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In the world of outdoor recreation, the Ice Park and the city of Ouray have a unique, symbiotic relationship.
In the world of outdoor recreation, the Ice Park and the city of Ouray have a unique, symbiotic relationship. (Photo: Michael Clark)

On Thin Ice in Ouray

Can the world's most iconic ice park survive a changing West?

Published: 
In the world of outdoor recreation, the Ice Park and the city of Ouray have a unique, symbiotic relationship.
(Photo: Michael Clark)

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Take a walk down Main Street in Ouray, Colorado, on a winter day and you鈥檒l see throngs of pedestrians in bright, technical outerwear鈥攕ome wearing backpacks, helmets, and harnesses鈥攁nd a steady stream of cars heading to the Uncompaghre Gorge above town, home of the听. You could mistake yourself for being in the Alps. Coffee shops, breweries, and restaurants that previously shuttered through winter now have the lights on and 鈥淧lease Remove Crampons Before Entering鈥 signs on their doors. This wasn鈥檛 always the case.听

Prior to the ice park鈥檚 official opening in 1997, the historic mining town, population 1,000, hibernated through winter. Businesses would close, waiting for the peak tourist season of summer. Main Street was a ghost town. The steady growth of visiting ice climbers over the years, along with Ouray鈥檚 internationally-renowned annual听鈥攚hich attracts upwards of 3,000 climbers for听a single weekend鈥攈as kept Ouray alive through the cold months.

Yet in this seemingly utopian mountain听town, a streak of听 combined with growing听overcrowding issues and听a management dustup has given rise to a new anxiety: How can a small听rural town make outdoor recreation both environmentally and economically sustainable in a rapidly changing West?听听


For the park to open each winter, the ice farmers鈥攁 four-member team that manages a听 of 7,500 feet of pipe and 250 showerheads and drains that run water down the 45- to 150-foot-tall cliffs鈥攖ypically need a month and a half of lead time from the first frost. But the ideal temperatures for ice farming鈥26 degrees or lower at night鈥攁re arriving later and later. As a result, the farmers have less time to build a big enough ice base to make it through warm spells in January and February.

鈥淲e start running water in the beginning of November,鈥 says Dan Chehayl, executive director of Ouray Ice Park Inc. (OIPI), the non-profit that runs the facility. Historically, the park would听open听around the second week of December and continue听until the end of March. A typical season lasted 90 to 100 days. The winter of 2013鈥14 was a banner year at 108 days. But ever since then, the season has shrunk, with 2016鈥17 lasting just 46 days.

Despite the uncertainty of park conditions in recent years, annual visitors are steadily on the rise and overcrowding is becoming a new headache.

Even when it鈥檚 cold enough, the park doesn鈥檛 always have the water to sustain full operations. The farmers need 150,000 to 300,000 gallons every night to repair the damage done by climbers swinging ice tools and kicking crampons during the day. That water is the overflow from the city鈥檚 spring-fed storage tanks above town. In recent years, however, the volume has diminished significantly thanks to the drier winters, mining diversion,听increased demand from the growing city, and听an听aging infrastructure. 鈥淭here were leaks that got bigger and bigger until they were basically the size of all the water allotment we needed,鈥 Chehayl says. (After last year鈥檚 early closure, the city fixed the major leaks in their infrastructure over the summer. This year, the ice park opened on December 23, delayed by warm temperatures, but they remained open until April 1, a date they haven鈥檛 reached since the water issues began in 2014, for a 100-day season.)

Chehayl and park staff work with the water they have or shut off the park鈥檚 pipes altogether. To cut their losses, they鈥檝e already closed three areas that weren鈥檛 worth their diminishing resources. They dropped from a peak of around 200 routes within a one-mile stretch of the Uncompaghre Gorge to approximately 150 routes after the 2013鈥14 season.听

Despite the uncertainty of park conditions in recent years, annual visitors are steadily on the rise and overcrowding is becoming a new headache. OIPI is playing with the idea of a visitor cap. The problem is, staff have no visitation data beyond an educated guess. The park is free, there are multiple entrances, and people come and go throughout the day, so it鈥檚 difficult to get an accurate count.听Chehayl estimates around 14,000 visitors a season.

OIPI currently runs the ice park on a thin budget of donations,听, and sponsorships from the听. 鈥淲e鈥檙e slowly understanding that it鈥檚 going to require revenue streams to protect and defend certain portions of our sport,鈥 says Luis Benitez, director of the Office of Outdoor Recreation Industry in Colorado. But, he says, 鈥淭he question of who pays for what when it comes to conservation and stewardship will always be a challenge in small, rural communities.鈥


In the world of outdoor recreation, the ice park听and the city of Ouray have a unique, symbiotic relationship. Nowhere else is a local municipality and climbing organization so intertwined or dependent on one another. The city owns the water needed to farm ice and the majority of the land that encompasses the ice park. OIPI, contracted by the city to operate the park, keeps alive the core of Ouray鈥檚 winter economy and attracts new residents to the area.

This relationship, however, is becoming increasingly strained. OIPI鈥檚 current five-year contract with the city ends in May. The park鈥檚 board of directors previously considered handing over the management of the park to the city, but ultimately decided against it.听Ouray and OIPI are in talks for a new contract. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of things that we want, and there鈥檚 a lot of things that the city wants鈥攕o all getting on the same page has been a rough go,鈥 Chehayl says.

The future direction of the Ouray Ice Park, and therefore Ouray鈥檚 outdoor-recreation-based economy, depends largely on the new agreement between the city and OIPI. Both parties are hopeful that they鈥檒l see a contract signed by the end of May, if not earlier.

In the next five years, Chehayl hopes to see the park grow from 鈥渕ore of a cowboy-run operation to a really well-oiled machine,鈥 with a fulltime staff听and reliable fundraising, all to help听better weather the changing times.

This year, the ice park opened on December 23, delayed by warm temperatures, but they remained open until April 1, a date they haven鈥檛 reached since the water issues began in 2014, for a 100-day season.

Whatever Ouray decides, it听will set the precedent on how a whole community鈥攐utdoor recreationalists, guides, business and land owners, local government鈥攃an, and should, all come together to create a long-term, sustainable plan around outdoor recreation. If other outdoor industry leaders are not watching Ouray, they should be鈥攖he city is navigating uncharted waters.听

鈥淥uray is setting an example for everyone,鈥 says Benitez. 鈥淭he outdoor industry is starting to wake up to the fact that conservation and stewardship are deeply connected to how effective we are as an economy.鈥澨

Lead Photo: Michael Clark

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