The couple a few steps ahead of us are having a hard time. They abruptly stop, panting, hands on their knees. They gaze up — and up and up and up — at the stairs that seem to rise to the heavens. Their weariness is so palpable that my own limbs begin to tremble.
"The next time we do this, we'll be smarter about it," the man says to his female companion. "But this is the last time we're doing this."
Like us, they are climbing the Manitou Incline, a staircase in Manitou Springs, Colo., that rises 2,000 vertical feet, with 2,700-plus steps, in just under a mile.
Originally, a cable car track ferried pipeline materials up to Pikes Peak. When the pipelines were finished, in the 1920s, the path was turned into a tourist attraction in the 1920s. For the next six decades, cable cars ferried guests up the mountain to an elevation of 8,550 feet, where they could drink in sweeping views of nearby Colorado Springs and the Garden of the Gods, a National Natural Landmark. Then, in 1990, a rock slide damaged part of the track. The cars were pulled off the mountainside and the tracks were yanked from their moorings. The attraction was no more.
But the wooden railroad ties were left behind, to prevent erosion. Chipped into the mountain's flank — at first neatly, then somewhat haphazardly — they appeared as a jumbled pile of matchsticks tumbling downhill.
This crazy stairway began luring hardy locals, who used it for redlining workouts. Eventually, word spread about these nearly vertical steps that humbled even the fittest. And people from around the globe began streaming to tiny Manitou Springs.
There was just one problem. A clutch of private owners held the land, so hiking up the steps was technically illegal. More concerning, the owners were not maintaining the steps for public use. That problem was solved in 2013, when the owners sat down and hammered out a deal putting the city of Colorado Springs in charge of the Incline. That same year, it formally opened as a public attraction.
Today, well over 300,000 people hike up the Manitou Incline annually. Competitive runners, cyclists, Olympians and military personnel often use the stairs for training purposes. Celebrities are sometimes spotted; Kevin Bacon was seen climbing the Incline when he was in town filming "Cop Car" a few years ago. But most people climb it simply to prove to themselves, and the cosmos, that they can.