FOTP trail crew volunteers, were last seen entering Bigfoot territory on the Crowe Gulch trail on the morning of August 26, 2023. The mission: clear corridor on this trail and the Mt. Esther trail in preparation for the Bigfoot Benefit hike last fall … as Denise, Carol, and Doug entered the mist they encountered bigfoot … they haven’t been seen since, or have they?
Friends of the Peak
August 2023 News Letter – Fenceline Repairs
Well, that tumbling boulder sure gave us a lot of things to fix on Barr trail. Here are some pictures of what we were doing on our first four days of fence repair, May 20 and 25, and June 8 and 11.
May 20: Our first job was to make a good path around the boulder. Here’s me sawing through the mangled trunk of the tree that finally stopped the boulder.
We’ve talked about “the boulder” that tumbled down the hillside and crashed through the fence in multiple places. But there was more than one boulder tumbling down the hill, although we don’t really know how many. It’s clear this smaller (about 4’x2’x3’) boulder (to the left of the trail in the next picture) was a new arrival. We’re glad it stopped where it did. And we decided to leave it right where it is, and build the new fence around it.
On May 25 we were back on Barr trail, doing routine (not boulder damage) post and rail work Here’s Mike installing a new fence rail in a scenic location.
Then we needed to do some quick repairs on the tread on the trail segment above the boulder. Here Susan argues with Brian while I take pictures and Courteney does all the work
On June 8 we were back to repairing fence damaged by the boulder above SB9. Here’s Shanda getting ready to drill the holes in the post so she can attach the rails.
Finally, on June 11 we built a drain structure on the trail before we replaced the segment of fence that now goes over it. Since the big boulder followed the existing drainage channel, we decided it would be a good place to enhance and armor the drain. The drawing on the picture explains what we want it to do. And so far, it’s doing its job very well.
So that’s what we got done by June 11. But wait, there’s more!
We’ve done much more than this. Stay tuned, I’ll get another newsletter out as soon as I can. Better yet, there are still a few more workdays on the schedule this season. Join us and see for yourself!
Sign up at https://friendsofthepeak.org/sign-up/
– Steve Driska
2023 Trail Work Season Recap Part 1
Our 2023 fieldwork season was scheduled to start on Thursday May 11. A group of Walmart managers were attending a meeting in the area and had volunteered to help us on Barr trail. They were registered, parking was arranged, and we looked to be off to a great start.
But there was lightning, thunder and over 3” of rain on this date. and Brian had to cancel the workday because of safety issues. It was the right call, and that was confirmed when we learned about the tumbling boulders. On our May 20 workday we assessed the damage.
In the picture above, Brian is standing next to largest of the boulders so you can get a sense of its size. It tumbled down the hillside, demolishing fences on three segments of the trail, and came to rest in the middle of the trail below switchback 9 (at 38° 51′ 18.438″ N, 104° 56′ 21.228″ W, which is about 0.9 miles up from the trailhead)
We sawed through the crushed and mangled tree trunk, removed it, and made a smooth and level path around the boulder on the uphill side. The path is narrow but passable.
Further up the trail, Susan and Brian survey the damage to the fence on the trail segment directly above the boulder
And the segment above this took a beating too. The picture above is above switchback 10 at milepost 1.0. Some of these rails (the lighter colored ones) were just replaced in 2022
The map below shows what happened. The boulder moved 243′ vertically and 390′ horizontally. The stars show where it broke through the fencing, and the yellow boxes mark the switchback numbering system we use, starting from the trailhead.
So…… in addition to the usual maintenance work on Barr trail, we’ve had a lot more to do.
Stay tuned and we’ll update you on the progress we’ve made so far. Better yet, come see it for yourself- sign up for our Barr trail post and rail workdays at https://friendsofthepeak.org/sign-up/
Friends of the Peak Newsletter: March 2023
Hello Friends,
We hope 2023 is off to a good start for you and that you’ve enjoyed the great outdoors
this winter. It’s time for another Friends of the Peak newsletter highlighting what we did in 2022.
