This valley looked nothing like it does today. A lake sat here, surrounded by a redwood forest, at the edge of a volcanic field that wouldeventually preserve what the lake contained in extraordinary detail. Insects mid-flight. Seeds still attached to their stems. Leaves with veins visible to the naked eye. And standing at the edge of the meadow today, massive petrified redwood stumps that dwarf the people who stand beside them.
The Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument is one of the most remarkable paleontological sites in North America. And because it sits eight minutes from the small community of Florissant rather than in a famous national park, it remains beautifully uncrowded.
What You’ll See
The petrified stumps are the first thing that stops you. The largest — Big Stump — measures 38 feet in circumference. It sits in the open meadow, preserved by volcanic ash for years, weathered now to a soft reddish-brown that glows in afternoon light. Standing beside it redefines your sense of time in a way that no museum exhibit can replicate. The visitor center houses an extraordinary fossil collection paper-thin shale slabs containing perfectly preserved insects, leaves, seeds, and flowers that died in a lake years ago. The detail is astonishing. A hornet’s wing. A beetle’s carapace. The outline of a tsetse fly that pre-dates the African continent as we know it.
The Trails
The monument contains 14 miles of trails ranging from the short and accessible Petrified Forest Loop to longer ridge hikes with views across South Park and the surrounding mountains.
The Walk Through Time trail is the best introduction for first-time visitors — interpretive signage at each stop explains the geological and ecological history of the valley in language that is genuinely engaging rather than academic.
For the most dramatic experience, walk the Hornbek Homestead trail in the afternoon when the light is low and the petrified stumps cast long shadows across the meadow.
Practical Information
The monument is open year-round. Summer hours run from 9am to 5pm with the visitor center open throughout. Winter brings reduced hours. An America the Beautiful pass covers the entrance fee — worth purchasing if you visit multiple national parks and monuments. The monument sits at 8,400 feet. Afternoon thunderstorms are common in summer. Start your visit in the morning and plan to be back at the trailhead by noon if weather is a concern.
Where to StayThe Den House and Perch Point Studio in Florissant sit eight minutes from the monument entrance. Stay here and the Fossil Beds become your backyard.
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