
Hallett Peak in Rocky Mtn. Nat'l Park
This week, President Obama signed into law a bill that makes me happy. It will create millions of acres of new wilderness and hundreds of miles of rivers, save natural areas from oil and gas leasing, and expand trails. It’s called the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009.
In doing so, he protected two of my favorite spots on the planet, Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado and the adjacent Indian Peaks Wilderness.
The law will designate nearly 250,000 acres of backcountry within the park and next to the existing wilderness area as wilderness. This tract includes 94 percent of the park.
This new act will save Longs Peak, the first Colorado 14er I ever climbed and on which I met a great friend, and sister peak Mount Meeker, a 13er that’s high on my wish list. The law also will add 1,000 acres to the adjacent Indian Peaks Wilderness Area in the Arapaho National Forest, a beautiful, rugged place full of sharp summits and smooth lakes.
This news has been a long time coming; President Nixon first recommended the acreage for wilderness designation in 1974.

Mt. Meeker in Rocky Mtn. Nat'l Park
Not much will change, and that’s the point. The wilderness designation protects the land and makes sure the character and awe-inspiring views of this land remain the same for future generations. According to The Wilderness Society, “while permanently protecting and solidifying the wild character of the park lands in perpetuity, wilderness designation will do little to change current park management and function.”
You’ll still be able to hike, backpack, climb, snowshoe, ski, fish, and ride horses along the 355 miles of trail there. You can still drive up Trail Ridge Road–which tops 12,000′ and lets you see miles of peaks over open tundra–and the more-burly unpaved Fall River Road.
The wildlife there will gain protection, too, including the bears, mountain lions, and the herds of hundreds of elk that emerge from the forest in the fall belting out the haunting bugling sounds of their rut.
Wilderness designation will clarify park management procedures, prevent roads from cutting up the landscape, and allow scientific research to continue there. It also will mean more clear air, clean water, and open spaces that benefit public health in Colorado.
To me personally, and I suspect to many other hikers and lovers of mountains, this law means protection of some of what is nearest and dearest to the heart. The Rockies give my body a place to spend days full of hard, honest, energizing exercise; my eyes a place to see pure natural beauty; and my spirit a place to fly.
To see more scenes from some of these areas, view my photos of Mount Audubon and Pawnee Peak in the Indian Peaks Wilderness and Ypsilon Lakes in Rocky Mountain National Park. May this special, newly saved place make your spirit fly as well.

Talk about climate change!