JANUARY 2011
RODEO LEGEND Cowboy Gentleman Harry Vold
The official publication of the Colorado Rural Electric Association • Volume 42, Number 01
Publisher/Editor Associate Editor Editorial/Digital
Mona Neeley, CCC Donna Norris Carissa Sheehan
OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Executive Director
Chris Morgan, Gunnison Bob Bledsoe, Tri-State Bill Midcap, Fort Morgan Don Kaufman, Sangre De Cristo Kent Singer, CREA
BOARD OF DIRECTORS Empire John Porter Grand Valley Sylvia Spangler Highline Jim Lueck Holy Cross Michael Glass K.C. Dan Mills LaPlata Tom Compton Mountain Parks Stan Cazier Mountain View B.D. Paddock Poudre Valley Jack Schneider San Isabel Joseph Costa, Reg Rudolph San Luis Valley Mike Rierson, John Villyard Sangre De Cristo Paul Erickson Southeast Mark Grasmick United Power Jim Jaeger White River Bill Jordan Y-W Stuart Travis Yampa Valley Sam Haslem Associate Members Basin Electric Co-Bank Moon Lake Electric Wheatland Electric EDITORIAL Denver Corporate Office 5400 N. Washington • Denver, CO 80216 Phone: 303-455-4111 Email: MNeeley@coloradocountrylife.org Website: coloradocountrylife.coop Facebook: Colorado Country Life Twitter: @COCountryLife ADVERTISING Kris Wendtland NCM
16
FEATURE Rodeo Legend Harry Vold, is a household name
16
22
20
22
Association, 5400 N. Washington Street, Denver, CO 80216 Periodical postage paid at Denver, Colorado. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Colorado Country Life, 5400 N. Washington Street, Denver, CO 80216. Publication of an advertisement in Colorado Country Life, does not imply endorsement by any Colorado rural electric cooperative or the Colorado Rural Electric Association. Editorial opinions published in Colorado Country Life, magazine shall pertain to issues affecting rural electric cooperatives, rural communities and citizens. The opinion of CREA is not necessarily that of any particular cooperative
24
COLUMNS
Recipes
20
Gardening
Xeriscape a perfect solution for Colorado’s dry climate BY EVE GILMORE
24
Outdoors
Hunting and fishing link us to those who come before us BY DENNIS SMITH
25
Energy Tips
Seal our home to keep the warm in and the cold out BY BRIAN SLOBODA
DEPARTMENTS
We have the opportunity to find ways to tackle challenges BY KENT SINGER
published monthly for $9/$15 per year by Colorado Rural Electric
BY FREIA BRADFORD
Savory stews and soups will keep winter cold at bay BY LINH TRUONG
4 303-902-7276 800-626-1181
in rodeo
COLORADO COUNTRY LIFE (USPS 469-400/ISSN 1090-2503) is
or individual.
Rodeo legend Harry Vold and his wife, Karen.
5 6 7 12 14 30
Viewpoint
Letters Calendar Co-op News NewsClips Industry Story Discoveries
COVER: COLORADO’S HARRY VOLD ATOP OF ONE OF HIS FAVORITE HORSES AT THE NATIONAL WESTERN STOCK SHOW. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF HARRY VOLD’S COLLECTION.
With New Beginnings We have an opportunity to find new ways to tackle our challenges BY KENT SINGER, CRE A E XECUTIVE DIRECTOR
W
hen the Colorado General Assembly convenes on January 12 at the State Capitol building in Denver, many of the senators and representatives will need to wear those labels that say “Hi! My name is____.” That’s because of the 100 Kent Singer members of the state legislature, 30 will be new to their jobs, having been elected in November. With those new faces comes a shift in the balance of power in Colorado. The Colorado House of Representatives, which had a Democratic 38-27 majority in the last session, now has a 33-32 Republican majority as the result of the election. The Republican majority has elected a new Speaker of the House (Frank McNulty, R-Highlands Ranch) and has also determined the composition and focus of the various committees that will consider legislation. The Republicans also picked up one seat in the Colorado Senate in November, but the Democrats maintain a 20-15 majority. A similar shift occurred on the federal level, where the Republicans picked up 63 seats in the U.S. House of Re-presentatives and now hold their largest majority in over 60 years. The Republicans also gained six seats in the U.S. Senate and reduced the Democratic edge to a count of 53-47. (The Independent and Democratic-Socialist senators caucus with the Democrats.) So what is the significance of this power shift to the Colorado Rural Electric Association and the Colorado co-ops? I believe there will be a couple of important impacts. On the state level, I believe we will see a more balanced approach to energy policy. Over the last four years of Gov.
4 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
Bill Ritter’s New Energy Economy, the Colorado legislature adopted 57 separate bills to implement new energy policies focused on the development of renewable energy and the promotion of energy efficiency. The electric co-op community supported some of these ideas, but tried to make sure that they were implemented in ways that did not result in significantly higher costs to Colorado ratepayers. We are pleased that Governor-elect John Hickenlooper appears to be more open to electric co-op concerns when it comes to legislation. We were glad to accompany him on a tour of the Craig Station, one of our power generating plants, prior to the election, and we believe he understands that additional regulations can translate to higher power costs. So, by “a more balanced approach” I mean that the recent emphasis on developing more environmentally-friendly power sources will and should continue, but we also have to recognize that Colorado’s homes and businesses will continue to rely on traditional sources of energy for the foreseeable future. Make no mistake, we at CREA and our members have a significant investment in the continued development of the New Energy Economy because there are many benefits, including jobs, rural development and a more diversified power portfolio. In fact, last year the co-op community opposed an effort by an out-of-state group to dilute the renewable portfolio standard by allowing utilities to opt out from that standard. But we also have a responsibility to our customers to provide reliable and affordable electric service, particularly
in light of the tough economic conditions that currently prevail in Colorado. At CREA, we will continue to fight for policies that protect rural electric members. On the national level, it appears that any kind of regulatory move by Congress to regulate carbon will not occur in the near future. However, even if Congress does not act, the Environmental Protection Agency is forging ahead with administrative rules that would create new permitting requirements for power plants and other industrial emitters of greenhouse gases. We continue to believe that this is not an appropriate role for the EPA and that only Congress has the authority to determine how and whether or not to regulate these gases. From a broader national perspective, there is no question that the most serious problems facing the country are the economic recession and the fearsome national debt. While energy policy is important and will continue to have a primary position in the local and national political discourse, it will likely take a backseat to other issues in the next Congress. With a new Congress and new state legislature, it is a time to be optimistic that our elected leaders will have the intestinal fortitude to act decisively to address many of the problems facing Colorado the U.S. To do so, it will take innovative thinking and a willingness to challenge conventional wisdom. Today’s political leaders would be wise to follow the advice of Ralph Waldo Emerson: “Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.”
Executive Director
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Defining Moderate Increases I’m writing in regard to your News Clips article titled “Projections Call for Moderate Increases in Home Heating Bills With Winter Weather” (November 2010). I don’t consider an 8 percent increase in the price of propane to be moderate. I’m retired and there will be no increase in my Social Security payments for the second year in a row. The cost of much of what I buy has increased while my income has not. Patricia Carey, Bellvue
Buoyed by Book Review Thanks to Julie Simpson for her lovely review of my book Crested Butte Stories … Through My Lens. I was flattered by her comments and wonderfully surprised by some book orders for Christmas. It was a treat to meet all the nice people who called. I’ve always liked your magazine. Good work. Sandra Cortner, Almont
Viewing Wildlife In reference to the letter (December 2010) concerning the November Outdoor article by Dennis Smith, I can assure the writer that Dennis Smith’s outdoor ethics and his hunting ethics do not include riding around on a noisy contraption all day. I don’t know what the writer tried to read into the story, but I am sorry he missed the intention of the article. John Stuart, Loveland
In regard to the Letter to the Editor (December 2010) regarding Dennis Smith’s November Outdoors article, I did not read the article. All I can say is that I have the fortunate privilege of seeing deer and bears in my own front yard. I get to view the elk wintering in the pastures in the valley. I love the Animas Valley and I consider myself lucky. Debbie Sterling, Durango
e
end your letter to the editor by mail to 5400 S N. Washington St., Denver, CO 80216 or by emailing it to mneeley@coloradocountrylife. org. You must include your name and address to be published. Letters may be edited.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
JANUARY 2011 Colorado
Country Life 5
JANUARY
CA L EN D A R Through March 18 near Dolores
January 15 in Leadville
January 22 in Grand Lake
February 2 in Pueblo
Keith Hutcheson Art Exhibition
State Snowshoe Championships
Moonlight Snowmobile Ride
Anasazi Heritage Center 3 miles west of Dolores, Highway 184 970-882-5600 www.co.blm.gov/ahc
Preregistration required 970-845-0931 pedalpwr@vail.net www.pedalpowerbike.com
Starts at Idleglen at 7 p.m. Ride to Hatchett Park to watch the moon rise 303-908-6950 www.grandlakechamber.com
Head Games: Football’s Concussion Crisis
January 6-9 in Ouray
January 15-16 in Crested Butte
Ouray Ice Festival
USASA Half Pipe and Slopestyle Competitions
January 23 in Trinidad
Snowdown Winter Celebration
The Polar Bear Ball
Crested Butte Mountain Resort 970-349-1168 www.gunnisoncrestedbutte.com
First Street Gallery 719-859-7702 www.historictrinidad.com/tourism/ events.html
Costume party, parade with a monster theme www.snowdown.org
Family events, ice-climbing competitions 970-325-4288 http://ourayicefestival.com
February 2-6 in Durango
January 19 in Crested Butte
Big Thunder Draft Horse Show
Full Moon Yurt Dinner Tour
January 25-27 in Greeley
Ranch-Way Feeds Indoor Arena at The Ranch January 14: 7 p.m. January 15-16: 2 p.m. 970-619-4003 www.bigthundershow.com
Crested Butte Nordic Center 970-349-1168 www.gunnisoncrestedbutte.com
The Colorado Farm Show
Winter Festival Contests, chili cook-off, carriage rides 970-577-9900 www.estesparkcvb.com/events.cfm
Island Grove Regional Park 970-356-9426 coloradofarmshow.com
Pikes Peak Ringers Concert
January 27 in Telluride
Abbey Events Center, Performance by a nonprofit handbell choir 7 p.m. www.canoncity.com/ community-calendar.php
Historic Pub Crawl Discover the history of Telluride’s watering holes Reservations required; starts 5 p.m. 970-728-3344 ext. 2 www.telluridemuseum.org/events.html
January 15 near Colorado Springs
Colorado Indian Market
January 27 in Crested Butte
Bob Taylor Memorial Ice Fishing Contest
The Denver Merchandise Mart 972-398-0052; 303-292-6278 http://indianmarket.net
ArtWalk Evening
January 21-22 in Winter Park
Downtown Crested Butte 5-8 p.m. 970-349-1168 www.gunnisoncrestedbutte.com
Chef’s Cup Dinner and Dance January 15 in Grand Lake
Nordic Ski Fest Grand Lake Golf Course Free lessons; reservations required.970-627-8008 www.grandlakechamber.com
Winter Park Resort’s West Portal Station. Dinner and dance fundraiser 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. 970-726-1564 www.playwinterpark.com/events
January 25-February 6 in Breckenridge
Snow Sculpture Championships Riverwalk Center parking lot and lawn 970-547-3100 www.townofbreckenridge.com
Nordic Ski Fest F or more information on these activities, visit www.coloradocountrylife. coop. Click on Events.
