Spring Creek Hut

The Spring Creek Hut is great for cross-country skiing, fat biking, and snowshoeing! It is our easiest to access winter hut and is great for families with kids! It is located around 20 miles outside of Montrose, Colorado. A quick 1.2-mile ski, snowshoe, or pedal will take you directly to the Spring Creek Hut. The Spring Creek hut sits tucked into the Uncompahgre National Forest and is just off Spring Creek Rim Road in Montrose County. There are miles and miles of cross-country skiing accessible from the hut on the Divide Road. You can check the grooming status at CSA Trail Grooming under the Uncompahgre Plateau. This Hut accommodates eight people via padded bunk-style beds. The Hut includes a propane stove, propane lamp, wood stove, firewood, cookware, and utensils. Water is obtained by melting snow. Hut users are responsible for treating water with iodine, pump & filter, or UV scanner. During ski season, the Spring Creek Hut is $30 per person per night.

ROUTEMILESASCENTDESCENT
Forest Boundary to Spring Creek Hut5.71,200’27’
Shorter Winter Trailhead to Spring Creek Hut1.2138’55’
Horsefly Mesa to Spring Creek Hut9936’675’
Spring-Creek-Winter-Map
  • When to Ski

December through April

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  • What the Hut?

Our mountain huts hold eight people per night. The wooden huts are equipped with padded bunks, a propane cook stove, lights, a wood stove, necessary utensils, cookware, and firewood. Each hut is equipped with a composting toilet facility.

  • What’s it Cost?

Rent the entire hut or just a few spots!
-8 booking minimum on weekends and holidays $30 per person/night

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  • What to Bring

AT skis/splitboard, skis, poles, boots, clothes, first aid kits, food, and a sleeping bag. Our huts have everything else. See the Skier’s Bible for a more detailed list.

  • Contact Us

Call us at (970) 626-3033 or send us an email.

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“The past 4 days was our second trip into the North Pole Hut on the winter route. You just can’t beat the fact that you’ve usually got the hut to yourself, there’s so few people that make the trek in. All the bare basics are already in the hut – you bring whatever else makes you comfy – but you’d better make it a light backpack AND be ready for anything. If you can do that, you will be rewarded. We’ve already booked the 7 day Durango/Moab bike trip on the other set of huts! I can’t thank SJHS enough for having these gems socked away deep in the mountains, ready for us when we need them!”

~ Eric K, Cortez, Colorado

What's Included

Our staff is available for in-depth trip planning and can offer individualized insight after getting to know you and your group.

Located on private property and within National Forests and BLM administered lands, our ski huts are used exclusively for our clients and are stocked with everything you’ll need for rest, hydration and cooking.  Equipped with 8 padded bunks, sleeping bags, propane cook stove & lighting, wood stove, cookware and composting toilet.

Our detailed maps, turn-by-turn directions, and GPS tracks help you stay on route. Winter huts can be linked together for multi-day trips or used individually as basecamps for your skiing adventures.

Each ski hut has a woodstove and is supplied with ample firewood for the winter.

More Questions?  Ask a question here or call us.

Ski Hut FAQ

San Juan Huts offers custom winter shuttles, and they must be booked at least 30 days in advance. TelluRides is another option: www.TelluRides.com [email protected] or 970.626.5121

Light to medium weight gear works getting to and between the huts. Except for Spring Creek and Blue Lakes, skis with climbing skins are recommended. Above the huts, full “backcountry” gear is recommended. Get out in the snow before you leave on your trip and learn your capabilities and the capabilities of your equipment.

Be prepared for varying terrain and conditions for hut to hut travel. Route-finding skills are important and the tracks may be obscured by fresh snow. It takes approximately three to eight hours between huts.

Between most huts avalanche danger is very minimal with one exception: between Last Dollar and North Pole Huts there are eight points of potential avalanche danger, and two of the eight points require real avy-savvy to negotiate. Above most huts a variety of non-avalanche as well as potential avalanche terrain exists. Skiers should have at a minimum some working knowledge of avalanche ‘mechanics’ while venturing above the huts. Proper avalanche equipment (shovel, beacon, probe, and a brain) is also recommended.

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