Pagosa Springs Colorado
The
Great Pagosa Hot Spring, Part 2: The Hippy Dip Years,
From Personal Experience

It was as simple as it gets, a hole in the ground
with no facilities and no charge! It was a hole dug about four
feet deep and lined by eight foot long 6x6 inch railroad ties.
I asked twenty years ago and no one could tell me how long it
had been there. Some said there had always been a free dip someplace
but weren’t for sure it was the same hole. Some said it
was the last of the "dug in the ground tubs" from as
long ago as the turn of the last century. It was private property
but the owners were far away and it had historically been left
open to the public.

The Hippy Dip as it looked for decades. |
It was fed spring water by a separate small vent about thirty
yards up a slight rise. The temperature was controlled by building
dams in the stream, like little boys, and forcing a portion of
the water to by-pass the pool. With no by-pass the pool became
unbearably hot and took hours to cool down.
It certainly had names before the “Hippy Dip,” given
to it in the 1960’s-70, but none were recalled by the 1980’s.
It was in the open field south of the main vent by a hundred yards
or so. There was a rise in the land to the north so that, when
in the tub, downtown could not be seen but the Pagosa Peak range
could. Until the Best Western was expanded southward, the only
close vestige of human occupation was the veterinarian office
a half mile to the south, where Town Hall is now located and houses
at a distance to the west. When Pagosa Springs was first established
it was declared to be one square mile centered on the hot springs.
So, although it was located at the absolute center of town, it
was a private experience more like being in the wilderness. It
was paradise.
My family's personal history was too many years living outside
of but working in Dallas, Texas. Ruth and I both worked high pressure
jobs in medical research at Southwestern Medical School. Mine
was particularly stressful as I carried a beeper 24/7/365 for
a dozen years and when it rang I was in for a couple of long days
of high tension, working in the CCU with a fresh heart attack
patient. I worked with high doses of radiation and became burned-up
and burned-out in a big way. I turned grey and turned loose. We
bought a small parcel of land south of Pagosa and five year old
son, Ian and I moved here while Ruth finished out the six month
time left on her grant at the medical school.
As we started our house we found the “falls” below
the dam at Echo Lake and used it for bathing for the summer. Soon
we were told about the Hippy Dip. It was about fifty degrees warmer
than Echo Falls and became a wonderful social and father and son
bonding experience. We loved it and, as many others did at the
time, it became our bath and rec center for several years. I also
had a keen interest and learned a lot just listening to people
and became part of the history by soaking there for a number of
years.
The Hot Springs Underground
A wide variety of people came to this pool from a lady who parked
a Mercedes Benz and took off a pile of jewelry before getting
in to groups of tree planters who spent life bent over and came
to soak away their pain. There were folks who were a part of a
hot springs underground. They move about the country or world
seeking out hot springs. They were purist and only went to free
or donation supported springs. They sometimes knew each other
by name and loved to compare notes on where they had been and
bathed. They told great tales such as going 200 miles from the
last pavement in Canada to a hot spring with mosquitoes as big
as hummingbirds. Worth the trip? Oh, yeeessss!
The Dip was different things to different people and this determined
when you went to bathe. There were morning people, early afternoon
people, late afternoon and getting off work people and night people.
The nights were the rowdiest with A LOT of parties. It was on
private property so the law didn’t bother anyone in less
there was a compliant. It was so far from anyone that there were
few to none.
The morning people, cool and meditative, got to clean up the
mess the night people couldn’t or didn’t want to see.
The early afternoon people were quietly social while late afternoon
brought construction workers, post a quick run by Pagosa Bar,
and they were very talkative, and a bit louder.
There was a code about the Dip’s use among the true spring
people. Considering the sheer number of people that used the Dip
and the fact that there was absolutely no one designated by the
property owners to keep the area clean it was amazingly well kept
and in nearly immaculate condition all of the time. The parties
were cleaned up and people brought new railroad ties for the side
walls, and wood planks and rocks as needed for landscaping. My
young son Ian, sank and held his breath while going through the
sandy floor with his hands, coming up with rings, other jewelry,
mysterious stuff and coins. It was the coins he was after but
hey, he did his part!
The anthropologist was one of many highly educated folks who
soaked and conversations ranged the gamut of knowledge. Great
oratory bored some and fascinated others and there were arguments
that went on till one or the other turned into a prune and left.
And then there were the characters and events that showed up or
happened from time to time.
Dena, the Great Naked Physic Lady from Wyoming.
Dena was such a character. She was a physic and hot spring fanatic;
she even brought lithium water with her from her “favorite
spring” because she heard The Great Pagosa was low on lithium.
Lithium is used medically as an antidepressant, Dena drank it
by the gallon. She began working with an alcoholics group here
and claimed she was saving them all with her physic powers. Suits
were optional at the Dip but locals tried to keep it quiet and
low key. Dena made a BIG POINT of bathing naked by standing, jiggling
and waving to people driving down Lightplant Road, now known as
Hot Springs Blvd. She was size challenged, jiggled ALL OVER and
couldn’t be subdued, charging that people were too up-tight.
She may have impressed some with her physic awareness but the
only thing she couldn’t seem to foretell was when the sheriff
was coming. She was taken to the county line and waved a “so
long and good-by.”
The Day of the Bud Girls.
Then there was the day three of the “Bud” cheerleaders
came by the Dip and said, “We can’t get in that water
with our pretty white Bud suits on!” There were no cell
phones then but guys started showing up in record numbers! Unfortunately,
I was out of the “guy’s physic network” so I
missed it all, but it was discussed in great detail and at length
for weeks.
Few locals knew the popularity of the Dip if they didn’t
use it. It was easy to estimate, while in the Dip, that it was
Pagosa’s number one tourist attraction. A continuous stream
of people came year-round from near and far. There was no publicity
other than word of mouth which was, evidently, very successful.
Several people came year after year or often, when they could,
and later bought property and became neighbors. I could name a
few still here! During conversations I found that many came from
places with hot springs or passed by hot springs on the way here,
they swore by The Great Pagosa!

Refer to "tease" photo in Springs
Article Part 1. That photo shows the start of the "Mineral
Mound" that we know today at The Springs Resort. It
was built about the mid 1950's of sand stone and mortor.
The lower part had a trough on top that caught the water
flowing down from the top so people could feel it or dip
a cup for drinking. The roof in the background is the same
A-frame building there now. This image was printed on a
matchbook cover that was lost in the earlier hot tub construction
and found fifty years later with a new construction phase.
Considering the humidity it is a miracle it survived. The
other side showed that the motel was the Best Western then. |
A Sad Day
In autumn of 1988 a sacrilege occurred. The tradition of peace
at the spring dip was shattered forever. Late at night a man and
woman walked over to bathe; only he walked away. She was found
floating face down the next morning. The details available are
few and not to be exploited here, but it was murder at the Great
Pagosa Hot Spring.
The owners realized their liability problem and a large yellow
machine arrived filling the Dip with rock and dirt. A tradition
of perhaps 10,000 years of free access came to a halt. The Hippy
Dip became one of those things too good to be true.
Now, almost a decade later, I still miss the freedom and culture
of the good souls who bathed there. Others miss it also, from
time to time some of us users happen across each other and wave
and if we can we talk and lament about the “good old days.”
We share a tradition and bond that will end with us.
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