The Hermosa Cliffs overlook Electra Lake under a winter storm. From the left side on the horizon, beginning with Mt. Wilson then moving to the right are El Diente Peak, Gladstone Peak and Wilson Peak.
Sitting below Mt. Wilson closer to us in this image is Graysill Mountain. Following the chain of mountain peaks on the horizon moving right we see Sunshine Mountain, Grizzly Peak, San Miguel Peak, Rolling Mountain, Engineer Peak, The Twin Sisters Peaks, and Bear Mountain. In the immediate bottom foreground lays Baldy Mountain and Spud Hill.
I lensed this winter image while flying directly above Missionary Ridge and shooting to the north. Durango, Colorado is behind me to the south a few miles.
Down in the valley below flows the Animus River, fed by numerous small creeks and washes and Electra Lake ( the white spot in the center of the valley). Above on the horizon to the upper right of Electra Lake are the West Needle Mountains in the Weminuche Wilderness.
Electra Lake
Located 25 miles north of Durango, Electra Lake is reservoir fed by waters from Cascade Creek, Little Cascade Creek and Elbert Creek. The original Electra Lake dam was a 400-foot rock and timber crib with a wooden face, constructed from 1905-06.
It was upgraded to the current structure in 1980. Originally called Ignacio Lakes, it was renamed Electra, a character in Greek mythology, because the water was used downstream to create electricity.
Water is channeled from the lake 18 miles downstream to the Tacoma Hydro Generating Station via a 4400-foot open wooden flume, one of the two remaining wooden flumes still operating on hydro projects in the U.S.
This valley and river was used seasonally for over two thousand years by the First Nations Utes, who lived and ranged in the mountains and desert over much of the Colorado Plateau: much of present-day eastern Utah, western Colorado, northern Arizona and northwestern New Mexico. The Ute people were hunters and gatherers who moved on foot to hunting grounds and gathering land based upon the season.
In the bottom of the valley here in this photo you can see the old train track from the Durango & Silverton narrow gauge railroad (D&SNG), a 3ft / 914mm narrow gauge heritage-railroad that still operates 45.2 miles / 72.7 km of track between Durango and Silverton, Colorado.
The route was opened in 1882 by the Denver & Rio Grande Railway (D&RG) to transport silver and gold mined up in the San Juan Mountains. The railway is a federally designated National Historic Landmark and has operated continuously since 1881, although it is now a tourist and heritage line hauling passengers, and is one of the few places in the U.S. which has seen continuous use of steam locomotives.
(Research Source)
This image is from my ongoing project in which I am trying to raise awareness of the 47% of the USA and 90% of Canada that remain unpopulated wilderness.
Where Eagles Fly - The American Wilderness Expedition is my personal mission to introduce people to these amazing locations that surround us.
If you like what you see here upvote then resteemit so that others may experience these wondrous places as well. And if you'd like these images to be part of your feed then follow me.
Yehaw!!
Jaw dropping shots on an incredible post. Electra Lake sounds amazing and somewhere I'd love to visit one day. Your post certainty makes me wanna go.
Awesome stuff, bro. Thanks for these great insights. :)
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This post recieved an upvote & comment from mahbubalam. If you would like to recieve upvotes comment from mahbubalam on all your posts, simply FOLLOW @mahbubalam
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Dear @mahbubalam
stop spamming comments you are sending same msg to everyone
Please tell me what is your voting power?
Remember reputation is everything
So care your reputation okay.
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Look at those clouds!! How are you flying in that weather?!
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This is the Best post av seen today . I love to read each and every post of yours. Sometimes I don'rt get time to read the full content but I make sure that whenever I am free I read the whole thing. Thanks for sharing...
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nice!Follow! It's interesting...
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