Yampah Vapor Caves: I PUT THE SPRING IN GLENWOOD SPRINGS!

D’ya mean “feeling good”?

Yampah Spa offers a host of corporeal delights, from massages to seaweed wraps to aroma oxygen sessions. But we didn’t come for those (I don’t even know what that last one is). Like Doc Holliday before us, we came for the vapor caves.

Let there be light! No, seriously, they really need some light down there. Source: https://yampahspa.com/caves/

Don’t let this promotional picture fool you. There’s no light down there. It’s dark.

Not dim, not murky. Utterly black.

Much like entering a first-rate haunted house, once you descend into the depths of the caves, you’ll find yourself taking cautious baby steps over the slippery, uneven stone floor, arms fully extended in front of you, grasping blindly like a nonagenarian playing a game of high stakes Pin the Tail on the Donkey.

Eventually, you’ll be able to discern that there are little cave rooms coming off the main corridor, and once you’ve inched your way into one, you will grope around confusedly until your hands perceive (unless your shin did already) some smooth flat rocks that must, you decide, be benches.

Your miraculous ocular organs will now be able to sense vague shapes occupying those benches. This is good, because now you can avoid sitting too closely to a sweaty fellow cave-goer. You will get settled, perhaps in a reclining position, close your eyes, and relax.

It is now that, with your vision so compromised, your hearing will become acutely amplified, and the sonance of a hot springs-fed cave will fill your ears:

gurgle

hissssss

glug, glug

drip . . . drip . . . drip . . .

whisper, whisper

gurgle

snort, snort, cough, cough, ahem, hack, snort, cough (there’s one in every sauna, steam room, and—it turns out—vapor cave)

hissssss

glug

Where’s the foggy mist? Where are their beads of sweat? Why isn’t her hair matted to her skin?
One gets the impression that, were it not for this rule, nudity would prevail here.

After a time, you will become desperate for a break because it’s 116ºF down there and humid as hell. Eyes slightly more adjusted now, you will take steps that are only a tad less cautious since the floor remains ultra slick, and you will think to yourself, “This is an ideal place to pick up a plantar wart.”

On that note: This Is Me—Warts & All . . .

Shuffling gingerly to the stairwell, you will ascend toward natural light and fresh air for a breather, then repeat the whole production several more times until your two-hour time slot is up or you feel you’ve had enough,* finally emerging utterly spent, like a wet noodle, and will accomplish little the rest of the day.

*An experienced and lifelong sauna user, I was sated after three passes through the caves over the course of an hour.

Glenwood Hot Springs Resort: NO, I PUT THE SPRING IN GLENWOOD SPRINGS!

Source: https://www.hotspringspool.com/gallery

I’ll admit, I didn’t have a lot of hope that we would enjoy this one. Knowing it was just one gigantic swimming pool—purportedly the world’s largest mineral hot spring pool at 405 x 100 feet—I figured it would be on par with Wisconsin Dells for noise, crowds, and general pandemonium.

Not so chaotic

I was glad to be proven wrong.  Though it certainly wasn’t deserted, neither was it heaving, and we were pleasantly surprised by the chill vibe exuded in the pool, even by the young’uns. We spent about an hour here, too, and were happy to stumble upon the Shoshone Chutes, “a whitewater river open air tube ride that plunges you downhill . . . with lush landscaping, cascading tiers, and boulders.”

The Chutes were full of “Whee!” but hopefully not wee.

Our mission? One pass on single tubes, and a second pass on a tandem. We call tandem bikes “divorce-mobiles,” but, happily, our marriage easily withstood the stressors of tandem tubing.

For children and adults still in touch with their inner children. Source: https://www.hotspringspool.com/gallery

Frankly, I could have stayed longer, but the husband has a lower tolerance than I do for just hanging out in a pool.  Whenever he finds himself in a rectangular human-made tank filled with water, he must swim laps . . . but with 90°F pool water, he knew better than to try. (Instead, he tried to impress me on the diving board.)

Iron Mountain Hot Springs: ARE YOU JOKING?! ‘TWAS I WHO PUT THE SPRING IN GLENWOOD SPRINGS!

This, I suspected, would be the crème de la crème of Glenwood’s hot springs offerings. Boasting 16 mineral-rich soaking pools of varying shape and temperature, as well as a freshwater family pool with an elevated jetted spa, Iron Mountain sits right on the Colorado River.

https://www.ironmountainhotsprings.com

The soaking pools range from 98° to 108°F, so it doesn’t have the wonderful temperature variability that, say, Széchenyi Baths in Budapest has. I know this because at both Széchenyi and Iron Mountain I spent time in every. single. pool. But plans are afoot to move ever so slightly in that direction. It turns out the construction mess we drove through in the parking lot is a planned adults-only expansion that will include a cold plunge pool along with ten new soaking pools, bringing it in line with the number of cold plunge pools available at Sundara Spa in Wisconsin.

