Log In


Reset Password

Driving through Glenwood Canyon? These routes avoid mudslides on I-70

The Grizzly Creek fire burnt vegetation throughout the canyon. Without roots to hold the soil in place, even moderate rain events are likely to bring rockslides and closures for many years to come. (Dan Boyce/CPR News)
Slides are more likely in wake of Grizzly Creek fire

Mudslides have closed Interstate 70 through Glenwood Canyon multiple times in the last week, and more rain in the forecast could make trouble for your holiday weekend travel plans.

The slides are more likely in the canyon after the Grizzly Creek Fire tore through it last summer.

So before you go, Colorado Department of Transportation spokeswoman Elise Thatcher has these suggestions for you:

Check the forecast

As of Wednesday morning, the National Weather Service is predicting at least a chance of showers and thunderstorms in Glenwood Springs every day through Monday. That doesn’t necessarily mean the highway will close, Thatcher said.

Rather, motorists should keep an eye on whether CDOT has closed the rest areas and bike path (It does that so evacuating the canyon is quicker and easier). If it has, flash floods and road closures are more likely.

"We need the moisture,” said CDOT's Michael Goolsby earlier this week. “But we just don't need it concentrated in Glenwood Canyon.”

Any disruptions to the highway will be noted at cotrip.org.

Courtesy Colorado Department of Transportation

Plan your detour, but don’t get too fancy

CDOT’s recommended detour will take you north of I-70 through Kremmling, Steamboat Springs and Craig, adding about two and a half hours to your journey.

“We understand that if we send folks in that direction, it's a commitment,” Thatcher said. “But we know that decades of managing these more rural highways, that that's really the best route."

Google or Apple Maps might suggest an alternative like Cottonwood Pass (the Gypsum-to-Carbondale one, not the Almont-to-Buena Vista one). Still, Thatcher said taking any of those back roads (as many people did last summer) is almost certainly a bad idea.

"Ninety-nine percent of the time, they are over roadways that are not designed for much traffic at all,” she said. “And often, they require four-wheel drive capability. They really don't have cell service. All it takes is one vehicle breaking an axle, breaking down in the roadway, and then everyone on either side of them is in for a really bad day."

Colorado Highway 82 over Independence Pass between Leadville and Aspen is a more heavily traveled alternative (and I made it up and over it twice last summer in a Toyota Corolla). However, it can be beset by delays of its own, Thatcher said. Oversized vehicles and trailers aren’t allowed on that road because the turns are quite tight.

Construction and routine closures on U.S. 50 between Montrose and Gunnison makes that southern alternative a dicey proposition for much of this summer. But construction is being suspended from noon on Friday to 8:30 a.m. on Tuesday, making it a decent choice, Thatcher said.

"That route can handle traffic," she said.

If you’re out of state, use I-80 through Wyoming

CDOT is working with the departments of transportation in Kansas, Utah and Wyoming to encourage out-of-state motorists to use Interstate 80 through Wyoming as an alternative to I-70.

That’s a more reliable route right now, Thatcher said.