Aspen Times Weekly-4/18

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FOOD MATTERS BIG CITY EATS 14

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LIBATIONS A TASTE OF PACO MARTINEZ 16

APRIL 18�24, 2013 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

CLOSING DAY

CULTURE SEE PAGE 20

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 10


WELCOME MAT

INSIDE this EDITION VOLUME 2 F ISSUE NUMBER 21

DEPARTMENTS 04 THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

Editor Jeanne McGovern Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott

08 Legends & Legacies

circulation Maria Wimmer

10 From Aspen, With Love

Art Director Afton Groepper

12 Wine Ink 14 food matters 17 Arts & Entertainment 23 Around Aspen 25 LOCAL CALENDAR 34 CROSSWORD

FOOD MATTERS BIG CITY EATS 14

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LIBATIONS A TASTE OF PACO MARTINEZ 16

APRIL 18�24, 2013 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 10

CLOSING DAY

CULTURE SEE PAGE 20

20 party on ... The end of the ski season means many things to many people. But for local skiers and boarders, it means party time. Writer Amanda Charles makes the rounds of closing day parties, past and present.

General Manager Gunilla Asher

ON THE COVER Photo by Daniel Bayer/ Aspen Skiin Co.

Arts Editor Stewart Oksenhorn Production Manager Evan Gibbard Contributing Editors Mary Eshbaugh Hayes Gunilla Asher Kelly Hayes John Colson Contributing Writers Paul Andersen Hilary Stunda Amanda Charles Aspen Times staff Frannie the dog Contributing Partners High Country News Aspen Historical Society The Ute Mountaineer Writers on the Range www.aspentimes.com Sales Ashton Hewitt Jeff Hoffman David Laughren Dan Frees Louise Walker Read the eEdition www.aspentimes.com/weekly Classified Advertising (970) 925-9937

ASPENSNOWMASS.COM | 970-923-1227

ASPEN HIGHLANDS TO OPEN FOR A BONUS WEEKEND, APRIL 27-28

Aspen Highlands will be open through April 21 as scheduled, as well as an additional weekend, April 27-28. The Exhibition lift will run daily from 9 am – 4 pm. Loge, Cloud Nine and Deep Temerity lifts will run until 3:30 pm, providing access to the entire mountain including the 12,392 summit of Highland Bowl. The Merry-Go-Round restaurant, Cloud Nine Alpine Bistro and Four-Mountain Sports will be open for business. The Aspen Highlands Closing Day festivities will remain on Sunday, April 21. 970-923-1227 | www.aspensnowmass.com/aspen-highlands

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WILLOUGHBY WAY BUILDING SITE ASPEN

One of the best building sites in Aspen just got better with a site plan review approval for a new residence with a ďŹ nal maximum oor area of 11,037 sq. ft. The property is sited above the Rio Grande Trail on Willoughby Way with the Roaring Fork River in the foreground and views of Aspen Mountain front and center. CCY Architects has designed a contemporary 6 bedroom residence, yet the style and layout can easily be changed since the plans are in the schematic design process. Located just a few properties west of the Red Mountain Road and Willoughby Way intersection and within walking and biking distance to town. $8,995,000

Carrie Wells 970.920.7375 carrie@carriewells.com

thesource

Aspen | 514 E. Hyman Ave. | 970.925.7000 Carbondale | 0290 Highway 133 | 970.963.3300 Redstone | 385 Redstone Blvd. | 970.963.1061 Glenwood Springs | 1614 Grand Ave. | 970.928.9000

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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

VOX POP What is your best memory from this past ski season?

with JOHN COLSON

Cybersecurity privatization, domestic spying — Obama’s as bad as Bush Now that he is free of the worries about re-election, President Barack Obama seems to want to prove to everybody that he is not beholden to anybody, and he is acting as badly as George W. Bush ever did. And nowhere is this more true than in his apparent determination to retain the federal government’s tight grip on information that, in my humble estimation, the public has a right to see. In the April 15 edition of The Nation, the oldest continuously published news magazine in the U.S., there is an article titled “Obama’s crackdown on whistle blowers,” detailing the long saga of four men who dared to blow the whistle on corruption and waste at the National Security Agency. The four men — Thomas Drake, William Binney, J. Kirk Wiebe and Edward Loomis — have been under indictment by Obama’s man, Attorney General Eric Holder, for their efforts to let the world know about the dark designs being hatched at the top echelons of the NSA. The NSA, for those choosing to live in the dark, is possibly the most powerful government agency in the world. Its budget is unknown, its personnel the most carefully guarded secret force on Earth, and its mission is ever-changing. It is in charge of eavesdropping on electronic conversations around the world, and while it was supposed to stay out of domestic surveillance, after the 9/11 terror attacks it is generally believed to have cross the line and started spying on U.S. citizens as much as it ever spied on foreign nationals. According to reporter/writer Tim Shorrock, writing in The Nation, three of the four men asked the Pentagon in 2002 to investigate the NSA for “wasting millions and millions of dollars” on a cybersecurity system known as Trailblazer, which was at the center of corporate efforts to privatize our entire cybersecurity network. Trailblazer, according to this article, was an untried and poorly thought out cybersecurity system, lacking domesticsurveillance protections meant to prevent illegal spying on U.S. citizens at home. It also was central to a privatization scheme by which multinational corporations were trying to take over NSA’s electronic eavesdropping role and earn billions in taxpayer money in

the process. This effort was enabled by one man — Gen. Michael V. Hayden, then the director of the NSA and currently a private consultant advising NSA on — guess what — cybersecurity work. Trailblazer’s predecessor, a system known as ThinThread, had been in use for a short time in 2000 and 2001 and was deemed successful and useful. Invented by the whistle blowers, it did include domestic-spying protections, and cost a mere $3 million compared to the multibillion dollar defense contract that spawned Trailblazer It is telling that Hayden and his corporate cronies managed to kill the ThinThread project in late August of 2001, weeks before the 9/11 attacks. There are those in the intelligence field who believe that, had ThinThread not been taken off line, we would have had forewarning of the 9/11 attacks. Since Trailblazer was not operational as of Sept. 11, 2001, we had no warning whatsoever, because the electronic trail of messages and plans was not analyzed and al-Qaida’s plans were not interrupted. Trailblazer, interestingly enough, was terminated in 2006, after the Pentagon’s Office of the Inspector General in 2005 concluded it was a waste of money and never would work right. But the privatization and domestic spying continued, according to The Nation, and continues to this day, with who knows how much waste and fraud siphoning billions into corporate coffers with little effective intelligence to show for it. As evidence, witness the fact that the U.S. security apparatus was caught flat-footed and dumfounded by the Arab Spring revolts of 2010 and 2011. At the same time, Obama and Holder have relentlessly pursued the four whistle-blowers named above, indicting them for charges of espionage and other acts that ultimately were found wanting when the entire matter was tossed out of court. Why is Obama acting this way? I don’t know, but one outcome is evident in a quote from the article: “By using the NSA to spy on American citizens ... the United States has created a police state with few parallels in history.” Stick that in your metaphorical pipe and smoke it for a while.

HIT&RUN

Alison Boyd Me m p his , T enn .

“We missed the ski season, but we came back because I grew up here.”

Amy Pandes A u rora , C olo .

“Getting time away with my husband.”

gabe LINEHAN as p en

“A day at Highlands with 12 inches of powder … that was the best day.”

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jcolson@aspentimes.com

V O X P O P C ompile d b y j ulia k r y s


PRIVATE VIEW ESTATE … IN PRESTIGIOUS FIVE TREES ASPEN

This very private residence in Five Trees represents classic European style. In addition to the property’s main residence of four bedrooms and four and half baths, a separate one bedroom, one bath artist studio/cottage is just steps away. Impeccable appointments include vaulted ceilings, gourmet chef’s kitchen with sitting area, separate casual dining and formal dining area, spacious living room that opens out to private waterfall/pond, stone patios and manicured gardens. Master bedroom is on main level with elevator access for easy living. Ski in/ski out access, backs up to open space. $6,450,000 Web Id#: WN123643 Brian Hazen 970.920.7395 | bhazen@rof.net

NE

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GREAT VALUE IN BASALT

STRAIGHT SHOT OF MT. SOPRIS!

