Sara Davidson
|October, 9, 2024
When I found myself recently, for reasons I could not fathom, in a “damp, drizzly November in my soul,” instead of taking to the sea, as Ishmael did in Moby Dick, I went with the man I call “Rio” to Valley View Hot Springs, in the great, wide and empty San Luis Valley of Colorado.
At Valley View, warm water bubbles out of the ground, creating natural pools for soaking and reflecting. I’ve been going there for years, and each time I arrive, there’s the first shock of seeing men and woman entirely naked except for shoes, walking to and from the primitive cabins and pools. The place has been “clothing optional” since it opened around 1920, and while people arriving for the first time often wear bathing suits, by the end of their first day, they usually lose the suits.
One of my friends, before her first visit, told me she did not want to take off her clothes. “No problem,” I said. But her resistance was short-lived. After she had a swim in the Olympic-size pool fed by springs and kept sparkling clean, then walked the short path to the hot water soaking pool, she dropped the suit.
On our way home, 3 days later, she said, “It makes you so relaxed, not having to think, ‘What should I put on? What goes with what? How cold or hot is it?’” Most people at Valley View carry a robe to put on if it’s chilly. And that’s it.
It’s called a “naturist” resort, and naturism has deep roots in the San Luis valley as well as other parts of the world.
Albert Camus, the French philosopher and novelist, was passionate about naturism. Growing up in Algeria, he and his friends, male and female, would spend hours on beaches where they could abandon their clothes. When he was 24, in 1937, Camus wrote in his notebook, “Being naked always has associations of physical liberty, of harmony between the hand and the flowers it touches, of a loving understanding between the earth and men who have been free from human things. Ah, I should be a convert to this if it were not already my religion…. To accept the world and to accept pleasure—but only when I am stripped bare of everything.”
Walt Whitman wrote in “Specimen Days,” about a beloved creek to which he’d retreat on hot days: “Nature was naked, and I was also. It was too lazy, soothing, and joyous…to speculate about. Yet I might have thought somehow in this vein: Perhaps the inner, never-lost rapport we hold with earth, light, air, trees, etc., is not to be realized through eyes and mind only but through the whole corporeal body, which I will not have blinded or bandaged… any more than the eyes. Sweet, sane, still nakedness in Nature!”
The etiquette at Valley View is to maintain eye contact when you speak with people, not letting your eyes wander. But at a distance, you see the whole person, and an hour or so after arriving, it’s all, to use the word again, “natural.”
You can camp, set up a tent, bring a trailer, or rent one of the cabins, which are primitive. The bathroom is either down a hall or a short walk across an open area. I usually stay in one of the cabins, but Rio likes the units that have a toilet down the hall.
One of the most beloved features of the place is the large colony of Brazilian free-tailed bats that arrive at Valley View in June and leave in September. While they’re there, you can hike up to the bat cave just before sunset, fix your eyes on the entrance to an old mine shaft, and suddenly, a few bats flutter out, looking as small as flies. The species is only four inches long with a wingspan of twelve inches, but in moments there’s a swarm, coming and coming and coming until they fan out across the blue sky.
They move like a tornado cloud, spinning and twisting at 60 miles an hour, hunting for flying insects. Gaining distance, they look like a lacy ribbon unfurling across the valley. Individual bats will dart away from the cloud, circle and dive back in. They navigate by echolocation, sending out sound waves that, when reaching anything solid, tell the bats where and how big the object is.
The out-flight lasts about ten minutes, then people walk back down to their cabin or campsite in the gathering darkness.
On our recent visit, the bats had already left the Valley, but there was plenty to enjoy. We fell into a lazy routine: swim in pool, soak in hot spring, lie in sun, read a book, take a walk, then a nap, and prepare a meal from food we’ve brought in.
There are no phones, no internet, but if needed, you can access wireless in the office, a small building at the entrance to Valley View, where you can always find a few souls sitting naked with their computers.
On one of our walks, we put on shirts to protect us from the brilliant sunlight. A tall, blond, well-built young man wearing nothing but athletic shoes walks toward us. We greet each other with smiles and ask where we’re from.
“Boulder,” I tell the young man.
“Aspen,” he says.
“That’s pretty great.”
“But it’s not this!” he says, extending his arms out in both directions. “The freedom.”
We nod, and smile, and walk on. All is silent except for our footfalls on the path. The hills above the valley are ablaze with gold from the Aspen trees turning yellow, and we come upon two does with their fauns, nibbling leaves from low-hanging branches.
