And because it was sorta close to our route, we decided to visit the Crystal Mill, site of many Colorado post card photos. You've seen it. The access road is 4WD only, but not terrible.
Worse than that in places, better in others.
Near the end of the road is the Mill:
If you drive a few hundred yards further up the road, there are a few cabins and some old mining junk laying around.
If you drive much past that, you encounter this sign:
The road beyond this sign is more of a buggy playground, and not the place for unmodified vehicles, so we turned around there.
BTW, if you ever find yourself inclined to head to the Mill, note that it's a narrow, rough (in places), shelf road, and there are a lot of people on it who have slim to no knowledge of trail etiquette or even how to drive their 4WD vehicles. Case in point: We met a guy coming the other way in a first gen Tundra. OK, probably a capable enough vehicle for the terrain, right? He's immediately adjacent to a pull out area, but it's at the edge of a drop off and he's nervous about using it. OK, is what it is. My wife gets out to spot him and get him safely onto the pull out so I can get by. Done. I look in my rear view mirror and can see he's spinning a rear wheel trying to back off the pull out area. So I park and go back to help him. Due to the angle he's positioned, he's got one rear wheel that's mostly unloaded, and it's spinning against a rock. I'm thinking good use of a locker if the truck has one, so I ask him: "do you have a rear locker?". His response: "I don't know". Then he asks me: "Do you think I should be in four-wheel drive?" Ummm...yeah, that might help. Got him on his way pretty quickly after that.