As someone mentioned above, high winds aloft in this region tend to create some hazardous conditions (mountain waves, etc.). I will qualify that response with the fact that I'm not an expert mountain flyer… I did my initial training in the Midwest, and only recently started flying the Rockies myself (now that my airport is spitting distance from the big rocks). But, every time the wind blows really strong out here, you tend to see the same hazardous PIREPS being reported… turbulence, mountain waves, and LLWS.
The rocks in a stream analogy is a good one here… the Rockies are our rocks, and sometimes you get "whitewater" in those conditions.
But, excluding those regional hazards here, winds aloft of 50+ can sometimes be entertaining even for local flights. I remember flying a C152 backwards over the ground in slow flight back when I first got my private pilot certificate. Kind of an interesting perspective from an airplane!