Is Florissant Fossil Beds Worth Visiting?
A small Colorado monument with giant petrified stumps, and a clear-eyed take on whether it earns the detour.
Beneath a grassy valley in central Colorado sits one of the richest fossil deposits in the world: petrified redwood stumps up to 14 feet wide, plus thousands of detailed insect and plant fossils. The short version: Florissant Fossil Beds is absolutely worth a half-day stop if you're already near Colorado Springs or Cripple Creek. It's not the kind of place most people fly across the country for, and that's fine. Here's how to tell which camp you're in.
The verdict
Florissant is a National Monument, not a sprawling park, and it wears that scale on its sleeve. You can see the headline sights (the giant petrified stumps, the visitor center exhibits, a couple of easy loops) in about two to three hours. If you arrive expecting Yellowstone, you'll feel underwhelmed by lunch.
But take it for what it is, and it delivers. These are some of the largest petrified tree stumps in the world by diameter, and standing next to a fossilized redwood as wide as a car does something a photo can't. The fossils here are 34 million years old, captured in stunning detail, including the famous ancient wasp on display in the visitor center. For a quiet, low-stress, genuinely fascinating stop, it's hard to beat.
Who should go
- Families with curious kids. The trails are short and flat, there's a Junior Ranger program, and "tree turned to stone" is a concept that lands at any age.
- Anyone already in the Pikes Peak region. It's about 35 miles west of Colorado Springs via US 24, or 16 miles north of Cripple Creek. If you're doing that loop anyway, this is an easy add.
- Geology and fossil nerds. The story of an ancient lake bed, a volcanic eruption, and a pyroclastic flow burying a forest is genuinely good.
- Travelers who want a calm stop. This place rarely feels crowded. After a packed day at a bigger destination, the quiet is the point.
Who can skip it
If you're not already passing through this corner of Colorado, it's a long way to come for two hours of stumps. There's no dramatic vista, no waterfall, no big-mammal viewing. People chasing peak-bagging or backcountry epics will find it slight. And at 8,500 feet of elevation, visitors coming up from sea level sometimes feel the altitude even on these gentle trails, worth knowing if anyone in your group is sensitive.
What to actually do here
Three short, self-guided trails cover the highlights, all starting behind the visitor center:
- Petrified Forest Loop: the main event. A one-mile, mostly flat gravel loop past the biggest petrified stumps, with interpretive panels along the way. Strollers manage it fine. Budget 30 to 60 minutes.
- Ponderosa Loop Trail: a graded, half-mile accessible loop through pine forest. The highlight is a living ponderosa pine growing straight out of a petrified redwood stump, the present meeting the past. Wheelchair and walker friendly.
- Geologic Trail: a 1.2-mile round trip that climbs about 105 feet to an overlook of the Florissant valley. It crosses a county road and gets narrow and rocky near the top, so it suits kids around 7 and up rather than strollers.
Inside, the museum exhibits and park film fill out the story, and the bookstore is worth a browse. Note that pets aren't allowed on any of the trails, only in the parking lot and the picnic area out front.
Logistics worth knowing
- Cost: $10 per adult (16+), good for 7 days; kids 15 and under are free. Interagency passes are accepted and cover the holder plus three adults.
- Hours: The visitor center runs 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM daily. The parking lot gate locks at 4:30, so if you think your hike might run late, park at the Hornbek Homestead lot, which stays open 24 hours and doubles as a Dark Sky viewing area.
- Closed: Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's Day, and MLK Day.
- Weather: Summer highs sit around 75°F with chilly nights near 40°F; winters are cold, with average highs around 40°F and lows near 5°F. Trails can be snowy in winter.
- Bonus: The 1878 Hornbek Homestead adds a slice of settler history if you have extra time.
Planning the trip? Nestward builds a day-by-day plan in minutes, free with no subscription. See how it works →
Nestward