Sopris Sun THE
VOLUME 1, NUMBER 31 • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009
Horses Sense A handful of locals are using horses to heal, and help people By Jane Bachrach
nce upon a time, Carbondale was a one-horse town. But gone are the days when a person could hear the clip-clop of horse hooves in the dust on Main Street. There is still a large horse population in and around Carbondale today, though, and after all these years, horses are being used in a new way – right here in Carbondale’s backyard. Horses are helping people heal. Local therapists and innovators are using them as a tool to help build confidence, self-esteem, and selfknowledge. They also use horses to help people with physical disabilities move more easily. Two local organizations, Windwalkers and Sopris Therapy Services (STS) that use horses to heal, are similar to one another.They’re both nonprofits and both work with physically, mentally and emotionally challenged children and adults. Horse Wisdom is a third local entity. It is quite different from the others, but Kathy Pike, who runs the business, uses horses in her practice for the same reason as Windwalkers and STS: Horses are great healers and teachers. Horses mirror our emotions. They can tell how we’re feeling on any given day. They pick up on our feelings and react to them in certain ways. The professionals who use them in a healing capacity can read their body language, which lets the teacher know how a human is feeling. There’s something special about a horse. It’s a quality that you almost can’t put into words or communicate, but it’s so compelling that many horse people would sell their house before they would sell their horse.“Horse people” know about it because they’ve experienced it, others are just beginning to figure it out. Health professionals, their patients, and healthy individuals are discovering how horses can help us learn about ourselves.
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Windwalkers
Kathy Pike spends a quiet moment with her mustang, Corazon. Photo by Jane Bachrach
“We figured out that we have an average of 35 butts in the saddle every week, ” Molly Robison said. Robison is the executive director of Windwalkers Equine Assisted Therapy and Learning Center at Cedar Ridge Ranch in Missouri Heights. Founded in 2005 with two riders and four horses, it has grown substantially over the years. Windwalkers currently uses eight horses but is looking for two more. Windwalkers now has a full-time staff of three people including Robison, a volunteer coordinator and a riding instructor. The organization also employs three part-time instructors. All of the instructors are NARH (North American Riding for the Handicapped) certified. Most of the group’s clients have been referred by speech pathologists, physical therapists and school counselors. Windwalkers also works with groups like the Youth Recovery Center out of Valley View Hospital, Mountain Valley Developmental Services and the Roaring Fork Autism Network According to Robison, “Therapy riding in general is becoming much more widely accepted and recognized.” “Physically, if you put a wheelchair person
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Carbondale Commentary First Friday: make it last all month It was oddly quiet in Carbondale Friday night, especially for a First Friday. The streets weren’t empty by any means, but nor were they hopping. The galleries were a little less crowded, the buzz a little quieter. At the SAW studios on Euclid, the food and liquor flowed all night, never running out. A couple of things conspired against the normal liveliness; namely, Labor Day weekend and Michael Franti. A lot of people were out of town for the long weekend or up in Snowmass listening to the great music. So to make up for the quietness, let’s turn First Friday into a monthlong affair. The Sopris Sun urges Bonedalians, Basaltines, Glenwood Springsters, Redstoners and everyone in
Protecting bike access won’t protect the land Wilderness designation is reserved for areas where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man. It is built on the idea that some areas should be set aside so that current and future generations may share the same opportunities to experience landscapes in their natural and primitive state. There aren’t many such places left, and the Hidden Gems Wilderness Proposal is designed to preserve those remaining special places on public lands in this part of Colorado. It is unfortunate that a recently formed mountain biking group, the Roaring Fork Mountain Bike Association, is working against a broad and multi-year effort to keep Colorado wild. The Hidden Gems proposal calls for preserving approximately 400,000 acres located primarily in four counties – Pitkin, Eagle, Gunnison and Summit. It was crafted over six years by dozens of volunteers working with four environmental organizations — the Wilderness Workshop, the Colorado Mountain Club, Colorado Environmental Coalition and The Wilderness Society. Some of these proposed areas are additions to existing wilderness areas and some are new, stand-alone areas. All contain precious wilderness characteristics that Coloradans and our many visitors value so highly. Hidden Gems representatives have met over the years with ranchers, individual property owners, firefighters, homeowner associations, municipalities, utilities, the Colorado National Guard, federal land managers, mountain bike organizations and climbing groups to name a few. We have dropped large areas of wilderness-quality lands from our proposal to meet their needs. Approximately 100,000 acres have been excluded in large measure due to the demands of mountain bikers. The proposal announced last week by the Roaring Fork Mountain Bike Association provides no guarantee that the roadless areas and mid-elevation gems in the White River and Gunnison National Forests will be protected at all. National Conservation Area or National Protection Area designations suggested by RFMBA in place of wilderness designation are created through a process that is vulnerable to special interests and highly paid lobbyists. The terms of use in each such area are negotiated individually. The loudest in the room usually get their way. Energy companies can lobby to keep some portions of an NCA or NPA open to development. Land-churning off road vehicle groups can leverage access to untrammeled areas. The Wilderness Act, by contrast, sets uniform management standards for all Wilderness Areas. It embraces grazing and associated upkeep; it allows trail building for travel by foot or horseback. Hunting and fishing are allowed. So are mountaineering, backpacking and hiking, and other activities that leave no trace. As a member of the negotiating team for the Hidden Gems Campaign, I can say that we were surprised by RFMBA’s proposal. It appears to be a hasty attempt to derail wilderness protections that so many support for the sake of a few disputed trails and the misguided notion that trails will someday be allowed in places that are now completely out of reach. For example, RFMBA opposes wilderness on Basalt Mountain in hopes to one day complete a trail through the Lake Christine State Wildlife Area. In fact, the Colorado Division of Wildlife has already barred mountain bikes from Lake Christine because bikers built bandit trails through sensitive habitat and ignored important seasonal closures. RFMBA opposes wilderness designation on Mount Sopris on the presumption it can cut a trail through private property owned by a Hidden Gems supporter who cherishes his privacy. RFMBA is also fighting wilderness designation on remote Red Table Mountain, even though the U.S. Forest Service recommended wilderness designation for the area and is managing it to protect its wilderness qualities. Are we to forego the protections for our land, water and wildlife for the sake of a few hoping to develop mountain bike trails across private property, and in areas already managed to protect wildlife and wilderness? A great many of us think such an idea is unreasonable. The only way to guarantee protection of habitat that supports our majestic elk herds and the streams that are home to the last of the native cutthroat trout is with the assured protections offered by the Wilderness Act. Hidden Gems invites RFMBA back to the table, so we can use the Wilderness Act where the landscape warrants it and work together to protect mountain biking and other quiet uses elsewhere. sloan shoemaker is the executive director of the Wilderness Workshop and on the steering committee of the hidden Gems Campaign. For more info, visit whiteriverwild.org. 2 • THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009
between to make the remainder of September “First Friday Month.” Take the time to visit the Clay Center, Harmony Scott, A. Beadles Fine Art, Parkside Gallery, Main Street Gallery, CCAH, Roadside Gallery, Kahhak Fine Arts & School and SAW to see what’s going on in the local art scene. It’s a great chance to see what your neighbors are creating and selling art-wise, at a different time of day and the month than you’re used to. The Roaring Fork Valley has a very lively art scene, with multiple venues for just about any kind of art imaginable – from sculpture in our public places to theaters up and down the valley, to galleries and studios that thrive everywhere Art is part of what makes this a great place to live. It brings us together. It makes us think. Sometimes it even challenges our notion of the world. It deserves your attention, Monday through Friday and on the weekends, too.
Letters
The Sopris Sun welcomes your letters, limited to no more than 400 words. Letters exceeding that length may be edited or returned for revisions. Include your name and residence (for publication) and a contact email and phone number. Submit letters via email to letters@soprissun.com or via snail mail to P.O. Box 399, Carbondale, CO 81623.