BASALT

Sunny 2 bedroom/2 bath/2 story townhome featuring upgraded bathrooms, laminate wood flooring, upgraded lighting, fenced patio area & extra owner storage. This is a great end-unit townhome with one of the best locations in Oak Grove Complex next to the grassy, common area. Conveniently located near Willits Dining, Shopping & Whole Foods and only 1 block from the Roaring Fork River. $245,000 Web Id#: WN129303

CARBONDALE This awe-inspiring 3.115 acre lot is a true gem with spectacular, unencumbered views of Mt. Sopris and the adjacent mountain ranges! Property corners and building envelope marked for easy viewing! Views protected by 100 acres of dedicated open space. Enjoy the simplicity of 3+ acres yet experience the grandeur of 103 acres! $275,000 Web Id#: WN129368

Christy Clettenberg 970.920.7398 | christyc@masonmorse.com

Shael Johnson 970.920.7384 | shael@masonmorse.com

thesource

Aspen | 514 E. Hyman Ave. | 970.925.7000 Carbondale | 0290 Highway 133 | 970.963.3300 Redstone | 385 Redstone Blvd. | 970.963.1061 Glenwood Springs | 1614 Grand Ave. | 970.928.9000

Find more at

masonmorse.com

FB/ColdwellBankerMasonMorse

TW/masonmorse

LN/Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

YT/MasonMorse1

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

by Stewart Oksenhorn

Downhill Think back a few months — say, to Nov. 22. That was Thanksgiving Day and I remember walking off the feast by strolling into downtown Aspen with friends, dressed in T-shirts and sandals. There was no snow and little promise of any to come and we were staring in the face another ski season like the previous one: an uninspiring bummer. Fast forward to right about now, and what I’ve got are satisfying memories of powder days, a season that kept getting better and better into midApril, and the sort of appreciation that comes only with the totally unexpected. And it’s not over: looking ahead, there’s at least two more weekends (the scheduled closing on Sunday, April 21, and the announced extension, Saturday and Sunday, April 27-28) on Aspen Highlands that are almost certain to be wonderful. I never would have imagined, heading into the end of April, that the problem with the 2012-’13 season would be an over-abundance of optimism.

Aspen Highlands will be open for skiing through April 21 and again the weekend of April 27-28 (at least).

currentevents Kids’ stuff It’s mid-spring, and the big-name acts are looking for audiences elsewhere. Time for the valley’s youth to start blossoming on local stages. The Theatre Aspen School presents its spring youth production of The Rock and Roll Academy has its annual “The Little Mermaid, Jr.” (Thursday through spring concert in May at Saturday, April the Wheeler Opera House. 18-20), based on the Disney tale of young Ariel, who longs to live above the sea. As is its 35year tradition, the entire Aspen Country Day School relocates into the Wheeler Opera House to present an original musical: “Once Upon a Twist” (April 26-27), an original tale, written by the eighth grade, about two young girls discovering a different notion of “reality TV.” On May 11, local music instructor Russell Cattaneo ushers his 45 students, ages 5 to 16, from the Rock and Roll Academy for some head-banging fun. All of the above are the Wheeler. Downvalley kids get the spotlight, too. SoL Theatre Co. presents “James and the Giant Peach” at Carbondale Middle School Friday through Sunday, April 19-21 and April 26-28.

film Colorado native and former CU, Boulder film student Derek Cianfrance arrived as a fully formed auteur with 2010’s “Blue Valentine.” The film took a daring tone for its story of sex, violence and regret, and a bold narrative style, with the action cross-cutting between time periods. But the real mark of the film was Cianfrance’s touch with actors Michelle Williams, who earned an Oscar nomination, and Ryan Gosling. Cianfrance teams again with Gosling in another gritty one, “The Place Beyond the Pines.” The focus is on a motorcycle stunt rider entangled with an eager rookie cop and a corrupt police department. Co-starring Eva Mendes, Bradley Cooper and Ray Liotta, the film opens Friday, April 19, in Aspen and El Jebel.

Ryan Gosling stars in Derek Cianfrance’s “ The Place Beyond the Pines,” opening Friday, April 19, in local theaters.

complete local listings on page 25

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cloc k wise f rom top ; P hoto b y Jerem y S wanson / A spen S k iin g C o . ; P hoto b y A tsushi N ishi j ima ; photo b y pat su d meier


BRIAN HAZEN PRESENTS...

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New Price SNOWMASS CANYON RANCH…ON THE ROARING FORK •  acre property with two  acre tracts of land, each with a building right of  square feet (with purchase of a TDR) • The historic Wheatley Ranch was homesteaded in 

• Almost  mile of “Gold Medal” Roaring Fork River frontage,  spring-fed ponds, senior water rights • historic log cabins, farm house and outbuilding. ,,

Price Reduced EAST ASPEN COUNTRY ESTATE • Just minutes East of downtown Aspen towards Independence Pass • The ideal setting for the outdoor enthusiast. •  bed/. bath country home built with hand-hewn logs from Aspen Mountain

• On  private fenced acres and overlooks a stocked trout pond, large manicured lawn, the Roaring Fork River and lush elk meadows. ,, PRICE REDUCED - ,,

Brian Hazen, CRS vice president/broker associate 970.379.1270 cell 970.920.7395 direct bhazen@rof.net www.brianhazen.com FB/Brian-Hazen-Presents

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Coldwell Banker Mason Morse Real Estate www.masonmorse.com LN/Brian Hazen

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

CLASSIC ASPEN

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

Aspen youth of the 1920s on a date in the Smuggler Mine seemed unaware of underground dangers.

Canary in the Mine: Not Simply a Metaphor “canary in the coal mine” is a frequently used metaphor today,

but the phrase originated with a mining life survival reality. Although Aspen’s mines did not employ canaries, they would have been useful in at least one instance. Coal mines may contain carbon monoxide gas that can build to a level that is toxic to humans. Canaries, by sickening from the gas before miners could detect it, warned of impending doom. Mineral mines such as those in Aspen experienced gas problems, but not commonly. In Aspen’s mines the inhalation of toxic gases was not so much of a problem as was the lack of a vital gas — oxygen. Miners could enter a tunnel section that had “dead” gas: a lack of oxygen. In a short amount of time an exposed miner would black out, and unless someone pulled him from the area, he would die. Death from gases or lack thereof was extremely rare, but the occasional incident sparked stories — as powerful a warning as a dead canary in a coal mine, especially for the young and uninitiated. One such story told how a non-miner lost his life in the tunnels.

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In the 1930s the Hope Mine in the Castle Creek valley was still operating, albeit on a small scale, when a party of teenagers chose it as the venue for an underground date. Howard DeMaris, the son of an

in the tunnel, overcome by the “gas.” DeMaris could not be revived, but the others were rescued. DeMaris’ death was not the result of dead air. His was the result of something a miner

In the 1930s the Hope Mine in the Castle Creek valley was still operating, albeit on a small scale, when a party of teenagers chose it as the venue for an underground date. Aspen undertaker, and Ted Cooper drove their dates to the mine at night, after the mine crew had left for the day. Not intending to stay inside the tunnel for long, they left their car lights on. The next morning the mine cook noticed the car lights switch on and the battery dead and when he saw that the car was unoccupied, he began a search. He found the four

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would have avoided: trapped toxic gases from the explosives used in mining. During mine operation, ventilation systems pushed outside air to the back of the tunnels. After detonating explosives, miners did not re-enter an area until ventilation diluted and moved the resulting toxic gases away. Usually detonations were scheduled for the end of the day, with miners

not returning until the following morning. DeMaris and his party entered the area not long after a detonation. My father experienced near fatal gas exposure only a couple of times during his 30 years underground, and only once in Aspen. Aspen miners were mindful of the possibility, but rarely worked alone and sensed problems long before a fatality occurred. Life seemed simpler then: although there may have been more hazards, people had the resources to detect and respond to them in time. Tim Willoughby’s family story parallels Aspen’s. He began sharing folklore while teaching for Aspen Country Day School and Colorado Mountain College. Now a tourist in his native town, he views it with historical perspective. Reach him at redmtn@schat.net.

P hoto courtes y B . B ishop / W illou g hb y collection


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

P a r ty time

1975

C losing Day at Gr etl’s

P H O T O C O U R T E S Y o f the A spen H istorical S ociet y

“Looking for one more good time,” proclaimed The Aspen Times on April 10, 1975, “celebrating whatever it was that was over. Winter, skiing, working, freezing, or just the weekend. Whatever. Good times, of course, are wherever you find them. And it was the kind of day when you could find them just about anywhere. Andre’s party was one. Out on the slopes was another. And so was just walking down the sidewalk, or sitting on the porch. Or even, if it came right down to it, working by an open window. Winter will return, it always does, blowing a cold spell though the valley. But it was still a nice day for a party.”