At the beginning of 2022, we added three new board members, Vickie Laughlin, Russell Iverson, and Steve Driska. Brian Van Valkenburg scheduled an entire season of work for 2022. In addition to our usual projects, our friends from the Pikes Peak Group of the Colorado Mountain Club, led by Tom Mowle, asked us to partner with them to re-route a segment of the trail to Horsethief Park. This was to prevent the closure of the trail by the Forest Service because of a land dispute; a recent survey showed the trail crossed private property. You probably heard about this land dispute because it was well publicized in the media. This trail starts at Highway 67 and allows access to many popular destinations, including Horsethief Falls, Pancake Rocks, and Sentinel Point. This became a high-priority project for us.
Before the 2022 season even started, board members were doing scout hikes on trails where we planned work, specifically on the North Catamount section of the Ring the Peak Trail and of course, on Barr trail. Our volunteers were also helping plan the Horsethief Park re-route project.
We started the season on a hot and dry Thursday in mid-May doing tread and drain work on Barr trail as multiple grass fires broke out in the city below. Nine days later, our first scheduled Post and Rail workday on Barr had to be canceled by a foot of snow on the trail. Colorado weather- you gotta love it!
In early June, we worked on the Catamount segment of the Ring the Peak trail. This beautiful trail continues the dirt road along the north shore of North Catamount Reservoir towards Raspberry Mountain and the Mennonite camp off Highway 67. We worked on about a mile of trail that hadn’t been touched for several years but was still in good shape. At its western end, we removed many small evergreens and shrubs taking over the trail. Further east (picture), we relocated about 100’ of trail upslope a few yards to avoid a deep eroded incision in the road caused by water draining to the adjacent North Catamount Creek.
June 21 was Pikes Peak United Way’s Day of Action. A great crew of community volunteers from United Way joined us to work on the Seven Bridges Trail. Thank you to these amazing volunteers who gave their time and energy moving rocks, hauling timbers, and digging in the dirt.
Saturday and Sunday, June 18 and 19, were the first two days of the Horsethief Park trail reroute with the Colorado Mountain Club. The new trail was about 550’ long, requiring extensive removal of small trees in the tread and a significant amount of rock wall construction. The trail had been staked and flagged, and sawyers had previously cut trees in the tread, leaving about three feet of trunk to use as leverage as we dug out the roots. About 45 volunteers worked on the first day and 25 on the second.
How the trail looked when we finished up on the first day
Here’s Dan working on the rock wall and ramp to connect the new trail to the old trail uphill from
the segment on private property.
And yes, all those rocks Dan is standing on were installed that weekend. After that first weekend of work, the forest service was satisfied that the trail was a functional reroute. This meant that they would not have close the old trail. Success! But both FotP and CMC have very high standards, so several volunteers from both organizations returned later to do finishing touches on the trail.
Back to Barr Trail:
We knew from our scout hikes that extensive work was needed on the fences along Barr trail. We had four workdays repairing fences on Barr Trail (“post and rail days”). As anyone who has hiked on Barr trail knows, trying to repair the fences is a never-ending task. Most problems are caused by age, weather, and falling trees, but some are caused by hikers taking shortcuts through or over the fences.
Here’s a “before” picture of fence damage at the end of winter, above switchback 10, about a
mile up from the trailhead. A tree had fallen on the rails to the left, breaking them and splitting
the post. Surprisingly, the post was still usable. As shown in the following picture, we replaced the two broken rails in July.
Our final Post & Rail Day on Barr was in August. These volunteers worked through a light rain on a
pleasantly cool and foggy day. Despite the weather, they’re all smiling.
This year we also spent a few days on the Saint Mary’s Falls and Seven Bridges trails, two of our favorites. On one of our work days on the Seven Bridges trail, we worked to protect the trail from further erosion towards the creek.
Brian, Mike, Dan, and Denise are setting stones in one of two drains we greatly expanded and armored to better handle water draining across the trail from the steep hillside on the right.