Thompson Divide: get involved Dear Editor: After attending the Thompson Divide Coalition meeting on Sept. 3, I’m definitely concerned about oil drilling up Thompson Creek. I use Thompson Creek for skiing, biking and taking my dog for a hike. I feel some people in the community are reluctant to get involved out of concern that the Thompson Divide Coalition (TDC) will take away biking trails or hunting roads. TDC is trying to withdraw land from oil leasing. I’m in fear that if people don’t get involved these areas will turn into numerous drilling sites with large trucks abusing the roads and chasing the elk away. Trout, forget it – the lakes will be polluted. I personally don’t like biking next to exhaust from oil trucks, or see the beauty in oil rigs. I would like this land to keep being used by ranchers and their grazing cattle; as well as hunters, skiers and bikers. I support the TDC and its effort to get permanent protection of this land. Please learn more before making a decision. Get involved before it’s too late and we are shaking our heads at water pollution and oil trucks. This needs to be grassroots supported and you can make a difference. Write a letter to our senators and representives. Maria Sweeterman Carbondale
Support from San Francisco editor’s note: The man who appeared in the corner of the cover photo of the Aug. 20 edition was, in fact, Jim Darien. Dear Editor: First of all, it was a great pleasure to be asked to attend last Thursday’s Sopris Sun event at the Village Smithy, and an even greater pleasure to have been able to toss my five twenties into the kitty on behalf of the Sun. I was taken back to April of ’74 and a very similar occasion with Pat Noel and Becky Young to benefit The Sun’s predecessor, that newspaper of many mastheads! When I got to San Francisco yesterday, there was The Sopris Sun waiting in my mail, and with it Becky [Young’s] electrifying photo of Main Street (Aug. 20 edition). It took me by surprise, and it was a couple minutes before my heart rate returned to normal. To some more used to Main Street’s look in 2009, this photo might appear to be a touch
too reminiscent of The Last Picture Show. To these old eyes, however, it was all about taking advantage of my height to aid and abet underage admissions into the Mountain Man Bar (a policy CRMS would’ve taken an exceedingly dim view of – and would still, were it not for the statute of limitations). It was all about Western Civilization’s best milkshakes at Kenny’s Pharmacy.And it was all about my life’s most precious times. (I really can’t tell for sure, but I’d like to think that the seated cowboy in the photo’s lower corner is Jim Darien. What that dude missed on Main Street over the many years, if anything, couldn’t have amounted to much. Trust me.) To know that I am among The Sun’s early population of out-of-state subscribers is a fine thing. Blessings, and every good wish, to you and your remarkable team. From this awkward distance, I will do everything I can to assist you folks. Because after all: They think we’re an airplane. But we’re really a bird... Robin Sutherland CRMS ’69; CMC ’72 Principal Pianist San Francisco Symphony LeTTers page 15
Sopris Sun THE
The Sopris Sun is an LLC organized under the 501c3 nonprofit structure of the Roaring Fork Community Development Corporation, P.O. Box 1582, Carbondale, CO 81623. Editor: Terray Sylvester • 618-9112 news@soprissun.com Advertising: Barbara Clarke barbarac@soprissun.com Anne Goldberg • 379-5050 anne@soprissun.com Reporters: Trina Ortega • Jeremy Heiman Photographer/Writer: Jane Bachrach Page Production: Terri Ritchie Ad Production: Barbara New Paper Boys: Russ Criswell, Mark Burrows Sopris Sun, LLC • P.O. Box 399 Carbondale, CO 81623 www.soprissun.com
ompson Divide Coalition steps up outreach efforts By Terray sylvester The Thompson Divide Coalition has grabbed a handful of headlines in local newspapers over the last few months, so it may seem surprising that the group made its debut only a week ago. But that’s how steering committee members describe the town hall meeting they hosted last Thursday. “We’ve had a number of meetings at [Carbondale] town hall but we haven’t put the broad ‘everybody welcome’ mat out like we did for this meeting,” said steering committee member Judy Fox-Perry, who has been spearheading the coalition’s grassroots organizing efforts. The group is attempting to prevent natural gas extraction on about 220,000 acres of federal land just west of Carbondale. The Sept. 3 meeting drew more than 150 people. Most were Carbondale residents, but a handful of attendees arrived from Glenwood Springs, cities west on the I-70 corridor, and from Aspen and other upvalley towns as well. Coalition members said they were pleased with the turnout, explaining that the meeting offered them their first opportunity to gauge the amount of support the group has generated so far. “We are really thrilled that the turnout was as strong as it was,” Fox-Perry said. She stated that to date, more than 700 signatures have landed on petitions circulated by the coalition, but that until the meeting, the group really did not have “a clue how much our outreach was connecting with people.” The meeting also attracted a handful of regional and local politicians, including Car-
bondale trustees Pam Zentmyer, John Hoffmann and Frosty Merriott; Pitkin County Commissioners Rachel Richards and George Newman; Garfield County Commissioner Tresi Houpt; and Colorado state Rep. Kathleen Curry. Fox-Perry said that the coalition will work to broaden its outreach efforts in the coming months. She said she doesn’t have a strong sense of public sentiment in the Glenwood Springs area, but thinks residents of the town have an obvious incentive to get involved: The city would be impacted by energy traffic to Fourmile Road and elsewhere. The coalition has identified Fourmile Road as one of several main access routes to the leases. At the meeting, Peter Hart, an attorney for the Wilderness Workshop, which is working with the Thompson Divide Coalition, estimated that access roads to the leases could see as many as 1,400 truck trips per day. Other access roads lie along the East Divide Creek Road out of Silt, and the Thompson Creek Road from Carbondale. Fox-Perry said she would like to extend her outreach efforts to Silt, as well as Redstone, Marble, and Paonia. “We’d like to hold similar meetings in other towns, to take our show on the road,” Fox-Perry said. The Sept. 3 meeting did not attract many dissenting viewpoints, such as the gas companies involved or, potentially, motorized recreationists. Much of the area focused on by the Thompson Divide Coalition overlaps with area included in the Hidden Gems Wilderness Proposal. Some coalition members said they
Thompson Divide Coalition steering committee members Dorothea Farris, Jock Jacober and Judy Fox-Perry (seated) discuss gas development west of Carbondale at the meeting last Thursday. Photo by Jane Bachrach
expected to face a backlash from snowmobilers, dirt bikers and others who might mistake the coalition’s efforts for those of the wilderness campaign, which would bar motorized access from much of the same terrain. But if that group turned out in significant numbers, it was silent during the meeting. Representatives of the gas industry were absent, or at least inconspicuous, as well. “It was a very congenial meeting, which was wonderful, in a way,” Fox-Perry said. “We actually hoped to get – I don’t know if you would call it opposition – people with more questions about motorized vehicle traffic, and maybe someone from the drilling industry that would represent an opposing view. We want to have a win-win situation where we work with the federal government and with oil companies to make it work.” The coalition has been meeting since November, but generally in smaller venues and with far fewer participants. Fox-Perry stressed that prior meetings have been open to the public, but were generally publicized by word-
of-mouth or email. The Thompson Divide Coalition formed to prevent gas extraction on 81 mineral leases on federal land in the Thompson Divide area west of Carbondale, including the Thompson Creek, Fourmile Creek, and Threemile Creek watersheds, as well as portions of the Muddy Basin, Coal Basin and the headwaters of East Divide Creek. The Coalition is also working to prevent further leasing in the area. As yet, the coalition hasn’t set a date for the next large, public meeting. But Jacober said the group is planning a fundraising event at White House Pizza in Carbondale in early October. One young woman at the meeting last week suggested that the Coalition picket during Potato Day, but according to Fox-Perry, the energy behind that proposal will likely be redirected, and a Potato Day Parade float may be in the works instead. The idea is to “capture the enthusiasm and use it in a positive way,” she said.
Ross Montessori hopes to quell neighbors’ concerns at possible new school site By Trina ortega and Terray sylvester As they plod forward in the search for a new school site, leaders at Ross Montessori School are hoping to ease nearby homeowners’ concerns that a campus near County Road 100 and Willow Lane would drain the water table and cause a traffic nightmare. The school is under contract to purchase a 5-acre piece of land east of town from Bill Vezzoso to build a new school. Ross School Director Mark Grice said the school is currently going through its due diligence on the property to address some of the issues that are of equal concern to the neighbors and the school, including traffic, sewer and water. “We’ve talked to the neighbors, and we’ve heard their concerns. We’re not going to close on the property if those things don’t work out [for the school],” Grice said. On Aug. 31, Grice invited neighboring property owners Julie and Mike Kennedy to a meeting to let them know the school is under contract to purchase the property. Julie Kennedy told The Sopris Sun that Grice “panicked” when the Kennedys brought along some of their neighbors. But Grice explained that he just hadn’t expected additional homeowners from the area to show up. Prior to that date, the school had an agreement with Vizzoso to not discuss details of the deal with outside parties, accord-
An engineer already has been to the site and the school will continue to study its options for both water and septic. Grice said he did not know what the solutions might be but expects to know before the due diligence period is up in April 2010. “We understand their [the neighbors’] concerns and so does Garfield County,” Grice said, explaining that the school still needs to meet basic rules such as those that govern sewage disposal. “We hire professionals. In fact, we hire the best in the valley.” Ross, a public charter school that is not Property owners near Willow Lane and County road 100, a potential site for ross’ new within the Roaring Fork School District, school, are concerned about the possible impacts. Photo by Terray sylvester does not need to meet county zoning rules. ing to Grice. Grice said he was also worried place weekly off of County Road 100. Though, if RFSD were to build on that site, the deal would fall through if too much inBut Grice views the move as an opportu- the same would hold true – public schools formation got out too soon. nity to encourage the school’s families to are not subject to town, city, and county pubKennedy said if the school is built there, allow their children to ride the bus and pedal lic hearing processes in order to build. the traffic “will be terrible.” The road to the their bikes instead of driving. Grice said he is trying to be a good neighschool is narrow, lacks a turning lane, and is “We want to create a traffic system that bor by meeting with the homeowners. He icy in the winter, Kennedy added.“They said will work for everybody, including the neigh- said he thought he’d be greeted with smiles up to 300 kids, so that’s 300 cars coming bors,” he said. from landowners who’ve had disputes over down our lane. The road is treacherous in the The Kennedys also expressed concern Vizzoso’s various endeavors (including an exwintertime.” about the water supply and said a school of cavating company and raising pigs) on the She said congestion will build at the 300 will drain their well. property. turnoff from County Road 100 to the school, “In the springtime we have no water,” In fact, Grice said he is worried that bad compounding problems that already exist Julie Kennedy said, noting that in March, publicity will wreck the deal for the school. due to blind hills near the turn offs to Rose April and May her hose runs at a trickle “What the neighborhood can do is give Lane and Willow Lane. when she fills her horse trough.“The impact us a lot of bad publicity; that could threaten “It would be like the rodeo twice a day,” [on water supplies] with 300 kids next door the landowner from selling,” Grice said, she said, referring to the summertime Car- is going to be — I can’t even imagine. We adding that it has been difficult finding a bondale Wild West Rodeo series that takes won’t have any water.” good site for the school’s future home. THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009 • 3
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News Briefs Group forms for local stimulus plan A group of Carbondale leaders, business owners, and citizens want to make shopping fun and meaningful for residents while simultaneously helping local retail shops survive another tough holiday season during the recession. The new Stimulus Committee aims to seek about $30,000 of financial assistance from the town to promote an incentive-based “shop local” campaign that will encourage residents to spend their dollars locally beginning this fall. Chris Chacos, who also heads the separate Historic Downtown Preservation Committee, has been helping to organize meetings, but said committee members have brought“great energy and ideas” to the stimulus group. “There has been a lot of enthusiasm, members have been tingling with interest. Just to be doing something to help our community feels good, it gives you hope, it feeds you,” said Chacos, who has been a longtime proponent of residents shopping locally. Chacos said the group wanted to organize something similar to Basalt’s recent economic stimulus but with “Carbondale flair.” One idea is for the committee to hold drawings for shoppers who spend their money at local retail outlets, with a large “green” prize, such as an electric vehicle, in order generate sales tax revenues. The program includes all of Carbondale, not just the downtown businesses, Chacos stressed. The committee aims to finalize the details and gain suppoort by month’s end in order to launch the program before holiday shopping season begins.
