Medicine Bow Rail Trail: 21-Mile Stretch of Solitude

0
1977

By Maggie Mullen, WyoFile.com — When immigrant laborers built it in the early 1900s, the Hahn’s Peak and Pacific Railway had bragging rights as the highest standard gauge railroad in the country at around 9,000 feet. 

Its railcars first hauled gold, then livestock, timber and coal, and soon mail and passengers between Colorado and Wyoming. The Monday, Wednesday and Friday trains ran south, while the Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday trains went north. 

The Medicine Bow Rail Trail in southeast Wyoming stretches across 21 miles of the Medicine Bow National Forest and is open to non-motorized travelers. (Maggie Mullen/WyoFile)

The corridor is much quieter today, with few signs to suggest its previous life as a buzzing sight of commerce. Now, bikers, runners, horseback riders and other non-motorized rovers will find a 21-mile stretch of solitude known as the Medicine Bow Rail Trail. 

The route snakes through large stands of aspen, fir, lodgepole and spruce, and passes by sagebrush meadows, ponds and swamps. Lake Owen marks one of its six trailheads, and there are several fire scars along the way, where blue skies silhouette burned trees.

Visitors have the Medicine Bow’s former Laramie District Ranger Clint Kyhl, U.S. Forest Service workers and Laramie citizens to thank for the trail’s 2001 transformation from an abandoned railway to a public-lands treasure. 

A map of the Medicine Bow Rail Trail. (Friends of the Medicine Bow Rail Trail)

Throughout the year, Friends of the Medicine Bow Rail Trail, a local non-profit, works to maintain and improve the trail. The organization also provides historical information, maps and tips for planning your own adventure on its website (https://medicinebowrailtrail.org).

WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.

(Visited 569 times, 4 visits today)