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY


from aspen, with love

GEAR of the Week

NEED TO KNOW

199

$

• Adjustable hem drawstring • Fixed, adjustable hood • 2 front pockets with bonded, watertight zippers • Pre-shaped sleeves with Velcro cuffs • Zippered underarm ventilation system

Mammut Women’s Keiko Jacket Springtime in the Rockies means the door opens wide on a range of sports, but it also means variable weather. Be prepared with the Mammut women’s Keiko jacket — a lightweight jacket with structured outer material that makes it perfect for a wide range of activities. From late-winter hiking and offseason travel to multipitch rock climbing and mountain biking, the Keiko’s small packing volume makes it the ideal companion on all tours. — Ute Mountaineer staff

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P H O T O C O U R T E S Y o f ute mountaineer


It is getting warmer, snow is melting… time to think about Summer! Please contact your local advertising representative to reserve your space in Summer in Aspen today! WWW.ASPENTIMES.COM | 970-923-3414

G DO WEEK

Margaret Gracie and

THE THE

Happy Anniversary to Jim Hayes from Mary Eshbaugh Hayes Today, April 18th, 2013 would have been our 60th anniversary

We were married April 18th, 1953 in the Aspen Community Church and spent the next almost 60 years in our little house across the way on Bleeker St.

Hickory

GracieDay is has a sweet loving purebred “Scott-type” American Lucky a love &story of our own. Meet Margaret and Hickory is justpair stunning in person - Shetogether. looks like a smallis aBulldog. delightfulShe bonded that must be adopted Margaret Great Dane! Her foster Dad thinks she is best dog he has had. a 55 pound lab/ chow mix and Hickory is a 45 pound Basset Hound. She loves walksold, but calm she isand known to be Margaret a couch potato... Both dogs to arego6onyears mellow. loves to and thinks of herself as atolap dog. Also, MORE cuddle and Hickory loves lounge. They she are is both greatthan on happy a leash to join youlong, in bed if invited. is low energy when needs and enjoy slow walks. ItGracie is especially endearing to she see Hickory to be but loves to get out to walk. She lived in a loving home but frequently look over his shoulder to make sure Margaret is close they could hermannered because inside of the and baby’s allergies. She is behind. They not bothkeep are well are both housebroken. a little white around the eyes, she isofonly 6 years old.dogs Gracie Margaret and Hickory enjoy the but company people, other and ignores walksother, well now on the and isis their obedience even cats.other They dogs, have each all leash they need forever trained. She also does not mind cats and children although home. Margaret and Hickory are spayed/neutered, micro chipped she current would prefer to live with kids 7If and This sweetheart and on their vaccinations. you older. are interested, please will make a lovingatcompanion & a life long bestand friend! Gracieand is visit our website www.luckydayrescue.org complete spayed, up-to-date on shots and microchipped. Please fi ll out an application, or for questions contact Stephanie at 303-478-0662. application at www.luckydayrescue.org then call 303-478-0662.

LUCKY DAY ANIMAL RESCUE OF COLORADO LUCKY DAY ANIMAL RESCUE OF COLORADO

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Here we are in 2005 working together in Jim’s Silversmithing Shop Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!

Aspen’s only ART exclusive publication

RODEO

Rodeo is an eightyear-old Australian Cattle Dog mix male who gets along well with people and other dogs. He is sweet and friendly. Rodeo has come to the shelter, through no fault of his own, due to housing.

ROXY

Large 7-year-old black/tan Sharpei/ Rottweiler mix female. Must be the only pet. Has guarding issues w/ toys and food. Needs an owner with the time and patience to work with her. Loving once she gets to know you!

Please contact a sales manager today to book your ad!

970.925.3414

www.aspentimes.com www.aspentimes.com/artinaspen

ALLIE

4-year-old gorgeous Lab/Pit Bull mix female. Such a sweet girl. Allie is happy, friendly, affectionate and energetic. Turned in because of housing.

DERMA

Gorgeous Siberian Husky female, approximately 4 years old. Athletic, with lots of good energy, and affectionate with everyone. Would do best in a home with an owner knowledgeable about Huskies.This is a very sweet dog!

JACKIE

Beautiful, friendly, 11-year-old American Foxhound/Husky mix who gets along well with people and other dogs. Jackie is a retired sled dog who came to the shelter with her brothers.

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206

JIM

Outgoing, energetic, 11-yearold American Foxhound/Husky mix male. Gets along well with people and other dogs. A retired sled dog. So handsome!

PUFFY

Beautiful, 2-yearold, black and brown-colored, long-haired Tabby who gets along well with people and other pets. She has a thick, healthy coat and looks like a Maine Coon Cat. LOTS OF GREAT CATS—COME VISIT!

LUCY

TIMBER

Gentle, friendly, affectionate, 3-year-old Pit Bull female found wandering the streets of LA. Hardest dog to photograph to show how sweet she is. Please visit her!

Soft-spoken, sleek, friendly, 9-year old Husky mix who gets along well with people and other dogs. She is a retired sled dog who deserves a comfortable, loving home.

CALI

Gentle, soft-spoken, 3-year-old Pit Bull mix. Gets along well with people + other dogs. Shy with strangers, but bonds tightly with people once she knows them. Has separation anxiety, so she will do best in a patient, knowledgeable home.

BUCK

Mellow, friendly 11-year-old American Foxhound/Husky mix who gets along well with people and other dogs. Buck is a retired sled dog who came to the shelter with his siblings.

SAM

ICE

13-year-old Husky mix female. Tall + gorgeous. Best with male dogs. Enjoys hikes. Great personality + very sociable. Loves people. Has been at the shelter for a long time but would really enjoy a loving home with her very own family.

HUNTER

3-year-old mediumsize Chow mix, found wandering around Aspen. Wary of strangers, but friendly once he knows you and trusts you. Loves treats. Will need a responsible owner.

CLEO

Strong, energetic, black/white 5-yearold female Boston Terrier mix with a splash of Pit Bull— larger than a typical Boston. Outgoing and very friendly. Loves people. Best as only pet.

Beautiful, friendly, soft-spoken 9-year-old Husky mix female. She is a retired sled dog looking for a loving home. Outgoing with people.

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter

101 Animal Shelter Road

www.dogsaspen.com

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WINEINK

words to DRINK by

In the Vineyard: The Best Place to Drink a Glass of Wine “The best place to drink a glass of wine is the place that you currently occupy.” So goes the joke. And while it may be true, some places are better than others for enjoying your favorite grapes. The wine-tasting experience may be enhanced by otherworldly views, impeccable service and most importantly by the company you keep. Over the past few years I have, well, consumed more than my fair share of vino. This is not bragging, mind you. Rather it is simply Kelly J. an honest assessment of Hayes the burden I bear happily in the process of writing this column on a weekly basis. Perhaps my most unique winetasting experience took place this past year at 8 a.m. on a Monday in September. The venue was a Pilatus, a single-engine Swiss-made gem of an airplane that serves as the “bus” for Kendall-Jackson winemakers as they visit their far-flung vineyards up and down the coast of California. My tasting companions were La Crema Winery’s winemaker Elizabeth GrantDouglas, her associate winemaker Eric Johannsen, and the winery’s assistant winemaker, Kiwi Craig McCallister. The trio was on their way to visit vineyards in Monterrey County, and I was along for the ride. Not wanting to waste the opportunity, Elizabeth brought along a selection of La Crema’s current releases for an early morning tasting. As we took off from the Santa Rosa airport, the vineyards of Sonoma County were visible as the fog lifted below. While coffee is my normal beverage of choice at that hour, the 2011 La Crema Chardonnay, Sonoma Coast, was a beautiful accompaniment to the scenic flight. It seemed such an … appropriate … way to start this week just before the harvest. And I assure you, wine at altitude does taste better. At least it did on this September day. Another high-altitude location where I love to sit and taste wine is downstate in our fellow resort of Telluride. Looming high above town, adjacent to the Telluride gondola stop at 10,551 feet (just shy of 2 miles high), is Allred’s Restaurant. While it is one

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LEFT: Winemaker Elizabeth GrantDouglas sips a glass of La Crema on a flight to vineyards in Monterrey County. BELOW: The Trace Ridge label perfectly depicts the surrounding landscape.

of four restaurants in Telluride to have been honored with the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence for its wine list, it is the view that makes this place stand out. There may be a more beautiful place to sip a glass of Pinot Noir in Colorado, but I don’t know where it would be. Out the enormous glass windows, one gazes at the stately mountain peaks that form the box canyon protecting Telluride from the rest of the outside world. At dusk, as the sky turns pink, then orange, exploding with flaming colors, the lights of the small mining town twinkle below. The effect is intoxicating, especially when you get, say, two glasses into your bottle. While there may not be a view to compete with that of Allred’s, a very different but equally elevated wine experience can be found right here in Aspen at the Element 47 restaurant in the The Little Nell hotel. Perhaps nowhere in the country will you find so many great wines and so many educated sommeliers with whom to drink them. This column has chronicled many experiences and personalities from The Nell over the years, but suffice it to say that it may be the single best place to ask for a wine list in America.

