My dad used to take my older brothers and myself four wheeling in the mountains a ton. We often went by St. Elmo in the 80's and just walked through the eerie silence of it. There's something about these mountain ghost towns that keep the imprint of the people who lived there. You can sorta feel it.
Oh yeah, I never really explained that, did I? That was coming from the bed and breakfast. Definitely wasn’t “open” for the season, but they still had the heat on.
My dad used to take my older brothers and myself four wheeling in the mountains a ton. We often went by St. Elmo in the 80's and just walked through the eerie silence of it. There's something about these mountain ghost towns that keep the imprint of the people who lived there. You can sorta feel it.
Eerie indeed-it’s almost shocking when you come upon it. No crazy switchbacks or off-roading…just a normal road leading right to it.
did you ever end up investigating the steam from the other end of town?? Gotta make a trip here soon glad it's not too far from Denver!
Oh yeah, I never really explained that, did I? That was coming from the bed and breakfast. Definitely wasn’t “open” for the season, but they still had the heat on.
Great video, Sam. Maybe Ana Stark joined the Faceless men.
😂 I can see it! Thank you, brother.
I never knew a ghost town was so close.
It’s worth a trip!
It is not abandoned. We were there the last week of Sept 2024
St. Elmo is NOT abandoned.
Yes it is.
@@DenverLivingwithSam EVERY property in St. Elmo is privately owned and cared for. That in no way fits the definition of "abandoned."
@@lynnparker9646 Someone owns everything, Lynn.
@@DenverLivingwithSam Exactly, so NOT abandoned.
@lynnparker9646 No, it is.