Towns promote tourism; each other Redstone and Marble soon will have more presence at the scenic overlook along Highway 133 directly north of Carbondale. As a way to build stronger ties with the neighboring tourist towns of Redstone and Marble, Carbondale business leaders and the Carbondale Chamber of Commerce have been meeting with the Redstone Community
Association to discuss ways to promote the sister communities. The groups will spend about $350 to upgrade signs at the scenic overlook to include information about historic Redstone and Marble, as well as promoting Highway 133 as a scenic route. “Over the years, we haven’t worked with Redstone and Marble enough,” said Chris Chacos, who heads up Carbondale’s Historic Downtown Preservation Association. After all, he added, Redstone is better known as a tourist destination than Carbondale. The Downtown Preservation Association has received funding to help promote the scenic byway, and the Carbondale and Redstone associations will pitch in to help pay for the signage. As part of the initiative, business leaders also aim to get Colorado Department of Transportation approval to move the highway sign denoting the scenic overlook away from the actual off-ramp to the scenic overlook. Because the highway sign is positioned too close to the exit, drivers do not have time to slow down and pull in, Chacos said. Additionally, Redstone and Carbondale are working together on ways to promote the fall colors to residents throughout the state, Chacos said. “We just want to work more with Redstone and Marble. We’re so close and we depend on each other for livelihood. This is a start; hopefully the bond between our communities will continue to grow,” Chacos said. Chacos added that once the Crystal River paved pedestrian and bike path is completed from Carbondale to Redstone, the two communities will have an even greater connection. Just as the Rio Grande bike path is used by cyclists and cross country skiers, Chacos said the southerly path will boost humanpowered trips to Redstone in the winter, too. That ultimately will result in more frequent stops at local eateries and businesses, he said. “I think Redstone is beginning to realize this will help their economy so much,” Chacos said. NeWs BrIeFs page 5
Cop Shop Tuesday, Sept. 1 At 7:10 p.m., two large, roving dogs named Ella and Duke approached a woman walking near the intersection of Crystal Bridge Drive and Perry Ridge Road, and reportedly gave her trouble. Police issued a citation to the owner. It seems the two musicians were having a bit too much fun on the town. Wednesday, Sept. 2 Police received an anonymous report of a loud stereo on Wheel Drive. Officers were unable to locate any loud stereos on Wheel Drive or Wheel Circle. Wednesday, Sept. 2 At 7:50 a.m., police found yet more graffiti in the men’s room at Sopris Park. Wednesday, Sept. 2 At 10:57 a.m., a police officer investigated an unattended death on Second Street. Thursday, Sept. 3 At 8:30 a.m., someone called to report a road rage incident on
Highway 133. The police report offered no further details. Thursday, Sept. 3 At 9:15 a.m., a woman who referred to herself as “Stacey” reported that a tall, full-size white van with squeaky brakes was driving around the neighborhood near Morrison Street. “Stacey” said the van appeared to be suspicious. Thursday, Sept. 3 At 9:30 a.m., a woman reported that her black Trek bike had been stolen. Thursday, Sept. 3 At 4 p.m., a dog bit a man on the bike path near Lincoln Avenue. Thursday, Sept. 3 At 6 p.m., two cars collided in the City Market parking lot. Thursday, Sept. 3 At 7:30 p.m., police received a report of a white van driving slowly on Main Street and swerving all over the place.
ird Street Center pulling in tenants; but looking for more By Jeremy heiman It’s a popular place. Dozens of nonprofit organizations are lining up for space in the Third Street Center. But what the project really needs is renters willing and able to take on the commitment of a long-term lease. Project coordinator Sara Plesset said that spaces are still available at the nonprofit center in the former Carbondale Elementary School building, though numerous organizations have paid deposits to get onto a waiting list. Several have signed long-term leases for spaces in the building and the numbers are growing. The center will open in spring 2010 “We’re leasing the long-term spaces now,” Plesset said. “By the time we open the doors we’ll be filled.” Nonprofits that have already signed longterm leases include Sustainability Center of the Rockies (SCoR), Mountain Regional Housing Corporation,Wilderness Workshop, Healthy Mountain Communities, Mountain Valley Developmental Services, Carbondale Council on Arts and Humanities, Solar Energy International (SEI), and Youth Zone. More groups are in lease negotiations, including Community Office for Resource Efficiency, Aspen Community Foundation, A Spiritual Center, Lift-Up, and Crystal River Ballet School. According to information provided by the Third Street Center, space is being offered to nonprofits at about half the going rate locally. Because of high property values in the Roaring Fork Valley, there’s a great deal of pentup demand for low-cost rental space. Some groups need a place right away. “We actually have people calling us every day wanting space, but we don’t have any more right now,” Plesset said. The Third Street Center is crawling with activity. Contractors are hard at work on a renovation that encompasses almost the entire building.
Amanda Emerson, director of enrichment for Mountain Valley Developmental Services. The Glenwood Springs-based agency provides opportunities for developmentally disabled citizens to live more useful and interesting lives. Mountain Valley has one permanent space and will soon have a second space as well. Currently, Emerson said, the space is used to provide education and enrichment services to clients who cannot work or who choose not to work. The space is also a base for outings to such destinations as the farmers’ market and parks and natural areas. “It’s wonderful,”Emerson said.“It’s working very well for us.”
Sign up for the gym, kitchen Though it’s still under renovation, a handful of nonprofits are getting ready to move into the Third street Center, and a few have moved in already. Photo by Jane Bachrach Plesset said the work that remains to be done includes replacing of the boilers, upgrading the mechanical system, insulation work, the last phase of asbestos removal, and installing of a solar hot water system for heating and domestic hot water. Though there’s immediate demand for space, most of the building is still empty. But three organizations have already occupied spaces in the old school under short-term leases. Mountain Valley Developmental Services, Senior Matters and SEI are now using spaces that will be renovated after the rest of the building is done.
Current renters satisfied SEI’s business manager, Sandy Pickard, said the temporary classroom space at the Third Street Center is just what the renew-
Mike Taggett, the man who invented Chums sunglasses straps, visited the Carbondale recreation and Community Center on Tuesday to show off his newest gadget. The human Dynamo is a stationary bicycle that generates electricity when used, and plugs into the wall to feed the juice back into the grid. eric Brendlinger, recreation center manager, said such energy-generating equipment might be the “wave of the future,” but noted that as yet the rec center has no definite plans to buy some. Futuristic the bikes may be, but they won’t save the world. Taggett said that Lance Armstrong would be hard pressed to generate 350 watts an hour on the device. That’s about enough power to run a big TV. Photo by Terray sylvester
able energy education organization needed. SEI has been growing exponentially for the past five years, she said, and the majority of SEI’s classes are now held in Paonia. High costs in the Roaring Fork Valley have made it difficult to expand here. At the old school, SEI will offer a building science class that explores the ways buildings can be improved through energy efficiency and renewable energy features. “This just seems to be a natural fit,” she said. “This building is the perfect example.” SEI has been a close partner in the development of the project, Pickard said, and SEI is happy about the prospect of being in a building that houses other nonprofits, is a community project, and is exemplary in its use of renewable energy. Also happy to be in the building is
Project coordinator Plesset said it’s important that prospective tenants sign leases soon, not only to reserve the spaces, but also because periodic drafts from construction loan funds hinge on getting legal commitments from tenants. The gym, cafeteria and industrial kitchen still need work, for example. But commitments are needed in order to fund those renovations, too. Plesset said leasing those spaces has proved tricky. Because of their size, they will no doubt need to be divided among several tenants. The kitchen might be rented hourly, she said, or become part of a building cafe. The gym might be rented in evening-long slots, or might be rented by for physical activity classes at lunchtime. “But we need people to step up now and say they’re interested in that space,” Plesset said.“That will determine the scope of the remodel.” For more information, log on to thirdstreetcenter.net
News Briefs continued om page 4 CMC cancels board elections No candidates for Colorado Mountain College’s board of trustees will appear on the ballot this November. The deadline to enter the election passed at the end of August, with only three candidates in the race – one each for three of the open seats. No candidate entered the race for a fourth open seat. The candidates for the three uncontested seats will be automatically elected. They are: Glenn Davis for District 7, Eagle County; Mary Ellen Denomy for District 3, West Garfield County; and returning trustee Anne Freedman for District 1, Pitkin County and parts of Eagle County. No candidate turned out for the Routt County seat. The CMC board will appoint someone to that seat. The Colorado Mountain College Board of Trustees has seven at-large seats that are elected by all the voters in the six counties that constitute the CMC District. One resident from each of the following areas is elected to fill a four-year term on the board: Eagle, Lake, Pitkin, Routt and Summit counties; and east and west Garfield County. The next board meeting will be Sept. 14
at CMC’s Timberline Campus in Buena Vista and Leadville.
