Finally, almost 5000ft above Salida. Rest.
Five miles along the Monarch Crest Trail at almost 12,000ft towards Marshall Pass. As you ride over passes, they are the highest topographic point. When riding ridges, the passes are the lowest. Four more miles to Silver Creek, the last drainage that will route us back to town. Further, the Colorado Trail leads over the Continental Divide towards Sargents Mesa. For now, we want to return to the east side of the Divide, to Salida.
Beyond Marshall Pass, toward the SIlver Creek drainage.
Silver Creek, as the sun falls.
…until someone gets hurt, and a crank is bent. Could be worse. At least it clears the chain stay. Fading light, pedal on.
Final light.
Finishing up by headlight. As soon as the sun falls, my dynamo lighting becomes visible in the thick wooded singletrack. At the junction of FS 201, the road to Bonanza, and the Rainbow Trail, we select the Rainbow Trail. We were here a year ago and have already ridden down the FS road. Time for something new, in the dark.
The final descent to Hwy 285. High fives and a fast paved downhill to town.
Love. Salida.
Many thanks to Anton from Salida Bike Company for the ride to Interbike in Las Vegas. And many more thanks for the escape from hundred degree heat and slot machines. For now, we’re back in Colorado.
The sticker in the last photo: Very funny. The laugh I needed. Thanks.
Beautiful photos except for the ones of the scraped hands. Shall I send you bike gloves? Better yet just come back to AK!
Lael says AK is too cold. Salida boasts over 300 days of sun every year and a mild winter– a worthy retirement opportunity. You can be sure we would visit you there.
We’ve begun to wear our bike gloves now that fall has arrived. Surely, we wear our helmets all the time.
Did you take advantage of Salida’s fine century old Carnegie library. I am always happy to go out of my way for a Carnegie. They are invariably a prominent building of majesty and grandeur that communities took great pride in when they were constructed.. Carnegie provided the funds for 1,679 of them all over the US, doubling the number of libraries in the country during the era of their construction. There is one in Missoula across the street from Adventury Cycling, though it has been somewhat diminished by a not so compatible addition. Wikipedia lists all the Carnegies if you wish to add them to your route. I visited 13 on my recent 1400 mile ride from Telluride to Bloomington, Indiana across Kansas, Missouri and Illinois. Not all were still standing or in use as libraries, but it was still nice to pay tribute to them. Many are enshrined as National Historic Sites. They could easily be declared en masse a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
I missed the library in Salida. I usually only find the library when I want shelter or internet, although I appreciate the Carnegies that I’ve visited. The library in Crested Butte which I visited today, is housed in the Old Rock School, a two-story stone building. How many have you visited in total?
I’ve visited about ten per cent of them, including the only one in France (Reims right beside its World Heritage cathedral) last summer and others in South Africa and Scotland.
Another place to put on the “List of Places to Check Out”. Still need to get to Viroqua, WI, first.
Viroqua, WI is home to the Driftless Folk School. That place sounds awesome!