Rocky Mountain Highs: The 10 Coolest Mountain Towns to Visit this Summer
Photos by Johnny Motley except where noted below
I neither ski nor snowboard, but I am enamored with mountain towns in the Rockies. The giddy bacchanalia of storied ski towns like Park City and Taos. The colorful outlaw lore of former mining camps like Durango and Glenwood Springs. The white-capped peaks, cerulean skies, and towering ponderosa pines in Pagosa Springs and Torrey. There’s dazzling natural splendor and also cultural gold in them thar mountains.
Tales of notorious gunslingers, gamblers, and pugilists—men like Butch Cassidy, Doc Holliday, and Jack Dempsey—still echo through streets and saloons in these high-altitude hamlets. Beneath the glitz of resorts and the kitsch of tourist traps, you’ll find the purest expression of the spirit of the Wild West: boundless freedom, unbridled optimism, and rugged individualism.
I prefer the summer for exploring the Rockies; crowds are thinner, but restaurants and shops remain open. With glorious weather, summertime is ideal for hiking, horseback riding, and dining and drinking al fresco. If you have a few days—or better yet, a week or two—you can make one hell of a road trip driving between these towns. Byways through the Rockies, which seem to defy, if not the laws of physics, at least the limits of engineering, are among the most beautiful in North America.
So crank up that John Denver playlist—or perhaps a little Grateful Dead or Yonder Mountain String Band to suit the mood—pack plenty of water for the altitude, and bask in the heavenly highs of the Rocky Mountains.
Durango, Colorado
A town as cool as its name, Durango boasts all the delights of a chic ski town—fabulous dining, hip coffee shops, dazzling scenery—without any of the pretentiousness. While modern Durango is serene enough for honeymooners and retirees, the small city in the San Juan Mountains was once a rough-and-tumble mining camp.
Rip shots of whiskey with the local home team of ski bums and roughnecks at El Rancho Tavern, the type of washed-in-the-blood saloon immortalized in country-western ballads. Jack Dempsey, son of a Colorado miner and arguably the greatest heavyweight in the annals of American boxing, once fought in the Tavern, swaggering through the door with his famous boast: “I can’t dance, and I can’t sing, but I can lick any man in this bar.” In gratitude for the broken barstools and jaws, the Roadhouse honors the Manassa Mauler with a mural. El Moro Tavern, next door to El Rancho Tavern, serves delectable burgers, steaks, and pasta.
With its vintage neon sign blazing red and green against starry skies, The Rochester Hotel, a resplendent yet laid-back guesthouse, is a Durango landmark. Hardwood floors, tiled bathrooms, and sumptuous mattresses grace each room, and an outdoor patio invites guests to sit by a firepit with a cocktail or Colorado brew.
Park City, Utah
Utah might connote convoluted blue laws, buttoned-up holy rollers, and regional cuisine limited to jello cakes and funeral potatoes; however, Park City, an exuberant ski town 45 minutes east of Salt Lake City, shatters those stereotypes.
Whiskey aficionados could spend a blissful weekend sampling the barreled treasures of High West, one of America’s most celebrated whiskey makers. The flagship distillery, in nearby Wanship, treats guests to distillery tours and pours of rare batches like Yippee Ki-Yay and A Midwinter’s Night Dram. The notorious No Name Saloon, ground zero for Prada-clad snow bunnies, bachelorettes, and thirsty ski instructors, boasts an admirable selection of High West pours and Colorado suds. Pair a nip of bourbon with No Name’s famous bison burger.
Park City attracts a glitzy clientele and has burgeoned into a bastion of ambitious chefs. Book a table at Handle for Lucullan feasts of aged steaks, fried chicken, and local charcuterie—scrumptious viands complemented with choice wines and craft cocktails. As the evening picks up steam, two-step your way up the street to The Spur, a live-music bar where the draughts are cold and the stage is hot with rock ‘n’ roll cover bands. Hangovers are virile at 7,000 feet, but the strong coffee at Atticus Bookstore Cafe will have you feeling right as rain after a big night in Park City.
Taos, New Mexico
New Mexico, as the license plates remind you, is the Land of Enchantment. And among all the mesmerizing, high desert settlements, Taos is the most enchanting of all. Human settlement in Taos stretches back millennia, and the Taos Pueblo, a UNESCO Heritage Site, is one of the oldest continuously inhabited sites in the Americas. The pueblo, a beehive of closely packed abode structures rising out of the desert, is an excellent place to purchase magnificent turquoise jewelry.
Plates bejeweled with red and green chili; carnitas wrapped in blue corn tortillas; frito pies and fluffy sopapillas: fiery, soulful cuisine is one of New Mexico’s great gifts to humankind. Rancho’s Plaza Grill serves up smothered enchiladas and chilaquiles spicy enough to raise the dead—the kind of down-home fare enjoyed at New Mexican weddings. Martyrs Steakhouse adds a gourmet twist to New Mexican cuisine, amalgamating Christmas chili and blue corn with steakhouse mainstays like porterhouses and NY strips. For caffeinated fuel to spend a morning perusing Taos’ mural-adorned streets, make a pit stop at The Coffee
Apothecary. Wake up to the crisp desert air inside a colorfully painted trailer at Hotel Luna Mystica. Each trailer is uniquely decorated and retrofitted with kitchenettes, art, and comfortable beds.
Grand Junction, Colorado
Set among the Bookcliff Mountains—long, flat mesas abutting the horizon like cosmic library shelves—Grand Junction is a picturesque small town four hours west of Denver. But don’t let the relaxed rhythms fool you, Grand Junction throbs with culinary, cultural, and musical elan.
Grab a cappuccino from Kiln Coffee, and spend the morning strolling downtown Grand Junction, a compact area bustling with street performers, outdoor dining, and record shops. Snag a gourmet picnic lunch from The Hog and The Hen and drive to Colorado National Monument, an otherworldly landscape of canyons, mesas, and desert. Hiking Colorado National Monument, a kaleidoscope of red, brown, and gray rock, might be the closest experience an earthling can have to exploring the surface of Mars. You can drive “the world’s crookedest road” through the park or stop at roadside trailheads to marvel at the scenery on foot.
Highlands Distillery crafts gin with Rocky Mountain botanicals and fresh lavender grown on the property. Tipple cocktails in the yurt or by the fire pits on their back patio, and if you get peckish, order the Detroit-style pizza—tasty enough to give Buddy’s or Ace’s a run for their money. The menu at Bin 707 Foodbar is a gourmet tour de force of the bounty of the Rockies—boards piled with charcuterie and cheese, plates of elk tartare, and of course, mouth-watering Colorado lamb.