Sprague Lake Loop
Fully paved and wheelchair accessible, with a view of Hallett Peak reflected on a calm morning. No permit.
Colorado · Stamp 11 / 63
Sixty peaks over 12,000 feet, one road that climbs above the trees entirely, and a lake for every kind of traveler.
Most mountain roads stay in the trees, switchbacking through forest until a summit clearing finally opens the view. Trail Ridge Road does something stranger: for eleven straight miles it runs above 11,000 feet, above where trees can survive at all, through a landscape of tundra, wind, and rock that looks more like the Arctic than Colorado. It is the highest continuous paved road in the country, and it treats you like you earned the view by simply driving there.
Below the road, sixty peaks push past 12,000 feet inside a park smaller than many Western counties, which is part of why it feels so vertical. Longs Peak anchors the skyline at 14,259 feet, visible from Denver on a clear day, and climbers have been testing its Keyhole Route since 1868.
Come for Bear Lake's mirror-still water. Stay for the elk bugling through Moraine Park at dusk in September. Read the story, book the timed entry above before you go, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature's peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees.John Muir
Six ways to spend your time, from a paved lakeside stroll to eleven miles of alpine tundra by car.
The park's most photographed lake, mirroring Hallett Peak on a calm morning. A half-mile paved loop gets you the whole view.
Everyone · 30 minEleven miles above 11,000 feet, the highest continuous paved road in the country, with pullouts at every impossible view.
The signature driveEvery September, bull elk bugle and spar through Moraine Park and Horseshoe Park at dawn and dusk. Bring a long lens and keep your distance.
Fall · wildlife watchersThe highest visitor center in the National Park System, at 11,796 feet, with tundra walks right outside the door.
Everyone · half hourOpen nearly year-round, close to trailheads and the elk-viewing meadows. Reserve early on Recreation.gov.
Campers · book aheadA paved, shuttle-served road connecting most of the park's classic trailheads. Early morning riders beat both the traffic and the timed-entry crowd.
Cyclists · early startsAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a note on which peak requires a permit and which just requires nerve.
Fully paved and wheelchair accessible, with a view of Hallett Peak reflected on a calm morning. No permit.
The park's most iconic short walk, mostly paved, ending where it starts with Hallett Peak the whole way around. No permit.
A shaded, well-graded climb to a lively waterfall, and the start of several longer trails deeper into Glacier Gorge. No permit.
Past Nymph and Dream Lakes to a cirque lake tucked directly beneath Hallett Peak and Flattop Mountain. No permit.
A scramble past a waterfall and through the Loch to a cirque lake ringed by spires. The last stretch involves wet rock. No permit.
Class 3 scrambling above the Keyhole with real exposure on the Narrows and the Trough. A pre-dawn start and a wilderness permit are required for camping; day climbers must beat the afternoon storms.
Timed entry via Recreation.gov required May 22–Oct 18 · wilderness permits for overnight camping · no permit for most day hikes
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
Thousands summer in the high country and drop into Moraine and Horseshoe Park by September, when the bugling starts and the traffic follows.
Look for rams working the cliffs near Trail Ridge Road, and watch for herds crossing near Sheep Lakes on Highway 34 in early summer.
The park's only bear species, mostly shy and mostly in the lower forests. Food storage rules apply at every campsite.
A tiny, round-eared relative of the rabbit that lives entirely above treeline and calls out a sharp warning chirp from the rocks. Climate-sensitive and worth the listen.
Common throughout the lower valleys, easiest to spot in the meadows around Beaver Meadows and Moraine Park in early morning light.
A chunky alpine rodent that spends summer sunbathing on rocks near the Alpine Visitor Center and most of the winter asleep underground.
Rare on the east side but regular in the willow flats of the Kawuneeche Valley on the park's quieter west side.
Above 11,000 feet, plants grow inches tall and bloom in weeks, adapted to a growing season shorter than almost anywhere else in Colorado.
Dominates the cool, high forests below treeline, often twisted into flagged shapes by relentless mountain wind.
Fills the lower valleys with brilliant gold each fall, drawing photographers to Bear Lake Road and Wild Basin in equal measure.
Colorado's state flower grows in cool, moist pockets along many trails, its blue-and-white blooms distinctive against the granite.
Trees at the edge of treeline grow bent and stunted by wind, sometimes only a few feet tall despite being over a century old.
A tiny, dense cushion of pink flowers that hugs the alpine rock to survive winds that would shred anything taller.
Trail Ridge Road is the highest continuous paved road in the United States, cresting above 12,000 feet for several miles.
The park protects sixty named peaks over 12,000 feet, anchored by Longs Peak at 14,259 feet, visible from downtown Denver on a clear day.
About a third of the park lies above treeline, a true alpine tundra ecosystem more commonly found hundreds of miles farther north.
The Continental Divide runs directly through the park, meaning rain falling on one side eventually reaches the Pacific, and on the other, the Atlantic.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Rocky Mountain deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
North to Montana's Crown of the Continent: from one alpine road to another, higher and colder.
Open Stamp 12 → The collectionSee the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn Rocky Mountain into a road trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.