But beyond those locations, all of which I would be happy to drink wine at any time, the best place in my opinion to drink wine is in the vineyard. The very place that gave birth to the wine. There is something so primal, so organic, so special about going to a vineyard site, especially with a winemaker who had a hand in the production of the wine, and opening a bottle, pouring a glass and taking a sip in the in the shade of the vines that originally bequeathed it. Perhaps my favorite tasting of the past year took place on the same trip as the La Crema flight, with Randy Ullom, head winemaker for KendallJackson. Part of Jess Jackson’s amazing acquisition of California vineyards prior to his death in 2011 includes a plot of land in Sonoma County’s Knights Valley. This vast vineyard is home to an enormous patch of Cabernet Sauvignon from which Ullom makes limited edition releases under the Kendall-Jackson Vineyard Estates Series moniker. That day, we crested the hill and surveyed the vineyards far below. Randy reached for a bottle, twisted

the cork and poured a glass for each of us. He then showed me the bottle, and there on the label was a sketch that corresponded perfectly to the vista beyond him. The bottle of 2005 Kendall-Jackson’s Highland Estates “Trace Ridge Vineyard” Knights Valley Cabernet Sauvignon was illustrated with an exact depiction of Mount St. Helena. And there, just behind us, was the mountain itself. We literally drank the landscape. Kelly J. Hayes lives in the soonto-be-designated appellation of Old Snowmass with his wife, Linda, and a black Lab named Vino. He can be reached at malibukj@aol.com.

photos b y k ell y j . ha y es ; bottom photo , opposite pa g e : photo courtes y o f the little nell


by KELLY J. HAYES

K.J.’s Suggestion Kendall-Jackson: www.kj.com Element 47: www.element47aspen.com Allred’s Restaurant: www.allredsrestaurant.com

TOP: There is no better place to taste the grapes than where they come from. LEFT: Element 47 at The Little Nell boasts one of the state’s top wine lists, making it a perfect place to enjoy a glass.

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from aspen, with love

FOOD matters

Essential Food and Drink Destinations on the Front Range

Now that the offseason has all but arrived and many restaurants are taking a well-deserved offseason break, there is no better time for exploring some of the standout dining options on the Front Range. Denver and Boulder have emerged over the last few years as a scene for varied cuisine with continued home runs by a handful of proven professionals, and some Amiee white young, experimental beazley chefs. Right now, taking the family to Denver on a culinary adventure may be just what the offseason doctor ordered.

Osteria Marco 1453 Larimer, Denver Set in a historic building, there is no better setting on a spring or summer evening than the patio of Osteria Marco. I’ve eaten here several times — with and without kids — and have never been disappointed. The setting is only second to the menu: delightful Italian classics, burratta with grilled Italian bread, bistecca with grilled asparagus, and the best rabbit dish I have ever had, served over a Parmesan carrot brood (broth). Best seat in the house: On the patio or in the window seats overlooking Larimer.

Euclid Hall Bar & Kitchen 1317 14th St. at Larimer With a rousing bar scene and exceptionally crafted fare, Euclid Hall is a causal eatery with elevated pub food, think fresh hand-cranked sausage, poutine and beef marrow bones. Led by celebrated chef Jennifer Jasinski (also of nearby Rioja and Bistro Vendome), Euclid presents the freshest ingredients with innovative preparations, incredible cocktails and beer list, and its daily special is always worth a try. Great portions, laid-back atmosphere.

Need I mention again how amazing the beer list is?

The Kitchen (Upstairs) 1039 Pearl St., Boulder The Kitchen has become a Front Range dining juggernaut. With two fine dining locations – one in Boulder, which also includes “Upstairs” (the lounge) and “Next Door” (the pub), and another location in Denver at 1530 16th St. (the entrance is on Wazee Street), this was my favorite dining experience of all on a recent trip to the big cities. Everything on the menu is new, fresh and exciting — and made in small plates to share. Yes, they too have amazing wine, beer and cocktail selections which isn’t all that surprising, but the servers knowledge of both food and drink makes you want to pull up a bar stool and just start discussing. There is a vibe of excitement in the chic community space at Upstairs, but it isn’t stuff. With my two kids I sat at the community table. I met several locals who gave us great recommendations and enticed my children to try an array of pickled vegetables, flat bread with la quercia prosciutto and burrata (who can resist more cheese!) and freshly made tomato soup among other bites. I could have spent the entire night nibbling, clinking and talking away. With large windows that overlook the bustle of Pearl it was the perfect dose of city life that this mountain girl was seeking.

The Green Russell

1422 Larimer, Denver

Ready for a cocktail? This underground joint and another of Frank Bonanno’s empiric locations, is about as cool as they come. When I walked in Jazz was being played, vested and mustacioed attendants scrambled behind the bar as they traded freshly squeezed juices and

classic cocktail glasses lined the bar. It’s underground, it’s experimental, and while it could use a little more creativity in the spirit selection itself (it’s no Justice Snow’s in terms of originality) the ambiance is anything but boring. A great spot to meet friends and act like real grown-ups. Amiee White Beazley writes about dining, restaurants and food-related travel for the Aspen Times Weekly. She also works at Woody Creek Distillers in Basalt. Follow her on Twitter @ awbeazley1, or email awb@awbeazley. Above: A selection of “nibbles” entices diners of all types. Right: The community table sets the vibe for the Kitchen’s collection of restaurants.

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P hotos courtes y o f the k itchen ca f e


by amiee white breazley

recipe Mussels Steamed with Garlic Courtesy of The Kitchen (Upstairs) Serves About 4

ingredients 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil 2 cloves garlic, sliced 1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves (removed from stems) 1 cup dry white wine 2 pounds fresh live mussels, cleaned 1 tablespoon finely chopped Fresno chili pepper 1/2 cup heavy cream Salt and pepper, to taste Extra-virgin olive oil, for drizzling process Place a large pot over medium heat and add olive oil, chili, garlic and thyme. Reduce heat to low and sautĂŠ for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add wine and bring to a boil. Add mussels. Cover and steam until mussels open, about 3-5 minutes. Add cream. Taste and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper. Put mussels into bowls, generously pouring over the sauce and drizzle lightly with olive oil. Notes A delicious, easy and elegant appetizer. Serve with fresh or grilled bread.

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from aspen, with love

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

NEED TO KNOW 2 ounces Suerte reposado 1/4 ounce luxardo maraschino liquor

The Paco Martinez Jonesing for the beach, now that it’s offseason in

1/4 ounce antica carpano sweet vermouth Dash of orange bitters Mix and serve in a double rocks glass over ice and an orange peel.

Aspen? We are. But since our travel plans won’t have us sipping margaritas in Mexico any time soon, we’ve found the next best thing right here at home. Yes, we’ll be bellying up to the bar at Jimmy’s, where the selection of fine tequila can’t be beat — nor can the creative ways the bartenders have found to serve it up. Case in point: the Paco Martinez, a tequila-centric version of the classic gin Martinez. Created by Jimmy’s Jacob Hatty, this strong but refreshing cocktail, with a small twist of bitter and orange, is sure to get you in the mood for the summer season ahead. Gunilla Asher is taking a break from the bar scene, so we’re turning this page over to you. Email jmcgovern@aspentimes. com with what cocktails you’re mixing, what libations you’re drinking, what tastes have tempted your tastebuds and we’ll share them with our readers. Cheers!

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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/literature

by STEWART OKSENHORN

Sound sampler

Who’s playing in Aspen/Snowmass and the sounds they’re bringing Simone Dinnerstein & Tift Merritt, “Night” (Sony Classical)

“Traveling Alone,” Tift Merritt’s excellent 2012 album, earned the country-folkish singersongwriter comparisons to Emmylou Harris. Just a few months later, and Merritt is adding Joni Mitchell and Billie Holiday to the list of singers she deserves being mentioned alongside of. Though even that undersells how bold and unique this project is. Merritt’s equal partner here is Simone Dinnerstein, a pianist who made her name with a distinctive 2007 recording of Bach’s Goldberg Variations, and who has made several appearances at the Aspen Music Festival. On “Night,” both musicians stretch into a new field of classical/folk, where

Bombino, “Nomad,” produced by Dan Auerbach (Nonesuch)

A member of Africa’s nomadic Tuareg tribe, Omara “Bombino” Moctar grew up in Niger, where the Tuareg were sometimes banned from playing guitar, and spent his teen years in Libya and Algeria. Still, he developed a fascination with the electric guitar, and studied Eric Clapton and Mark Knopfler by watching videos. The 33-year-old steps closer to Western music with his second album, “Nomad,” which was recorded in Nashville, produced by Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys, and includes some American musicians. Bombino’s style remains grounded in West Africa, but with intriguing shades of blues and country. Bombino makes his local debut May 29 at Belly Up.

