I can’t say I wasn’t happy to leave Limon, especially since leaving Limon meant we were, at least for a little while, back to my EXCELLENTLY GOOD PLAN instead of Jim’s somewhat less than excellently good plan. Our next exploration stops were Empire, Georgetown, and Silver Plume in Colorado. These are all places I had heard about from my brother and Linda Rizzardi and had always wanted to visit. I have a habit of picturing places in my mind and pre-forming concepts about them. I have to say that these tiny towns epitomize the Colorado I’ve always pictured and wanted to see. They are all places that I could see myself living in.
We stopped at Jenny’s Restaurant in Empire for a cup of coffee and some talk with Sue who was working there. Linda Rizzardi had told me quite a bit about the whole area and some of the colorful people who lived there. Sue and I talked for a bit about Linda and my brother Andy.
Jim wanted to know how to get to Georgetown and Silver Plume and Sue told us that you had to get back on I-70 to get anywhere…unless you wanted to walk. We saw bighorn sheep as we were getting back on I-70.
I don’t think Jim believed Sue when she told us about I-70 because once we got to Georgetown, he insisted on trying this little road to get to Silver Plume. Needless to say, it didn’t work out and while I kept telling him that Sue said to get back on I 70, he insisted that we stop at the Georgetown Visitor’s Center to ask. Of course, he left me to do the asking and since I already knew we had to get back on I-70, I asked the woman who answered me to “please tell my husband that because he doesn’t believe me”. She did. We got back on I-70.
Silver Plume is a tiny little old mining town. It had some great old houses, an old single cell jail, and surprisingly, several open businesses. We traveled every street in under 7 minutes, but they were exciting minutes. The photo below was taken between Georgetown and Silver Plume.
We spent several hours wandering around Georgetown, Empire and Silver Plume before heading down to Pueblo, CO for the night. This wasn’t an uneventful drive, however. Somewhere around Colorado Springs, traffic got really heavy and was pretty much stop and go. There we were at a dead stop in the right hand lane when the left lane started moving forward. Hearing a lot of yelling we looked and saw a car full of college aged girls signaling wildly. Jim opened his window to see what they wanted and a girl in the back seat started yelling “I’m from Vermont” excitedly. I guess we were the first northeasterners she’d seen.
Well as traffic jams go, sometimes we were ahead in our lane and sometimes they were ahead in theirs, but lots of conversation took place between Jim and these young girls. At some point, Jim reached behind my seat and pulled out one of the jugs of the maple syrup we were bringing as gifts to my brother, nephew and nieces and held it up. The girl shouted across “Is that Vermont maple Syrup?” Jim answered: “No. New York!” The girl answered: “Vermont is better.” and pointing to the others in her car said “They’ve never even tasted real maple syrup”. Jim, in his infinite generosity said: “Do you want it.” The girl said yes and there we were, driving down I-25 with Jim swerving closer, holding out a jug of syrup, while the girl leaned half her body out the window to grab it. Did I mention that my husband is kind of strange?
Now, I’m stuck trying to figure out what to give my brother when we visit. He isn’t getting maple syrup.
We finally got to Pueblo, Colorado where Tomm, The Weekend Guy at the Hampton Inn happily posed with Jim’s duck.