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Western Colorado

Blue sky, high peaks, fresh powder and sunshine 

Welcome to our backyard! Western Colorado is an exquisite location with incredible opportunities for recreation. If hiking, skiing, fishing, hunting, whitewater rafting, skydiving, golfing or horseback riding aren't your cup of tea, the beauty of the valley itself is sure to entertain. 

Telluride

Historic and happening, Telluride is home to superb winter skiing, a thriving cultural arts scene, world-class restaurants, and more than a few artists, writers, and actors. A former mining town named after tellurium, a metalloid element never actually found here, Telluride is today at the center of southwestern Colorado's cultural and winter sports scene. A free gondola connects Telluride to Mountain Village at the base of the ski area.

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Ouray

Ouray likes to call itself the "Switzerland of America" and in fact, this former mining town nestled in a valley surrounded on three sides by steep peaks is as quaintly beautiful as it is historic. Two-thirds of the town's original Victorian buildings have been preserved. People come to Ouray for ice-climbing and for the natural hot springs.

Montrose

Montrose, a county seat, has been a hub for agriculture and commerce since the early 20th century and the completion of the Gunnison Tunnel, which brought water for irrigation to the Uncompahgre Valley. Humans have lived here, though, for more than 3,000 years as evidenced by the petroglyphs at the Shavano Valley Rock Art Site. Today, Montrose is a regional center for health care, retail, and entertainment. 

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The Black Canyon

The Black Canyon of the Gunnison near Montrose is, as the National Park Service notes, "big enough to be overwhelming and still intimate enough to feel the pulse of time." With its steep cliffs and rock spires, the canyon tests hikers while fishermen, boaters, and kayakers find challenges on the river. 

Moab, Utah

Home to two of the America's most famous national parks, Moab is less than three hours west through the Paradox Valley and over the La Sal mountains.

Arches National Park, located just five miles north of Moab, boasts the world's largest concentration of natural sandstone arches-more than 2,000 in all-along with an awe-inspiring variety of natural geological formations.

The vastness and amazing diversity of Canyon/ands National Park, 32 miles from Moab, boggle the mind and offer endless opportunities for hiking, camping, and whitewater rafting through Cataract Canyon. 

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