The Keeping of the Springs

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HEART & SOULS by Paige Boucher, Inside | Out

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Swimmer, courtesy of AwA

he Keeping of the Springs

A SOAK IN THE Old Town Hot Springs (OTHS) pools is always rejuvenating, but the experience can also be a journey through time and place when you consider where the water comes from and where it is going. Bathing or swimming in a natural hot spring beats soaking in a hot tub or spa. The water is filled with natural minerals and is constantly refreshed, bubbling up out of the earth through layers of rock and sediment, swirling through the pools, and then going on its path along a network of rivers to the Pacific Ocean. Thermal hot springs are a precious natural phenomenon, but as we have learned over the past century, they are fragile. “Keeping” the springs and the water that rises from them takes forethought and dedication from our community. The hot spring that feeds the OTHS hot pools and community pool is one of 10 managed springs. When Steamboat Springs was first settled by white people, there were said to be more than 150 springs within a two-mile radius of downtown. Over the years, many of those springs have been lost to development, impact from cattle drives and beautification projects. Several of the remaining springs are named and on city property, some appear only in especially wet years, and others, including the OTHS Heart Spring, are privately protected. 38

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“Groundwater travels along fractures to depths of about 12,000 feet below the surface and is then heated by the normal geothermal gradient, which then rises along a series of faults in the valley,” said Audrey Walker, geology professor at Colorado Mountain College. “At about 102 degrees Fahrenheit, the water at Heart Spring is not chlorinated but does contain comparatively very few natural minerals including bicarbonate­—which makes the little bubbles in the spring—calcium, carbonate, a little potassium, sodium and sulfate, though this is the least odoriferous of our local springs.” Some of the most noted minerals in the local springs include sulfur, lithium and iron. Heart Spring water contains a pleasant mix of natural bicarbonates, perfect for soaking. The springs in the area have long been a treasured resource and gathering place. Before Europeans arrived, the Ute people summered in the valley and considered the springs to be a source of physical and spiritual healing. In 1872, Missourian Colonel James Crawford arrived in the valley. The abundant beauty and potential of the springs to create future commerce convinced him it was the ideal place to settle his family. He claimed a homestead near Steamboat Spring, becoming the first permanent settler and, in 1874, he became the founder of the township of Steamboat Springs. Crawford built a log shelter over the top of what today is known as the Art with Altitude

11/2/23 11:32 AM


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