Lake Charles Llama Trip | Holy Cross Wilderness
Fri, Jul 11
|Lake Charles
Join us for a fun-filled 3 day/2 night trip to Lake Charles!


Time & Location
Jul 11, 2025, 9:00 AM – Jul 13, 2025, 3:00 PM
Lake Charles, Eagle, CO
About the event
Llama trips offer great opportunities to explore some of the beautiful and more remote areas of the wilderness with experienced backpackers and help restore these harder-to-reach areas. This ESWA llama trip will spend a three day weekend performing various forms of trail work and restoration activities around Lake Charles in the Holy Cross Wilderness outside of Eagle, CO.
U.S. Forest Service rangers guide the trips. We will backpack in to camp on Friday, 7/11, and set up camp away from the more heavily used areas near the lakes. It is a 4.1 mile hike from the trailhead to camp with 1,650 ft of elevation gain. Please click this link for more information about the trail. We expect to be back at the trailhead sometime during the afternoon on Sunday, 7/13.
The llamas often have extra capacity and typically carry some of our gear (tents, stoves, group beverages, sleeping bags, etc). The llamas are unable to carry tools, which may require participants to volunteer to carry a tool during the hike in to camp on the first day and back to the trailhead on the last day. The llamas walk steadily, but not fast. People generally hike at their own pace with one of the rangers arriving early to mark the camping area not far from a water source.
We are all responsible for our own food, cooking/eating gear, and camping equipment. Personal water purifiers (filters) are needed. Typically, the Forest Service requires use of bear-proof containers. Please let us know if you need to borrow one. We practice Leave No Trace camping so we don’t build campfires, but we generally eat together. ESWA also brings some happy hour supplies for everyone. In addition, please bring your own individual WAG bags for human waste. If you do not have any, please let us know and ESWA can provide some. The llamas carry the WAG bags back.
The following morning after breakfast and packing lunch, information about possible hazards and proper use of the tools is presented. Afterwards, we usually hike up the trail and break into smaller groups to do various restoration activities. These might include scattering illegal fire rings and restoring the area, restoring illegal campsites (typically on lakeshores), trail maintenance (erosion control, trimming vegetation, tree clearing, etc), pulling noxious weeds, and repairing and adding signage.
Everyone works at their own pace, and we are urged to take frequent breaks and drink lots of water.
We return to camp in the late afternoon to enjoy the wilderness and each other’s company. The following day is spent mainly backpacking out. Sometimes there is an opportunity to do some additional work for those interested.
Please contact krista.a.hughes@gmail.com with any questions.