High Creek Fen

High Creek Fen Natural Area

Location:   Park County
Size:   1147 acres
Designated:   September 1994
Landowner:   The Nature Conservancy and The State Land Board

High Creek Fen is a calcareous (rich in calcium carbonate) spring-fed wetland supporting a large number of rare plants that are calcareophilous (calcium-loving) and/or arctic disjuncts.  Arctic disjuncts are isolated populations of species whose normal range is now much further north.  The calcareous conditions at High Creek are due to the fact that the wetland's springs seep through limestone-rich glacial outwash from the high elevations of the Mosquito Range to the west.  The wetland community at High Creek Fen is a relict of the much colder and wetter conditions that prevailed in South Park during the last ice age.  Primula egaliksensis (Greenland primrose), Salix candida (silver willow), Sisyrinchium pallidum (pale blue-eyed grass), Eriophorum gracile (slender cotton grass), Ptilagrostis porteri (Porter feathergrass), Carex microglochin (few-seeded bog sedge), Salix myrtillifolia (low blueberry willow), and Packera pauciflora (alpine groundsel) are all found at High Creek Fen.   Click here to visit The Nature Conservancy's site about the Preserve.

This site is featured in the Colorado State Parks and Natural Areas Book

Colorado State Parks & Natural Areas
by Frank Weston

Published September 1, 2008

Click here to purchase.


Last Modified Date: 2/23/2010 4:34 PM