Can tiny mean glacial? Yes, on a trip to the tiny town of Encampment, Wyoming, population 450.
I stayed a week, and every direction I turned, the views were long. Road trips every day were loaded with gigantic vistas and history eons old.
Each foray beyond the town of Encampment showed me different geology. No matter which way I went, the rocks or the snow or the rivers looked really different.
Curious though; sagebrush seemed the same.
This is southern Wyoming, west of Laramie, which is west of the capital city, Cheyenne. Feeling like a pioneer, seeking settlement possibilities, hearing those town names? I did.
Fly into the airport in Denver, Colorado, and rent a car. Nothing routine about this drive once you escape airport traffic. Think three hours to Encampment.
Read More: Where to eat and stay in Encampment Wyoming.
Snowy Range is first and it sets the tone for a week of awe and wonder.
Know that this is Wyoming’s second-highest pass when you stare way up at the snowy peaks. And imagine the side roads as cross-country ski trails all winter.
That pass is 10,847 feet. I’m told you can see Colorado, the Sierra Madre Mountain Range and also the Continental Divide from observation points.
Even if you save driving the scenic byway which is US 130 for another day, at least get out of the car and stare at the snow. Memorial Day through October, the Snowy Range byway is likely to be open.
Might not all be snow. Some pre-Cambrian quartzite reflects sunlight.
Same short season for the Battle Pass Scenic Byway too; it’s US-70 which connects to Encampment.
Lakes seem to be everywhere in Snowy Range—- fed by glaciers. Hundreds of them all through the many campgrounds.
Walk around part of Lake Marie at any easy stop (with a restroom) on the road from Denver to Encampment. Medicine Bow National Forest — a peak for sure from this vantage point – towers above; 12,073 feet to be precise.
Hike up there from the lake’s edge, starting early another day , and only if you’re hardy.
The lake’s namesake was Mary Bellamy, elected to the Wyoming legislature in 1910—the first woman ever. Connect Lake Marie to the 19th Amendment too because Bellamy was a suffragette.
American history defines lots of the Snowy Range trails, roads, bridges and campgrounds. The CCC – Civilian Conservation Corps — built them in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
The town of Encampment was my destination but another southern Wyoming pleasure quickly became clear: little towns and their people feel like cousins or partners or siblings who delight in each other’s personalities.
Riverside for instance—-at the junction of Highway 70 and 230—-population 66. And proud of it, declaring that status on a highway sign.
Ranching has long been important here, so it’s kind of nice to know the small, private golf course has history too as part of the old Peryam family ranch.
I grew up in the shadow of New York City, but in Wyoming, I learned a new respect for pride in community.
Saratoga is another town in this Carbon County region; Rawlins too—-whose population tops 8,000. The base of the Sierra Madre Mountains is an hour away, but having their own “uplift” means a lot to people in Rawlins.
That’s a rock formation north of the city, kind of a boundary between sagebrush prairies and the Red Desert.
It’s as easy to meet local people with deep roots as folks from elsewhere who chose to shape a grand new life near the Encampment River or throughout the region.
Grand Encampment Museum is the name of the history center whose parking lot stayed full the entire week I explored this stretch of southern Wyoming. Trust this data because my lodging was a private home directly across the street.
Copper mining history comes to life here, an 1890s to 1920 turn-of-the-century 18-building exhibition, complete with an areal tramway showing the movement of copper and homestead cabins furnished with original-owner possessions to tour.
SheBuysTravel Tip: After visiting the two-story outhouse (handy for copper mining workers when the snow was deep) climb the 65-foot fire lookout tower for grand views. Plan ahead to make arrangements for a sunrise or sunset photo shoot for an extra fee.
Catching the trout in Seminoe Reservoir and the North Platte River is reason enough to travel here——and so is just watching the ones who do. The drive to arrive in what’s nicknamed the Miracle Mile is quite satisfying too.
Every mile is so beautiful and so different from the previous turn in the road, that missing the fish might not matter.
Some spots are lush and watery. Others feel like a desert with colorful cactus flowers and rocks smoothed by the centuries.
Look for another “uplift” in Seminoe. Rocks likely to be 550 million years old – once deep in the earth’s crust.
Be prepared for paved roads to become packed dirt and then gravel. But delight in a public restroom and covered picnic pavilions right next to grassy banks for fishing without waders.
There’s more. Seminoe –named for a French trapper from the 1800s — offers camping, hiking, boating and ATV trails in huge white sand dunes. Expect to find 1600 acres of public land and 19,000 acres of water.
I even saw a big moose!
SheBuysTravel Tip: Think about your lungs when researching the vast number of beautiful hikes. They can include elevations from 6,000 to 12,000 feet – no small breathing matter.
Detailed camping data is readily available from the Carbon County Visitors Council. Some of the general facts might be Wyoming distinctive.
Encampment restaurant and lodging owners believe staying open all winter is now a plan——not something they always believed. Same for nearby communities.
Winter sports vacations seem to be fueling those decisions.
Eating out is definitely possible in these tiny southern Wyoming towns. Delicious and interesting too.
SheBuysTravel Tip: Satisfaction means more than just savoring a restaurant meal. A multi-community vacation week allows eating in every restaurant! But consider cooking too if possible because a trip to the grocery involves big taxidermy displays.
Lodging options range from old historic boutique-size hotels to a road-side one-story motel to cabins, lodges and a dude ranch.
2023-09-22T20:51:57Z dg43tfdfdgfd