The recent trip to visit our daughter and son-in-law in Hayden, Colorado, was full of adventure, laughter, and the kind of memories that stay with you long after you've unpacked your bags.
It began with a challenge. Storms in Denver forced our flight to divert to Omaha, Nebraska, of all places. For a while it looked as though we might miss our connecting flight to Hayden altogether. More than six hours after we had expected to arrive, we finally landed—tired, relieved, and simply thankful to be there.
Our first full day (Thursday) was an easy one while our hosts were at work. We wandered through the small town of Hayden, stopped by the local library to pick up a few free books, and enjoyed coffee at the neighborhood coffee shop. That afternoon we hiked around Elkhead Reservoir, where the wide-open beauty reminded us once again why Colorado has such a hold on those who love the outdoors.
But something unexpected captured my attention even more than the scenery.
It was the wind.
Before the week was over, I had started calling it the Sagewood Wind. It seemed to have a personality all its own—sometimes cool, sometimes warm, always moving. It carried the scents of sage, dry earth, wildflowers, and distant rain. It swept across a landscape that felt almost like a desert tucked into the mountains. There were few trees of any size, yet the hills were alive with shades of green, brown, and gold, dotted with blooms that swayed together as if the wind itself were conducting them.
When I hike, my mind has a habit of turning over ideas, names, and stories. As the miles passed, I kept coming back to that phrase: Sagewood Wind. I had come to Colorado expecting the mountains to be the highlight, but somehow the breeze stole the show.
After months of Alabama's heavy summer humidity, that dry mountain wind felt almost restorative. It cooled the sweat on my back, filled the air with surprising fragrances, and tugged gently at my shirt as I walked through a landscape of sage, water, distant peaks, and endless sky. There was something quietly healing about it.
The wildlife only added to the experience. Looking back, I'm not sure there was a Colorado animal we didn't see. During the week we watched a bear cross the highway, had two close encounters with moose, spotted antelope, deer—including several impressive bucks—hawks, cattle, sheep, goats, ground squirrels, and even a few snakes. Everywhere we went, the land seemed full of life.
As always, we were wonderfully cared for with home-cooked meals and some excellent restaurants in nearby Steamboat Springs. After long hikes, hard climbs, and afternoons spent in the Colorado sun, every meal felt earned. Good food has a way of becoming even better when it follows honest effort, and we enjoyed each one with genuine gratitude.
We finished our first day wandering through Hayden's town market, where I happily contributed to the local economy by buying a tie-dye shirt made by friends of Conner and Melissa. It wasn't my usual style, but it turned out to be one of the most comfortable shirts I own and became my hiking shirt for the rest of the trip.
The next morning (Friday), the adventure truly began.
Conner and Melissa experience Colorado at full throttle. They graciously tone it down for the parents, but we still know we're going to be pushed. In fact, we start "training" weeks before the trip, though there's really no way to prepare for hiking above 10,000 feet except to show up and start climbing.
We packed our gear and headed for the Skinny Fish Trail in the White River National Forest. By the end of the hike we had covered 5.16 miles, climbed 1,132 feet, and spent over two hours making our way through one of the most beautiful landscapes in northwest Colorado.
One of the most striking sights along the trail was the mountainside itself. At first glance, it looked as though thousands of giant matchsticks had been scattered across the landscape—gray trunks standing where a dense forest once grew. I later learned we were walking through the aftermath of the Big Fish Fire, a lightning-caused wildfire that burned more than 17,000 acres of the Flat Tops Wilderness in 2002. Because it occurred in designated wilderness, much of the fire was allowed to burn naturally. More than two decades later, the skeletons of the old forest still stand while aspens, grasses, wildflowers, sage, and young conifers slowly reclaim the mountain. It wasn't a picture of death so much as a picture of recovery.
It was a normal Colorado hike—breathing hard, adjusting to the thin air, and settling into the steady rhythm of climbing. We had just entered a patch of timber between two open switchbacks when the silence exploded. Branches snapped. Heavy footsteps crashed through the trees.
"Moose!"
They were only about thirty feet away.
Before we could fully process what was happening, an enormous bull moved uphill with a cow and two calves close behind. For several long seconds, all four stopped and looked back at us while we stood perfectly still, hoping we had not wandered too close. Thankfully, they continued over the ridge and disappeared into the timber.
Having recently watched the viral Yellowstone bison attack videos, I was keenly aware of how quickly a beautiful wildlife encounter can become something much more dangerous. We had been fortunate.
