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 Steamboat Springs
 Hiking
Sarvis Creek Wilderness Area
Courtesy of EatStayPlay.com
Two large creeks, Service and Silver, exit the open valley of the Yampa River upstream of Steamboat Springs in Sarvis Creek Wilderness Area. Ducking under fallen logs, skirting gravel bars, and providing cover for the darting shadows of trout, the creeks meander through rolling forests in their relentless journey to the river. The trees open occasionally, sometimes at broken rock piles and other times in wet meadows that squish underfoot.
Draped like a soothing blanket over the tired granite hills of the southern Park Range, the impenetrable forests of Sarvis Creek Wilderness offer refuge for deer, elk, bear, and mountain lion. What makes Sarvis Creek an oddity among Colorado wildernesses is its complete lack of alpine tundra; its sheltering forests, evenly split among lodgepole pine and Engelmann spruce-subalpine fir, provide its reason for being.
Sarvis Creek's legislative journey demonstrates the power of perseverance. A kind of wilderness Cinderella story, Sarvis Creek was overlooked for many years while its more glamorous alpine neighbors, such as Eagles Nest and Mount Zirkel, achieved official designation. After all, wilderness areas are protected largely through the dedicated efforts of interested citizens, and for many years those active conservationists consisted of mountain climbers and fishermen drawn to the jagged peaks and crystalline lakes of the high country.
As interest grew in biological diversity and people became aware of the importance that lower elevation forests have as connections in the landscape, the protection of Sarvis Creek gained prominence among conservationists. The Forest Service unfortunately lagged behind, and during its 1979 nationwide study of roadless areas, the agency recommended against protecting Sarvis Creek as wilderness. But the Carter Administration overruled the Forest Service and directed that the area be studied again. By 1983, the Forest Service realized the ecological importance of preserving Sarvis Creek and changed its position to one of wilderness support. The area was finally designated in 1993.

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