It takes three days for me to quiet down and feel the whole body relax. What joy. The mind’s at peace. The body fairly sings with good health. God’s in his heaven—All’s right with the world.* Then it’s time to pack up, put on clothes, and drive home.
Would you like to guess how long that peace of mind and body stayed with me?
However long, I’m grateful. And already wishing to return.
*from Robert Browning’s poem, Pippa Passes
PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT. What do you think about “naturism?”
I went to a college in NJ many moons ago that had a nude swimming hole. I was amazed how nobody cared about being naked. It was very freeing. The ones who wore suits were observed more.
I love the story, and hot springs. We have many close to us, a drive into BC. Many are remote, but a drive down most backcountry roads you will find a car it two pulled off the roadside, and you can surmise there’s a hot spring close by. Very relaxing, therapeutic. I’m glad you’ve discovered your place🤩😘
Hi Sara, I met you at Valley View Hot Springs – when the bats were flying out through a rainbow- the sunset was dramatic with the dark clouds on one side, the rainbow opposite and the bats heading out over the valley. Thanks for reminding me to go look at the photos from that evening!
My wife and I have been going to Valley View Hot Springs since 1976 at least 2x/year and consider it our favorite place in CO. It has definitely been a significant factor in maintaining and enhancing our 56-year marriage.
Congratulations, a 56-year marriage! That’s a rare achievement in our time. Hope our paths cross sometime at Valley View.
Loved this, Sara. You fully lived in the moment!
I want to go!! Beautifully written piece!
I loved this article.
I also know San Luis Valley so gorgeous. Really enjoyed it. You are a great writer.. thanks
I used to be quite familiar with Valley View hot springs. My son was conceived during a visit there (not in one of the pools )over forty three years ago. There are many others to visit. You may wish to make a journey to visit more, particularly in Montana. There is also a place near Indian Hills where ‘being in nature’ may be referred to as a nudist colony. Check it out as this location is closer to home
Thrilled to hear your son was conceived there! How do you contact the place near Indian Hills? What’s it called? Thanks!
I had the same experience when going with a group of friends several years ago to a clothing optional hot springs (I’ve gone a couple of times since). Really, it’s no big deal after all very short time of going unclothed. Thanks for the reminder.
Excellent depiction of Valley View Hot Springs Sara. It is an oasis with an amazing variety of plants and animals too. It’s the only place in Colorado that I’ve ever seen fire flies. They look like tiny lanterns above the dark warm pools in the evenings. Truly a healing magical world. Being free to be naked here is another deep rich blessing. Let your cares fall away.
Beautiful description of your experience. Would love to go there!!!
I did leave a message yesterday about my not swimming nakedly.
Hey Linda, the comments from yesterday and a few days before did not work. Could you please re-send it via my website, which has now been fixed? Hope all is well with you. Warmest, Sara
What do people do about hugs, one naked man with one naked woman? Or does everyone just pass on that and content themselves with a handshake or a pat on the shoulder?
Interesting question. It never occurred to me. I guess we don’t hug strangers. Just smile and communicate good will and wishes through the eyes. Being naked sets up a kind of natural boundary. You can look but you don’t touch?
I love being naked (I sleep naked), it is so nice not to have clothes touching my skin. In my rural home, I can walk around without clothes anytime. I do feel compelled to not sit on my furniture without clothes on, or a cloth barrier. That being said, I don’t understand why I need to share the experience with other people. I do love soaking in hot water in scenic places. IE: a hot springs pool. We stopped at Tecopa Hot Springs one year on our annual winter trip to the Southwest. You are not allowed to wear swimwear in the pools (mandatory nakedness!), however the genders are segregated. It was so nice to be naked in the hot water. In comparison, we stay at Agua Caliente County Park (San Diego County) and the pool requires swimwear, not the same experience!
I know Valley View. Great to take your clothes off and frolic, not worrying about our imperfect bodies.
Another enjoyable post… I used to go to a small nudist beach and community on the North Shore on Oahu many years ago… Such Freedom..
My sister lives on Oahu and would love to know about the beach on the North Shore. Do you know, Is it still Naturist?
I love your adventurous spirit.
This sounds so peaceful and freeing.
Cedar and I can’t wait to go!!! xxoo, Ren
Be sure to make reservations long in advance, like now for next spring or summer. Warmest, Sara