RFTA makes schedule changes Sales tax revenues are down in the current tight economic conditions, so RFTA has increased cash fares by $1 per trip, and has made minor service reductions as well. RFTA will raise the cash fares on the Valley and Hogback routes by $1 per trip, except for trips within a single zone. For those trips, the fare will be limited to $1. The prices of punch passes, monthly passes and zone passes will not change. As of Tuesday, Sept. 8, service was reduced on the Grand Hogback route, and several weekday and weekend Glenwood to Rifle runs were eliminated. Some Express, Local and Snowmass direct routes have also been reduced or eliminated. The changes primarily affect weekday, early morning upvalley Express routes; and afternoon and evening Express routes downvalley. Back-up service on late night runs from Monday through Saturday will also be affected. For more information, call 925-8484, or visit rfta.com.
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Scuttlebutt More press And we aren’t complaining. The more the better. We’re happier to see the Sunrise than the sunset. Sue Gray told us that once again, The Sun was discussed on Con Games around the first of the month. Sue also wrote a blog about the Sun for aspenpost.net. Here’s an excerpt: “The Sopris Sun keeps us connected to each other and to our town. It’s a paper of the people, by the people, and for the people. Just like the first pamphlets that were printed and distributed hundreds of years ago in America, the newspaper has gone back to its roots.” Thanks, Sue!
Gettin’ hitched. Congratulations to Heidi Hendricks and her soon-to-be husband, Todd Mathis. The couple will be married this Saturday in Collbran.
There’s Susie and Leslie and John and David and Brad… The 12th annual Colorado Relay will get underway tomorrow with many, many Carbondalians participating. The 174-mile race starts in Georgetown on Friday, Sept. 11, and finishes at Sopris Park in Carbondale on Saturday. This race will be run over jeep roads, trails, bike paths and three high mountain passes, according to the web site. Some of the Carbondalians participating include John Stroud, David Clark, Brad Palmer, Mark Feinsinger, Brion After, Susie Wallace and Leslie Johnson. Good luck, everyone and if you’re running and didn’t let us know, please shoot us an email next time so you too can get your name in the paper.
Talkin’ trash The sixth graders at Carbondale Middle School recently completed a project involving trashcans that were donated by ACE Hardware in Carbondale. As a school community service project all of their efforts went to waste. They painted those recycling cans in conjunction with learning how to reduce waste and help the environment. The cans and some paper bins will be placed in the halls for everybody to use.
Happy belated birthday to… …The Sun’s indispensable Jane Bachrach and Allyn Harvey! And to these other Bondalians as well: Marian Perregeaux, Hailey Thompson, John Colson and Nelson Oldham and his son, Charlie Oldham. Hope you all had fun birthdays.
Namaste… and bonjour A few weeks ago, Elizabeth Robinson of Marble flew off to sojourn abroad in Hyderabad, India. The Carbondale Rotary Club sponsored her trip as part of the club’s youth exchange program. We’re sure her parents, Pamela and Tom, miss her dearly, but here at The Sun, we’re just curious to hear how she’s taking to her new home in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. We’ll keep you posted with any breaking news. But in the meantime, Carbondale has been lucky enough to welcome its own visitor from abroad. Violette Hardy, from outside of Paris, has moved to Carbondale on the Rotary exchange program as well. She’ll be attending Roaring Fork High School.
Has anyone collected? We would like to know if any Carbondalians went to the Police and asked them for $4 or if anyone collected $4 before last week’s Ful Moon Cruiser ride. If you saw the posters hanging on Main Street last Wednesday you’ll know what we’re talkin’ about. We think THAT was pretty funny. Email Janeb@soprissun.com if you went to the Carbondale PD to collect, or if you know who was behind this little scheme. We will keep your identity confidential. We just want to know who you are.
Welcome home from abroad, Conrad! More on this later.
Read about a writer If you’d like to catch local writer Mary Peace Finely’s recent interview, get online and type in Examiner.com.
6 • THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009
Town finds time to enforce lighting ordinance By Jeremy heiman Nights are getting darker in Carbondale. The 7-11 store at Main Street and Highway 133 no longer competes with the sun’s brilliance. The Cowen Center no longer lights up so much of Red Hill. Other businesses throughout town are beginning to tone it down as well. In a way, the lights have dimmed due to the economic downturn, but not because people are struggling to pay their electricity bills. These light sources are being brought into compliance with an ordinance adopted by the Carbondale Board of Trustees in 2002, controlling exterior lighting at both businesses and homes. Because building activity in Carbondale has declined with the recession, John Plano, the town’s building official, and Lark Lawson, code enforcement officer, have had more time to pay attention to some of the regulations that have gone unenforced during the times of hectic building activity. “The dark sky concern has been around for many years,” said Town Manager Tom Baker, “but until the last couple of years, we haven’t had the manpower or the time to pursue it.” The ordinance was enacted to promote safety and security while preserving small town character, stopping the escalation of light pollution, conserving energy and increasing visibility by reducing glare. Recently, Plano and Lawson have been taking to the streets at 4 a.m. with a new high-tech light meter purchased by the town, Baker said. They’ve been measuring the amount of light leaking from fixtures in both commercial and residential neighborhoods, checking to see that excess light doesn’t create glare in streets and monitoring light trespassing on neighbors’ yards and homes. When they find violations, the two have been contacting the owners and urging them to bring their lighting into compliance. Businesses that have been contacted include the 7-11, the Cowen Center, Sunburst Car Care, and the building at 1101 Village Road, Plano said. There are a few violations in residential areas, too. “There’s a light here and a light there that we’ve contacted people about,” he said. Some of those contacted didn’t know Carbondale had an exterior lighting ordinance,
Plano said, but everyone has been cooperative. Some of the problems can be fixed by modifying existing light fixtures, while others require the installation of new lights. The 7-11 store fixed some of its violations by installing new, energy efficient LED (light-emitting diode) fixtures. These lights operate on a small fraction of the electricity demanded by conventional mercury vapor or high-pressure sodium lamps, no doubt improving the convenience store’s bottom line as well as its civic image. Efforts to contact a 7-11 spokesperson were unsuccessful. Baker said the main issues with light are well expressed in the ordinance — that light is to be directed onto the job at hand, such as filling a gasoline tank, rather than leaking all over the neighborhood. “That’s one of the fundamental tenets of the new lighting code,” Baker said, “that light goes on the task, rather than spreading.” Light trespass is the light leaking from one property onto a neighboring property, measured at the lot line. The code has different standards for the amount or intensity of light allowable in commercial and residential neighborhoods. For residential lighting, the light source, that is the bulb or floodlight, can’t be visible from adjoining lots or streets. The ordinance provides specifications for lighting installed in newly constructed buildings, and it also requires that all pre-existing nonconforming lighting be brought into compliance within Tom Baker five years after the effective date of the ordinance, or at the time Town Manager the lighting system is substantially revamped or the building is significantly enlarged. That means any business or dwelling that had lights that were out of compliance when the ordinance was adopted in 2002 needed to be in compliance by 2007.
The dark sky concern has been around for many years but until the last couple of years, we haven’t had the manpower or the time to pursue it.
The People of the Carbondale Community United Methodist Church invite you to
RETHINK CHURCH A special invitation to young families with children, young couples and singles for a “Rethink” experience. Sunday, September 13, 2009 12 noon free picnic lunch with food, family fun, and conversation in the church yard (or inside if it rains) at 385 South 2nd Street in Carbondale
More Information
If you have a question or a complaint about lighting, call John Plano or Tom Baker at town hall at 963-2733.
farmer’s table d'hôte Every Wednesday, inspired by Carbondale’s farm fresh market produce. 3 courses for $28. Includes starter, main, and dessert or glass of wine.
tuesday thru saturday lunch - 11:30am to 2pm happy hours - 4 to 6pm dinner - 5:30 until...