By the time we reached Skinny Fish Lake, the scenery almost felt like a bonus. The moose encounter had already made the day unforgettable. Still, the crystal-clear water, surrounding peaks, and peaceful setting made for a perfect place to catch our breath before beginning the descent.
As we left the woods, I caught one last glimpse of those small oval aspen leaves trembling in the Sagewood Wind. I have always loved aspens. Someday I'd like to return when the mountains are covered in their brilliant gold.
Back at the house, we cleaned up and headed to one of our favorite summer traditions—the Steamboat Rodeo. After a tremendous dinner at Cypress, we walked over to the arena. The rodeo is wonderfully attended, and with the Steamboat mountains glowing in the fading evening light, it felt like one of those perfect Colorado nights that you wish could last just a little longer.
The following day (Saturday) was reserved for the real test.
Years ago, we rode sixty miles with Conner and Melissa, but the forecast was calling for extreme heat—one Garmin would eventually register 104 degrees—so we wisely settled for a "shorter" 38-mile gravel loop around the Steamboat area.
Of course, "shorter" is a relative term.
Lisa and I ride e-bikes while Conner and Melissa power through on nothing but strong legs and stronger lungs. Even with a little battery assistance, it was a demanding ride. Three long climbs were followed by a thrilling descent down Cow Creek Trail, where your bike, your bones, and your teeth all rattled together like a rattlesnake's tail.
An early mechanical problem delayed us just enough to push much of the ride into the hottest part of the day. Thankfully, our batteries lasted this year, but by the final two miles everyone was running on fumes.
When we finally rolled back into town, our computers read 38.92 miles, 2,192 feet of climbing, and 3 hours and 20 minutes in the saddle. We were completely spent.
I shuffled into the nearby store for recovery drinks feeling more like a zombie than a cyclist. Thankfully, recovery in Steamboat has its rewards. We finished the evening with what I still believe may be the greatest pizza ever made during Mambo Italiano's happy hour, while watching England defeat Norway on the big screen in the Men's World Cup.
Later that evening we took the dogs for one last walk before turning in.
That evening, as the sun settled behind the mountains, the furnace of the day finally gave way to Colorado's remarkable cool. The Sagewood Wind returned, gentle now, carrying the familiar fragrance of sage and dry earth as though the land itself were breathing again. During our walk I looked toward a small church on the edge of town where three simple crosses stood silhouetted against the glowing western sky. It was one of those moments that asks nothing of you except to stop and take it in. The week had been full of steep climbs, aching legs, wildlife encounters, laughter around the table, and memories with family. But standing there beneath that evening sky, with the wind quietly moving through the valley and the crosses watching over it all, I was reminded that some places do more than challenge us—they restore us. And sometimes the greatest gift a journey gives is not the miles we've covered, but the quiet it leaves behind in our souls.
It had simply been one of those perfect Colorado summer days.
Sunday
Sunday is always special. It is the Lord's Day, and it's hard not to worship when surrounded by a place that so effortlessly declares His glory.
We packed up and drove toward Rabbit Ears Pass to hike a section of the famed Continental Divide Trail. Like the Appalachian Trail in the East, the CDT stretches thousands of miles, from Canada to Mexico through the spine of the Rockies.
Conner decided to turn the hike into a training run, disappearing up the trail while the rest of us settled into a slower pace. We kept in touch with satellite radios, which somehow made the whole experience even more enjoyable. At nearly 10,000 feet, the elevation took a little edge off the summer heat, and the morning couldn't have been more beautiful.
About two miles into the hike, Melissa stopped and pointed toward the horizon.
Four miles away, a narrow column of smoke was rising above the treeline like a chimney.
This wasn't yesterday's smoke drifting on the wind.
We were watching a wildfire begin.
Melissa immediately reported it, only to learn that authorities had just become aware of it themselves. We continued a little farther, but as the plume widened and darkened, we all agreed it was time to head back. It proved to be a wise decision. By the time we returned to the trailhead, a second fire had appeared in the distance.
As I write this, both fires are still burning. Thankfully, no homes have been lost, though evacuations have begun. One report suggested that one fire may have started from a tractor baling hay—a sobering reminder of how easily disaster can begin when heat, drought, and wind come together.
Driving back toward Hayden, I couldn't stop thinking about what we had just witnessed. Looking through the photos and videos on my phone, a song title suddenly appeared in my mind.