6 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
February 4 in Fort Collins Downtown Fort Collins Special exhibitions, refreshments at galleries www.fortcollinsarts.com February 5 in Grand Lake
Winter Carnival Downtown Grand Lake Bedsled races, human bowling, more 970-531-1914 www.grandlakechamber.com February 5 in Durango
Bella Notte Handbell Concert St. Columba School gym 1801 E. Third Ave. Concert and Italian dinner 970-247-5527 February 7 in Grand Junction
Taste of Grand Valley Festival January 29 in Gunnison
e
Downtown Steamboat Springs 970-879-0695 ext.100 www.sswsc.org
First Friday Gallery Walk
January 21 in Cañon City
January 22-24 in Denver
Antero Reservoir 50 miles west of Colorado Springs www.antero-icefishing-contest.com
February 2-6 in Steamboat Springs
Winter Carnival
January 14-16 in Loveland
January 14-17 in Estes Park
Lecture by Chris Nowinski Occhiato University Ballroom, 7 p.m. 719-549-2810
Hartman Rocks Recreation Area 970-349-1168 www.gunnisoncrestedbutte.com
Two Rivers Convention Center 970-243-5364 www.visitgrandjunction.com/events
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
K.C. ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION
Country News INSIDE ... k Electricity Theft Not Worth It k Make Your Home Safer k Electric Credits and Rebates k Operations Update k Country Kitchen
R
MAILING ADDRESS HUGO OFFICE P.O. Box 8 Hugo, CO 80821-0008 STRATTON OFFICE P.O. Box 285 Stratton, CO 80836-0285 HUGO ADDRESS 422 Third Avenue Hugo, CO 80821 STRATTON ADDRESS 281 Main Street Stratton, CO 80836 719-743-2431 Hugo 719-348-5318 Stratton www.kcelectric.coop Web
Board of Directors Kevin Penny, president Robert Bledsoe, vice president Terry Tagtmeyer, secretary/treasurer Danny Mills, asst. secretary/treasurer James Lewis, director Jim Michal, director Luanna Naugle, director Dave Ritchey, director Marvin Thaller, director Staff Tim Power, general manager Chance Briscoe, office manager Ben Orrell, member services specialist Larry Shutte, operations manager Paul Norris, line superintendent
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Communication Is Key in 2011 BY TIMOTHY J. POWER, GENERAL MANAGER
I
f you are like many people, you w ill have set resolutions or goals to accomplish in 2011. At K.C. Electric Association, one of our resolutions going into 2011 is to expand member communication. Our Tim Power goal is to ensure we are communicating with you, our members, on a regular basis. And two of the main ways we plan to do this are through the monthly newsletter and our website. Both of these venues offer us excellent ways to let you know what is happening at K.C. Electric. As you read this newsletter, you may notice the increase in the number of articles. In 2011 our staff will be writing articles on a regular basis to let you know what we are working on and how you may be affected by various issues. For example,
in this edition you will see a listing of 2011 KC Electric rebates that Ben Orrell, member services specialist has compiled. Larry Shutte, our operations manager, provides a short update on happenings in his department. And Chance Briscoe, our office manager and chief financial officer, has an article on budget billing. Another communication medium that has been updated is our website. While the site may look similar to how it has looked, there is now much more content for our members. If you have trouble finding something on our site, please give us a call at 719-743-2431 and let us know. You can check out our website at www.kcelectric.coop. We are confident you will enjoy the expanded newsletter and website and we will continue to explore new ways to communicate with you in the months and years ahead.
LEVEL OUT YOUR PAYMENTS BY CHANCE BRISCOE, CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER
A
s the cold weather moves in and residential electric bills begin to rise, more and more people are looking for ways to keep their energy bills from getting too high. To do this, consider insulating and weatherizing your home. You might also look at your heating system and appliances and make sure they are running efficiently. Doing these things will save you money and make your home more comfortable. But there is another way to lessen the financial impact of higher electric bills. It is called budget billing. With budget billing all your monthly bills are averaged together so you pay the same amount each month. This way you avoid paying higher bills in the winter and lower bills in the moderate seasons. If you are interested in budget billing, then contact the office to sign up or learn more. (Tom Ackerman 422950002)
JANUARY 2011 Colorado
Country Life 7
COUNTRY NEWS
Electricity Theft: It’s Not Worth the Risk BY CHRISTINE SMITH
E
very year, electric cooperatives across the country cope with thieves — folks who deliberately tamper with their electric meter to steal power. Not only is this practice extremely dangerous, it’s a serious crime that results in hefty fines and jail time. “We’ve seen people do some dangerous things — using knives, forks, magnets, jumper cables and any number of other objects to get around paying for the power they use,” explains Tim Power, general manager for K.C. Electric. “However, not only are these persons stealing from their fellow co-op members, they’re also risking their lives and those of our workers.” According to the Cooperative Research Network, a division of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, power surging through a compromised meter can cause an electrical catastrophe. A short circuit could produce an arc flash bright enough to cause blindness and powerful enough to launch fragments of shrapnel-like, red-hot debris. Serious injury or death from electrocution, explosion or fire often results from meter tampering. Only trained electric co-op personnel wearing pro-
tective clothing should work on meters. “Anytime you get into a meter base, you run a risk,” comments Power. “With an arc flash, somebody could get killed or seriously maimed.” (Jason Smith 636795000) Electricity theft is not a victimless crime. Your not-for-profit co-op loses revenue and expends resources to investigate tampering. These costs are then passed on to the entire membership. National estimates vary, but The Washington Post cited revenue protection officials who claim between $1 billion and $10 billion worth of electricity is stolen from utilities annually. Since everyone pays for lost power, please let your co-op know if you suspect meter tampering. Call K.C. Electric at 719-7432431 to report possible theft of service. All information can be given anonymously. Christine Smith writes on safety issues for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, the Arlington, Virginia-based service arm of the nation’s 900-plus consumer-owned, not-for-profit electric cooperatives.
Upgrading Your Outlets Makes Your Home Safer
E
lectricity is a major cause of home fires. As each year goes by, Americans continue to use more energy in their homes. At the same time, the electrical systems in many existing homes have become outdated and are unable to handle the demands of today’s electrical appliances and devices. The statistics are staggering. Each year, home electrical fires in the United States are responsible for over 500 deaths, 1,400 injuries and more than $1.4 billion in property damage. And fire is not the only danger. Thousands of children and adults are critically injured and electrocuted annually from accidents in their homes. But now, new technology such as arc fault circuit interrupters (AFCIs) and tamper resistant receptacles (TRRs) are preventing tragedy before it ever occurs. In fact, these devices have proven so effective that the National Electrical Code has significantly increased requirements for AFCI and TRR protection in all new homes today. But exactly what will they do? AFCI is a new type of circuit breaker that recognizes fire hazards and immediately 8 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
shuts off the power. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Healthy Homes report lists lack of AFCIs among the primary residential hazards associated with burns and fire-related injuries
Ground fault circuit interrupters or GFCIs have been around for a while and are common on bathroom and garage circuits. They are special outlets that sense when there is an imbalance in the electric circuit and then trip the circuit. These outlets have saved thousands of people from electrocution over the last three decades. If GFCIs were installed in older homes, experts suggest that 70 percent of the electrocutions that occur each year in the home could be prevented. TRRs feature an internal shutter mechanism to prevent small children from inserting foreign objects into them. These specialized outlets have been so effective in preventing injuries to children that the National Electrical Code now requires that TRRs be installed in all newly constructed homes. (Martina Heintges 1263900002) Incorporating these new devices into your home can help reduce the risk of fires and electrocutions, so make it a new year’s resolution to upgrade your outlets and circuits today.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
COUNTRY NEWS
K.C. ELECTRIC ENERGY EFFICIENCY CREDITS AND REBATES BY BEN ORRELL, MEMBER SERVICES SPECIALIST
A
s we go into a new year we thought it would be a good time to remind our members about various rebates and energy credits. We routinely offer rebates on new water heaters, electric motors and heat pumps. In addition, we will fill out the paper work for possible rebates provided by Tri-State Generation and Transmission. Below is a list of our 2011 rebates.
K.C. Electric Association rebate
Tri-State Generation & Transmission rebate
$150-$250 $8 per horsepower $125 per ton $150 per ton
$75 $225-$325 $12 per horsepower $20 per horsepower $125 per ton $250 per ton $150 per ton $300 per ton
Water heaters Electric motors Air source heat pumps Ground source heat pumps
Total rebate
For those of you who use a generator as backup or emergency power consider this — in 2011, K.C. Electric will offer a $100 rebate to K.C. members who install an approved double-throw switch. Call member services for details. Tri-State also offers rebates on the following Energy Star products: air conditioners, clothes washer, dishwashers and refrigerators. (Arapahoe Church 103400001) K.C. Electric will submit paperwork to Tri-State for consumers who purchase appliances or motors that meet K.C. Electric standards. Tri-State will make the determination of how much the rebate will be on each purchase. If you have questions on any of K.C. Electric’s rebates, call member services at 719-743-2431.
