Maddjoe wrote:
I will be traveling from MN to Mancos, CO (Mesa Verde). I am pulling a 26' fifth wheel with a diesel. Trying to figure out best route (easiest pulls) from Denver to Mesa Verde.
Thanks!
Do you want scenic, or just get there? You'll get differing responses, everyone has a favourite route. Since you want to use Denver as a starting point, there are a variety of different ways to get there:
I-25 south through Colorado Springs and Pueblo to Walsenburg, the US 160 West over North La Veta Pass (easy) and across the San Luis Valley through Alamosa and South Fork, up and over Wolf Creek Pass (not as difficult as legend would have one believe), dropping down into Pagosa Springs and then on to Durango and Mancos. Two passes, not overly difficult (lots of RVs do it all the time), some great scenery ops.
Alternatively, instead of going all the way to Walsenburg, you could take US 24 west from the Springs, up to Woodland Park and into the South Park area to US 285, then taking US 285 south into the San Luis Valley where it joins up with US 160 near South Fork, and then to same directions as the latter above. Goodly climb but not difficult from the Springs up to Woodland Park and then a beautiful drive on US 24 across the south part of South Park, to join up with US 285, which goes down to the Buena Vista area then on to Poncha Pass (another easy one) and then in to the north part of the San Luis Valley, which is flat and beautiful vistas of the mountains around it.
And another alternative, take US 285 south out of Denver through Evergreen, Conifer, Bailey and up/over Kenosha Pass (10000 feet/not difficult) and across South Park, which is at 9000-9600 feet most of the way across. Can get windy there, but it's an incredible drive, the mountain views are impressive. South of Fairplay, US 285 joins up with US 24, then see the paragraphs above. This route has a lot of ups/downs, particularly in the early part of it through Evergreen/Conifer/Pine Junction/Bailey; at Bailey, you'll be in a valley and will gradually climb to the top of Kenosha Pass. Sweeping views to die for at the top of the pass, and an easy drop down into South Park.
OR...from I-25 you can take US 50 from Pueblo west through Canon City and on through the Arkansas River Valley to Salida and Poncha Springs. Then see paragraphs above about crossing Poncha Pass. Very easy drive, curvy but not a lot of ups/downs.
Then there's....I-70. From Denver, major climb, major decent...flat...major climb to Johnson/Eisenhower Tunnels, major decent into Dillon/Silverthorne. Sorta kinda flat for a bit, then major climb up Vail Pass, then decline into the Vail Valley. From there, it's pretty much all down hill to Grand Junction. South on US 50 to Montrose, then US 550 south to CO 62 and on to CO 145 past Telluride and up/over Lizard Head Pass. Not even gonna tell you to stay on US 550 from Ouray to Silverton to Durango. Others may recommend this way, I will not, not for someone wanting to avoid major mountain passes.
There's other variations. If it were me, I'd consider either going all the way to Walsenburg and across US 160 (what I consider the easiest route for pulls), or take US 285 from Denver all the way to US 160. I cannot in good conscience recommend taking I-70 all the way across, since you're looking for the easiest pulls, and these are not. But that's just me.
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