One.

It also gives one pool—the “experience pool”—a monthly makeover.  Each month its mineral composition reflects that of another hot spring pool around the world.  During our visit, we soaked in the same minerals found at an onsen in Kinosaki, Japan.  The following month the pool was scheduled to mimic the waters of Iceland’s Blue Lagoon.

Until I get to Japan, this will have to do.

There were only two drawbacks to Iron Mountain Hot Spring. The first was lack of shade. A few pools have umbrellas and one or two have pergolas, but for the most part, you’re soaking in both water and sun. They didn’t prohibit sunscreen they way some hot springs (understandably) do, but even so, the earliest bookable time slot (9am to noon) had my skin sizzling. Call me crazy (the husband does), but I would have jumped at a 6am to 9am slot.

The second problem was out of Iron Mountain’s control. I’m sure when the place was first put into commercial operation in 1896, the soaking view was unparalleled. It’s still beautiful, but over time the opposite bank has filled with eyesores: condos, a strip mall, a hotel, Target, Lowe’s, and Petco, among others. It’s difficult to achieve a state of Zen-like relaxation when intrusive shopping lists keep popping into your head.

Let’s see, I need cat food, bunny treats, litter, hay . . .

So who really put the spring in Glenwood Springs? As a teacher, I can state with authority that they are all equally important stops on the Colorado Hot Springs Loop, with no one better than the others. So stop fighting, you three. (Brace yourself, because I’m going to say it.)

You’re all winners!


The journey, in universum:

37 thoughts

  1. I had no idea there were so many soaking springs in Colorado. The scenery is gorgeous! That being said … it also sounds like my idea of hot flash Hell. I can attain wet noodle status just walking to kitchen, so as much as I want to explore that state, I may pass on this one.
    🤣

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I can’t get over the models in the third promotional photo in the post. The guy looks super creepy and about 10 years older than the girl and it really bothers me that someone thought this was a good idea.

    Those vapor caves sound dangerous and uncomfortable! We have had a heat index over 100 the last month or so here and I do nothing but sweat, so I can imagine how hot it must be down there. But it does sound like a unique experience. I’ll have to add this to my list next time I visit Colorado.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. It’s probably been 20 years since I was in The Vapor Caves. Your description is about right though, and I have no urge to do it again. I did like the massage I got while there though. Also, being in a steam cave as Covid rages through through the continent is even less appealing. I rode the train over The Rockies a couple of weeks ago and was stuck in the lower level with some guy who had “a bad cold.” He kept coughing, sneezing and hacking around. It’s been 2 weeks and I’m symptom free, but I wasn’t happy about it.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I’ve never heard of vapor caves before, but from what you wrote…wow! What an experience! Traveling for springs isn’t the first thing that would come to mind for me, but it looked to be a rejuvenating time for you all the same (although the darkness doesn’t sound too appealing to me, haha)!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. The vapor caves sound… unpleasant, honestly. I’m clumsy enough I’m sure I would stub my toe, bang my shin, hit my head, and probably slip and fall. Maybe simultaneously. Plus I’d be all sweaty. I’m thinking that one is maybe not for me. The other two look worth the visit, though!

    Liked by 1 person

  6. My biggest concern here is that poster with the creepiest AF man I’ve ever seen in my life! I don’t think I fancy a trip to the vapor caves – but I’ll happily indulge in a massage. I’m glad it was relaxing though 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  7. You did it all! I went to the vapor caves once, dark and dank, and a bit creepy, no desire to return. The big pool is great fun with a family. It was a regular short vacation spot for us, going back and forth between soaking in the hot pool and playing in the big one. The hot pool is wonderful in the winter, all steamy and you can’t see anyone else in the fog. I’ve soaked there with snow on my shoulders. I’ll have to check out the chutes, that’s a new one!

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Seems to get to the relaxing and rejuvenating cave requires a little anxiety inducing and dangerous path down to it. To traverse that in the dark would be difficult and then the worry of sitting on a sweaty stranger. But after all that, I think I would really enjoy the experience once I was safely seated. Also I had to laugh at loud with the reminder that swimsuits are required because you know there have probably been a lot of awkward moments down there that necessitated the sign. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Loved the description of the sounds in the cave, but don’t you feel claustrophobic? Also love that circular pool, would so love to do that. The description of the Lowe’s and Target was a little heartbreaking. And I think the organization of this post is so creative. Love your writing. It inspires me and gives me good ideas. Finally — you’re all winners — ha! I work in education, too. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank you, Suzanne. You say the nicest things to make my already great day (I’m on a balcony in San Diego overlooking a marina full of boats in Coronado Bay) even better!

      No problem with claustrophobia. I’m not immune to it, but it would have to be much, much smaller.

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