Using Less Energy to Keep Things Clean Around the Home
Y Operations Update BY LARRY SHUTTE OPERATIONS MANAGER
K
.C. Electric is currently replacing some older equipment in a substation south of Burlington. This work will be completed in early January. Since most of our outages occur during the summer, we keep two crews on standby. But during the winter months, we experience relatively few outages. As a result, we use one crew to cover the system for outages during the winter. Please keep this in mind if response times are just a little longer.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
ou r Energ y Star-qualified clothes washer or dishwasher operates extremely efficiently. That’s likely one of the reasons why you bought it. But there are simple ways to further reduce how much electricity each of these appliances consumes. Selecting a lower water temperature — a cold wash and cold rinse setting, for example — on your washing machine will save energy dollars. You can also choose a lower water level for smaller loads, trimming water use. Some Energy Star clothes washers even boast extra energy-cutting features such as pre-soak and “suds saver.” Much of the energy used by your dish-
washer — as much as 80 percent — goes for heating water. An Energy Starqualif ied dishwasher with a booster heater allows you to set the temperature on your home’s water heater at a lower 120 degrees. In addition, many Energy Star dishwashers offer efficiency settings, such as “energy-saving” and “short-wash” cycles, that shave both energy and water consumption. Most models come equipped with an air-drying option that helps lower electric bills. For other tips on how to save energy — and money — call the energy experts at K.C. Electric Association. You can also find out how little changes quickly add up to big savings at www.TogetherWeSave.com.
JANUARY 2011 Colorado
Country Life 9
COUNTRY NEWS
Country Kitchen Gingerbread Pancakes
Apple Dessert
1 cup and 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon ginger 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon 1/4 teaspoon salt 3/4 cup sour cream 1/4 cup vegetable oil 1/3 cup cornmeal 1/2 teaspoon soda 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg 1/2 teaspoon cloves 2 large eggs 3/4 cup milk 1 1/2 tablespoons molasses 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 eggs, well-beaten 1 cup sugar 1/4 cup flour 1 cup sliced apples 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/2 cup nut meats Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour 8- by 8-inch pan; set aside. In a mixing bowl combine ingredients in order given above. Pour into prepared pan. Bake 30 minutes. Cut into squares. Serve with whipped topping or ice cream. Mrs. Ronald Ferris, Haswell
Mix all ingredients together. Bake on griddle. Serve with syrup, applesauce or apple butter. Excellent with bacon and eggs. Donna Smethers, Hugo
CLAIM YOUR CREDIT ON YOUR BILL
E
ach month, K.C. Electric offers consumers a chance to earn a $10 credit on their next electric bill. If you recognize your 10-digit account number in this magazine, call 719-743-2431 and ask for your credit. It couldn’t be easier. In November, William Mallory of Hugo, Carl Adolf of Bethune and the Gering Brothers of Flagler called
to claim their savings. Get acquainted with your account number, read your Colorado Country Life and pick up the phone. That’s all the energy you’ll need to claim your energy bucks. You must claim your credit during the month in which your name appears in the magazine (check the date on the front cover).
IRRIGATION METER READING Irrigation meters will be read on: January 31 February 1 March 1-2 and 30-31
ENERGY TIP
Feel around doors and windows for airflow. Adding weather stripping or caulk around a leaky door or window can lower energy bills by keeping your heating system from working too hard to compensate for air leaving your home. (Archie Cloud 1145100002)
10 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Controlling Costs Through Innovation.
It’s hard to predict the future, but one thing seems certain. New government regulations will increase the cost of electricity. Our energy efficiency programs help you manage your energy use, and we’re deploying state-of-the-art solutions to help control operating costs and improve service reliability. Find out how we’re Looking Out for You at www.crea.coop.
Colorado’s Electric Cooperatives
Out
Looking for
You
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
JANUARY 2011 Colorado
Country Life 11
Last year’s Touchstone Energy six-horse draft hitch performs at the stock show.
Utilities in Colorado Save With Efficiency
E TOUCHSTONE ENERGY CONTINUES SUPPORT OF NATIONAL WESTERN STOCKSHOW
C
olorado’s electric cooperatives will be there when Denver’s historic stockyards come to life in a few days as the 2011 National Western Stock Show plays host to more than 15,000 head of stock and hundreds of vendors, performers, rodeo competitors and much more January 8-23. And for the 13th straight year, the region’s Touchstone Energy cooperatives will be a supporting sponsor of the event, presenting the popular six-horse draft hitch. The hitch is one of the National Western’s top entertainment attractions and will be featured at 23 Pro Rodeo performances, two Mexican rodeo extravaganzas, the Martin Luther King Rodeo and the
annual NWSS Parade in downtown Denver. In addition to seeing the electric co-op Touchstone logo on the hitch, stock show attendees will see Touchstone Energy messaging in print and Internet promotions and throughout the event grounds. The Stock Show’s attendance historically exceeds 640,000 people during its 16-day run. This year marks the 105th year of the NWSS. The first show opened on January 29, 1906. It ran for six days and it’s estimated that 15,000 people attended. That year’s grand champion steer sold for 33 cents a pound — 23 cents above the market price.
lectricity is being saved throughout Colorado thanks to aggressive energy efficiency programs put in place by the electric co-ops and other electric utilities. According to a recent report by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Colorado electric utilities saved 203,344 kilowatt-hours of electricity in 2008. Additional efficiencies were expected to be shown in the 2009 report since, according to the Consortium for Energy Efficiency, utilities established efficiency budgets totaling $46.7 million for that year. And new programs are being added and de m a nd- s ide management is being expanded by several of the state’s electric utilities.
GREEN GOO LOVES CO2
A
lgae are feasting on flue gases in a carbon capture test project being conducted in Kentucky. This is one of many research projects around the country working on ways to eliminate the carbon dioxide being emitted from coal-fired generating power plants. Since last June, smokestack emissions from the 195-megawatt facility have been piped into 1,000 gallons of algae and water contained in six 8-foot-long “reactor” tubes. Algae in the “primordial green goo,” as workers call the mixture, need carbon dioxide and nitrogen oxides from the emissions to grow. The resulting “crop” contains rich amounts of oil, protein and carbohydrates. The company will experiment with turning the algae into byproducts, such as animal feed and vehicle biofuels. —RE Magazine
12 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Electric Co-ops Publish Newsletter Focusing on Renewables, Efficiency
C
olorado’s electric cooperatives have been promoting energy efficiency for their member-owners since the co-ops’ inception. In recent years the co-ops have gotten involved in an even wider variety of renewable energy projects. However, these programs have often been carried out without a lot of fanfare or promotion. To help members and others concerned with energy efficiency and renewable energy learn more about what the electric co-ops are doing, the Colorado Rural Electric Association publishes a monthly e-newsletter. Called simply Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy, the newsletter is available to anyone interested in staying up to date with what electric co-ops are doing. A recent issue announces a wind farm coming on line, a co-op working with one of the cities it serves on more efficient street lighting and a new solar array being planned for the Western Slope. Anyone interested in subscribing to this free newsletter may email their email address to Editor Mona Neeley at mneeley@colorado countrylife.org. Stay current with what Colorado’s electric co-ops are doing.
Coal Remains Dominant Despite Shift
A
lthough the future of carbon-capping Electric Cooperative Association and the legislation remains uncertain, its G&T Accounting & Finance Association. potential has U.S. electric generaFor the 39 G&Ts responding, 12,618 MW tors rethinking how coal fits into future fuel of new capacity is planned over the next mixes. And, although coal is far from being decade: 70 percent will be natural gas and replaced as a leading source of power, cheap only 13 percent will be coal. Of the $25 natural gas and lowered demand also will billion expected to be spent on generation, contribute to coal’s reduced role in coming $3 billion is flagged for coal-fired generation. years. A wave of plant retirements is also on the Craig Plant —Tri-State Two investor-owned utilities with coalhorizon, according to SNL Financial. Along Generation and Transmission heavy portfolios recently announced plans with Xcel, Duke Energy, Progress Energy, to reduce the fuel’s slice of the pie in coming years, according to Southern Co. and the Tennessee Valley Authority have discussed SNL Financial. Xcel Energy, which serves in Colorado, currently plans to phase out older, less-efficient plants. draws 50 percent of its power from coal generation. Xcel and Recent analysis by energy consulting firm Wood Mackenzie Colorado’s Public Utilities Commission have been reviewing the predicts the pattern will only intensify in coming years. utility’s plans to trim coal’s contribution to Xcel’s resource mix “To put this into context, over the last decade, less than 30 by retiring 551 megawatts of older coal generation and bringing gigawatts of power plants have been retired in North America, new renewable generation on line and increasing nuclear output. mostly representing old gas- and oil-fired steam generators,” said In the eastern part of the country, American Electric Power Hind Farag, North American power research manager for Wood Co. plans to scale back coal generation from 66 percent cur- Mackenzie. “Over the next 10 years, retirements could double to rently to 58 percent by 2017, primarily by boosting natural gas 60 GW, mainly from coal plants.” generation to 27 percent, up from 22 percent in 2009. Nuclear Despite these projections, slowed demand growth could mean and renewable generation will be increased slightly. the cuts have little impact on coal’s dominance as a fuel. Coal’s Generation and transmission cooperatives such as Tri-State share of the generating mix is predicted to fall from 48 percent Generation and Transmission, which serves Colorado and neigh- in 2008 to 44 percent in 2035, according to U.S. Energy Inforboring states, also have a less coal-intense 10-year plan, according mation Administration data. to results of a recent survey conducted by the National Rural — Solutions News Bulletin
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
JANUARY 2011
Colorado Country Life 13
T
INDUSTRY
Prices Under Pressure Local electric co-ops work to keep electric bills affordable as energy challenges grow BY MEGAN MCCOY-NOE, CCC
P
ressure cookers are ideal for heating liquids without reaching a boiling point. Outside influences are sealed off, and as pressure builds a liquid withstands higher and higher heat. But if you apply too much pressure, the liquid explodes, popping a gasket in the process. Electric co-ops face a similar situation. Pressures from new government regulations, rising fuel and materials costs, escalating demand for electricity and required investments in both adding generation as well as upgrading existing power plants have been climbing over the last decade. While the current economic downturn released some steam — such as causing electric demand to dip — this respite may just mark the “calm before the storm” when financial fortunes rebound and pressure builds again. Let’s lift the lid to explore different pressures impacting your electric bills.
