La Garita sits quietly on the western edge of the San Luis Valley,
along the southern edge of Saguache County. The name,
La Garita, means sentinel or lookout, and comes from a nearby
mountain with the same name, from which there is a spectacular
optical panorama. La Garita has

been gatekeeper to the
San Luis Valley for centuries. There is evidence that Native
Americans lived in and traveled through the area extensively.
On the cliff walls of beautiful and serene Carnero Canyon,
a pictograph portrayal of a past native encampment is recorded
in red ochre. While overlooking a major portal into the
La Garita Wilderness and the San Juan Range, La Garita has
offered many travelers both solace and sustenance.
In the early to mid 1800s, La Garita was a Spanish settlement
along the wagon trail to Saguache, primarily occupied
with raising sheep and

subsistence farming. Almost every
family had land and a water ditch and the population of La
Garita grew to almost 1,000. However, in the late 1800s,
the government decided that everyone had to file for water
rights. This being a foreign idea to those who had been using
the water equitably for centuries, many failed to take the
required actions and lost their use of the water. This event had
a devastating effect on the local livelyhood. Sometime after La
Garita’s farming economy started downward, gold was discovered
nearby. Many folks ventured into La Garita’s hills in
search of gold, but few were as lucky as Mark Biedel at striking
a mother lode. In 1881, his Crystal Hill Mine proved to be
the most bountiful find in the region.

The solace that small Spanish communities offered attracted
the Penitente Brotherhood to places like La Garita. They
were being ostracized from the mainstream Catholicism due
to their extreme practices of faith. Following the devastating
influenza outbreak of 1918, the Brothers of Light, as they were
often called, retreated into the hills. The Penitentes lived in
the remote canyons, practicing their rituals and living by
strict codes. Little remains of the Penitentes, today, except for
their legend and a faded Madonna adorning one of Penitente
Canyon’s walls.
Penitente Canyon is only a few minutes outside of La
Garita and, in the modern day, it is a great destination for
picnicking, hiking, biking, and world class rock climbing.
Other local sights near La Garita are the Natural Arch and
the Wagon Tracks, which were worn into the rock’s face by the
pioneers carrying timber down from the mountains. Currently,
the most popular spot in town is the La Garita Store, where
information and maps for local sights can be found, as well
as a cup of coffee, some local chat, and the best hamburger in
the valley. Everyone is welcome to visit and celebrate La Garita
Days in July, featuring fellowship, dancing in the street, and
great food.