White River National Forest
White River National Forest is a National Forest in northwest Colorado. It is named after the White River that passes through its northern section. It is the most visited National Forest in the United States, primarily from users of the twelve ski areas within its boundaries.
The forest contains 2,285,970 acres. In descending order of land area it is located in parts of Eagle,
Pitkin, Garfield, Summit, Rio Blanco, Mesa, Gunnison, Routt, and Moffat counties.
The White River national forest provides significant habitat for deer, elk, mountain sheep, mountain goat, bear, mountain lion, bobcat, lynx, moose, raptors, waterfowl, trout and many other species of wildlife.
The forest contains 1,900 mi. of forest system roads, 2,500 mi of trails, and the Dillon, Green Mountain, Ruedi, and Homestake reservoirs.
The forest is managed from Forest Service offices in Glenwood Springs. There are local ranger district offices in Aspen, Carbondale, Eagle, Meeker, Minturn, Rifle, and Silverthorne.
The Dillon Ranger district, run out of Silverthorne, was transferred from the Arapahoe National Forest to the White River National Forest in 1998.Wilderness areas
There are eight officially designated wilderness areas lying within White River National Forest that are part of the National Wilderness Preservation System. Five of them extend into neighboring National Forests.
- Collegiate Peaks Wilderness
- Eagles Nest Wilderness
- Flat Tops Wilderness
- Holy Cross Wilderness
- Hunter-Fryingpan Wilderness
- Maroon Bells–Snowmass Wilderness
- Ptarmigan Peak Wilderness
- Raggeds Wilderness
Ski areas
The following ski areas are located inside the forest:
- Arapahoe Basin
- Aspen Mountain
- Aspen Highlands
- Beaver Creek
- Breckenridge
- Buttermilk
- Copper Mountain
- Ski Cooper
- Keystone
- Snowmass
- Sunlight
- Vail
Fourteeners
There are ten peaks with an elevation higher than 14,000 ft, colloquially known as 14ers in the forest:
- Castle Peak 14,279 ft., Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Elk Mountains
- Grays Peak 14,278 ft, Front Range
- Torreys Peak 14,274 ft, Front Range
- Quandary Peak, 14,271 ft Tenmile Range
- Capitol Peak 14,137 ft., Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Elk Mountains
- Maroon Peak, the higher of the two Maroon Bells summits, 14,163 ft, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Elk Mountains
- Snowmass Mountain 14,099 ft, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Elk Mountains
- Pyramid Peak 14,025 ft, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Elk Mountains
- Mount of the Holy Cross 14,011 ft., Holy Cross Wilderness, Sawatch Range
The following two peaks are often included in lists of the Colorado fourteeners, but do not pass the 300 ft. topographic prominence metric commonly used by U.S. Mountaineers:
- North Maroon Peak, the lower of the two Maroon Bells Summits 14,019 ft., Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Elk Mountains
- Conundrum Peak, a neighboring summit of Castle Peak, 14,040 ft., Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Elk Mountains