sunday brunch 9am to 2pm
located at 348 main street, downtown carbondale 970/704-0377 www.ellacarbondale.com
Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors It’s what we do. Fall Schedule at the Church Sunday Morning Worship – 10:30 a.m. Children’s Sunday School – 10:30 a.m. Centering Prayer – Wednesdays 6:30 p.m. Bell Choir rehearsals – Thursdays 4:30 p.m. Adult Choir rehearsals – Thursdays 7:00 p.m. Extended Table Service Project – 1st Mondays Carbondale Community United Methodist Church 385 So. 2nd Street – PO Box 793 Rev. Wallace D. (Wally) Finley, Pastor Rev. Dr. Richard Lyons, Pastor ccumc@rof.net Church: 963-4461
Wally: 379-5686
Richard: 987-4034
Carbondale’s Historic “Mainline” Church Where we take the Bible seriously but not literally. THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009 • 7
A quarter century in Carbondale: e Pour House celebrates 25 years By Terray sylvester Skip Bell has run the Pour House restaurant and bar on Main Street for the last quarter century. He opened the establishment Sept. 7, 1984, after tending bar upvalley in Aspen since the early 1970s, and says he doesn’t think he’ll ever retire. “It’s been a great run and I’m so grateful to the people of Carbondale for accepting me and making it work,” Bell said. The Sopris Sun talked with Bell on Monday afternoon. The Sun: Did you expect to stay in business for 25 years? Bell: Yeah. Because I love this business. It’s pretty much all I’ve ever done and I look forward to coming to work every day. There is no better job than coming out and hanging out with people that you like and making them feel good about their food and the way they’ve been served. The Sun: How many bars were there in town when you opened? Bell: The Crystal River Steakhouse, me, and The [Black] Nugget – that was it. The Sun: So you figured it was a market waiting to happen? Bell: Yeah, because Carbondale was the next deal on the horizon. A lot of people from Aspen migrated to Carbondale. And within the fact that I had tended bar for so long up in Aspen, I knew so many of them that I figured I had the beginning of a market. People who were already living down here found a little bit of a home. They knew what to expect from me. [The miners] were my key night business back then. They’d get off the swing shift and they’d stop in Redstone and grab a case of beer and this would be their next stop – here and The Nugget. There were cowboys, coal miners, bikers, hippies. The Sun: What attracts people to the Pour House? Bell: I’ve had some of the greatest employees over the years that I can even talk about. Three people could run the
joint [when I opened]. Now I’ve got 20 employees. I have one lady that’s been with me going on 20 years: Margaret (Midge) Wampler. Caroline Buechner has worked for 11 years, this June. So I feel real blessed that way. Service to me is 70 percent of the deal. That’s what makes it all happen. The Sun: What memories of town, or your patrons, stand out? Bell: Years ago I had two guys who used to come in here: Ralph Brecegirdle and Don Pierson, both retired. Bracie had worked on the dam at Ruedi. Don had worked up at the coal mine. They’d get there about eleven o’clock in the morning when I opened up, and they’d drink beer until 3 or 4 o’clock in the afternoon and then go home. And they would talk about the old days, and sometimes argue about the old days, and Bracie would usually end up winning the argument and he’d piss Don off and so Don would come down and sit at the other end of the bar and watch the television and turn his back on Bracie. Both passed away, of course. But those were two of my favorite old characters. I learned a lot about the area and about the history of the area from them. The Sun: A quarter century must provide quite a window into Carbondale. Bell: I could go on about the townspeople forever. One of my favorite memories used to be working on Sunday, the ladies who had been to the Methodist Church would come downtown and walk through with their parasols and bright clothes and their Sunday finest on – cowboys coming down town and tying their horses up next door and coming in to drink; Jim Duke bringing his mule in… Every once in a while somebody will still come down [on horseback]. Not that often though. That spirit of adventure, or just that, “this is a cow town and we’re going to ride our horses downtown” – it’s not there anymore. When the cowboys come down they come in their pickups. The Sun: What do you think about the future? Will you
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Postcard cir. 1902 show the Hotel Colorado and the Vapor Caves
September’s Special
Sugar or Salt Glow Scrub Back, Neck, Shoulder Massage Private Mineral Bath Day Pass to the Vapor Caves
A day at the Spa for $115
For Information & Reservations call 970-945-0667 `HTWHOZWH JVT 6WLU +HPS` HT WT 4HQVY *YLKP[ *HYKZ .PM[ *LY[PÄJH[LZ (]HPSHISL
The Church at Redstone September 13, 10 a.m.Worship Stoll the Boulevard and witness the Fall colors and the incredible beauty of our valley
8 • THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009
skip Bell with his dog, Gus. Photo by Jane Bachrach stay with it? Bell: Yeah. I don’t see myself retiring. I’ll do it until they drag me out by my heels.
The Event
On Sunday, Sept. 13, Skip Bell, manager of the Pour House, will host a free barbecue, concert and street dance to celebrate the last 25 years and say “thank you” to the town that has supported the Pour House for all these years. The barbecue will start at 1 p.m. and last until the food is gone. The music will last from 6-9:30 p.m.
Please join us to celebrate
25 Great years of serving Fine Food and Friendly Spirits in Carbondale
Sunday, September 13 Free BBQ served from 1pm until it’s gone
Buttons the Clown will be doing free face painting and balloon animals Aspen House of Bounce will have bounce castles set up
Street Dance with The Sirens Starts at 6pm - 9:30pm
Fine dining, friendly service and a great jukebox.
351 MAIN STREET, CARBONDALE • 963-3553
Community Calendar THURSDAY Sept. 10 WATER QUALITY MEETING • The Roaring Fork Conservancy will present a meeting to discuss water quality and flow issues in the Crystal River at 6:30 p.m. at the Church at Redstone. It will be the second of five meetings about the Roaring Fork Watershed Plan. For more information, visit roaringfork.org/watershedplan. GREEN DRINKS • The Sustainability Center of the Rockies (SCoR) hosts a lively networking event attended by folks from nonprofits, academia, government and business from 5-7 p.m. at Russets at 225 Main Street. For more information, visit greendrinks.org. ECO-GODDESS TUNES • Eco-Goddess at 335 Main St. presents Ann Federowicz and John Sommers from 7-9 p.m with no cover charge. For more information, call 963-7316, or visit eco-goddess.com. P&Z MEETS • Carbondale Planning & Zoning Commission meets at 7 p.m. the second and fourth Thursdays of the month at Town Hall. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED • Volunteers are needed now to help organize and hold the “Potato Bake Off” at the 100th Potato Day scheduled for Sept. 18-20. Farmer’s market vendors also are needed. For more information, call 963-3744. STRESS RELIEF • Patricia Kerschner will lead a final Release Stress workshop from 6-8 p.m. at Splendor Mountain Spa, 506 Maple St., in Glenwood Springs. $15 suggested donation. To sign up or for more information, call (720) 382-6900.
FRIDAY Sept. 11 STORYTELLERS NEEDED • Spellbinders’ three-day storytelling workshop for interested volunteers continues from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sept. 9, 11 and 15 at the Eagle Valley Community Center in El Jebel. For more information, visit www.spellbinders.org. BOBBY MASON DANCE • Bobby Mason and Harding, Hills & Hawes will play from 6-10 p.m. at the Gathering Center at the Church of Carbondale at 110 Snowmass Drive. Tickets cost $40 in advance, $45 at the door. Proceeds benefit Mountain Regional Housing. For tickets, call 704-9801, or email janet@housingcommunity.org. LIVE MUSIC • The Black Nugget presents Straightshot and the S-Curves playing rock ‘n’ roll dance music at 9 p.m., Friday. Visit straightshotmusic.com for more details. MOVIES • Showing at 8 p.m. Fri.-Thurs., Sept. 11-17 at the Crystal Theatre “500 Days of Summer” (PG-13). DANCE CLUB • Deejay Deeogee spins for the under 21 crowd from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. every Friday at The Lift on Main St. in Carbondale.
SATURDAY Sept. 12 GODDESS HAFLA • Glenwood Springs Center for the Arts hosts the fourth annual Goddess Hafla (featuring belly dancing, fire dancing, food and wine) at 7 p.m. Sept. 12. Belly dancers are invited to participate in the “Shakin’ Sharp and Slinky Combos with Phoenix” from 1-3:30 p.m. Sept. 12.
To list your event, email information to news@soprissun.com. Deadline is 5 p.m. Friday. events take place in Carbondale unless noted.
FRIDAY Sept. 18
Call 945- 2414 for tickets and more information.
LIVE MUSIC • Heart of the Rockies (Twirp Anderson, John Sommers, and Randy Utterback) will play country rock and bluegrass from 7-11 p.m. at the free Potato Days community dance and picnic at the Carbondale Recreation and Community Center. For more information, call 963-0161.
GROUP RUN • Independence Run & Hike holds its regular Saturday group run at 7:30 a.m. Rain, snow or sun. Tuesday night trail runs are at 5:45 p.m. Call 704-0909, email independencerun@sopris.net, or stop by 995 Cowen Drive for details. HEALTH LECTURE • Dr. Narain Naidu will speak about “Bio-Replenishment for Bone and Joint Health” from 911:30 a.m. at the Auditorium in the Aspen Elementary School. The event will be useful for athletes, women, and all. Admission is $15. For information call Rachel Dayton, 379-9654.
MONDAY Sept. 14 DANCE CLASSES • Learn African and Caribbean dances with live drummers and fun rhythms. All ages and abilities welcome. $10. Mondays from 7-8:30 p.m. at the Carbondale Community School, 1505 Satank Road. Call Steve at 379-8422 with questions.
TUESDAY Sept. 15 AARP DRIVER SAFETY • RSVP and Colorado Mountain College will be sponsoring two AARP Driver Safety classes from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sept. 15-16 and again on Sept. 22-23 at the CMC Blake Center, 1402 Blake Ave., Glenwood Springs. Cost is $12 for AARP members and $14 for non-members, which includes the workbook and handouts. Call 3848747 and leave your name, phone number, which class you would like to take and any questions. STORYTELLERS NEEDED • Spellbinders’ three-day storytelling workshop for interested volunteers continues from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sept. 9, 11 and 15 at the Eagle Valley Community Center in El Jebel. For more information, visit www.spellbinders.org.
SATURDAY Sept. 19
the sing-a-longs, from The Beatles to Britney Spears. For more information, call 704-9400, or visit whitehousepizza.com.
THURSDAY Sept. 17 AMERICORPS MEETING • An AmeriCorps/VISTA informational meeting will be from 10 a.m. to noon Sept. 17 at US Bank Community Room in Glenwood Springs. Call 947-8462 or 625-6110, ext. 7001, for information. STRESS RELIEF • Davi Nikent presents trauma release exercises on Thursdays. For more information, contact Rita Marsh at 963-8979 or rita@davinikent.org.
Y’ART SALE • The Carbondale Clay Center’s Annual Y’Art Sale will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 19 at 135 Main St. All proceeds from this fun, funky flea market support CCC’s year-round programming. Donations of new and gently-used art supplies, pottery “seconds,” garden sculptures, framed artwork, scrapbooking paraphernalia, and more are being accepted through Sept. 18. Call 963-CLAY for more information. MAKE A CUP • The Carbondale Clay Center hosts a Make Your Own Cup workshop from 10-11:30 a.m. Sept. 19. Build and paint the same day. All ages welcome; children under 5 must be accompanied by an adult. Cost is $25. Call 963-2529 for information. NIA DANCE • Nia dance is held from 9:30-10:30 a.m. Saturdays at the River Valley Ranch House, 444 River Valley Ranch Drive. $18 drop-in. Visit sol-nia.com for further details.