P hoto b y L isa - M arie M a z z ucco

there is room for tunes by Schubert, Leonard Cohen and jazz pianist Brad Mehldau, as well as a cover of “I Can See Clearly Now,” and where piano, harmonica and acoustic guitar mingle harmoniously. A real stretch and a real achievement. Dinnerstein & Merritt perform July 16 at the Aspen Music Festival.

The duo of Tift Merritt, left, and Simone Dinnerstein have released their first album, “Night,” and will perform in July at the Aspen Music Festival and School.

Devendra Banhart, “Mala,” produced by Banhart and Noah Georgeson (Nonesuch)

On “Golden Girls,” the opening song on “Mala,” Devendra Banhart urges listeners to “Get on the dance floor.” Despite the repeated command, I doubt that Banhart’s music will fill a dance floor with gyrating bodies; apart from that, Banhart’s music fills most of the purposes you’d want music to. On “Mala,” the 31-year-old Venezuelan-American’s eighth album, the music mystifies with oddball references (one song is addressed to the 12th-century German writer St. Hildegard von Bingen; another to the late professional skateboarder Keenan Milton), the moving about from Spanish lyrics to English, the appearance, against a folk-ish

Black Rebel Ben Harper & Charlie Motorcycle Club, Musselwhite, “Get Up!” “Specter at the Feast,” (Stax) Ben Harper (43, Californiaproduced by Black bred, rock star guitarist) and Charlie Rebel Motorcycle Club Musselwhite (69, Mississippi native, harmonica player) both have some (Abstract Dragon)

San Francisco’s Black Rebel Motorcycle Club established in the early ’00s that its foundation was heavy rock, influenced largely by the garage. Over time the trio has shown a desire to expand its reach; “Howl,” from 2005, incorporated Americana and gospel into the sound. “Specter at the Feast,” their seventh album, finds B.R.M.C. back in louder mode, with guitarist Peter Hayes cranking the volume on “Teenage Disease” and “Sell It,” and drummer Leah Shapiro in pounding mode. Even in the few slower moments, the heaviness remains. But the group leaves plenty of room for psychedelic flourishes and hints of blues, and “Specter at the Feast” sounds inventive. On “Returning,” I even think I heard an acoustic guitar under all that sludge. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club makes its local debut May 21 at Belly Up.

native American blood in them. Much more to the point though on “Get Up!” — their first album together — is the blues that runs in their veins. The two run through Zeppelinesque blues-rock (“I Don’t Believe a Word You Say”), front-porch acoustic picking (“You Found Another Lover (I Lost Another Friend)”), an unusual Delta gospel-waltz (“We Can’t End This Way”), and other variations on the blues without ever straying from a blues foundation. Harper wrote all the songs and does all the singing; Musselwhite gets plenty of room for his harmonica. Harper & Musselwhite play June 22 at the Jazz Aspen Snowmass June Festival.

background, of disco beats and bossa nova rhythms. But Banhart’s music, despite the variety of components, is comforting and integrated, his hushed voice serving as a warm invitation inside his unusual world. (One tune is titled “Won’t You Come Over,” another is “Won’t You Come Home.”) And there is also a dark edge; the final track, “Taurobolium” — the title refers to animal sacrifice in ancient bull-fighting — repeated the phrase, “I can’t keep myself from evil.” Strange here gets turned into sublime, and you can see why the term “freak folk” was invented. Devendra Banhart makes his local debut May 4 at Belly Up.

JJ Grey & Mofro, “This River,” produced by Dan Prothero and Grey (Alligator)

The northern Florida band Mofro has hardly left the swamp. But with its seventh album, “This River,” the group inches closer to, say, Memphis. Bandleader JJ Grey’s voice slips into full-on soul shouting on “Your Lady, She’s Shady,” and the album features organ and smooth horn arrangements, reminiscent of the iconic Memphis label Stax, on “Tame a Wild One.” JJ Grey & Mofro performs June 7 at the Snowmass Mammoth Festival.

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Grand Dame of Basalt 5 bedrooms+guest house, 5.5 baths, 6,263 sq ft Outstanding views on 3.5 acres, elevator Private, yet only minutes to Aspen Adjacent parcel available for $295,000 $2,300,000 Tory Thomas | 970.948.1341

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Meadowood Home 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 2,674 sq ft Unique corner lot offers endless possibilities Easy access to skiing, within walking distance of Aspen School District $2,875,000 Holly Goldstein | 970.948.4824

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rtfully uniting extraordinary homes with extraordinary lives.

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Central Core Condo on River’s Edge s Newly refurbished, clean and sleek s RD mOOR #HATEAU %AU #LAIRE UNIT directly on the Roaring Fork River s Newly remodeled exterior with elevator s 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, 965 sq ft s 7OOD BURNING lREPLACE s 0RIVATE DECK ON RIVER S EDGE s /FF STREET PARKING COMPLEX POOL SPA s *UST A SHORT WALK TO DOWNTOWN !SPEN and the Gondola s 'REAT RENTAL INCOME PRODUCER $1,359,000 Furnished Mark Haldeman | 970.379.3372 New Listing

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Sunrise Ranch...Colorado Paradise! Access to Black Canyon National Monument 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2,346 sq ft home House on 35 acres - $1,200,000 House on 1,000 acres - $1,900,000 (includes 2 addt’l 35 acre building sites) Carol Dopkin | 970.618.0187

Downtown Basalt’s Finest Desirable River Cove neighborhood 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 2,745 sq ft Enjoy sounds of the Frying Pan River Stroll to downtown Basalt via swinging bridge $1,250,000 Ted Borchelt | 970.309.3626 Jana Dillard | 970.948.9731

River Serenity Beautiful English Tudor home 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 3,853 sq ft Meditation studio with yoga wall Large deck overlooks Frying Pan River $1,699,000 Carter Budwell | 970.309.0991

Remodeled Downtown Aspen Gem 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 976 sq ft 3 blocks from gondola next to park Head on views of Aspen Mountain Low HOA dues, pets allowed $1,195,000 Wendy Wogan Williams | 970.948.8948

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Highlands closing day — the grandaddy of all closing day parties.

Closing days are glory days Tales from locals who write their own ‘Aspen Extreme’ by amanda charles

you just came off the hill after what may have been your last run of the season. It was sick up there — almost 11 inches of fresh powder overnight — and you’re smiling because you know that for the last five months, you chased the snow like a cop chases crime: determined, flashy and aggressive on all fronts.

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You are stoked; not just because you came out to explore the Aspen fantasy life of pictures and movies, but because you finally get to be a part of the event all your friends have amped you up for — an occasion everyone counts down to from their very first turn of the season, and an experience you know will remain in your memory for months, perhaps even years to come. You change out of your gear and into the costume you crafted out of an old T-shirt, jeans, painters tape and a blue and red striped hat. From the street you can hear the overflow of people cheering — energetic and loud against the repetitive thump of a bass womping in and out between open doors, and for a moment the anticipation overcomes you. The man at the door greets you with a wristband before stepping aside to welcome you through. Almost immediately you spot your favorite bartenders, slinging drinks in full costume and tossing bottles between one another like players on a ball field. Upon getting a drink, you look to your right to see a man dressed in a Winnie the Pooh onesie, and to the right of him a man donning a cow suit. At last, you think to yourself, you are home. Weaving in and out between crowds of animals, gapers, Stoli girls and a grand supply of Waldo characters dressed to match the party’s “Where’s Waldo, Bro?” theme, you meet up with your friends just in time to hear DJ Dylan and special guest Jesse Seely of Chicago dueling it out on the boards with a super-sweet matchup. Knowing that it couldn’t possibly get any better than this, you turn to face your buds and throw your drink in the air. Just as the beat drops a bodyshaking vibration, you yell out a scream to toast the final day of the season; one celebrated by endless days of shreddin’ the gnar, unforgettable times with friends and living out an adventure that couldn’t be replicated anywhere else. This is closing day; the day when all the kooks come out to take their final runs, dance in expression of their desires and get weird until hours after sunset. It’s a time when everyone says their goodbyes before traveling back

P hoto b y Daniel B a y er / A spen S k iin g C o .


Clockwise from top left: Hiking the Highland Bowl on closing day; Schneetag at Snowmass; closing party at the Sky; pond-skimming at Highlands.

home to see the family, or boards a plane to take a vacation across the country. It’s a celebration of passion beyond responsibility, successes or material gains, and a time when locals acknowledge more than any other day in the year the significance of the line we all know verbatim: “This is Aspen. Things are always different.”