This year the Pikes Peak Ascent and Marathon moved to a new weekend later in the year. This meant our three traditional workdays to remove slip and trip hazards just before race weekend was held in September. On the first day, we started from the trailhead and worked on the bottom of the trail, ending at switchback 18 (the “corral” in trail worker slang, about 1.75 miles from the trailhead). Our relationship with PPAM is excellent; the organizers (and racers) appreciate our efforts to make the course safer. In return, on two of the workdays, PPAM gave us a ride up Longs Ranch Road with marathon staff who were hauling water tanks up for the aid stations. (Anytime you can get a ride and not have to carry tools up 2,000’ vertical feet, it’s a real treat!) This allowed us to start work at No Name Creek near milepost 3.0 and work uphill to milepost 3.5 and then down to the junction with the Incline return trail (near milepost 2.5) on one of the days. We finished tuning up the trail from the Incline return trail down to switchback 18 on the final workday.
Some of our friends from the AdAmAn club joined us on a cool and rainy Saturday for this work, and on the following Thursday, a group of volunteers from Cisco joined us. Both groups were great and fun to get to know and work with.
Our AdAmAn friends at PPAM headquarters before they got wet.
Breaking up into work teams and dividing the tools at No Name Creek. The rain didn’t hamper our work, and many of us enjoyed seeing these familiar places in different weather. (At least I did.) Our volunteers from Cisco had nicer weather the following Thursday.
Here are some of the Cisco folks and some of our “usual suspects” at the tool talk.
Besides removing slip and trip hazards, we cut back scrub oak and mountain mahogany encroaching on the trail (i.e., corridor clearing). Whenever possible, we cleaned out drains.
Here are two of the Cisco volunteers rejuvenating an existing drain near milepost 2.0:
Finally, we had something new:
The Second Annual Pikes Peak Bigfoot Hunt to benefit Friends of the Peak! Russ Iverson organized, publicized (even appearing on local TV!), and starred in this production as Bigfoot himself. The hunt was on the Mt. Esther/Crowe Gulch trail along the Pikes Peak Highway on a beautiful Saturday in late September. Those who bought tickets to be Bigfoot hunters and successfully found him were eligible for neat outdoor gifts.
Here are some happy prize winners getting their gifts from Russ at the night’s after-party. Like Clark Kent and Superman, you never see Russ and Bigfoot together.
So, to summarize, it was great to be back outside again, working on the trails we all love! The next newsletter will cover the end-of-season banquet, our post-season trail work on Barr, our involvement with the Manitou High School project, and pictures of our annual tool cleaning (Spoiler Alert: sparks will be flying).
Friends of the Peak, October 2022 Newsletter, Part 1: What we did in 2021
Part 1 of 2, October 2022
Hello Friends,
You haven’t heard from us for a while, and we’d like to let you know what we’ve been up to in the last two years. By the way, did you know that midway through 2019, our web address changed to www.friendsofthepeak.org? We hope no one has been looking for us at the old address.
We didn’t have any volunteer work days in 2020 because of the Covid-19 pandemic. But erosion and weather didn’t take the year off. Weather, water, and foot traffic degraded the trails and the fences. In addition, many new trail users came out to try hiking and biking on area trails during the pandemic, increasing the wear and tear on the trails beyond what we normally see.
With the availability of Covid vaccines in early 2021, we were able to have a short 2021 work season, and here are some of the highlights:
In July 2021, we finally got the tools dirty, repairing damage to the post and rail fencing on Barr Trail. In the first picture, Brian is getting the tools organized to start work. We also did more fence work on Barr later in the season.
In August, we worked on the Elk Park Knoll trail. This trail was in pretty good shape. We started at the trailhead near timberline, and worked our way down through the pines into the aspens.
In September, we were back on the Barr trail a few times to do more fence repair and to lay the groundwork (literally) for our upcoming work day with some of our friends from the AdAmAn club. On our workday with AdAmAn, we finished a set of four rock steps at switchback 11, about one mile up from the trailhead. This was our last workday of 2021.
