Wet Mountains

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The Wet Mountains are a small range of mountains in southern Colorado named for the amount of snow they receive in the winter. They are also called the Sierra Mojadas. Most of the range is contained in Custer County, and run approximately from Highway 50 to Walsenburg.

The tallest mountain is known as the Greenhorn, which has multiple peaks, the highest of which reaches 12,346 feet. The Greenhorn is also the only peak to go above tree-line. Though the mountains do not have high elevations as do many in the state (Colorado has many peaks over 13,000 and 14,000 feet, which are known as 13ers and 14ers) the range is important as it provides the eastern boundary of the Wet Mountain Valley, bordered on the west by the Sangre de Cristos.

The valley contains the small towns of Westcliffe and Silver Cliff. Within the mountains, Highway 96 weaves its way down to Wetmore by way of Hardscrabble Canyon and is one of only three main exits from the valley. The only other highway in the range is Highway 165. Highway 165 travels through the range to Rye and Colorado City, and can also be noted for Lake Isabel and Bishop's Castle.

Bishop's Castle is a stone castle made to resemble those of the Middle Ages. Parts are completed and open to the public, and it is also being expanded. Both the lake and the castle can be accessed right off of the highway, which also connects to the access route for climbing the Greenhorn. Other towns/communities in the small range include Beulah and Rosita, which is now a ghost town after a period of gold and silver mining over the past two centuries.