The evolution of closing day

“One of the most defining characteristics of closing days in Aspen is that for the most part, they are undefined,” said Dylan Regan, longtime local and DJ on the scene at the Sky’s closing party on April 14. According to Dylan, who got his DJ start back in the late ’90s by throwing house parties in Snowmass and selling mixed tapes to bars around town, closing days have generally

been notorious for chaotic and overthe-top celebrations, yet traditionally unorganized as a whole. In the event of a closing day party, he recalls, planning is usually left in the hands of the merchants who run the venues at the base. But when it comes to outlandish costumes and people skidding on ponds with handcrafted boats, the real party, he says, is left in the hands of the partygoers themselves. Such is the case with the town’s most sought-after closing day party, Aspen Highlands, where people from far and wide come to experience the mayhem firsthand. But how exactly did the closing day party evolve from gangs of skiers gathering to toast a season’s end to a week-long affair shaped by theme parties, pond skimming, neon-crazy, ’70s retro-costumewearing debauchery?

For Dylan, who was asked by local radio station KSPN 10 years ago to DJ a promotional party at the base of Highlands on closing day, the celebration began with humble beginnings and has since grown larger with each passing year. “There was a guy by the name of Jeff Picasso who ran the base spot at Highlands, and it was him who had the idea to elevate the party and really brainstorm something big,” Dylan said. “People have typically always worn ’70s outfits to the party, but over the last five years it really blew up, with thousands of people wearing costumes and dancing around on a rubber deck, the floorboards bouncing up and down like a trampoline and sending people and speakers flying all over the place.” Thus, Dylan believes, the birth of Highlands closing came to be, and before long other mountain venues —

T op photos b y Jerem y S wanson / A spen S k iin g C o . ; ri g ht - han d photo b y A man d a C harles ; A spen T imes f ile photo

like Ajax, Snowmass and Buttermilk — began tailoring their closing day events to parallel the somewhat accidental tradition the Highlands party evolved into. Now, closing day events have become a staple of our community, inviting celebrations like Bacon Appreciation Day at Buttermilk, where event planners host bartending competitions and serve up drink and food with everything bacon to skiers and snowboarders; the Snowmass Base Bash with the Schneetag competition, where participants build floats and then attempt to skim over a standing pond; and the latest at the Sky, where a theme party arranged by a group of party planners from Chicago specifically gave thanks to all the people in the hospitality industry who put in their hard work to make the season another memorable one.

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parting words from an aspen legend When was the first-ever closing day celebration? Is there a year that stands out as the best ever? How has the closing day culture changed? Many newcomers, myself included, hold nostalgic curiosities for what skiing was like back in the day; the free-spirited hippies, the drug-influenced Beatniks and the ski-gang scoundrels who made Aspen the place it is today. We tend to wonder, do we dress up because we want the old days back, or do we dress up because in some ways, the old days never really left? If there is one person who beholds the truth to these newcomer curiosities, Klaus Obermeyer — the 94-year-old ski pioneer and spirited yodeler — is the man with all the answers. Aspen Times Weekly: When was the first closing day party you can remember? What was it like? Klaus Obermeyer: The first closing day party I remember was in the spring of 1948 — that was before grooming was brought to Aspen. We had a lot of fun in spring snow and had a few drinks on the bottom of the Little Nell lift. Closing day is always nice to catch up with friends, get some final turns in, laugh out loud and have fun. ATW: In your opinion, what is the origin of the closing party? Which mountain was the first to have a celebration? KO: It was Aspen Mountain naturally because it was the first mountain that had lifts! Everyone who worked and skied there were always excited to have an end of the season celebration.

Clockwise from top: Snowmass, circa 1970; Aspen Highlands, 1998; Schneetag at Snowmass, 2013; Aspen Mountain, 1969.

All BAM at Sky Hotel

“I’ve been coming to Aspen the past five years just for Highlands closing day alone,” said Joe Quade, creative director of Lunatics of Bam in Chicago and forerunner for this year’s Ajax closing party at the Sky Hotel titled, “Where’s Waldo, Bro?” “Highlands is always a wild party, but after last year’s lack of snowfall and ending decision to move closing day up a week, not as many people showed up and it kind of threw off the vibe.” Quade teamed up with his college buddy Wes Kubica, a fulltime

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bartender at 39 Degrees, to revive the closing day excitement and pin down a destination that would elevate the atmosphere and make for a lasting memory for those who leave town at season’s end. He claims the idea to be a vehicle for locals to have fun in the biggest way imaginable. “We wanted to do it in a way that would amplify the party scene in Aspen to something you might find in a club in downtown Chicago, with a costume theme, sponsors, cases of CO2, videographers, DJs spinning tables, party favors, satellite bars and

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tons of energy,” he said. And thematic to all degrees it was, as hundreds of Waldo lookalikes showed up after a day skiing Ajax to get loose at what ended up being one of the biggest parties of the year. “On the first day of the season I’m already getting excited for the last day of the season,” said Kubica, “and if there ever was a party that was organized to the core — one that screamed fun and allowed people to be their goofy selves — the Waldo party was it, and we are already looking forward to going bigger next year.”

ATW: How has the culture of the closing parties changed or evolved over the years? Have people always worn retro clothing and funny-looking costumes? KO: The culture hasn’t changed a whole lot – we celebrate with friends the wonderful winter and enjoyed our last day on the mountain. It used to be that you wore what you always wore skiing, perhaps a little less clothing because of the beautiful spring sunshine. And then it came you would spot a few costumes, such as a bear outfit, which was funny. Nowadays, it’s quite a spectacle to see all the creative and different outfits people are putting together to celebrate this day. I say, go for it! ATW: Which year would you pick to be the best closing day of your skiing career? What made it so memorable? KO: For me, it is an equal celebration each and every year to put in the last run to close the season. Each season is special for different reasons, but I must tell you, I am thankful for every day I am out skiing in our wonderful mountains of Aspen — remember, every day you don’t ski you don’t get back.

T op three photos courtes y o f the A spen H istorical S ociet y , L in d er C ollection ; bottom photo b y Jerem y S wanson / A spen S k iin g C o .


aroundaspen

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES

winter memories I think winter is over, so I will put the last two winter parties in this week’s column and hope to see spring columns starting next week! Aspen Film held its sixth annual fundraising party to celebrate the Academy Awards recently at the Caribou Club. The event was coMary chaired by Aspen Film eshbaugh board member and hayes event planner Esther Pearlstone and Caribou Club co-owner Billy Stolz. The glamorous festivities included a walk down the red carpet in Caribou Alley and a cranberry-raspberry margarita created by Snowmass-based Stripped Mixers, dinner, and a live telecast of the 85th annual Academy Awards. Earlier in the winter, a group of Aspenites held their 37th annual Shitkickers Ball where everyone wore their best Western garb and enjoyed dinner and dancing. Usually held at the Hotel Jerome, it was at the St. Moritz this year as the Jerome was being remodeled. Hosts included Kyle Boyd, Bobbie Brazzell and Roger Nicholson, Michael Buysse, Sandra and Jim Dukas, Jamie and Maurice Emmer, Melinda Fouts, Nell Graham, Helen Klanderud, Tita and Dan McCarty, Pat and Ed Peterson, Joan and Kent Shodeen, Dick Stahura, Kathy and Dick Stephenson, Jackie Van Woerkom and Lun Woodward. Undercurrent...I’m beginning to think that “protecting Aspen’s character” is just a bunch of rhetoric. Why else does the city allow gigantic large-scale homes to be built lot-line to lot-line in small-scale Victorian neighborhoods?

film

Party emcee Oliver Sharpe, Aspen Film board president Howard Gross, Aspen Film executive director Kip Hubbard and his wife, Robin Hubbard.

film Kip Hubbard and Bryant Mattieson of Aspen Film welcome guests to the Academy Awards party.

film

Party co-chairs Esther Pearlstone and Billy Stolz.

film Alex Halperin, publisher of Aspen Peak, Laura Thielen, creative director of Aspen, Film, and Erin Lentz, editor of Aspen Peak.

ball Brian Speck and his mother, Karin Speck.

ball P hotos b y M ar y E S H B A U G H H a y es ; f ilm photos contribute d b y aspen f ilm

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ball Mary Doyle and Disco Dan are seated and Larry MacIntyre is standing.

ball

Linda Desoto and John Werning.

ball Heidi Hoffmann and Tom Grifffith.

film Kip Hubbard watches Torre interview Lee and Steve Ritvo on the red carpet.

ball John Pennington and Janis Nark.

ball Johanna and Wayne Payne.

film Tables were decorated with award-shaped cookies.

film Chi Chi Villaloz and Torre.

film Marcy and Howard Gross and Joyce Shenk.

