Like generations of southern Colorado travelers, I stumbled upon the Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument in the western foothills of Pikes Peak.
The national monument brings an unexpected glimpse into a long-gone world, a window to a past when colossal redwood trees loomed over a humid, swampy Colorado from 34 million years ago.
I lost track of my visits, but several stand out from the past 17 years. In October 2008 , I never expected the fossil beds would become local. Even in September 2015, when we wandered the visitor center and toured the Hornbeck Homestead, an 1870s home once part of a larger ranch led by Adeline Hornbeck, the fossil beds never felt like they might be next door someday.
Then May 2019 happened and I can’t imagine going without the fossil beds. I have visited dozens of times, attended the park’s 50th anniversary celebration, hiked all 15 miles of trails, and looked at Jupiter’s moons during a star party (the national monument is an International Dark Sky Park).
I let my visits slide a little in 2024. I don’t really know why. In late February, I realized I let my annual National Park pass lapse, so I trekked up the hill the Florissant.
Winter was still strong on a sunny, almost spring-like day. A few inches of solid snow coated the ancient lakebed that hosts the fossil beds. The elevation of 8,500 feet provides a respite in the summer, as temperatures usually run 10 or more degrees cooler than in the Springs. The wildflowers bloom later, and winter returns faster.
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Not on the map |
I relish the pond not on the trail maps that draws dozens of bird species in summer, and where hoofprints cross the ice in winter. I wait for the first calls of the prairie dogs from a massive colony past the pond, or the chirps from the ground squirrels near the Hornbeck Homestead.
This trip I finally stopped to watch the park film, and learned what happened to the rest of the redwood trunks. The stumps run about 15 feet tall because that was the height of the lava mud that covered the valley. The 200-plus feet of tree that stood above the flow died and rotted away, while the stumps gradually fossilized.
What makes Florissant an easy spot to revisit is the nature of its fossils. We have the redwoods, relatives to today’s coastal redwoods, the tallest trees on the planet. Like living redwoods, they can humble visitors with their size and longevity. The monument is often quiet, and there is space to contemplate the world of these giant trees.
Florissant also preserves a vast trove of tiny creatures with its collection of insects and invertebrate fossils. Those include an ancient wasp (which serves as the fossil beds’ logo), a tsetse fly (only found in Africa today), beetles, molluscs, and snails. Finding these tiny remnants is a miracle of sorts.
Hard work preserved this land. At one time, two private attractions covered the fossil beds – Colorado’s petrified forest, then a lodge that include more of the stumps. Walt Disney bought one of the stumps and it is still displayed at Disneyland in California. When the land went up for sale and was targeted for a housing development, the locals organized, and eventually the federal government acquired the land, and the national monument came into existence.
But now the parks are in the crosshairs. Rangers aren’t lazy. They tend to show passion toward their work. Most people take less money to stay in these jobs. In 20 years of heavy national park travel, I have rarely met an unfriendly one.
Staff cuts have arrived. Florissant Fossil Beds announced it would close entirely on Mondays and Tuesdays – slow days for an out-of-the-way national monument, but indicative of a cut in employees. have never lived so close to national forests (Colorado has 20 million acres of them). The Forest Service suffers even more. Homeless people squat at campgrounds, often trashing them in the process. They conduct controlled burns to lower the overall wildfire risk. Seasonal camp hosts oversee campgrounds.
Staff shortages will bring trouble to these special places. Human beings behave terribly when no one is looking. We criticisize the tourons who act terribly in our national parks, but they have the freedom to act because most NPS units already were understaffed.
Florissant has limited visitor center hours in the past due to low staffing. It is hardly the lone NPS site to struggle with this problem. Having a national park site in my backyard – 45 minutes away- I feel I need to spend more time there. Maybe even start volunteering as staff are unlikely to lose the target on their backs soon.
I’m not a fan to short-sighted decisions, and cutting the federal workforce feels stunningly short-sighted. When compared to the millions of years it took Florissant’s grove of redwood stumps to turn to stone, these actions that threaten endangered places occurred in a blink. Perhaps there’s a darker goal of privatization. Nothing would shock me right now.
We have to keep these places closer to us if we want any chance of keeping safe from people who can put a price on anything, but don’t understand that value goes beyond money.