The good running

12 10 2025

At least one part of Disappointment Valley got 1.35 inches of rain over about 16 hours yesterday (it started around dark Friday and ended mid-morning Saturday). Every minor ditch and arroyo to every creek bed (Disappointment, Spring and Dawson creeks) ran with water. … LOTS of water. None had been running previously; all had been dry.

While a lot of water ran off and away, there must have been a fair bit of soaking in; the rain was all fairly light and decidedly steady. The ground and the road into and in Spring Creek Basin are all SOGGY.

Come along on this virtual tour with me – yesterday late afternoon – to see what I saw:

It’s hard to tell either how wide or how deep the water is here in Disappointment Creek several miles up-valley from the turn to Spring Creek Basin off Disappointment Road, but given that it was previously dry, I *hope* you can see that it’s running like a milk-chocolate river. This is looking upstream.

Another view, from several miles downstream of the above image; this is just 50 or 75 yards south of the road to Spring Creek Basin. The creek channel is much narrower here; I hope you can tell how high and wide the water is?

Now we’re looking upstream at Spring Creek water flowing downstream (toward us) from Spring Creek Basin, a few miles east (Temple Butte is visible against the horizon). (I’m still on Disappointment Road, a mile or so north of the above Disappointment Creek pic.)

And, from the other side of the bridge, Spring Creek flowing downstream toward its confluence with Disappointment Creek (marked by the line of barely visible golden cottonwoods in the middle distance).

I know it’s hard to tell width and depth again; the creek arroyo here isn’t terribly deep, but it’s three or four times as wide at this point as in the second pic of Disappointment Creek above. These creeks carried a LOT of water yesterday.

Then I went looking for the condition of the Spring Creek arroyo in Spring Creek Basin (in case this isn’t obvious, Spring Creek and its tributary arroyos drain Spring Creek Basin – when it rains – and the main Spring Creek arroyo carries all that gathered water west across Disappointment Valley to join the also-muddy water of Disappointment Creek, and together, they carry the watershed’s drainage to the Dolores River).

I thought you all might like to see a bit different view of Spring Creek, and I had to walk the last half-mile or so because the road was still too mucky even for my faithful little buggy, so this is just upstream and around the curve from the first crossing, where I usually take pix of rolling Spring Creek after a good rain. If you’ve ever gone into the basin with me, you’ve heard the story about Custer dam (and I even wrote a bit about it earlier this year). This image doesn’t show it well because of the background, but if you look on the left and right sides of the image above the water, you might see that the ground is abnormally straight/flat? Those sides are what remain of Custer dam (marked on maps). The brief story is that around 1900 (?), someone(s) put an enormous amount of work (and likely money) into building a dam to contain water from Spring Creek (the lowest/central arroyo in Spring Creek Basin) and the north and south *major* arroyos that feed into it (and a whole lotta other arroyos feed into all of them). The people also built at least a few miles of irrigation ditch. The story goes that the first major storm after the dam was built burst the dam. As you can (maybe?) see in the pic above, Mother Nature prevailed. (Who could possibly think this country is farmable?!)

Now I’m standing atop the south side of the dam looking downstream and westish. Just around the bend to the right is where the road crosses (when the arroyo is dry). It’s a weird perspective, and though I thought this would be a great perspective, it proved difficult to actually show. The road tops the area at the far (north) end of the dam, which is more to the right than “straight” across, but it’s only … 150 yards away, maybe? Or maybe it’s that from the far side part of the dam.

Now I’m down at the bend that you can see in the above pic, still looking downstream at the road crossing. You see it, right? Where all the rocks are at the left side of the pic. The road crosses the rocks, the arroyo and up the other side to the right.

Sorry, how about now? 🙂 Straight across. This should look familiar. … Well, except for the increase in rocks and the far side, which looks a bit like a wall. …

Looking upstream, there’s the curve where I was standing a couple of pix ago, looking to where I’m now standing.

The water, I should mention, had greatly receded at this point. This is probably some five, six miles (??) upstream from the first Spring Creek pix I showed toward the top of this post. I found evidence that the water reached probably at least another 20 yards up the road where I approached, from, say, the middle of the arroyo. It would have looked most definitely like Spring RIVER at its highest/deepest point. Spring Creek runs ONLY when we have a major rain event. … And when all that water from all that rain is done, so is the “creek.”

