Wolf Creek Pass

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Wolf Creek Pass is also the name of the C.W. McCall album which contains the song that made the pass famous.
Wolf Creek Pass

View to the south into the snaking West Fork of the San Juan River as seen from Hwy 160, halfway up to the pass. Wolf Creek pass is located just above 10,800 feet in southwestern Colorado at the Continental Divide in the San Juan Mountains
Elevation 10,823 feet (3,299 m)[1]
Location Mineral County, Colorado, Flag of the United States United States
Range San Juan Mountains
Coordinates 37°28′57″N 106°47′56″W / 37.4825, -106.79889
Topo map USGS Wolf Creek Pass
Traversed by U.S. Highway 160

Wolf Creek Pass (el. 10,823 ft.) is a high mountain pass on the Continental Divide, in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado. It is the route through which U.S. Highway 160 passes from the San Luis Valley into southwest Colorado on its way to New Mexico and Arizona. The pass is notable as inspiration of a C.W. McCall song.

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[edit] Expansion

Wolf Creek Pass, once a two-lane road winding through the San Juan Mountains between South Fork, Colorado and Pagosa Springs, has recently been expanded into a multi-lane highway, greatly increasing the traffic capacity of the pass and making it more navigable in bad weather. It will also become the easiest access to southwest Colorado from the rest of the state, as all remaining overland routes require a lengthy detours through New Mexico or over Lizard Head Pass, near Telluride, or the intimidating Red Mountain Pass: a two-lane road winding along sheer cliffs from Ouray to Silverton.

A 900-foot tunnel on the eastern portion was opened November 5, 2005. Construction was completed in the Summer of 2006, with the highway fully widened and drainage projects along the route completed.

At present, a major resort project headed by Texan billionaire Red McCombs is causing controversy in the area. The proposed resort would be situated near the summit of the pass.

[edit] Attractions

The pass is also home to Wolf Creek ski area, frequented by locals and famous for large annual snowfall. It is located on the eastern side of the Continental Divide on Highway 160. Also on the eastern side is one of the largest RV parks in the United States, located just a few miles west of South Fork, Colorado.

Wolf Creek Pass is also an attraction for tourists, as it is known for the natural beauty of the wilderness the highway passes through.

[edit] C.W. McCall

It was made famous in 1975 by Country music artist C.W. McCall's humorous spoken word song of the same name, in which the pass is fondly described as "37 miles o' hell -- which is up on the Great Divide." In the song, two truckers drive an out-of-control 18-wheeler down U.S. Highway 160 to Pagosa Springs -- a 5,000-foot drop in elevation.

I looked at Earl and his eyes was wide
His lip was curled, and his leg was fried.
And his hand was froze to the wheel like a tongue to a sled in the middle of a blizzard.
I says, "Earl, I'm not the type to complain
But the time has come for me to explain
That if you don't apply some brake real soon, they're gonna have to pick us up with a stick and a spoon..."
("Wolf Creek Pass" written by Bill Fries and Chip Davis, sung by C.W. McCall)

The song describes the truck careening down through a "tunnel" (during which process several crates of chickens stacked on the back of the truck are inadvertently lost) and eventually into a feed store in Pagosa Springs. This tunnel is actually a snow shed: the song predates the only true tunnel on the pass by 30 years. However, the snow shed is on the east side of the pass while Pagosa Springs is on the west side, making this sequence of events impossible.

It should be noted, however, that going through the snowshed prior to crashing in Pagosa Springs is possible. The trip, as noted in early verses, starts in eastern Colorado from the town of Wiggins. Thus, the truck is headed westbound into Pagosa Springs, not eastbound FROM Pagosa Springs.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 37°27′5″N, 106°48′1″W