Thursday, December 12, 2013

Cave Of The Winds Pikes Peak Colorado

Another tourist attraction in the Pikes Peak region of Colorado is the Cave of the Winds. A great little cave filled with wonders. The first shot shows the homey entrance to the attraction. The cave looks very home spun and charming.

Next up are two interior images showing the nice geological features.

Luckily this cave is still open and is on my list of things to see and do.

7 comments:

K. Martinez said...

I've been to a few caves/caverns in my day and many of them had that homey entrance/building next to them. Mercer Caverns in Calaveras County, California is one that comes to mind.

Major Pepperidge said...

Very cool!

Anonymous said...

It's changed dramatically! Not homey any more, almost a tourist trap. It would have been so cool to see it back in the early days!

Bill in Denver

Anonymous said...

Meh it's just a cave. Yeah my favorite part of the tour is when they tell you it was named because the holes in the rock made a howling noise in the wind - and when they built the visitors center it blocked the wind so it doesn't do it any more. Genius!

ODJennings said...

I went through the cave when I was a child back in the 1960, and I remember it was a wonderland of colored lights turning the different rock formations lime green or pink, purple--every color of the rainbow. Naturally as a child, I took all that for granted and just automatically assumed those were the real colors.

I went back a few years ago, and the colored lights were gone, and the rock was now boring greys and tans. I told the tour guide they made a huge mistake and they need go back to the colors. She looked at me like I was a whore in church, and told me in no uncertain terms that it would never happen.

keeline said...

I'm guessing that the colored lights were traditional theatre gels. However, I can't help but think of the Rainbow Caverns at Disneyland. In that case, the waterfalls and fountains had fluorescent dyes of six colors that were illuminated by longwave ultraviolet light (UV-A, "blacklight" such as used on posters). The dyes and lamps came from Ultra-Violet Products of Pasadena (and later San Gabriel and other locations), CA. They ran the Mineral Hall shop in the early years of the attraction (1956-1963).

TongaXtine said...

LOVE cave of the Winds! Thanks so much for posting this!