TRUE NATURE Healing Arts
connecting with the truth of who we are
SCHEDULE MON
8:30-10 am 5:30-6:45 pm
YOGA FLOW RESTORATIVE YOGA
CREATIVITY WORKSHOP • Kathy Pike will host a workshop on finding creative inspiration by associating with horses, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The workshop costs $75. For more information, call Angel Alexia at (303) 842-0755, or email angeliquealexia@yahoo.com.
TUES
7-8:15 am 10 am - noon 5:15-6:30 pm
YOGA FLOW MUSIC TOGETHER YOGA FOR EVERYONE
FLY FISHING CLINICS • Crystal Fly Shop offers free beginner’s fly fishing clinics every Tuesday evening at 5:30 p.m. in September at 208 Main St. Classes consist of detailed casting lessons and other instruction. Equipment provided. Call 963-5741 to reserve a space.
THURS
WEDNESDAY Sept. 16 FARMER’S MARKET • The Carbondale Farmer’s Market is from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. every Wednesday through Sept. 30 at the corner of Fourth and Main streets. Fruits, vegetables, meats, cheese, bread, coffee, wine, flowers, prepared foods, crafts and more. Free entertainment. LIVE MUSIC • White House Pizza presents Nate Biro from 7-10 p.m. Biro loves
10 • THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009
WED
FRI SAT SUN
SIVANANDA YOGA 8:30-10 am 10:45 am - noon MUSIC TOGETHER 1-6 pm 5 ELEMENT ACUPUNCTURE 7:30 -8:30 pm MEDITATION 7-8:15 am 6:45- 8 pm
YOGA FLOW YOGA EN ESPANOL
8:30-10 am 11 a.m - 5 pm
VINYASA FLOW 5 ELEMENT ACUPUNCTURE
8:30-9:45 am YOGA FLOW 10:15-11:15 am KUNDALINI YOGA 4-6 pm WORKSHOPS 8:30-9:45 am 10-11:30 am 4:30-5:45 pm
YOGA FLOW BUDDHIST MEDITATION & PHILOSOPHY YOGA WITH GRACE
THAI MASSAGE AVAILABLE Drop-in $12 with Punch Pass $10
549
www.truenature.us main st. • carbondale, co 963-9900
Community Briefs KDNK seeks community voices
Rotary accepting grant applications
KDNK is launching an effort to record testimonials from listeners of the public radio station. During the Fall Membership Drive, Sept. 23 to Oct. 2, KDNK will be playing back these recorded pieces. Listeners who have a story, a desire to be heard, or a passion for KDNK are encouraged to participate. The deadline to record a testimonial is Sept. 18. KDNK is also seeking volunteers to answer phones and take pledges during the Fall Membership Drive. Morning, afternoon and evening shifts available. To sign up for either, contact Cindy at 963-0139 or via email at cindy@kdnk.org.
Grant applications are now being accepted from organizations whose missions focus on the Roaring Fork Valley and Carbondale community. Priority goes toward projects that have a direct, immediate, and identifiable long-range benefit to the quality of life in the mid-valley area of Carbondale, El Jebel, and Basalt and coincide with Rotary International’s goals of literacy, health, hunger, water management, and youth services. However, other applications will be considered. Rotary funds will be used for the purchase of physical or tangible items for these projects. The application deadline is Oct. 16, and grants will be awarded Nov. 25. Applications are available at Carbondale Town Hall, 511 Colorado Ave., by calling Andy White at 274-2157, and on the Carbondale Rotary Web site at rotarycarbondale.org. The Carbondale Rotary meets at 7 a.m. every Wednesday at the Carbondale Fire House off Highway 133.
Discounted ski passes on sale Members of the Carbondale Chamber of Commerce can purchase discounted Aspen/Snowmass ski passes for the 2009-2010 season. In order to qualify for the discounted chamber rate, purchasers must have a chamber voucher that costs $25 per business. Vouchers may be purchased by cash, check or credit card. Season passes are to be purchased at Aspen/Snowmass ticket offices and must be purchased by company check or credit card. The Carbondale chamber is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more information, call the chamber at 963-1890.
Free Health Care Screenings in September Mountain Family Health Centers will be conducting free health screenings in Carbondale from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday, Sept. 11, at La Perla, 1018 Highway 133 (weather permitting), and from 5-8 p.m. Sept. 28 at Saint Mary of the Crown Catholic Church. The health screenings are open to the public and anyone may attend. Screenings include cholesterol, blood pressure, blood sugar levels, body mass index, and a heart disease risk assessment. Checking such risk factors regularly can help prevent serious health conditions from developing. Area businesses may also arrange for free, on-site screenings for employees or customers. Contact Sharla Gallegos at 618-3159 for more information.
Workshop uses horses’ healing ways A workshop that focuses on connecting to the spirit of creativity through the “way of the horse” will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15. Participants will reawaken and expand creative energy through the natural beauty and noble spirit of horses. The workshop includes individual and small group activities, as well as lunch. Cost is $75. For more information, call (303) 842-0755 or see coachingwithhorses.com/documents/workshopflyer.PDF.
AVLT holds dance fundraiser Aspen Valley Land Trust’s sixth annual Save the Land Dance begins at 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12, at the Tybar Ranch on Prince Creek and Dinkel Lake Road, two miles outside of Carbondale. The festivities include dinner, dancing, an auction and an opportunity to meet and thank area landowners who have conserved their properties. Join the Tybar hands, as well as friends and neighbors, to support continued conservation in the Roaring Fork and Colorado River valleys. For tickets and information, log on to avlt.org or call 963-8440.
Dream workshop and book signing Local author Wewer Keohane will be conducting a dream workshop at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15, at the Gordon Cooper Branch Library. Keohane will be discussing ideas from her book “Artful Dreaming: A Primer for Finding Inspiration from Your Dreams,” including ways to work with your dreams and capture creativity. Her book states: “Through dream work you will grow into an authentic person, writer and artist, and learn individual and group processes which will enhance your life and your creativity.” Keohane has lectured internationally and will present an interactive talk and book signing at the library. The workshop is free and open to the public. For further details, contact the Gordon Cooper Branch Library at 963-2889. CoMMUNITY BrIeFs page 13
LIVE MUSIC THURSDAYS
PARTY ON THE PATIO with Haden Gregg 5-8 p.m.
HAPPY HOUR
EVERY NIGHT ON THE PATIO AND BAR FROM 5 TO 6:30 P.M. Any Appetizer on the Menu, Glass of House Wine, Domestic Beer or a Blue Creek Martini – $10 Serving American Contemporary Cuisine Chef Owned and Operated for 15 Years
64 El Jebel Road, El Jebel Colorado • 963-3946
GREAT TASTING TENDER BEEF Born and Raised on Grass in the Roaring Fork Valley Select Individual Cuts Available at 55 North 4th Street • 963-9996 Carbondale Community Food Co-op & Basalt Sunday Market THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009 • 11
Horses heal
continued om page 1
on the back of horse bareback, the heat from the horse completely relaxes them,” Robison said. She added that if a patient is sitting in a wheelchair all the time, being on the back of a horse gives them the chance to be upright and let their legs stretch. It loosens their muscles and gets the circulation going. “With young clients that are slow to walk, the movement of their hips when they ride bareback on the horse mimics the walk,” she said, adding that all clients ride bareback. And the horses are also useful for emotional therapy. “What we do in riding therapy is articulate. When we have a rider come to us after a bad day at school, nine times out of ten the horse is the first one to figure it out. The rider isn’t going to say ‘I have had a really bad day at school’ but they’ll get on the horse and we see it in the horse’s behavior,” Robison said. “When the horse gives us these cues, it gives us the opportunity to start a dialog with the child,” Robison said. “Something like, ‘Cookie seems to really be feeling anxious today. How are you feeling?’” Getting on a 1,000-pound animal provides great physical benefits and self-confidence. “A lot of kids have come out of difficult situations and they crave that gentle, physical contact that isn’t violent or sexual. They love to groom the horses. It’s a one-on-one connection with a living being,” Robison said. “As the horse relaxes [it] is saying to the child, ‘I trust you,’” Robison explained. “What we do as therapists is point those things out to the person, and what we’re really saying is: ‘Do you realize that you are trustworthy and kind?’ Simply recognizing those things and making those observations builds the person’s self-esteem,” she said.
Sopris Therapy Services “I’ve seen horses turn grumpy old men into pussycats,” said Pat Horwitz, director of Sopris Therapy Services. “It’s the horse and human bond. I think it’s the powerful animal that loves and serves them unconditionally and takes care of them and seems to intuitively know what they need,” she added. Sopris Therapy Services has been in Carbondale since 1994. It was started by Belinda Brownell, a licensed physical therapist. Seventy-five percent of the group’s clients are kids under 12, and the rest are teens and adults. The group’s web site says,“The mission of Sopris Therapy Services is to promote and en-
Above: Mikey Grandbois during a session at sopris Therapy services. right: Kathy Pike’s mustang, Corazon. Below: Corazon’s remarkable heart-shaped hoof prints. Photos by Jane Bachrach
hance the health and quality of life for the citizens of the Roaring Fork Valley. Sopris Therapy Services helps people with disabilities achieve the highest level of function, self-sufficiency and independence possible.” When Horwitz was asked how STS differs from Windwalkers, she replied, “We are more of a medical model.” Horwitz explained that the therapists at STS are all certified medical personnel. STS employs a full-time physical therapist and a part-time speech therapist, a psychologist and a social worker. Just like at Windwalkers, STS’ therapeutic riding instructors are all certified. “Each person is individually evaluated and they get what they need,” Horwitz said. Clients are treated for both emotional and physical ailments. “At Sopris we do Hippo therapy, Horwitz said. “‘Hippo’ means horse in Latin, and in Hippo therapy we’re using the horse as the therapy tool.” “It’s not horseback riding,” Horwitz said, adding that therapeutic riding is a riding lesson “with a therapeutic goal.” The horses STS uses for therapy have to be gentle, quiet, responsive, totally spookproof, patient and willing to put up with all the craziness. Horowitz added that it’s such intense work for the horses that they get
breaks, vacations, and even trail rides to get their brains somewhere else. All the horses STS uses are donated.