1.
Pressure point: Growing electric demand
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) predicts by 2030 residential demand for electricity will increase between 16 percent and 36 percent above 2007 levels. Historically, electric co-op demand has risen faster than the industry average. For example, before the recession hit co-op sales increased by 4.4 percent, while industry sales only increased by 2.6 percent between 2006 and 2007. The U.S. Energy Information Administration predicts industry demand will rebound by 5 percent in 2010 and estimates that with strong economic growth, electricity prices will jump 19 percent by 2035. However, the forecaster fails to factor in added costs of complying with new federal regulations aimed at curbing emissions of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, from power plants.
14 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
POWER USE MIRRORS OVERALL ECONOMY For a quarter century America’s electricity consumption climbed steadily, making it fairly easy to forecast and plan for power needs 10, 20 or even 30 years down the road. That changed in December of 2007 with the first signs of a recession. As the nation’s economy slowed, electricity sales dropped 0.8 percent in 2008 and another 4.2 percent in 2009 — the greatest single decline in six decades. Commercial and industrial use was the hardest hit. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, net power generation nationwide in 2009 sank below 2004 levels. Electric co-ops primarily serve residential members so the downward trend wasn’t as severe, but it was still apparent. “With the economic recession affecting electricity demand, forecasts of future demand have resulted in greater uncertainty for both shortand long-term planning horizons,” states a 2010 report from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, an organization charged with overseeing reliability of the United States’ electric grid. Further illustrating uncertainty, EIA released two different forecasts for the next 25 years hinging on the nation’s economic growth — predictions that don’t take into account the cost of impending federal regulations to curb carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, North American Electric Reliability Corporation
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
T
INDUSTRY
2.
Pressure point: Added regulation
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will begin regulating greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, this month — an action made possible by a 2007 U.S. Supreme Court decision (Massachusetts v. EPA) that gave the agency a green light to consider imposing such controls. In late 2009, the EPA declared that six greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, “endanger the public health and welfare” of current and future generations. Although CO2 measures crowd headlines, the cumulative impact of new federal mandates for handling coal ash water and limiting hazardous air pollutants along with state (and perhaps federal) requirements for renewable energy generation could become a much more expensive hurdle. During the past 20 years the EPA has used the federal Clean Air Act to slash nationwide emissions of nitrogen oxides, which contribute to smog, by 54 percent, and cut acid rain-causing sulfur dioxide emissions by 42 percent. That’s an impressive reduction, considering electricity use rose 64 percent over the same period. However, proven technology existed to achieve those results — something not currently available for removing carbon dioxide and other areas under scrutiny. “The Clean Air Act as written was never designed to deal with carbon dioxide, and it could be awkward at best and probably a disaster at worst,” warns Glenn English, CEO of National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. “We’re entering an era where regulatory activities are going to play a more significant role in the electric industry than what happens on the legislative front,” asserts Kirk Johnson, NRECA vice president of energy and environmental policy, noting Congress has debated climate change policy for more than a decade without reaching a clear consensus. “Environmental statutes that have been on the books since the 1970s, especially the Clean Air Act, are like a one-way ratchet: They only tighten.” Tighter emissions standards could have a multi-billion dollar impact on the cost of doing business for electric co-ops, adding more pressure to electric bills. WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
3.
Pressure Point: Need for new power plants
Even as new regulations are announced, utilities must be ready to make quick decisions on moving forward with power plants to meet growing electricity demand — especially since the number of operating plants may start to fall, not rise. “Because of these new rules, we’re expecting a number of current power plants to go offline and retire,” predicts Johnson. “The cost to comply with the rules may simply be too much.” The North American Electric Reliability Corporation, which oversees the reliability of the bulk power system covering the United States and most of Canada, estimates that by 2017 peak demand for electricity will jump 135,000 megawatts — equivalent to the current amount of power used by the entire western half of the nation. Planned new generation resources will only provide another 77,000 MW, far short of the amount of energy AmeriBy 2017 peak demand cans will need. will climb by 135,000 Co-ops are working hard to relieve megawatts, equal the some of this pressure and delay the amount of power used need for new plants through energy efficiency programs. Most co-ops offer by the western half energy efficiency education. Many take of the nation. this a step further; 77 percent provide residential energy audits while 49 percent offer financial incentives for members to make efficient choices. But these measures can only go so far. “When the economy turns around, co-ops will resume growing faster than other electric utilities,” remarks English. “We’ve got to be ready for that development and have new power plants planned and largely ready to go. However, co-ops must first know how carbon dioxide and other rules could impact the price of power to make prudent decisions.”
4.
Pressure point: Cost of materials
Every year that investments in new power plants are delayed jacks up the final price tag. Worldwide, steel prices soared 42 percent between 2009 and 2010 while costs for other construction supplies like nickel and concrete jumped as well. Materials costs for distribution co-ops are also climbing. Prices for copper, a critical raw material used for wire and to ground electrical equipment, reached a 27-month high at the end of 2010. Between 1990 and 2010 in the north-central part of the nation the price tag on utility poles, towers and fixtures skyrocketed 98 percent while line transformers spiked 154 percent. “Electric co-ops have an obligation to keep the lights on and electric bills affordable at a time when the costs for fuel and raw materials to build new generation are steadily rising,” acknowledges English. “Combined with costs of additional regulatory compliance, these are just some of the pressure points that will affect electric bills in years to come — all of which are largely beyond the control of local co-ops.” U.S. Energy Information Administration, North American Electric Reliability Corporation
JANUARY 2011
Colorado Country Life 15
What makes a rodeo legend? Did it happen when a saddle bronc was turned out of the chute at the Vold brothers’ Asker Stampede in 1944?
RODEO LEGEND Gentleman Cowboy — Harry Vold BY FREIA HOOPER-BRADFORD
16 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
I
n a time when integrity has gone out of style, Harry Vold still lives by the code of the West. Supplying bucking stock to 12 of the leading rodeos in the country, Harry seals every deal with a handshake. He moves among the kind of businessmen and women who live by their word. “They’d be insulted if I came up with a paper contract,” he says. For this and many other reasons, Harry Vold is a household name in the rodeo world. Another reason is simply because he’s been around so long. Harry has been supplying the f lashiest bucking stock to rodeos for 60 out of his 86 years. Ty Murray, seven-times all-around world rodeo champion; Marty Wood, world champion saddle bronc rider; and Harry Tompkins, eight-time world champion bull and bronc rider have all ridden into fame on the back of Harry’s stock. And then there are also Rodeo Hall of Fame inductee Larry Mahan and the legendary Jim Shoulders and Casey Tibbs (now in cowboy heaven). Their brilliant rodeo careers were not only due to their athletic skills, but also to Harry’s bucking horses and bulls. But then you don’t have to ask for testimonials to discover the depth of Harry’s contribution to the rodeo world. Proof can be found in a collection of saucer-sized silver buckles that cover tables made from wagon wheels in the Vold home. A sample of the gold inscriptions read “Stock Contractor of the Year” for eight consecutive years and “1985 PRCA (Professional Rodeo Cowboy Association) Man of the Year.” They join the collection of nine silver-adorned halters for Angel Sings, Rusty, Wrangler Savvy, and other bucking horses of the year. Harry is especially proud of Bobby Joe Skoal, three time world champion, and his 777, his world champion bull. Every inch of the walls in the original homestead on Harry’s Red Top Ranch near Fowler is covered with photos that tell of a life few men can top. It is doubtful that there is any famous rodeo rider from the past 60 years who is not in one of Harry’s photographs. Despite all the fanfare and fame, Harry is a modest man who takes pride in having
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Harry Vold is a rodeo legend with all of his buckles measuring his accomplishments.
contributed his part to rodeo. Without exceptional bucking stock, a rodeo is — well — just another show. His humility may stem in part from a recognition that happenstance played a part in his destiny. That, and an appreciation for where he is now in comparison to his humble beginnings. “I started from nothing,” he recalls. He was born in 1924 in Ponoka, Alberta, Canada. His daddy, Nansen Vold, immigrated to Canada from North Dakota, making a living buying, selling and trading horses. The Great Depression colored young Harry’s growing years and taught him to value every cent. His brother Clifford earned a dollar a day on roundups, which was cut to 50 cents as the depression deepened. Vold remembers Clifford winning the bucking horse event at the Ponoka rodeo. Six dollars was as much as a week’s wages. “Back then,” Harry says, “the bucking horses were snubbed to another
horse. There were no chutes or fancy facilities.” That wild and dusty Ponoka rodeo, the introduction to Harry’s future, would later become the second largest rodeo in Canada next to the famous Calgary Stampede. Although Ponoka was Harry’s start in rodeo, he still had to pay his dues before rodeo would become his calling. Working in the horse business with his daddy was a way to scrape by. Even good horses brought not much more than a hundred dollars during those hard times. Regardless of tough times and though he needed a job, Harry’s mother had ideas different than rodeo work for her son. “My mother, born and raised in Oslo, Norway, figured that as a 16 year old, I had better learn manners,” Harry remembers. Kirsten Vold shipped Harry off to a Youth Training School in Bashaw, Alberta, where teaching manners was the most important part of the curriculum. “Badly needed [continued on page 18] JANUARY 2011
Colorado Country Life 17
Harry and Karen Vold are an extraordinary rodeo couple.
The Vold children Wayne, Doug, Dona and Darce spend time on a Canadian ranch during their childhoods.
