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“Sometimes folks want to learn about winter ecology. “This is a beginners’ hike,” Langdon explained. The park used to offer intermediate snowshoe hikes, but with snow levels are not high enough to offer those anymore. By the time I go home, it will have been a round trip of 200 miles.” “I learned a lot I didn’t know about nature, too,” she added. Pirello noted that even though she has been showshoeing for many seasons, she learned new aspects about showshoeing that she didn’t know before. It’s just a whole different character in the winter than in the summertime.” The national park looks completely different in the winter. “I haven’t done it up in the mountains for so long with COVID. “I just really wanted to snowshoe,” commented Karen Pirello who drove from Aurora for the experience. Several of the participants were from Front Range communities. “You may have been there many times, in the summer, but it’s not the same place in the winter.” “You need to know what you’re doing to go on up to Dream or Emerald Lake,” Langdon said. Total mileage was only about a mile-and-a-half, but it was still enough of a workout to be enjoyable. On the way back down from Nymph, we stopped at another overhang of Bear Lake and we watched people walking across the glorious frozen landscape.
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A snowshoer enjoy an overlook that provides a wonderful view of Bear Lake and the mountain backdrop beyond.