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Guide to the Colorado
Mountains
Edited by Randy Jacobs with Robert M. Ormes
"Coloradans know 'Ormes' as it's called,
as the definitive guide, written with authority
and wit."
- The Denver Post
Since 1952, Guide to the Colorado Mountains
has been the authoritative source on Colorado's
mountains; a must for casual hikers, fourteeners
enthusiasts, or veteran mountaineers. Now
in a revised tenth edition, the guide is
more complete than ever with route descriptions
for over 1,500 hiking and climbing destinations
- peaks, passes, lakes, and trails. This
legendary classic has been updated with
over 80 photos, 28 easy-to-read maps, a
detailed index, sections on history and
geology of the Colorado Rockies, and a ranked
listing of the 200 highest summits in the
state, cross-referenced to the text. Written
with the famous 'Ormes" wit and with
route descriptions compiled and checked
by the experts - trip leaders of the Colorado
Mountain Club - all hikers and climbers
will find this the best and most accurate
book on the mountains of Colorado.
Now in its 50th year of publication, Guide
to the Colorado Mountains is the best-selling
Colorado book of all time with over ¼
million copies in print. Generations of
recreationalists have depended on it for
guiding them into the Colorado backcountry.
Around 1950, the original CMC Publications
Committee - Betsy Cowles Partridge, Carl
Blaurock and Henry Buchtel - persuaded Bob
Ormes to be editor of a new Colorado guidebook
they were beginning to hatch. Among other
things, they were looking for a writer sprightly
enough to, for example, direct prospective
climbers of that rotten rockpile Lizard
Head to "Take photograph and go away."
(Bob had made the third ascent.) This was
easily the most noted quotation from the
first edition, which was published in 1952.
This book was based largely on many contributions
from club members, and the extensive CMC
trip report files. Later, principally in
the 1970's and 80's, Bob took over the publishing
of the book, and by the 8th edition the
text had largely become his. By then, the
Guide to the Colorado Mountains had established
a unique niche in mountaineering circles,
and still remained the only comprehensive
climbing guide to the entire state. What
has made the book legendary over the past
48 years is its nonchalant conversational
style, which reflects the author's wry humor
and love of life.
Many mountaineers have their goals; the
fourteeners, the highest 100, the highest
200, etc; and a wealth of interpretive guides
have grown around the need to satisfy these
specific objectives, activities or localities.
But one of the beauties of the Ormes Guide
has been a statewide focus on diverse destinations
not addressed in more recent guidebooks.
It is the only guide to offer complete coverage
of the mountains of Colorado, from the heavily-used
Front Range to the remote San Juan Mountains.
The guide logically groups the mountainous
regions into seven geographic sections,
further reduced into 42 manageable units
or ranges. Guide to the Colorado Mountains
should be the foundation for your Colorado
guidebook library, whether you are a hiker,
climber, backpacker, or mountain biker.
368 pages, 6" x 9", 28 b &
w maps, 84 b & w photos, paperbound,
$18.95, ISBN 0-9671466-0-7
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