[continued from page 17] today,” Harry shakes his head with a bit of sadness. “We learned to set a table, stand up when a lady entered the room and remove our hats.” Those “manners” would become an integral part of doing business in the growing world of rodeo. When he finished school, Harry returned home to help his father. The horse business had recovered and horses started to bring a decent price. Fortunes continued to improve when Leo Cremer, a rodeo stock contractor and producer from Big Timber, Montana, sent a representative to Canada to ship stock to Montana. Destiny once again intervened and would lead, although not obvious at the time, to Harry’s legendary success in rodeo. It started when, in 1952, disaster struck Harry’s rodeo business. The Canadian border closed because of an outbreak of hoof-and-mouth disease. “We couldn’t ship horses anymore, and there was nothing we could do with them, couldn’t even sell them,” Harry recalls. That desperate time turned into an opportunity. Harry offered the bucking stock to the Ponoca Stampede for free. The horses were good broncs and caught the eye of the neighboring town of Stettler. “They paid $8 a head for 40 horses for three days,” Harry says. The rodeo business started to look real good. Those first years of supplying bucking
truly “ride like an Indian” and knew every trick in the book about rounding up horses. Young Harry also learned plenty of horse sense from other top cowboys. “I worked with cowboy Lawrence Bruce. He taught me more than anyone,” Harry says. He also credits Bruce with teaching him the skills of rounding up, roping and handling rough stock. On the Vold Red Top Ranch, Harry handles his seasoned bucking horses as well as his up-andcoming colts the old-fashioned way. No four wheelers. No chutes for branding. If you work on the Red Top Ranch, you’ve got to be a real cowboy or cowgirl. As Harry gained a reputation, he was also in competition with other stock contractors. A good relationship with the largest stock contractor at the time, Beutler Brothers, led to a partnership that became Beutler, Vold, and Cervy and was based in the United States. After four years, Vold decided to work independently and eventually became the largest rodeo stock contractor in the U.S. Today, he supplies bucking horses and bulls in 15 states. And he’s still on the road. Harry was highly regarded as an auctioneer and owned a livestock auction barn. “I couldn’t be a real homebody,” he says, looking at his pretty wife, Karen. “It takes a special wife to put up with that kind of life.” And Karen Vold is a special wife. She
18 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
stock to rodeos far from home demanded tough hands to drive horses dozens of miles. “We drove as far as 150 miles, poking along,” Harry recalls. “We’d spend up to one week on the trail, and pay was 25 to 30 cents a day.” Although Harry has fond memories of grub served from a chuck wagon and sleeping on the ground in bedrolls after trailing horses 25 miles per day, he certainly appreciated the railroad. As his business grew, he could finally afford the luxury of shipping his bucking stock by train. Rodeos wanted fresh horses, ready to buck, and Harry could deliver them over long distances by rail. Today, he wishes he could still ship by rail, but bucking stock is now transported in stock trucks. “The railroad is safer and more reliable, no breakdowns on the road,” he says. During those early years of driving bucking horses, the drovers had to have a lot of cowboy savvy. “There are tricks to controlling a herd,” says Harry. He remembers learning early in life how to handle horses that want to stampede. “You don’t drive horses from behind. You are out to the sides and in front.” Harry learned valuable skills from the Sarcee tribe when he grazed large herds of horses on their reservation. Harry talks with admiration particularly about Rupert Crowchild, a horseman who he says could
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
is an extraordinary woman who was a trick rider on the rodeo circuit and still teaches trick riding at the Red Top Ranch. Karen Womack Vold is in the Cowgirl Hall of Fame, while husband Harry is in the Rodeo Hall of Fame. Harry met Karen when he hired his wife’s group of trick riders for one of his rodeo specialty acts in Wainwright, Alberta. They were rained out but traveled to the next rodeo and continued performing in the U.S.A. She caught his eye, and eventually he caught her hand in marriage. Karen was born and raised in the rodeo business and is no stranger to the vagabond way of life that makes their business so successful. Harry, although he regrets his busy schedule when his children were growing up, must have done something right, seeing as all of his children are not only involved with but also love and live the rodeo life. “They were all good kids,“ Harry says with obvious admiration. “None of them gave us any trouble.” Daughters Darce and Dona and son Doug own the Triple V Rodeo Stock Company. Darce has proved herself in the rodeo world. Likewise, Dona, also a horsewoman, has followed in her father’s footsteps as a rodeo contractor. Daughter Nancy (who passed away in 2008) Doug rode in and worked rodeos, was also a first-rate saddle bronc rider, inducted into the Canadian Professional Rodeo Hall of Fame. Wayne is the oldest, also inducted into the Canadian Professional Rodeo Hall of Fame. He owns a rodeo stock contracting business in Canada and proved himself early in his career with saddle bronc titles. Daughter Kirsten is now manager of the Vold Rodeo Corporation. Like her mother, she was a talented trick rider. After graduating from college, she was the only member of the family who drifted away from the life of rodeo, but that separation didn’t last long. She earned a degree in marketing and after two years, Kirsten came home to follow what’s in her blood. If you want to see a proud daddy, just look at Harry. He doesn’t need to praise his children because it’s written all over his face. About Kirsten he brags, “She has all the horses on a computer. I use a pad and 25-cent lead pencil.” WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
The Vold clan’s home is an 1865 homestead on the 32,000-acre Red Top Ranch a ways out of Avondale. Harry and Karen still live in the house, although they added onto the original homestead. When I visited, we were comfortably seated in the ‘new part’ at a round table that could accommodate the entire Vold clan. A bull hide Karen had brought from Brazil covered the table. Handsome western art added a sense of gracious western living. The surprise came when Harry invited me into the homestead part of the house. Next visit, I promised myself to take a few hours —although that would not be
horse. “I’ve always had black horses,” he says. “This latest black horse, Scott, is quite a looker, but also bombproof.” Vold wouldn’t let much grass grow under his horse’s hoofs even when he had to stay on the ground for a time because of a knee replacement. “The knee problems probably started 50 years ago,” he says, “I chased horses in Canada and I had one fall with me.” Although there is no doubt he could still ride with the best, Vold no longer rides pickup. Pickup riders pick up the bronc rider — provided he stays on — aside from taking the bucking horse out of the arena. Vold explains that he hires only the best pickup men and clowns (bull fighters that who keep the cowboy out of danger). It’s just another way of doing things right. Once rodeo season is over, ending in mid-September with only two rodeos remaining the rest of the year, Vold gets to enjoy his handsome ranch. The stone ranch buildings with red roofs cut silhouettes into the expansive prairie sky. A new crop of colts — possible future champion bucking horses — that already dwarf the average riding horses turn and race into the infinity of the land. They have plenty of good grass nurtured Harry always takes time to visit with the by prairie thunderstorms. “I feel very cowboys and performers at the rodeo events. blessed when the horses get fat and enough — to check out the museum-sized strong and are in good shape,” Vold says collection of memorabilia. It’s safe to say with a smile. there are a thousand photos of rodeo stars, Harry and Karen’s home snuggles dozens of champion bucking horses and under trees by the Huerfano River. It’s bulls, honorable awards, and gifts of admi- the sort of ranch you could stay home on ration and gratitude all the time, but Harry Vold, even at age No doubt, Vold is proud of his accom- 86, is still a vagabond. He already looks plishments, but he takes greater pride in forward to another busy summer and how others respect and remember him. to his favorite rodeo, Cheyenne Frontier He pointed at a headdress from the Sarcee Days, the daddy of ’em all. He’s looking tribe in Canada when it made him hon- forward to providing a couple thousand orary Chief. The name Chief Many animals, horses for rodeo queens and Horses fits Vold perfectly. That respect dignitaries, selecting specialty acts, and obviously means more to Vold than the being with the 1,300 contestant. Every bottom line. one of the contestants, by the way, will Countless friendships keep Vold actively know who Harry Vold is. involved in rodeo, but it’s also in his blood. Not much can keep this rodeo man from Freia Hooper Bradford knew Harry Vold during being in the saddle. Vold isn’t just a rodeo the late ’60s and ’70s, when her husband Joe businessman, he is a genuine cowboy who Hooper put on weekly rodeos at Paradise Ranch. wouldn’t think of quitting. And, if you see Freia worked as a pickup rider and remembers, Harry Vold in the Grand Entry at any of “Even for an amateur rodeo, we got really good his rodeos, he will be mounted on a black bucking stock from Harry Vold.” JANUARY 2011
Colorado Country Life 19
Soul-Warming Soups Prepare savory stews and soups during winter’s blustery days
BY LINH TRUONG
T
o keep your family warm during those cold Colorado winter days, serve them a delicious soup or stew. Convenient and versatile, these savory meals can be cooked on the stove top, in a slow cooker or even over a campfire.
Colorado Green Chili (Chili Verde) 1 tablespoon olive oil 1 1/2 pounds cubed pork stew meat salt and pepper to taste 1 large yellow onion, diced 4 cloves garlic, minced 2 cups chopped, roasted green chilies 1 (14.5-ounce) can diced tomatoes with juice 1 1/2 cups tomatillo salsa 5 cups chicken broth 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano 1 pinch ground clove Heat the olive oil in a Dutch oven or large pot over mediumhigh heat. Season the pork with salt and pepper to taste, then place into the hot oil. Cook until golden brown on all sides, about 7 minutes. Once browned, remove the pork and set aside. Reduce heat to medium, and stir in the onion and garlic. Cook and stir until the onion has softened and turned translucent, about 5 minutes. Return the pork to the pot and stir in the green chilies, diced tomatoes with juice, tomatillo salsa and chicken broth. Season with oregano and clove. Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat, then reduce heat to medium-low, cover and simmer 20 minutes. After 20 minutes, remove 2 cups of the soup (ensure there are no pork cubes in it), and pour into a blender. Hold down the lid of the blender with a folded kitchen towel, and carefully start the blender, using a few quick pulses to get the soup moving before leaving it on to puree. Puree until smooth, then pour back into the cooking pot. This will create a thicker texture for your chili and will eliminate some of the chunky bits of chiles. Continue to simmer, stirring occasionally, until the pork is very tender, at least 35 minutes more. Courtesy of www.allrecipes.com
Fail-safe Potato Soup 1 cup chopped onion 8 large potatoes, cubed 2 chicken bouillon cubes 2 tablespoons margarine or butter 2 tablespoons parsley or dried parsley flakes 6 cups water 2 cups milk (or evaporated milk) 1/2 cup flour Combine first six ingredients in slow cooker on low heat for about 6 hours. About 30 minutes before dinner, mix milk (or evaporated milk) with flour and stir into the soup. When the soup has thickened, it’s ready. (Note: To create a fabulous Potato-Cheese Soup, just add 1/4 pound of grated cheese.) Courtesy of www.coloradopotato.org
e 20 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
F or more soup and stew recipes, visit our website at www.coloradocountrylife. coop. Click on Recipes.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Bonus recipe: We know this isn’t a soup but the recipe is so delicious we had to share it with our readers.
