Trail Rating: T2, P3, N2
Facilities: none
Waldo Canyon is one of the most popular trails in the region,
and for good reason. It has moderate grades, views of both city
and mountains, cool dark forest, and (mostly) good running
surfaces. Much of the trail faces south, making for reasonable
conditions year round. Waldo provides trail connections to the
Ute Pass Trail, Longs Ranch Road, Williams Canyon, Rampart
Range
Road, and the town of Cascade. It must have good vibes, since
several members of the Incline Club have chosen it for the
location of their wedding!
Section 1: Highway 24 to Waldo Canyon
(7 Miles total for the loop)
Waldo Canyon trail begins at a well-marked trailhead on
Highway 24 about two miles west of Manitou Springs. The parking
lot often fills on a nice day, so you can choose to run from
Manitou via the Ute Pass Trail (See long route below). To reach
the trailhead from the junction of Ute Pass Trail and Longs
Ranch Road, turn right and run down the well-maintained road to
the highway. The trailhead is directly across the highway.
The Waldo Canyon trail begins with some switchbacks and
stairs, but believe me, this is much less intimidating than the
old stairs that used to march straight up the hill in two long
flights. It soon straightens out and traverses eastward along
the south-facing hillside, quickly climbing away from the noise
of the highway.
It winds in and out of some ravines, crossing over a
ridge into Waldo Canyon proper after about one mile. At this
ridgeline, an obscure trail heads straight up the hill for a
connection to Cascade.
The trail descends and rolls gently into the bottom of
Waldo Canyon where you will find a nice meadow followed shortly
by the start of the loop trail.
Section 2: Waldo Canyon Loop
The loop begins at a sign indicating the 3.5-mile loop
running either direction. In winter I always go clockwise (stay
left of the sign) because there is often ice in the canyon
bottom and I'd rather ascend icy patches than slide down on my
butt! Also it is much easier to stay warm in this icebox while
running uphill. This description takes the clockwise
direction.
The trail follows the creek up Waldo Canyon, crossing
it
five times. This section is wooded, which provides a welcome
respite on hot days. About 120 meters after the fifth crossing
(you're on the right side of the creek now as you head
upstream), it takes a sharp switchback to the right. There are
a
few stairs here and usually a sign to keep you on track.
However, many have still missed this turn and continued
upstream! If you continue on the wrong trail you will
eventually
pop out on Rampart Range Road or you can connect into the trail
that goes to Cascade.
The trail ascends out of the canyon bottom, making one
more sharp switchback to the left (you'll know if you miss this
one because you'll squeeze between a couple of boulders and
find
yourself suddenly looking out over the treetops). Another creek
crossing follows a nice level section.
About 3/4 mile after the creek, the trail reaches a
forested pass and begins to descend. This is the high point of
the trail. It takes a right turn in the forest and quickly
breaks out into open country. The footing deteriorates here due
to limestone chunks - stay alert!
A switchback leads to a long descending traverse across
a south-facing hillside to a ridge. You'll know you've reached
this ridge because the footing gets really abysmal on deep red
sandstone chunks. As you descend this ridgeline, watch for the
switchback toward the left down into the next valley. There is
sometimes a small cairn here marking the obscure "Bail Trail"
down into Williams Canyon.
If you stay with the Waldo trail, you will descend into
a small valley, then face a 1/4-mile climb up to the next
ridge.
From there it is all downhill through a series of nine
switchbacks to the bottom of Waldo Canyon and the sign marking
the start of the loop trail.
Section 3: Back to the Highway
From the loop trail sign, turn left (south) to return
to
Highway 24, reversing the route in Section 1 above. One
interesting thing is that it seems like it is a lot longer
running out than running in. The total distance of this run is
about seven miles. To turn this run into a great 15 mile long
run, keep reading.
Long Run Addition (15 Miles Total)
If you want to make this into a long run of 15 miles,
then park at Memorial Park in Manitou Springs (off Businees
24).
Run west on Business 24 and turn left on Ruxton. Many will
recall that this is the same route as the first mile of the
Pikes Peak Ascent and Marathon.
When you are about to reach the Cog Railway station,
there is a road to the right. Take this road, then turn right
at
the gate onto the Ute Pass Trail. Follow this trail for about 3
miles, passing the turn off to Cascade. The trail will make a
turn to the right and then run into Longs Ranch Road. Turn
right
and run down Long's Ranch Road to the gate at Highway 24. Cross
24 and follow the directions above.
When you get back to Highway 24 on the return trip,
cross over 24 and follow Longs Ranch Road up to the left turn
onto the UPT.
Randy Lindsey is a member of the Incline Club, a Colorado
Springs based running club. To learn more about the club and
their runs, visit their website at www.inclineclub.com.