Horse Wisdom Kathy Pike lives right outside Carbondale and is recognized nationally and internationally as a leader in the field of equine facilitated learning and coaching. She brings 15 years of experience to her work. Pike uses the power of horses to help people grow. She keeps a handful of horses in Carbondale and works with them to teach classes, workshops and training programs. Clients of her for-profit business include business leaders, corporations and equestrians. “Through their relationship with horses, I work with individuals on achieving emotional intelligence, leadership and building trust and respect, presence and purpose and heart-based power and confidence,” she said. There is no riding involved in Pike’s work, but there is a great deal of personal interaction with horses. According to Pike, her own experiences with horses changed her life. Years ago she had a bad accident from a horse and after struggling with her fear for years following the accident, she discovered how horses can heal. On her web site, Pike offers a description of why horses are appropriate participants in
her line of work. “Horses are wise mentors in this unique type of work. As prey animals, their flight instincts become instant mirrors and nonjudgmental feedback mechanisms for humans. Horses sense and respond to a person’s intentions and emotions, and thoughts that are conveyed subconsciously through body language.”
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Community Briefs continued om page 11 AmeriCorps VISTA meeting scheduled Colorado Mountain College and Dan Dunlap of the Corporation for National and Community Service will host an AmeriCorps VISTA informational meeting for Roaring Fork Valley residents to learn more about the national service program that fights poverty. Dunlap manages these programs in Colorado and holds monthly meetings in Denver. The Glenwood Springs teleconference gives West Slope residents the opportunity to learn about the programs without having to drive. The meeting will be from 10 a.m. to noon Thursday, Sept. 17, at US Bank Community Room (next to Safeway). Contact Cheryl at 947-8462 or ccain@coloradomtn.edu to RSVP.
Seniors’ driver safety classes offered RSVP and Colorado Mountain College will sponsor two AARP Driver Safety classes in September. Classes cost $12 for AARP members and $14 for non-members. The price includes a workbook and handouts. The program is a driver refresher course for drivers age 50 and over. Most automobile insurance companies in Colorado offer a discount to those who complete the course. Classes will be held Sept. 15-16 and 22-23, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., at the CMC Blake Center, 1402 Blake Ave., Glenwood Springs. To enroll, call 384-8747 and leave a message with your name, phone number, any questions and the class you would like to take.
Healthcare orientations for immigrants The Community Integration Initiative will present the “Living in the U.S.” workshop series to offer immigrants information about the U.S. healthcare system and help
them orient themselves in their new home. To successfully adapt to a place, it’s essential for immigrants to learn about local healthcare systems, states a press release. Family well-being depends on it. The second workshop of the series, titled “Health Education and Disease Prevention,” will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 28, at St. Mary of the Crown Catholic Church at 397 White Hill Road in Carbondale. The event will include presentations from Garfield County Public Health, Mountain Family Health Centers, Planned Parenthood, Comfort Dental, and Pathfinders for Cancer. They will discuss topics such as tobacco prevention, sexually transmitted diseases, dental health, mental health, drug abuse prevention, cancer prevention and treatment, and also focus on where people can find help. Free blood screenings – including cholesterol, blood pressure, weight, body mass index and blood sugar tests – will be offered for free at 5 p.m. by Mountain Family Health Centers. For more information, call the Community Integration Initiative at 319-1677.
The Trollabration is planned Bring your best Troll stories and your favorite potluck dish (if you’d like) and come out to share your memories and celebrate Troll’s amazing life. The celebration will be held from 2-5 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 20, at the Tybar Ranch on Prince Creek Road. Event organizers ask that you carpool with a designated driver. Longtime Carbondale resident Troll Liston passed away Aug. 1.
Troll Liston. Photo courtesy of Donna Liston
THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009 • 13
One hundred years later, Potato Day a little less “whacky” By Terray sylvester This year, Potato Day will turn 100. On Sept. 18, 19 and 20, residents of Carbondale and visitors from out of town will come together for a festival of good eats, live music, a rodeo, the annual Potato Day Parade and other events. Over the last century, Carbondale has changed but Potato Day has persisted. The bountiful crops of spuds for which the celebration is named have largely vanished from the valley, but if the festival’s timing is now dictated by high school sports schedules (the event coincides with homecoming) instead of the timing of the harvest, the motivation for the event has hardly flagged. Or at least, that’s how organizer Eva Cerise put it. “It’s the community that keeps it going,” Cerise said. “It’s a great celebration. It’s more social now. Before it was a celebration of bringing in the crops, but now it’s more social with the barbecue and things like that.” But if the community spirit that sustains the event has stayed the same over the years, other aspects of the celebration definitely haven’t. Potato Day this year will kick off with the Tater Trot, a 5-kilometer and 1-mile running race. Back in 1913, Potato Day included running races as well. But those races were a bit more, well, democratic. Revelers could enter a Fat Man’s Race, a Slim Man’s Race, a Married Woman’s Race, races for school girls and schools boys and a Free For All Race. Top finishers in the men’s divisions took home boxes of cigars, silk hankies and cigarettes; kids were awarded cash, chocolate, baseball outfits and pocketknives; and the married women? They won silk hose, a pair of supporters, and a rolling pin. And according to a program from the 1913
14 • THE SOPRIS SUN • SEPTEMBER 10, 2009
event, other quirky, eyebrow-raising competitions have been held in the past. Here are a few: The most perfect baby under 18 months received $5 to be deposited at First National Bank of Carbondale. The fattest baby under 18 months was awarded a pair of shoes from the Dinkel mercantile and Lumber Company. The Carbondale Item (a newspaper at the time) awarded 100 visiting cards to the largest lady to enter the exhibit hall. The mother with the largest family was awarded a handbag from the Dinkel mercantile. And of course, the best sack of red McClure potatoes to arrive from the Basalt area was awarded a 50-pound sack of Morning Glory Flour from the Basalt Supply Co.
Potato Day 3-day celebration
The 100th Annual Potato Day celebration will kick off in Carbondale on Friday, Sept. 18.
Friday events will include a free, community dance with live music from 7-11 p.m. at the Carbondale Recreation and Community Center. On Saturday, Sept. 19, the farmer’s market and Tater Trot running race will start at 8 a.m.; the parade will start at 10:30 a.m.; and from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. the Redtones will play in Sopris Park. At noon a barbecue will start in Sopris Park and a horseshoe contest will be held in Glassier Park.
On Sunday, Sept. 20, the Bareback Bonanza rodeo will be held in the Gus Darien Arena. Registration and a barbecue will start at 2 p.m. The rodeo will begin at 3 p.m.
The official Potato Day program from 1913, graciously loaned to The sopris sun.
