This morning's trail run began at the Cañada Bonita trailhead (#282) off of Camp May Road near the ski hill. I hiked up the hills but ran on the flat and downhill portions. The trail was beautiful, especially since everything was so green, lush, and damp after the rains we had the last couple of days. Wildflowers lined the trails. I took the cross country trail cutoff since I like it better than the actual Cañada Bonita Trail. It meanders through the trees and is much prettier than the direct route. After about a mile or so, the trail opens up to the meadow (Babelfish said that Cañada Bonita means "pretty gorge") and the trail rims the outside edge. At the top edge of the meadow the trail goes up over the mountain, becoming the Guaje Canyon Trail. I hiked and jogged that trail until I found a spot overlooking part of the Valle Caldera, the remains of a collapsed volcano that exploded 1.2 million years ago. From there, I headed left at the fork of the Pipeline Trail and the Guaje Canyon Trail and went another half a mile or so to another overlook (at 9600 feet) with a sheer drop beneath me. I sat there and contemplated life for a bit, enjoying the beauty around me. I ran a little more along the trail and
after the GPS said I went 3 miles, I turned around and jogged back, encountering 3 squirrels and a butterfly that I almost ended up eating. Six total miles along some of the most beautiful trails in the area. I'm so glad that the Cerro Grande fire missed this area when it burned through the area 9 years ago. I can't wait to do this run again in the fall, when the aspen trees have all turned their golden fall colors. It'll be so beautiful.
P.S. I was told that the Los Alamos Pajarito Trail Runs Festival in the fall follows the same route that I went on today, just a longer distance (a half marathon as well as the 10K I just did) before the turnaround spot.
Neat
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