Sweet Onion Soup 2 sweet onions, peeled, cut in half and sliced thin 2/3 cup extra virgin olive oil 2/3 cup sparkling white wine 1/2 cup heavy cream 2/3 cup water salt to taste Combine sweet onions and olive oil in cold pot. Put over low heat and let onions sweat. Salt slightly to prevent onions from caramelizing. Stir occasionally. When onions have released most of their juices (about 2 hours), add sparkling white wine and cook another hour. When all alcohol is cooked off, remove from heat and blend in blender, then strain through a fine sieve. Whisk in cream and water, and add salt to taste. Chill or serve hot.
Ever made soup that was too salty?
Lentil Soup 1/4 cup olive oil 1 onion, chopped 2 carrots, diced 2 stalks celery, chopped 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 teaspoon dried oregano 1 bay leaf 1 teaspoon dried basil 2 cups dry lentils 8 cups water 1 (14.5-ounce) can crushed tomatoes 1/2 cup spinach, rinsed and thinly sliced 2 tablespoons vinegar salt to taste ground black pepper to taste In a large soup pot, heat oil over medium heat. Add onions, carrots and celery; cook and stir until onion is tender. Stir in garlic, oregano, bay leaf and basil; cook for 2 minutes. Stir in lentils, and add water and tomatoes. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, and simmer for at least 1 hour. When ready to serve stir in spinach, and cook until it wilts. Stir in vinegar, and season to taste with salt and pepper. Add more vinegar if desired.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
All you need to do is place a raw potato into your soup pot and simmer it with the soup for about 15 minutes. Not only does the potato absorb the extra salt, but as an added snack for the cook, it also absorbs all that flavor and becomes a fantastic taste treat.
Sweet Potato Soufflé 2 cups cooked, mashed sweet potatoes (about 2 medium-large) 1/2 cup sugar 2 eggs 6 tablespoons butter, melted 1 cup milk* 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon Topping: 3/4 cup crushed cornflakes 1/2 cup chopped pecans 1/2 cup brown sugar 6 tablespoons butter, melted Mix all base ingredients. Pour into 9-inch square casserole dish. Bake at 400 degrees for 20 minutes. Mix topping ingredients, spread evenly over partially baked soufflé and bake an additional 10 minutes. * (If you are using canned instead fresh potatoes, decrease milk to 2/3 cup.) Courtesy of Pam Wood
Classic Minestrone 3 tablespoons olive oil 1 leek, sliced 2 carrots, chopped 1 zucchini, thinly sliced 4 ounces green beans, cut into 1-inch pieces 2 stalks celery, thinly sliced 1 1/2 quarts vegetable stock 1 pound chopped tomatoes 1 tablespoon chopped fresh thyme 1 (15-ounce) can cannellini beans, with liquid 1/4 cup elbow macaroni salt and ground black pepper to taste Heat olive oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add leek, carrots, zucchini, green beans and celery. Cover, and reduce heat to low. Cook for 15 minutes, shaking the pan occasionally. Stir in the stock, tomatoes and thyme. Bring to a boil, then replace the lid and reduce heat to low; simmer gently for 30 minutes. Stir in the cannellini beans with its liquid and pasta. Simmer for an additional 10 minutes, or until pasta is al dente. Season with salt and pepper to taste before serving.
JANUARY 2011
Colorado Country Life 21
Gardening High and Dry Exactly what does it mean to landscape through Xeriscape?
BY EVE GILMORE
W
hat is Xeriscape? Good question. If you’ve heard different things and are confused, you aren’t the only one. Defining xeriscape is a slippery slope. The root word “xeri” comes from the Greek word for dry, and “scape” is of course in reference to landscape. I pronounce it “zairy-scape” to clarify that it is not “zeroscape.” Beyond that, I’ve been on a quest to uncover the original intent for the word and the practice as well as the common usage now, covering a 30-year period. From what I gather, it can be broken down into three separate stages over the course of its development. (No wonder there’s confusion!) “No water” gardening One school of thought, perhaps the most foundational in Xeriscape’s evolution, is born of the notion that dry means dry, and that a dry landscape is just that: One where no water is added by the hand of humans. Plants are planted that are suited to the particular climate, soil and general conditions. This categorization includes many plants native to the region where they are being planted. It closely, if not exactly, resembles dryland gardening, as discussed in Robert Nold’s book, High and Dry: Gardening with Cold-Hardy Dryland Plants. This method is also called “no water gardening,” which nicely bypasses any ambiguity. Xeric plants In my experience, what has become the most common working definition of Xeriscape at this juncture is one that embraces plants considered xeric. This means a plant that has relatively low water needs. However, as Nold pointed out in a recent interview (for more on my interview with Nold and more ideas about Xeriscape, see www. xeriscapegardens.com), a plant such as agastache, generally considered xeric, is from southern Arizona where the rainfall pattern is different than it is in Colorado. This means that although it requires little water, it requires it at a specific time of year to be successful. Plants like these, then, still demand irrigation when planted in 22 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
Seven principles of Xeriscape Xeriscape gardening is perfect alternative in Colorado’s dry climate.
Colorado even though they are considered xeric. Most Xeriscapes today would not make it without ongoing irrigation, which contradicts the translation of Xeriscape from its root words. While it seems to me a step in the right direction, I would like to think that watered xeriscapes (an oxymoron, right?) are a stepping stone, something more palatable to the masses than the first notions of what it may have been. But eventually, I for one would like to see us in Colorado, the birthplace of Xeriscape (as of 2004, Xeriscape public education programs existed in cities in 42 states), get back to its roots where less and eventually no water is used in our landscapes. That would be Xeriscape to its truest definition. Eve Gilmore is a garden coach, consultant, and designer with Gardens by Eve, LLC in Durango. For more tips and discussion check out her blog at www.xeriscapegardens.com.
Denver Water is credited with making the notion of Xeriscape more official. According to its website, (www.denverwater.org/Conservation/Xeriscape/), “Denver Water coined the word in 1981 to help make low-water-use landscaping an easily recognized concept.” Seven principles were assigned to this version of landscaping to help define what Xeriscape means, what it is and how a gardener could go about practicing it. They are: 1. Planning and design 2. Soil improvements 3. Efficient irrigation 4. Hydrozones 5. Mulch 6. Turf alternatives 7. Maintenance According to some versions of this definition, the water requirements of any plant could be met as long as it is grouped with other plants with the same needs, which sums up the idea behind hydrozoning.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
The Duke of the Chutes
R
odeo stock contractor Harry Vold has won nearly every award in rodeo, and now a new book, the first ever written on Vold, chronicles his 60 years in the business. The Duke of the Chutes: Harry Vold’s Sixty Years in Rodeo, was written by Loren R. Whittemore, a Colorado rancher and long-time rodeo enthusiast. “Harry’s story exemplifies the ideals of the American West: patriotism, perseverance, hard work, and faith,” says Whittemore. In the 144-page hardcover book illustrated with Vold family photos, Whittemore digs deep into Vold’s Canadian roots, profiles his entrance into rodeo contracting, and highlights remembrances of rodeo legends such as Leo Cremer, Harry Knight and Gene Autry. The book chronicles how the Harry Vold Rodeo Company has managed and produced some of the largest rodeos around, including 33 consecutive years as the Cheyenne Frontier Days stock contractor. “My goal has always been to produce top rodeos all over North America and to have the best stock at the biggest and best rodeos, featuring the top cowboys,” says Vold. The story also tells how Vold and his family created a rodeo dynasty in the United States and in Canada. The 86-year-old cowboy was also recently inducted into the Rodeo Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association also honored Vold with the ProRodeo Hall of Fame Legend Award at the Wrangler National Finals Rodeo, as Vold is one of only two contractors to have supplied stock for the entire 50-year history of the WNFR. The Duke of the Chutes hardcover book is now available book stores or direct from the publisher, Filter Press Books, by calling 888-570-2663 or visit www.filterpress.com.
Are you wild about Colorado Countr y Life? Visit us at w w w. coloradocountr ylife. coop Be a fan of ours on Facebook and win prizes and then follow us on Twit ter at COCountr yLife.
“Ah, but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp or what”s heaven for.”
— Robert Browninga
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
JANUARY 2011 Colorado
Country Life 23
Connections Hunting, fishing, outdoor living links us to our ancestors BY DENNIS SMITH
S
ome of us had the remarkably good fortune to grow up in a time or place where hunting and fishing were pursued as a matter of course rather than just for the sport of it all. If you were one of those fortunate few, if you hunted or fished, you could bet your relatives, friends and neighbors did too. Likewise, fish, game and other wild bounty were significant, if not critical, entrées in your diet. I was one of the fortunate. In my neck of the woods, bluegills, bullheads and brook trout were spring and summertime staples at the dinner table. Come fall, southern-fried rabbit, squirrel and the occasional pheasant graced our tables. Likely as not, venison and ruffed grouse rounded out the larder. Our neighbor lady, Old “Ma” Myers, was regionally famous for her spaghetti sauce concocted from the meat of gray squirrels. I’d give anything to have her recipe today, although I would be hard pressed to find a gray squirrel in Colorado — much less one raised almost exclusively on a diet of white oak acorns, beech and hickory nuts and black walnuts. I still distinctly remember making midsummer expeditions with neighbors and church groups to fill our tin pails and milk buckets with the supersweet strawberries and jumbosized black cap mushrooms that grew wild in our area. We also took September jaunts to forage for juicy, blue -bla ck huck leber r ie s i n t he boulder-studded hills close by. The ladies turned them into fresh pies and preserves and canned the rest for special desserts on cold winter nights. Berrying was a big social deal back then — and a delicious adventure for a 6-year-old. Nothing you could
24 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
buy in a supermarket today approaches the intensely sweet, lip-smacking flavor of those wild, hand-picked berries. Very few of us hunt or fish to live anymore, but some of us still live to hunt and fish. Some do it for its demanding challenges, some for the satisfaction of practicing ancient skill sets. Some do it for the meat. For those with strict dietary restrictions, hunting or fishing remains one of the few ways to obtain food free of antibiotics, synthetic steroids, artificial growth hormones, nitrates, sulfites or insecticide residues. But I’d venture to say many of us hunt because we find that it deepens our sense of connection to the surrounding natural world and sharpens our awareness that we too are animals — not separate from them but twisted together with them in one great braid of life. We hunt because it not only brings us into the wild, it also brings the wild into us. We are inextricably linked to our ancestors, genetically predisposed to follow in the footsteps of our fathers, grandfathers and greatgrandfathers who hunted before us. I received an email today from a reader who was excited to tell me that his young 16 -year-old fr iend, Colton Mullinix, had just taken his first deer — a huge 6 x 5 white-tailed buck. I wasn’t able to get the details before my deadline, but I think it’s especially telling that Colton was in the company of his brother, Clayton; his father, Brad; and his grand father, Ralph, when he made the kill. They were all there making those important connections at an important time.
e
Read outdoor columns at www.colorado countrylife.coop. Click on Outdoors.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Stopping the Draft Seal your home to keep the warm in and cold out … or vice versa BY BRIAN SLOBODA, COOPERATIVE RESEARCH NETWORK
W
hat are some energy-efficient and cost-effective ways to deal with a drafty house?