24

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

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Ap r il 18 - 2 4 , 20 13

ball P hotos b y M ar y E S H B A U G H H a y es ; f ilm photos contribute d b y aspen f ilm


theListings

april 18 - 24, 2013

Sunday, April 21 Aspen Art Museum Family Workshop 3:30 - 5 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. To register, please call or email education@aspenartmuseum.org. Call 970-925-8050 (ext. 24). Local author reading 4 - 5 p.m., The Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Former general manager of The Red Onion, Tom Elder, will be reading from his novel, “It’s All About the Timing.” Copies will be available for signing. Call 970-618-9584. Literature Out Loud 3 - 4 p.m., Pitkin County Library. This month’s theme, “Younger Voices,” features literature read by young readers. Aspen High School senior Luke Seamans and 2011 graduate Erin Daniel will read from Steven Millhauser and Margaret Atwood. Call 970-429-1900.

HEAR The Soul Rebels, a brass band from New Orleans, plays Thursday, April 18 at Belly Up.

Live Entertainment

The Arts

Thursday, April 18 The Soul Rebels 9:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. The Rebels’ music celebrates life in the New Orleans style. Call 970-544-9800.

Thursday, April 18 Booksigning and discussion — “The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in America” 5:30 - 6 p.m., Explore Booksellers, 221 E. Main St., Aspen. Call 970-925-5336.

Friday, April 19 Mord Fustang 9:30 p.m., Belly Up, 450 S. Galena St, Aspen. Beatport Music awards’ breakthrough artist of the year in 2012. Call 970-5449800.

Theatre Aspen’s “The Little Mermaid Jr” 7 - 8:30 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, downtown Aspen. Tickets: $15 for adults, $10 for students. Visit www.aspenshowtix. com or call 970-920-5770.

The Shack Nasites featuring Nate Biro 9:30 p.m., Aspen Brewing Company, 304 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen. No cover. Call 970-920-2739.

Train Dreams Book Club 5:30 - 6:30 p.m., Pitkin County Library. We’ll discuss “HHhH” by Laurent Binet. Sign up for next month’s read, and get a free book on a first-come, firstserved basis. Call 970-429-1900.

Saturday, April 20 Jes Grew and Pegi Young & The Survivors 9 p.m., Belly Up, 450 S Galena St., Aspen. Call 970-544-9800. Sunday, April 21 Alt-J with Wildcat! Wildcat! 8:30 11 p.m., Belly Up, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Call 970-544-9800. Wednesday, April 24 DJ Muggs with Nas-Ja 9:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. DJ Muggs incorporates elements of various electronicmusic genres, including glitch and dubstep, with hip-hop. Call 970544-9800.

P hoto b y S tewart O k senhorn

Friday, April 19 Art Opening: Kathy Chamberlin, “ViSuaL KoMBat” 6 - 8 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. The show will feature sculptural works with printed paper, masks and multimedia photography. Show runs through May 15. Call 970-922-2342. Sara Ransford: The Eloquent Edge 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. An exhibition of contemporary ceramic wall pieces by Sara Ransford. Free and open to the public. Call 970-927-4123.

Theatre Aspen’s “The Little Mermaid Jr” 7 - 8:30 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, downtown Aspen. Tickets: $15 for adults, $10 for students. Visit www.aspenshowtix. com or call 970-920-5770. Saturday, April 20 Aspen Community Dance 6:30 - 10 p.m., Rio Grande Commons, 455 Galena St., Aspen. Open dancing with music by Disco Dan, featuring West Coast swing, country western and disco. Free pizza and drink with discounted beer. No partner required. $15 for single and $25 for couple. Call 970-925-8536. Theatre Aspen’s “The Little Mermaid Jr” 7 - 8:30 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, downtown Aspen. Tickets: $15 for adults, $10 for students. Visit www.aspenshowtix. com or call 970-920-5770.

Tuesday, April 23 World Book Night 5 - 7 p.m., Aspen Middle School library. Readers of all ages are invited. Light refreshments will be served, and books will be given away. Call 970925-3760, ext. 2367. Latin dance 7 - 10 p.m., Aspen Red Brick Dance Studio. Learn the spicy partner moves of salsa, merenge bachata and the circular salsa line dance called salsa rueda. Instruction by Heather Morrow. Email hjemorrow@gmail.com to register. Call 970-948-3963. Wednesday, April 24 Argentine tango 6:30 - 10 p.m., Aspen Red Brick Dance Studio. Learn to follow and/or lead the culturally iconic ballroom dance of the heart. No partner necessary. Instruction by Heather Morrow. Email hjemorrow@gmail.com to register. Beginning close-embrace: 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Intermediate mixing salon/milongero: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Practilonga: 8:30 to 10 p.m. Call 970-948-3963.

Freaker Prom Party Benefit for PAC3 8 - 11 p.m., PAC3, Carbondale. Dress in traditional prom attire, but show your freak flag — the freakier the better. DJ Harry will perform. Photo booth, spiked punch, appetizers and more. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. For more information and tickets, visit www. pac3carbondale.com, Dos Gringos, Thunder River Market or Deja Brew Coffee. Call 970-618-8032.

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

25


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Did you know more people read a newspaper on a typical Sunday than watched the 2011 Super Bowl?

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No other advertising vehicle has the reach of newspapers. Nationally, 104 million adults read a newspaper on an average weekday and more than 115 million on an average Sunday. To place your Classified ad – in print and online - please call 866-850-9937 or

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Service Directory.

Always in print, always online and always affordable. Our Classified Advertising staff is ready to schedule your Service Directory ad. Call 866-850-9937 or e-mail classifieds@ cmnm.org.

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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

27


Photographer

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Sell your vehicle,

guaranteed,

when you place an auto photo ad for a month!

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28

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SOLD... GUARANTEED!

Auto Photo Ads work. -( 456%*0 %8/58/ "TQFO 'VSOJTIFE PGG TU QSLH XBML UP FWFSZUIJOH 8 % % 8 / 4 / 1 VUJM JODME $BMM ,ZMF ! #% #" $PSF 8BML UP HPOEPMB GPPE MJRVPS "KBY WJFX EFDL 8 % QLH 4VOOZ TLZMJHIU CSJHIU 4IPSU MPOH UFSN NP BCJTJHOT !HNBJM DPN 4VTBO PS

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restaurant opening!

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STAFF HOUSING (SFBU GPS TFBTPOBM FNQMPZFFT JOUFSOT NVTJD TUVEFOUT DPO TUSVDUJPO DSFXT UFN QPSBSZ IPVTJOH Summer housing available now in Snowmass Village $550 per room "QBSUNFOUT BSF GVMMZ GVSOJTIFE "MM VUJMJUJFT 57 DBCMF JODMVEFE 0O CVT SPVUF MBVOESZ GBDJMJUZ PO TJUF 4PSSZ OP QFUT

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

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Call Leasing Office 970-922-9001 or housingoffice@aspensnowmass.com

Please apply in person Tuesday-Friday between 11 a.m.-3 p.m. At the Limelight Hotel at 355 S. Monarch Street or call 602-553-2113 to schedule an interview. Email resumes to: whitehousetavern@hillstone.com

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#% #" "QU X LJUDI FOFUUF /1 /4 -POH UFSN N 8 % 970-319-4463

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First Month 1/2 Off! 3BD/2.5BA, Townhome, 1 car gar, MH GFODFE ZBSE /1 $975/month

970-618-6237

3FOUBMT 4OPXNBTT #SJHIU 2VBM $POUFN 3FNPEFM 'VSO " $ 8 % &MFW /P 1FUT -5 -TF

No rain, or snow, on this parade. Advertise your roofing company in the Service Directory. Classifieds@ cmnm.org.

Try a border for just five bucks! &YDFQUJPOBM EPXO UPXO BQU (SBOE #% #" GSFF MBVOESZ QBSLJOH QFSNJUT NP 3VTTFMM VILLAGE GREEN TOWNHOMES! '1 %8 8 % (SFBU DPNNVOJUZ CFBVUJGVM MBOETDBQFE QMBZ BSFB -BSHF CESNT

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Realtors: Do you have a “retreat” for sale? 84 percent of vacation-home buyers said the primary reason for buying a second home was to use the property for vacations or as a family retreat. To place a Real Estate Photo Ad in print and online call 866-850-9937 or e-mail classifieds@cmnm. org

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Color makes your classified ad stand out.

Mid-Valley Offices 505"- 3&/5 TU OE 'M 4' 1SJW CBUI $BMM

Aviation

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Office 135 W. Main, Aspen $600/mo. Call 970-379-3715 0GGJDF #MEH 4' $BO CF TQMJU JO IBMG $BSCPOEBMF 5PUBM NP (SPTT -FBTF 1BSLJOH 'JSTU -BTU 4FD 1SPQFSUZ JT BMTP GPS TBMF $POUBDU

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… Yellow really does stand out!