Here’s the crew, and the rock steps we finished.
It’s always satisfying to do an improvement like this where the finished look of the steps is natural and blends in with the surroundings as they’ve always been there. For those unfamiliar with rock steps, each of the four big rocks is like an iceberg—most of each rock is buried, for stability.
Another positive thing about this day was the parking situation. This was the first day we could arrange limited free reserved parking for volunteers in the Barr trailhead parking lot. While we’ve had some frustration with illegal parkers taking our reserved spots since then, it’s been a great improvement. The cooperation of the Manitou Springs parking department is greatly appreciated and it has continued throughout the 2022 work season.
It was a great finish to the 2021 season, and it set us up for an even better season in 2022. What we did in 2022 will be covered in part 2 of the newsletter, coming later this fall.
About Friends of the Peak
Friends of the Peak is an all-volunteer organization with no paid staff. We only work on public lands. Our work area is bounded on the north by US 24, on the west by CO 67, on the south by Gold Camp Road, and on the east by 31st Street.
Because we’re a grass-roots organization, we live here and hike, bike, and run on the trails here, and we see where problems develop throughout the year. We coordinate with land managers to work on the problems we think most need our attention.
We have many volunteers with a wealth of experience who’ve learned what works (and what doesn’t) on trails built on our soils in our climate. These experienced folks are happy to pass this knowledge on to newer volunteers. You might say we have “institutional memory.” We work side-by-side with new volunteers and are eager to teach them skills that help them become more capable workers and develop an interest in trail work. We believe this fosters a sense of stewardship of the trails.
Please Report Trail Problems
Please report trail problems to us if you see trail problems in our area. You can email us at
info@friendsofthepeak.org or you can report it on our website, or you can message us on our Facebook page or you can join our Facebook group
If your report concerns a trail maintained by another group, we will pass on reports as needed. Please note that any change takes time since we are volunteers, and we also need to get the approval from land managers for projects.
Donating: Why and How
Even though we don’t have paid staff, we still have expenses. For example, lumber for posts, rails, and steps; hardware, replacing tools. And watermelon. Yes, we have watermelon and other snacks for volunteers after the workday. And, of course, tee-shirts and other swag for volunteers that get our name out in front of the public.
You can help us by becoming a member and by donating through our website using PayPal, a credit card, or just sending a check.
Meet the Board
Friends of the Peak is excited to welcome the newest 2022 FOTP board members:
Russ Iverson, Creator of the Bigfoot Benefit Hike
Vickie Laughlin, Treasurer
Steve Driska, Assistant Tool Manager
They join our continuing members:
Steve Bremner, President
Rick Hessek, Secretary
Brian VanValkenburg, Vice President and Project Coordinator
Kevin Shaw, Membership Coordinator
Susan Jarvis-Weber, Outreach and Education
We will miss the presence of Shel and Don Little this year. After her husband, Don, passing in 2019, Shel continued to offer support as a valuable board member until this spring, when she resigned to follow new life paths. She has been greatly missed, but we wish her the best in her newest adventures.
If you are interested in becoming a board member, FOTP Board Meetings are open to the public. We meet on the 2nd Tuesday of the month, at 6:00 by Zoom or at locations to be announced. Don’t hesitate to get in touch with us for details at info@friendsofthepeak.org
How to Stay in Touch with Us
On the web: www.friendsofthepeak.org This is where we publish our calendar of work days. More importantly, this is the ONLY place you can register to join us on a workday.
On Facebook: https://Facebook.com/FriendsofthePeak
You can visit our Facebook page even if you don’t have a Facebook account. This is where we can quickly and easily post news, and announcements, show pictures of our trail work, and things like that. But remember, you can’t sign up for workdays there; you have to go to our webpage to sign up! https://friendsofthepeak.org/sign-up/
You can join our Friends of the Peak Volunteer page on Facebook, where you can post your own trail-related news and pictures, and see those your friends posted.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/fotpvolunteer
The next newsletter will be about our 2022 season. Be watching for it!