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Letters continued om page 2 A note on a pianist Dear Editor: It was nice to hear from Robin Sutherland (Poetic Endings, in Letters, July 9, 09). For years (’70s and ’80s?) he entertained us with his great music, both at CRMS and at Betsy Schenck’s famous Cottage Concerts. “There’s music in the sighing of a reed; There’s music in the gushing of a rill; There’s music in all things, if men had ears: Their earth is but an echo of the spheres.” ~Lord Byron Julian Vogt Glenwood
Residents can prevent gas drilling Dear Editor: The most encouraging news that came out of the Thompson Divide meeting held in Carbondale this past Thursday night was that several other communities in other states were successful in protecting their landscapes and wilderness areas from gas drilling. Is it impossible to stop gas drilling? No! But we need your help. The Thompson Creek Coalition was formed to prevent oil and gas development in the Thompson Divide area (200,000 plus acres) including Thompson and Fourmile Creek watersheds, Muddy Basin, Coal Basin and the headwaters of East Divide Creek. The Thompson Creek Coalition on its web site, savethompsondivide.org, so aptly states “This landscape is our home – it’s the back-
yard that we play in, the skyline of our sunsets, the forest that filters our air and provides habitat for the wildlife we coexist with. It’s the headwaters of several watersheds that supply the clean water we drink and use for agriculture. And it’s the direct source of the livelihood of most of the ranching families in our area, and indirectly sustains the economies and well-being of Carbondale, Glenwood Springs, Redstone and other communities.” We were informed during the meeting that there is enough gas in this area to power all of the United States’ vehicles for 34 hours. That’s right, just 34 hours! And for 34 hours, they will threaten the water, lands, forests and wildlife in the Thompson Divide area and spoil our view planes. Anyone who has driven the I-70 corridor west of Glenwood Springs knows what is in store for us if we do not act now. You do not witness the true destruction of land these gas companies cause unless you visit the area or view it from the air. I always looked forward to the drive to Grand Junction for the scenery it provided. Not so much anymore. Please visit savethompsondivide.org and get involved by writing your congressmen and senators at their addresses listed on the site. Sincerely, Richard T Walker
For our kids’ sake, no drilling editor’s note: This letter was also sent to
U.s. senators Mark Udall and Michael Bennet, rep. John salazar, and secretary of the Interior Ken salazar. Dear Editor: My wife and I have been married for just over a year now and conceived our first child about three months ago. My wife is a self-employed and locally respected massage therapist. I work for a local nonprofit working with at-risk youth in four counties along Colorado’s Western Slope. We understand the decisions you make every day are weighed with unrelenting compromise. The concept of the “greater good” is not one that escapes us. We are sensitive to what is going on in this country, and accept that the decisions our legislators make are not without sacrifice. However, we trust that in your heart of hearts, you have the foresight to see what others have missed – an urgent need to preserve the very last of unspoiled wilderness remaining in Colorado’s majestic Rockies. Specifically, we ask that emergency legislation be passed to repeal the 81 gas leases on federal lands outside of Carbondale, including the Thompson and Four Mile Creek watersheds, Muddy Basin, Coal Basin and the headwaters of East Divide Creek. Citizens recently held a meeting to discuss the impending oil and gas development of Thompson Divide, and citizen after citizen stood up to explain how they would be directly impacted by such a short-sighted endeavor. Ranching, tourism, recreation, hunting,
fishing – these are the livelihoods of the people who have lived here for generations. The scars of energy development are ever increasing along the I-70 corridor from Glenwood Springs to Grand Junction. The long-term effects on the sustainability of local communities are obvious. You know better than I how the health of ecosystems, wildlife and human populations become ravaged by this insidious industry. The Thompson Divide Coalition (TDC) urges those who can make a difference to move quickly in the defense of impending tragedy on these lands. It is not an over-estimation to describe these 221,500 acres as a national treasure, renowned for their pristine habitat, crystal clean waters and productive ranch lands. Majestically perched on the edge of Carbondale, the Thompson Divide constitutes the headwaters for uncontaminated rivers and streams I hope to one day see my child kayak and swim without fear of harmful chemicals leached into the watershed. The TDC has made a commitment to examining every possible solution to prevent future drilling on Thompson Divide, including compensating the federal government for these leases. Our coalition is steadfast in its pledge to preserve these lands reasonably, rationally, and with all parties’ best interests in mind. Please contact our friends and neighbors at savethompsondivide.org today. Evan M. Zislis Carbondale
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Well-being and community: Health is also about belonging Last month, I offered readers a chance to reflect on sev- step in preventing suicide.” eral definitions of health. This month I want to introduce The importance of belonging as an attribute to health you to the idea that there is a significant relationship be- has long been included in the writings of Canadian phitween an individual’s sense of belonging in a community, lanthropist and philosopher Jean Vanier. Vanier is the and his or her self-per- founder of the L’Arche, an international organization that ceived state of health. creates communities where people with developmental disBelonging is about the abilities and those who assist them share life together. loving, caring relationships Vanier’s deep understanding about the connection between in our lives and having our health and belonging is well stated in the following quote unique contributions to from his book, “Community and Growth.” those relationships recog“The longer we journey on the road to inner healing nized and valued. No mat- and wholeness, the more the sense of belonging grows and ter how old we are, where deepens. The sense is not just one of belonging to others we live, and what our life and to a community. It is a sense of belonging to the unicircumstances are, when verse, to the earth, to the air, to the water, to everything we belong (when we are that lives, to all humanity.” surrounded How fortunate we are to live in by a social Carbondale, a community that has network of a supportive environment to nurture into people who belonging and thus support our love us and health and well-being. And yet we when we feel may be feeling a sense of isolation by Rita Marsh part of someand a longing for belonging. This RN, BSN thing larger can happen so easily in times of ecothan ourselves), we are less likely to get sick nomic stress such as we are currently and if we do, we heal faster. When we have carexperiencing. We may be so focused ing connections we cope better with stress, our on work and essentials of survival immune systems are stronger, and we live that we have lost connection to the longer. social resources of support – family, Several social research projects conducted friends, social groups, church comin native and immigrant societies throughout munities, etc. Perhaps this is a good North America conclude that individuals who time to take notice of how as indifeel very strong connections in their commuviduals, as couples, as families we nities have nearly twice the odds of reporting have a sense of belonging. Who and excellent or very good health, compared with where are our support systems? those who report a weak sense of community How do we nurture these connecbelonging. Those with weak social ties have tions? How do we reach out to new Dr. David Kahn mortality rates two to five times higher than members of the community to welClinical Professor of Psychiatry individuals who feel connected. Studies show come them so they begin to feel they Columbia University that social isolation is actually a greater risk to belong? your life than smoking! It is also a significant If you are interested in exploring risk factor for depression and suicide in college age and belonging as an aspect of health and community building young adults says Dr. David Kahn, a clinical professor of there is an award-winning documentary titled “Belonging: psychiatry at Columbia University. In an interview last year The Search for Acceptance,” featuring the life and work of with Reuters Health, Kahn stated, “Connection and a feel- Jean Vanier. The video is prepared in a 50-minute discusing of social belonging is I think the most important initial sion format with accompanying curriculum. It can be pur-
Journeys Health
Connection and a feeling of social belonging is I think the most important initial step in preventing suicide.
Legal Notices PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Public Hearing will be held before the Carbondale Board of Adjustment and Appeals for the purpose of considering a Special Variance seeking relief from the minimum rear yard setback of 7.5 feet and front yard setback of 15 feet to accommodate a green house and carport, the latter with a storage shed. The applicants / property owners are Ellen Sassano and Jeff Maus. The property is located at 315 South Second Street (Block 6, Lots 1-3, Original Townsite, Town of Carbondale, County of Garfield, State of Colorado). Said Public Hearing will be held at the Carbondale Town Hall, 511 Colorado Avenue, Carbondale, CO at 7:00 p.m. on September 30, 2009.
Copies of the proposed application are on file in the Planning Department office, Town Hall, 511 Colorado Avenue, Carbondale, CO and may be examined by interested persons during regular working hours, 8:00 a.m. through 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Kay Philip Assistant Town Planner
Publish: 1x on September 10, 2009 in the Sopris Sun NOTICE PURSUANT TO THE LIQUOR LAWS OF COLORADO
CARBONDALE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE RE: ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING P O BOX 1645 CARBONDALE, CO 81623
HAS REQUESTED THE LIQUOR LICENSING OFFICIALS OF CARBONDALE TO GRANT A SPECIAL EVENTS PERMIT TO SELL MALT, VINOUS, AND SPIRITUOUS LIQUORS FOR CONSUMPTION ON THE PREMISE AT CARBONDALE RURAL & FIRE PROTECTION TRAINING CENTER
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300 MEADOWOOD DRIVE CARBONDALE, CO 81623
HEARING ON APPLICATION TO BE HELD AT: CARBONDALE TOWN HALL 511 COLORADO AVENUE CARBONDALE, COLORADO
DATE AND TIME: SEPTEMBER 22, 2009, 6:30 P.M. DATE OF APPLICATION: AUGUST 25, 2009 BY ORDER OF: MICHAEL HASSIG, MAYOR APPLICANTS:
VICKI PETERSON, PRESIDENT SHERRI HARRISON, EVENT MANAGER
Information may be obtained from, and Petitions or Remonstranceʼs may be filed with the Town Clerk Carbondale Town Hall, 511 Colorado Avenue, Carbondale, CO 81623 Publish: 1x on September 10, 2009 in the Sopris Sun
chased through Daybreak Books & Media, 11339 Yonge St., Richmond Hill, ON L4S 1L1. Toll free 800-823-1412. A trailer for the video is available on YouTube at youtube.com/watch?v=2LUT8CT7Bf4. rita Marsh has been a practicing nurse for more than 30 years. over the past nine years she has designed and cotaught courses to enhance well-being, reduce the effects of stress, support healthful aging and ultimately help people prepare for life’s final transition.
Unclassifieds 1996 TOYOTA CAMRY WAGON. 165,000 miles. Strong V6 engine, needs tires. $2000. 319-8496. 3 BD 2 BA home, clean, quiet, close. Sunroom, nice yard, garden, DW, W/D, big freezer, 2-car garage + storage. NS. Pets considered. 1 yr lease, $2000/mo, 1st, last, dep. Call Tom, 963-5515 or tladk@attglobal.net. GET THE WORD OUT IN UNCLASSIFIEDS! Rates start at $15. Contact Anne at anne@soprissun.com or 379-5050. MASSAGE AND MUSIC Sound good? Come to Pixie Byrne CMT for a massage at the Carbondale Acupuncture Center and receive a FREE piano or guitar lesson from Jimmy Byrne. Schedule for September with Pixie: 970-948-6971. ON VACATION? NEED AN OFFICE? SHORT TERM? LONG TERM? If you need professional office space while visiting the area, stop in and use one of our offices. Phones, fax, scanner, secured high speed internet, private offices. Daily, weekly and monthly rates available. Long term also available 379-4766. PART TIME “WIFE” WANTED. Looking for a cook, grocery shopper, laundress, ironing, housecleaner for a happily married businesswoman situated in River Valley Ranch. 1 or 2 days per week. Please call Leela at 970-759-2400 or email leela@durango.net. PROFESSIONAL WRITER AVAILABLE for press releases, annual reports, letters and special projects. Call Lynn Burton at 963-1549. SEEKING COMPANIONSHIP? Two wonderful dogs found in Carbondale are looking for good homes: (1) “DUALLY” is an 8-year-old neutered male Australian Heeler mix who is a very sweet, well behaved dog, deserving of a happy home. (2) “JD” is a red & white, handsome neutered male Pit Bull age 2 who is great with people and would like a fenced yard. To visit with these fine companions, call 704-0403 or stop in at the Red Hill Animal Health Center, 955 Cowen Drive, Carbondale.
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