Colorado Furnace.
The fire...
The relentless sun...
The dry wind...
The long climbs...
It all fit together.
I'm back in the Colorado furnace,
Where the mountains test your soul.
Where beauty waits beyond the struggle,
And the fire makes you whole.
That evening we took the dogs on another walk, and once again I noticed something remarkable about Colorado.
The furnace never wins.
No matter how fiercely the sun burns all afternoon, the evening always comes. Without Alabama's heavy humidity to trap the heat, the cool mountain air quietly returns. The Sagewood Wind begins to move again. The day's harshness simply lets go.
Back at the house, I rewrote the ending of the song.
The furnace keeps no final word...
The evening does, every time.
That line stayed with me long after I wrote it.
It struck me that the mountains preach a quiet sermon every single day. Heat is real. Fire is real. Hard climbs are real. But none of them have the last word. Mercy arrives with the evening breeze.
Monday
I woke Monday morning already feeling the sadness that comes with the last full day of a trip.
Conner headed to work while Melissa, Lisa, and I squeezed every remaining drop out of Colorado. Because of the wildfire smoke, we chose a trail near Steamboat Lake, hoping to find clearer air.
The Prospector Trail stretched 8.38 miles with another 1,070 feet of climbing. By then my legs were tired, but my heart certainly wasn't.
The trail wound through forests, meadows, ponds, and open ridges, each mile seeming to offer another postcard view. Melissa had to keep us moving because she was scheduled to teach an exercise class back in Hayden that evening. I, on the other hand, was perfectly content to admire every overlook a little longer than necessary.
Eventually she smiled and asked,
"Can you make it one more mile to the fire road?"
I perked up immediately.
The narrow trail wasn't exactly built for a guy my size, and the thought of stretching my stride on a wide road sounded wonderful.
When we stepped out into the open, beside a beautiful meadow and a quiet pond...
...there they were.
Two young moose.
We froze.
Melissa quietly asked,
"Uh-oh...where's Mama?"
It was exactly the right question.
A few days earlier we had encountered an entire moose family, so I knew these calves almost certainly weren't alone. We slowly backed away, but I couldn't help laughing to myself.
"But this is the ROAD..."
It's amazing how differently a tired brain thinks.
Melissa finally suggested we ease along the far edge, single file.
We took perhaps fifteen careful steps.
Then Mama stood up.
She had been lying in the pond the entire time.
At that point the decision was made for us.
We backed away slowly until, after what felt like a very long standoff, she calmly led the calves into the timber.
I wasn't tired anymore.
Adrenaline is a wonderful thing.
As if one wildlife encounter weren't enough, a mile farther down the road we walked into the middle of hundreds of free-ranging sheep. The sheep themselves weren't the concern.
The Great Pyrenees guarding them were.
We soon realized we had one sheep dog ahead of us...and another behind us.
There wasn't much to do except keep walking.
I removed my sunglasses and hat, wanting the dogs to clearly see my face, and we spoke calmly as we passed. Thankfully, they decided we weren't a threat.
The sheep, however, never stopped complaining.
With one final mile remaining, I slowed down once again. The breeze carried the scent of sage through the trees. We caught one last view of Steamboat Lake, saw smoke from the Rabbit Ears Fire hanging in the distance, and watched the aspen leaves shimmer in the afternoon light.
When we reached the trailhead, I knew another song had been born.
I hadn't planned to write One More Trail but Colorado had other ideas.
The next morning, saying goodbye was every bit as hard as I expected. The flight home was easy enough, but part of me was still somewhere along those trails, listening to the wind move through the sage.
I came to Colorado expecting the mountains to leave the deepest impression.
Instead, it was the wind.
The Sagewood Wind carried the scent of sage, the memory of family, the challenge of steep climbs, the reminder that beauty often waits beyond effort, and perhaps most importantly, the quiet assurance that the furnace never has the final word.
The evening does.
Every time.
Note: I did read the Crime/mystery novel “A Murder of Quality” by John Le Carre that I picked up from the free book stand at the Hayden Library on day 1. It was OK, there were some interesting parallels of that setting - An elite private school named “The Carne School” and my work environment of the last 36 years!
Anyway- that’s a wrap- I love visiting Colorado no matter the season!
Three Videos:
And you can listen to these songs as well:
Don't Let Goodbye Get the Final Say