When a home feels too cold or too warm, folks often purchase air conditioners or space heaters to improve comfort. In most cases, these appliances only address the symptoms, not the actual issue. However, there are two simple and relatively inexpensive solutions to the problem — sealing air leaks and adding insulation. To find leaks, walk around your house on a cold day and feel for drafts around exterior doors and windows, electrical outlets and entrance points for television and telephone cables. In basements, target dryer vents, gas lines and any other place with an opening in the wall. To fix leaks, apply caulk, spray foam or weather stripping to these areas. Spray foam is the best option for large openings, but be careful: The foam expands and can damage weak wood and loose brick. When purchasing caulk, pay careful attention to whether it is rated for interior or exterior use and if you can paint over it. An insulation kit can provide a temporary solution for older windows during the winter. This method requires applying a clear plastic sheet to the interior of windows, then using a hair dryer to remove wrinkles and make the sheet almost as clear as the glass. If your home has a forced air heating or cooling system, consider sealing the ductwork. According to Energy Star, a standard for rating energy-efficient consumer products, about 20 percent of the air moving through ductwork is lost through leaks and holes. For exposed duct work in basements or attics, a duct sealant can be applied — either tape, aerosol or mastic — depending on the skill level of the person performing the application. Once leaks are sealed, focus on places where insulation could be added. Insulation is your home’s first line of defense when it comes to keeping out heat and cold. Insulation can be made of fiberWWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
Adding the right kind of insulation in the right places can keep your home warmer
glass (batt or blown), cellulose, rigid foam board, spray foam or ref lective (also called radiant barrier) forms. Your local hardware store can help you choose the one that best fits your area and particular needs. When buying insulation, consider its R-value. Typical insulation levels for an attic range from R-30 to R-60, while floor requirements vary from R-13 to R-30. Walls provide the biggest challenge for adding insulation. Ideally, wall insulation can be added when siding is being replaced. In most areas of the country, either R-5 or R-6 insulative wall sheathing would be put into place and then the wall would be filled with blown-in insulation. If your home does not have siding or you won’t be replacing it anytime soon, you can also cut holes in the wall to blow the insulation in. But be careful: This is generally a tricky
undertaking and can cause significant damage if not done properly. Sealing up those air leaks and adding insulation can significantly increase the comfort and the energy efficiency of your home. Get to work using some of these easy and relatively inexpensive solutions to seal your home against the elements and enjoy a warmer home this winter. Brian Sloboda is a program manager specializing in energy efficiency for the Cooperative Research Network, a service of the Arlington, Virginia-based National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. The Cooperative Research Network monitors, evaluates and applies technologies that help electric cooperatives control costs, increase productivity and enhance service to their consumers. Additional research provided by ESource.
JANUARY 2011 Colorado
Country Life 25
MARKETPLACE
We’ve got your back. Advertise in Colorado Country Life and enjoy the exposure to more than 188,000 readers. Our readers enjoy features about Colorado and Coloradans, recipes, gardening and outdoor activities. Invest in your business future at Colorado Country Life.
To advertise in Colorado Country Life: email advertising@coloradocountrylife.org or call Kris at 303-902-7276.
26 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
MARKETPLACE
HAPPY NEW YEAR
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
JANUARY 2011
Colorado Country Life 27
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD Please type or print your ad on a separate paper. Indicate how many months you would like your ad to run and which month to start. There is a minimum of 12 words at $1.63 per word/month. Be sure to include your full name and address for our records. Check MUST accompany this order or call to pay with a credit card. Send your ad to: Mail: Colorado Country Life 5400 N. Washington Street, Denver, CO 80216 Phone: 303-902-7276 fax: 303-455-2807 Email: classifieds@coloradocountrylife.org
ANTIQUES
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CHAIR CANING, hand caning, machine caning, fiber rush caning. Pueblo West, 719-5470723. chaanita@aculink.net. (858-10-11)
EARN A LITTLE OR A LOT! We can help you achieve your goals. www.GreatDayProfits. com. (924-01-11)
COMPLETE RESTORATION of antique woodburning stoves. Some parts available. Free estimates. 719-924-9192. (87402-11)
ANTLERS ANTLER CHANDELIERS made only from REAL antlers. We are the manufacturer and we sell all of our products at wholesale prices; save as much as 60% from store prices. Many other antler products and mounts, including giant 5’ Moose Mount, 56” Elk Mount and giant Moose Paddles. Showroom open May 15 through October 15 in Granby, CO. 15 years at this location, over 900 satisfied customers! 970-627-3053. (105-12-11)
BOOKS LET US PUBLISH your book! We can take your manuscript, design a cover, edit and format it, and print it. Check us out. Personalized service is our specialty. 719-749-2126. www. peakvistapress.com (93303-11)
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES (These opportunities have not been investigated by Colorado Country Life.) BEGIN YOUR OWN BUSINESS! Mia Bella Candles/Gifts/ Beauty. Try the best! www. naturesbest.scent-team.com. Free weekly drawing. Great income potential. (831-01-11)
e
INSTANTLY RENEW METAL, rubber, flat roofs. Saves replacement. Email aztec collc@socket.net, 573-4899346. (938-08-11) K-LAWN – LAWN FERTILIZING business opportunity. Parttime seasonal work. Be your own boss. NOT a franchise. It’s YOUR business! Training by turf professionals. Superior quality products. Protected territory. Low startup costs. www.k-lawn.com. 800-4459116 (914-03-11) LEGITIMATE WORK AT HOME opportunity. No sales. No investment. No risk. Training/ website provided. Weekly/ monthly income plus bonuses and benefits. Call Carrie at 303-579-4207 or fill out form at www.workathomeunited. com/ourabundance (93203-11) MAKE MONEY PLAYING THE LOTTERY. Guaranteed system. Free report. Call toll-free 1-877-526-6957 ID# S4465 or visit our website — www. flalottomagic.net/?S4465 (911-04-11) PIANO TUNING PAYS. Learn with American School homestudy course. Tools included. Call for info. 800-497-9793. (158-01-11)
CARS/TRUCKS/BOATS 1985 CADILLAC ELDORADO Barritz Conv., mint condition, collector’s dream, $15K, 970522-4600 (899-02-11)
CARS/TRUCKS/BOATS
FOR SALE
POULTRY/GAMEBIRDS
1995-2010 — SUBARUS, Foresters, Outbacks, Imprezas, WRXs and Tribecas! Great Prices! One-Year Warranty! Dealer: 719-510-2212 or 303870-2212. (574-02-11)
FIREWOOD – 15-17” cut, not split. Seasoned – Ponderosa. You pick up. West Loveland. $60 moderately rounded 8’ pickup. 303-665-5749. (93901-11)
2005 40 FT. ALFA GOLD motorhome, diesel, loaded, 2 slides, non-smokers, new $400K, now $145K, 970-5224600 (899-02-11)
WORK CLOTHES – good clean rental type, 6 pants and 6 shirts $44.95. Lined work jackets $10.95. Denim Jeans $6.00. Call 1-800-233-1853. www.usedworkclothing.com. 100% satisfaction guaranteed. (610-04-11)
FREE – 5 EXOTIC CHICKS or 3 ducks with 100 frypan special @ $35.95 plus shipping. Also Cornish Cross, standard breeds, fancy chicks, ducks, geese, turkeys, bantams, guineas, pheasants, quail, supplies, video. FREE COLOR CATALOG 417-532-4581. Cackle Hatchery – PO Box 529, Lebanon, MO 65536. www. cacklehatchery.com. (87607-11)
CLOCK REPAIR & RESTORATION DURANGO AREA. CLOCKS of all kinds repaired. Antique and modern. Call Robert 970-2477729. (109-03-11)
COACHING SOMETIMES COACHING OTHERS to “be determined” is a challenge. See a variety of coaching successes in Colorado’s Rodeo Roots to ModernDay Cowboys. This is a book about the Wild West. It can be yours for only $25. Call 303-455-4111 to order one today.
