Yay! I got a new camera as an early birthday present and was able to plug in my old memory card into this camera so my pictures on my broken camera were not lost! Sadly, I was not able to take pictures for several weeks so those would be photos will never be shared. Oh well. In celebration I am posting pictures of the Great Sand Dunes taken just moments before the old camera bit the dust, so to say.
The Sand Dunes literally leave me speechless every time I visit. Part of this is due to the fact that climbing them is very difficult and I can’t talk, but part is due to their extreme and ancient beauty. The Sand Dunes formed because our Valley has very sandy soil (because it used to be a giant lake), is very windy, and is surrounded by mountains. The sand is swept away in the wind and ends up right here, against the base of the Sangre de Christo Mountain range.
These are the tallest Sand Dunes in North America. They are so surreal you feel like you are in another part of the world, or even another planet. During the spring months the snow melt-off from the mountains leaves a little creek at the base of the Dunes that you have to pass through before reaching them. No one knows how old they are but there is evidence of humans in the Dunes dates more than 11,000 years ago.
We didn’t make it all the way to the top but I was pretty impressed with my parents’ endurance considering they had come from Missouri with an elevation of 740 feet to the valley with an elevation of about 7,500 feet.
Its hard to capture the size of these dunes in photos but here is one of my mom taking a picture from afar for a bit of reference. She isn’t even standing in front of the tallest dune. Anyhow, I am happy to be able to share these photos that were at one point stuck on the broken camera. I have learned my lesson and will never bring my camera to the dunes in the future so enjoy the pictures here. Thats all you get.























