Permits will soon be required to hike Blue Lakes near Telluride

US

The U.S. Forest Service has officially decided to institute a hiking permit system for the Blue Lakes near Telluride, but exactly when it will take effect remains undetermined.

Located in the San Juan Mountains, the Blue Lakes are popular due to their picturesque turquoise waters and proximity to 14,150-foot Mount Sneffels. But in recent years increased foot traffic has negatively impacted the natural landscape and the experience for hikers – so much so that, last fall, officials proposed a plan to curtail visitation by requiring reservations.

The decision to adopt that plan, announced Tuesday, comes after nearly a year of gathering feedback from the public. While a few amendments have been made – for example, the window when permits will be required shrunk by a month – the plan remains mostly intact.

Dana Gardunio at the forest service’s Ouray Ranger District said the permit system could launch by the summer of 2025 if the technology is ready, but it is more likely to be up and running by 2026.

Gardunio estimates the permit system will cut the number of summertime visitors by 40%, from 13,000 to 7,808 people. Though that’s a significant decrease, the agency deemed it necessary to mitigate human waste in the area, vegetation loss from campsite expansion, user-created trails, negative dog interactions, illegal campfires, bear conflicts, overcrowding and parking congestion.

“It’s really important to keep in mind that this plan is really a blueprint of where we are headed,” Gardunio said by email. “It’s not an ‘on/off’ switch… so this will be years of planning and implementation to come.”

The first thing officials will do is reconstruct parking spots at the Blue Lakes trailhead and install two new toilets there. Then they will begin working with recreation.gov on the permit system. The forest service also expects to monitor how the implementation goes, and may decide to either broaden or further restrict access to the zones.

The agency’s plan outlines details on how it will address the impact of recreation in a total of 16,200 acres of alpine terrain, which was divided into five zones with individual needs. They are the Lower East Dallas Zone, the Blaine Basin Zone, Yankee Boy Basin Zone, Mount Sneffels Zone (including the summit) and the Wilderness Zone, which encompasses the Blue Lakes.

Here are a few highlights of the Visitor Use Management Plan. You can view it in full here.

Permits required to visit the Blue Lakes

Lower Blue Lake, visible from the trail leading to the other namesake Blue Lakes. Blue Lakes Trail is the most popular hike within the Mount Sneffels Wilderness. (Tiney Ricciardi, The Denver Post)

Starting in 2025 or 2026, hikers and campers will be required to reserve a permit to access the Blue Lakes from June 1 to Sept. 30.

Similar to how recreators need a permit to stay overnight in the Maroon Bells-Snowmass wilderness, hikers would need to reserve a day-use permit or an overnight camping permit to access the Blue Lakes Trail.

The forest service plans to issue up to 40 day-use permits per day, which hikers would reserve at recreation.gov. Every individual would need their own permit. The agency will also issue up to 24 overnight permits per night, but only for four designated campsites. That means each campsite could have up to six people.

Hikers would need either a day-use permit or an overnight permit – not both. That means up to 64 people per day would use the trail. Permits will likely carry a fee though the cost has yet to be determined.

Climbing Mount Sneffels

Mountaineers will not be required to have a permit to climb Mount Sneffels if they approach from the Yankee Boy Basin trailhead; however, dogs are prohibited from climbing in the Mount Sneffels zone together. That includes the summit.

Changes to camping rules

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