DIET FOOD DISCOUNT DIET FOOD. Highest quality, lowest prices. Our plan or yours. Diethighprotein. com. (763-06-11)
FARM MACHINERY & PARTS SAWMILL EXCHANGE: North America’s largest source of used portable sawmills and commercial equipment for woodlot owners and sawmill operations. Over 800 listings. THE place to sell equipment. 800-459-2148 www.sawmill exchange.com. (267-03-11)
FINANCIAL SERVICES TIRED OF STOCK MARKET volatility? Low rates of return on your CD’s? Now you can earn 8% guaranteed with no risk to your principal, ever, as well as tax-deferred growth, guaranteed lifetime income, and liberal withdrawal benefits. For more information, please contact Thad Scholl at Town & Country Insurance at 877887-3131 or thad.scholl@gmail. com. (851-01-11)
FREE FREE BOOKS/DVDS. Soon the “Mark of the Beast” will be enforced as Church and State unite! Let the Bible reveal. The Bible Says, POB 99, Lenoir City, TN 37771. thebible saystruth@yahoo.com, 888211-1715. (814-04-11)
HELP WANTED $400 WEEKLY ASSEMBLING PRODUCTS FROM HOME. For free information, send SASE: Home Assembly – CC, PO Box 450, New Britain, CT 060500450. EARN $60,000/yr PART-TIME in the livestock or equipment appraisal business. Agricultural background required. Classroom or home study courses available. 800-488-7570. www. amagappraisers.com (93505-11)
HOBBIES & CRAFTS AWARD WINNING LONG-ARM QUILTING — reasonable rates, quick turnaround. Karen Niemi, 303-470-9309, http://creative. stitching.home.comcast.net, creative.stitching@comcast.net (846-02-11) SPINNING, WEAVING, KNITTING, crochet, felting, dyeing, books, patterns, classes. Table Rock Llamas Fiber Arts Studio, 6520 Shoup Road, Colorado Springs, CO 80908, 866-4957747. (791-03-11)
REAL ESTATE 35 ACRES. PINON HILLS RANCH, Pagosa Springs, CO Parcel 2. Year round access. Grazing permit. Electricity, tested well, stone well house/ storage. 360 degree view. Pinons, pines, cedar. Artifacts, fossils. Call 970-731-9459. (936-01-11) 35-ACRE PARCELS, overlooking North Sterling Reservoir, ideal for custom home, exc. hunting, 970-522-4600. (89902-11) FT. COLLINS EQUESTRIAN ESTATE. 8720 sq. ft. home on 35 acres with lakefront, mtn. views, trees, barns, steel fencing, arena… www.obeo. com/637253 or call John Stegner 970-412-1657 or email jfstegner@msn.com (93704-11)
REAL ESTATE LAND WANTED — large land buyer looking to purchase 500-20,000 acres in Colorado. Will consider bail outs, foreclosures, joint ventures, condo/commercial projects. Will close quickly. Call Joe @ Red Creek Land 719-543-6663. (648-02-11) WINTER PARK AREA. Unbelievable horse property. 12-stall barn, foaling apartment, 2400 sq. ft. home, 10 fenced acres. Ride to national forest. $777,000. OWNER FINANCING. www.gingeryinfo.com, 970-531-5050 (934-03-11)
Read classified ads at countrylife.coop. Click on Classifieds.
28 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
RELIGION
VACATION RENTAL
WANTED TO BUY
BECOME AN ORDAINED Minister by correspondence study. Founded in 1988. Free info. Ministers for Christ Outreach, PMB 207, 7549 W Cactus, #104, Peoria, AZ 85381. http://www.ordination.org. (44106-11)
KAUAI VACATION RENTAL, 2bdr, full kitchen. Minutes from beaches. $600/wk. 808-245-6500; makanacrest.com; kauaiweddings.com. (756-05-11)
OLD POCKET WATCHES – working or non-working and old repair material. Bob 719-859-4209 watchdoctor@hotmail.com. (87006-12)
WANTED TO BUY
OLD TRACTORS that don’t run. Jerry Browne, 2707 Weld Co. Rd. 19, Fort Lupton, CO 80621. 303659-7026. (220-04-11)
SPECIAL SERVICES CHIMNEY CLEANING. Gas, wood, and pellet stove installations/ service. Factory trained. Serving Custer and Fremont County. 719-942-3880 (929-02-11) LAKE OR POND? Aeration is your 1st step toward improved water quality. Complete systems $199 to $369!! Waterfall? 7,000 gph super Hi-Efficiency waterfall pump, just 3 amps! $399.99! wwwfishpond aerator.com, 608-254-2735. (87912-11)
TICKETS NFR & PBR RODEO TICKETS – Las Vegas. All seating levels available. Call 1-888-NFR-rodeo (1-888637-7633) or www.NFR-Rodeo. com. *BBB Member; Since 1990. (912-11-11)
VACATION RENTAL HIDEAWAY CHALET vacation home in Winter Park. Sleeps 6. Close to town. No smoking. No pets. Free front door shuttle. Call Judy 847392-9713. (941-03-11)
I WILL BUY YOUR German daggers, helmets and other military items. Don Simmons, PO Box 4734, Springfield, MO 65808, 417-8815645. DSimmons@corpranet.net. (470-06-11) NAVAJO RUGS, old and recent, native baskets, pottery. Tribal Rugs, Salida. 719-539-5363, b_ inaz@hotmail.com. (817-04-11) OLD CARS. PRE 1970. Prefer complete cars. Not running okay. 970565-2653 after 3pm. (940-02-11) OLD COLO. LIVESTOCK Brand Books prior to 1950. Call Wes 303757-8553. (889-03-11)
WANTED TO BUY OLD GAS AND OIL items: Gas pumps, advertising signs, globes, etc. Pieces, parts, etc. considered. Also 1932-34 Ford cars and trucks, parts and pieces too. Any condition. Brandon, 719-250-5721. (519-11-11)
WANT TO PURCHASE mineral and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: PO Box 13557, Denver, CO 80201. (402-02-11)
I learned my first lesson about words that sound alike while visiting my grandparents as a child. My grandfather was the mayor of a small village in northern Ohio. I loved visiting “the mayor” and my grandmother, but the horse in the barn was always my favorite part. In those days I was horse crazy and always thinking about them. One day Grandmother and I went shopping at a store down the road and as she was sharing some local gossip with the store owner, he asked my grandmother, “How is the mayor doing today?” Having horse on my brain I replied, “He’s not a mare, he’s a gelding.” Cindy Bush, Durango
WANTED: JEEP CJ OR WRANGLER. Reasonably priced. No rust buckets. 888-735-5337. (227-09-11) WE PAY CASH FOR minerals and oil/gas interests, producing and nonproducing. 800-733-8122. (227-09-11)
WEDDINGS DO YOU WANT TO CREATE a magical, romantic, unforgettable wedding on the beach? The NEW Beach Wedding Planning Guide and Workbook shows you how. Download now at www.Beach Wedding Magic.com. (106-12-11)
Get your cowboy a book
One day, my 3-year-old granddaughter was spending time with me at the farm. She is a very observant little girl. On the drive to take her back to her home, we passed a neighbor’s farm. She knew who lived there and said, “They brought us some eggs the other day.” “That was nice of them,” I replied. Wanting to keep her in talking mode, I added, “I think it was on Tuesday, wasn’t it?” “No, I think it was Threesday,” she answered. Mary Belle Rafert, Amherst
An old man had electricity installed in his backwoods cabin. When the meter inspector made his first visit, he was amazed that so little energy was used. “Don’t you use the lights?” “Sure,” said the old man. “How long at a time?” asked the inspector. “Long enough to see to light my oil lamp,” the man answered. Lila Taylor, Stratton
A mother and her little girl were sitting the
Buy a him book about the Wild West.
On sale for $25. (includes shipping)
Call 303-455-4111
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP
veterinarian’s office. A lady came in with her bulldog and sat across from them. Soon the little girl started making ugly faces at the dog. “Stop it,” her mother scolded. “Well, Mom,” the little girl said, “He started it.” Lila Taylor, Stratton We pay $15 to each person who submits a funny story that’s printed in the magazine. At the end of the year, we draw one name from those submitting jokes and that person will receive $150. Send your 2011 stories to Colorado Country Life, 5400 N. Washington Street, Denver, CO 80216 or email them to funnystories@coloradocountrylife.org.
JANUARY 2011
Colorado Country Life 29
Till the Cows Come Home
R
anching would be a lot easier if cows could take care of themselves. Since they can’t, K&K Manufacturing has invented something to make the cowboy’s job easier: an automatic cattle gate. This portable electric gate opens automatically when a cow approaches and closes when it has passed through. It can be used to corral cattle when set up as part of a temporary fence around a water source, allowing the cows to enter but preventing them from leaving. The gate is powered by a 12-volt battery charged by a photovoltaic panel. It measures 48 inches wide and 72 inches tall. For more information or to purchase, contact K&K Manufacturing at 402-984-8864 or visit www. autocattlegate.com.
ANCHORED DOWN ON THE FARM
K
eeping hay dry with tarps can be a challenge. Hay Anchors offer an easy way to tie these coverings directly to the bales. Simply rotate these durable plastic stakes into the bales by hand or use a power tool. Then hook bungees or bailing twine to these strong, easily accessed anchors. Conveniently removable for feeding access, Hay Anchors have been tested in winds over 80 miles per hour and can be used again and again. Hay Anchors are manufactured in Longmont and can be found at www. FarmTek.com or at www.HayAnchor.com.
Doctor’s Orders
F
or hearty, healthy horses, nutrition is key. Dr. Juliet Getty of Bayfield makes it easy to feed your horse correctly with her equine nutrition reference book, Feed Your Horse Like a Horse, now available on searchable CD. Dr. Getty is a popular speaker and consultant for everything to do with what horses eat. Her book is an equally valuable resource for breeders, competitors and your everyday recreational horse owner, addressing how to choose the right feed, alleviate arthritis, feed orphaned foals and much more. To learn more about optimizing your horse’s health, find Feed Your Horse Like a Horse CD or book at www.gettyequine nutrition.com.
How Much Wood Can a Woodchuck Chuck?
F
or warmer and cleaner burning fires this winter, use Woodchucks logs as a smart alternative to regular wood. Since they’re made with 100-percent clean recycled hardwood, Woodchucks burn with a higher Btu, or more heat energy, and produce less emissions, ash and creosote. Also, because they contain no additives, they’re safe to cook over and provide a naturally pleasant hardwood smoke flavor. Made in Cortez, Woodchucks fire logs are available at www.woodchuckfirelogs.com.
e 30 Colorado Country Life JANUARY 2011
E nter to win Dukes of the Chutes: Harry Vold’s Sixty Years in Rodeo. Visit our website at www.coloradocountrylife.coop and click on Contests. Deadline is January 15. We will also be giving away Colorado’s Rodeo Roots and Modern-Day Cowboys books during Janurary. You’ll find us at www.facebook.com/COCountryLife.
WWW.COLORADOCOUNTRYLIFE.COOP