I’m gonna need my shovel. Again. 🙂

Are you tired? We’ve been walking around, in the super-mucky mud, in calf-high mud (or muck) boots. And we still have to hoof it back to the buggy. I was whupped.

But you can never, ever, ever beat that view. 🙂 Especially rain-dampened and -darkened. 🙂

I can’t wait to get farther in and take a gander at ponds. SURELY the mustangs have multiple water sources now. What an amazing deluge of rain. Much needed.


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15 responses

12 10 2025
Sue E. Story's avatar Sue E. Story

THAT is amazing, TJ! Good to see so much water out there! Looks like the road at that first major crossing has suddenly disappeared…again. 😅 This strange, late monsoon has really put down some rain. In two days, we’ve had close to 1.5 inches at our house and we are grateful! Love these photos!

12 10 2025
TJ's avatar TJ

Thank you, Hurricane Priscilla?! 🙂 https://coloradosun.com/2025/10/11/vallecito-floods-southwest-colorado-hurricane-priscilla/

I would say that this approaches (or maybe IS) a historic rain event for us. As of this morning’s measurements (I do it every morning (every 24 hours) for CoCoRaHS (https://www.cocorahs.org/)), my part of Disappointment Valley has gotten 2.21 inches (!!!!!!!) since the first rain overnight Oct. 9-10. That’s ginormous (and a little destructive!). 🙂 First freeze is forecast for next week? … At least the mustangs hopefully will have water over winter (even frozen) if not much in the way of good vegetation.

13 10 2025
Sue E. Story's avatar Sue E. Story

Wow, TJ. “Historical event” seems to apply to a lot of places around us. Unfortunately for some it means flooding. 😐

13 10 2025
TJ's avatar TJ

I read even more this morning about the devastating flooding along Vallecito Creek and in Pagosa Springs. … And I thought it rained a lot in Disappointment country!

12 10 2025
ChicoRey's avatar ChicoRey

Super pictures – and I agree that this is far from “agricultural” farming land! But then its even farther from livestock grazing land! The wildlife (horses included) have adapted to this kind of forage and land – without human “management”!!

Thanks, TJ – its all so beautiful.

Maggie

12 10 2025
TJ's avatar TJ

It’s a land of adaptations, for sure. Some of the lighter, “deserty” cattle breeds, such as Criollo and Corriente, do very well in these kinds of conditions (“the mustangs of the cattle world,” as friend Kat Wilder puts it). It’s tough country, for sure, and it breeds hearty and hardy critters (two- AND four-legged ;)). One thing is very much for sure: The mustangs elevate this country’s beauty to magic.

12 10 2025
ChicoRey's avatar ChicoRey

That they do!

12 10 2025
karenflash3's avatar karenflash3

Thank you for the tour! So very glad for all the rain! Good things come for those who wait! Waited for the rain, and it finally came!

12 10 2025
TJ's avatar TJ

Maybe so … but I wish we didn’t have to wait till the very end of the growing season for what we’ve very much needed through the growing season (and earlier!). And maybe not all at once. 🙂

12 10 2025
Ginger Fedak's avatar Ginger Fedak

Wow, TJ – when I saw the flooding on the news this morning, the first thing I thought about was you and the horses and other wildlife. Thank you for this informative photo tour. I’m so happy you got this much needed rain, even if it left the road in less than great condition. I hope the water catchments are now full!

12 10 2025
TJ's avatar TJ

The road(s) will dry out, as will the arroyos, but the marks of this rain event (and by the forecast, it’s not over), will be felt for a while. I’m not unhappy about that. 😉 I’m not sure the catchments will be *full* … but the major drought of this year left them mostly empty. This will have put gallons and gallons back in the tanks. I’m really hopeful about the ponds!

12 10 2025
Martha Kennedy's avatar Martha Kennedy

You were lucky! We got enough to put some water back in an almost dried pond.

13 10 2025
TJ's avatar TJ

I may or may not have (OK, I totally did) let out whoops of sheer joy when I saw the mirror-surface shine of one of the ponds in the basin yesterday that I know was dry immediately before the deluge. It is full, and I mean absolutely full to the BRIM. … And there were mustangs in the area. 🙂 I’m glad your pond got some much-needed infusion of water!

13 10 2025
lovewildmustangs's avatar lovewildmustangs

Wonderful to see!!

14 10 2025
TJ's avatar TJ

I am ecstatic. 🙂

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