Skip to main content
  • Find Your Adventure
    • Hiking + Backpacking
    • Camping
    • Parks + Wilderness Areas
    • Special Destinations
    • Ocean Beaches + Shores
    • Canoeing, Kayaking + SUP (Flatwater)
    • Snowshoeing + Microspikes
    • Swimming Holes
    • Mountain Biking
    • Mountaineering
    • Backcountry Skiing + Splitboarding
    • Lodging
    • Hot Springs
    • Cross-country Skiing
    • Rafting + Kayaking (Whitewater)
    • Wildlife Viewing
  • Travel
    • Top Picks
    • Road Trips
    • Itineraries
  • Video
  • Articles
    • Stories
    • News + Events
    • Conservation + Nature
    • Tips, Tricks + How-to
    • Leave No Trace
  • Become a Contributor
Home
Sign In

Outdoor Project

The ultimate adventure guide

Starting off on the Arapaho Pass Trail en route to Diamond Lake.
Starting off on the Arapaho Pass Trail en route to Diamond Lake.
Bluebell (Campanula rotundifolia) along the Arapaho Pass Trail.
American monkshood (Aconitum columbianum).
Looking across the Middle Boulder Creek Valley to a waterfall below Diamond Lake.
Early view of Mount Jasper (12,923 ft) at left and Mount Neva (12,814 ft) at center.
Paintbrush and bluebells along the Diamond Lake Trail.
Wildflowers along the Diamond Lake Trail.
Diamond Lake Trail in the Indian Peaks Wilderness.
Subalpine daisy (Erigeron peregrinus) and other wildflowers along the Diamond Lake Trail.
Middle Boulder Creek.
Meadow arnica (Arnica fulgens) just below Diamond Lake.
Scarlet paintbrush (Castilleja miniata) and Ram's-horn (Pedicularis racemosa).
Diamond Lake.
One of 10 backcountry campsites at Diamond Lake.
Diamond Lake.
Diamond Lake.
Scarlet paintbrush (Castilleja miniata).
Elephant heads (Pedicularis groenlandica).
Departing Diamond Lake with a view north of North Arapaho Peak (13,502 ft).
View southeast down the Middle Boulder Creek Valley from the Arapaho Pass Trail.
Bluebell (Campanula rotundifolia) along the Arapaho Pass Trail.
Small cascading creek along the Arapaho Pass Trail.

Outdoor Project

About Us

We believe good things come from people spending time outside. It’s about more than standing on the mountain top. It’s about nourishment and learning. It’s about protecting what sustains us. It’s about building relationships with the outdoors and each other.
 
We are proud members of  
FOLLOW US
  • Find your adventure
    • Adventure Guides
    • Travel
    • Video
    • Articles
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Our Community
    • Become a Contributor
    • onX Backcountry

Join free

Sign up to receive our newsletter packed with the best adventure guides, travel ideas, news, and articles.
We promise not to annoy you, but if you wish, you may unsubscribe at any time.
Outdoor Project may earn commission on products purchased through our links, which supports the work we do for our readers.
© 2024 Outdoor Project. All rights reserved.
Terms + Conditions Privacy Policy Site Map