Colorado Springs is a beautiful city with incredible outdoor
activities. Its located on the south east side of the Rocky Mountains in the state of Colorado. From
almost everywhere you can enjoy beautiful views of Pike's Peak. This is a big city that gets congested during peak hours, so plan your outings accordingly.
We stayed at:
Garden of the Gods RV Resort.
3704 W Colorado Ave, Colorado Springs
(719) 475-9450
Amenities:
Full hookups
Wi-Fi
Cable TV
BBQ
Picnic table
Dog friendly
Off leash dog park
Convenient store
Lounge
Tent area
Cabins
The sites are large, level and well-maintained. The staff is super friendly and very helpful.
** Be aware that if your a wheelchair user or someone with mobility issues that although the roads are paved, the sites are gravel.
A couple of the attractions:
The Olympic Training Center
1750 E Boulder St, Colorado Springs, CO
719-866-4618
The
Colorado Springs Olympic Training Center rests on a 35-acre complex
located near downtown Colorado Springs. The center has sport venues and
support facilities for fencing, gymnastics, judo, shooting, swimming,
taekwondo, weightlifting and wrestling. Athletes live and train at this
facility.
I highly recommend this interesting stop. It is
completely wheelchair accessible. This is a FREE experience. Guided
tours run all day long. Also, free parking with a lot of handicapped
accessible spaces.
Garden of the Gods National Park
1805 N 30th St, Colorado Springs, CO
(719) 634-6666
This beautiful park is completely accessible by foot, wheelchair, scooter or car.
The terrain is completely paved however some spots are quite steep. There is also a lot of unpaved area for hiking.
"Wonder
how the Garden of the Gods in Colorado was named? In August, 1859, two
surveyors started out from Denver to begin a town site, to be called
Colorado City. While exploring locations, they came upon a beautiful
area of sandstone formations. M.S. Beach suggested that it would be “a
capital place for a beer garden,” when the country grew up. His
companion, Rufus Cable, exclaimed, “Beer Garden! Why it is a fit place
for the Gods to assemble. We will call it the Garden of the Gods.” The
name stuck.
How did an area of such national significance become
a city park? The answer to that question is a story of friendship, of
strong commitment to the common good and of children fulfilling their
father’s dream. This part of the story begins in 1879 when General
William Jackson Palmer, founder of the city of Colorado Springs,
convinced his good friend, Charles Elliott Perkins to buy 240 acres of
land known as the Garden of the Gods. In 1899, Perkins purchased another
240 areas and in his letters to General Palmer, expressed his desire to
donate his 480 acres to the City of Colorado Springs. Perkins was
undoubtedly influenced by General Palmer, who already had donated more
than 1,000 acres of his own land to become public city park lands.
In
1907, Charles Perkins died before he had officially arranged for the
Garden of the Gods in Colorado to become a public park. However, knowing
their father’s wish for the Garden, Perkins’ children deeded the
480-acre Garden of the Gods to the City of Colorado Springs on December
22, 1909, with the stipulation that it remain “free to the entire
world".