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Sell your vehicle,

3FOUBMT 0GGJDF 4QBDF

when you place an auto photo ad for a month!

TRGU $MFBO PGGJDF SFUBJM TUPSBHF TQBDFT TG TG OPX BWBJMBCMF *O $BTDBEF 3FTPSU ;&30 $". ;&30 65*-*5*&4 'JSTU MBTU TFDVSJUZ ZFBS MFBTF 7BJM 4LJ JO 4LJ 0VU $BMM .JDIBFM

guaranteed,

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Aspen - $3,200,000

Aspen - $3,200,000

Aspen - $44,995

ASPEN CORE 1/2 DUPLEX "MM EBZ TPVUIFBTU GBDJOH TVO WJFXT PG "TQFO NPVOUBJO CE CB -JTUFO UP UIF SJWFS GSPN UIF NBTUFS TVJUF BOE EFDL 4UFBN TIPXFS JO NBTUFS TQSJOLMFS TZT UFN 5XP HVFTU TVJUFT DBS HBSBHF

!!! BEST CORE ASPEN MT VIEW LOT !!! #&45 3&%&7&-01.&/5 -05 */ "41&/ 'VMM WJFXT PG "TQFO .PVOUBJO 8BML UP EPXOUPXO NBMM SFTUBVSBOUT HPOEPMB '"3 BQSPY TR GU GPS EVQMFY .BZ CF B EFUBDIFE VOJU -PU TJ[F TG

BEST DEAL IN TOWN! 0OF CFESPPN UXP CBUI GSBDUJPOBM DPOEP "NFOJUJFT JODMVEF TIVUUMF DPODJFSHF EBJMZ IPVTFLFFQJOH QBSLJOH LJUDIFO FUUF XJSFMFTT GJSFQMBDF 'MBU TDSFFOT 57T QSJWBUF IPU UVC TBVOB JO ZPVS VOJU

NFT !NTO DPN XXX "TQFO3FBM&TUBUFT DP

NFT !NTO DPN XXX "TQFO3FBM&TUBUFT DP

TDPUU!NBTPONPSTF DPN XXX NBTPONPSTF DPN

Florida - $55,000,000

Close A Loan In Thirty Days? No Problem!!! At Mountain Mortgage, we don’t believe that it should take forever and a day to get your loan approved and closed. While others promise, we perform!

Mary Ellen Sheridan

225 North Mill Street, Suite 202, Aspen, CO 81611 (970) 925-5490 mtnmtg@sopris.net Marilyn Foss, President NMLS #267478

Mary Ellen Sheridan

Aspen - $525,000

Commercial Eagle - $65,000

Eagle Ranch - $415,000

El Jebel - $335,000

SOUTHFACING VIEWS OF ASPEN MOUNTAIN CE CB )VOUFS $SFFL HSPVOE GMPPS DPO EP #BNCPP GMPPST TUBJOMFTT BQQMJBODFT 1BSLJOH TXJNNJOH QPPM KBDV[[J UFOOJT DPVSUT TIVUUMF 0XOFS #SPLFS

Want to own Eagle County? 0XO UIF POMZ MOBILE GSBODIJTF 5VSOLFZ CVTJ OFTT (SFBU QPUFOUJBM .BLF ZPVS PXO IPVST "-- FRVJQNFOU JOWFOUPSZ JO DMVEFT .FSDFEFT 4QSJOUFS 7BO 8JMM USBJO

PRICE REDUCED!!!

%FTJSBCMF &BHMF 3BODI MPDBUJPO KVTU B GFX CMPDLT GSPN &BHMF 3BODI 7JMMBHF BOE #SVTI $SFFL &MFN #% #" TUVEZ TG DBS HBSBHF 'FODFE CBDLZBSE 'JOJTIFE CBTFNFOU QSPWJEFT BNQMF TUPS BHF HSFBU IPNF GPS PMEFS DIJMESFO

Mid Valley Location! 3BODI TUZMF CFESPPN CBUI IPNF TRGU WFSZ HPPE DPOE DBS HBSBHF MBSHF GFODFE ZBSE XJUI OP OFJHICPS UP UIF SFBS (SFBU WJFXT GSPN UIF CBDL

Mary Ellen Sheridan

Ginny Cassano

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.&4 !.4/ $0.

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Kim Bradley

Mike Kennedy

Scott Lupow

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Ryan & Matt Podskoch

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Glenwood Springs - $249,000

Glenwood Springs - $389,000

New Castle - $395,000

New Castle - $449,000

Silt - $319,000

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Michelle James

Amy Luetke

Amy Luetke

Amy Luetke .-4

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.-4

Mike Kennedy

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DISTRICT COURT, WATER DIVISION NO. 2, COLORADO TO: ALL INTERESTED PARTIES Pursuant to C.R.S. 37-92-302, you are hereby notified that the following case is a portion of the resume of applications and amendments ordered published during the month of March 2013, in Water Division No. 2. The Water Judge ordered this case be published in The Eagle Valley Enterprise in Eagle County, Colorado. The name(s) and address(es) of applicant(s), description of water rights or conditional water rights and description of ruling sought as reflected by said application, or amendment, are as follows. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------CASE NO. 2013CW20; Previous Case Nos. 84CW202, 93CW35 and 02CW71 – CITY OF COLORADO SPRINGS, Acting Through Colorado Springs Utilities, c/o M. Patrick Wells, P.E., P. O. Box 1103, Mail Code 930, Colorado Springs, CO 80947-0930 (Please address all correspondence to: Michael J. Gustafson, City Attorney’s Office – Utilities Division, 30 South Nevada Avenue, Suite 501, Mail Code 510, Colorado Springs, Colorado 80903 (719) 385-5909) Application for Sexennial Finding of Reasonable Diligence and to Make Partially Absolute Conditional Water Rights in the Arkansas River and its Tributaries IN TELLER AND EL PASO COUNTIES, COLORADO 2. Conditional Water Right and Structures Involved: Colorado Springs’ Local Exchange Plan, involving the structures described in Paragraph 3.F below. 3. Describe conditional water right, including the following information from the Referee’s Ruling and Judgment and Decree: A. General: This Application involves Applicant’s appropriative rights of exchange and reuse originally decreed on June 16, 1987, in Case No. 84CW202 (the “Local Exchange Plan”). The water for the Local Exchange Plan is derived from transmountain sources flowing into Fountain Creek from Applicant’s wastewater treatment facilities. The decree for the Local Exchange Plan entered by the Court on June 16, 1987, in Case No. 84CW202 excluded all issues and claims of use, reuse and successive use by exchange of water derived from Applicant’s transmountain sources from the irrigation of lawns, gardens, parks, landscaping and all other similar uses within the areas served by Applicant, accruing to Fountain Creek and its tributaries (“NonSewered Return Flows”). The Non-Sewered Return Flows were the subject of a separate decree entered by this Court on July 17, 1991, in Consolidated Cases No. 84CW202, 84CW203, 86CW118(B) and 89CW36. B. Date of Original Decree: June 16, 1987, Case No. 84CW202, District Court, Water Division No. 2. C. Subsequent Decree Awarding Findings of Diligence: Case No. 02CW71 District Court, Water Division No. 2, entered March 6, 2007; and Case No. 93CW35 District Court, Water Division No. 2, entered May 15, 1996. D. Appropriation Date: April 30, 1975. E. Decreed Use: All beneficial uses for which the water to be exchanged and reused are decreed, including those set forth in the Decree in Case No. 84CW202. F. Decreed Legal Description and PLSS Description (structures involved in exchange): i. Structures Used for the Delivery of Reusable Sewered Return Flows: a. Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall, located on Fountain Creek in the SE¼ SW¼ of Section 20, Township 14 South, Range 66 West of the 6th Principal Meridian in El Paso County. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the SW¼ of Section 20, T. 14 S., R. 66 W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 583 feet from the South Section line and 2176 feet from the West Section line. b. Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall, located on Monument Creek in the SW¼ SW¼ of Section 19, Township 12 South, Range 66 West of the 6th Principal Meridian in El Paso County. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the SW¼ of Section 19, T. 12S., R. 66W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 10 feet from the South Section line and 775 feet from the West Section line. c. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall located within the drainages of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek and hereafter utilized by Applicant, including any terminal storage facilities hereafter constructed and located to receive Applicant’s wastewater facility discharges. ii. Structures Used to Divert, Store, and/or Subsequently Release Exchanged Reusable Sewered Return Flows: a. Ruxton Creek System. 1. Sheep Creek Intake: A point on the South bank of Sheep Creek whence the Southwest corner of Section 11, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 21° West a distance of 600 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the SW¼ of Section 11, T. 14S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 205 feet from the West Section line and 573 feet from the South Section line. 2. South Ruxton Creek Intake No. 1: A point on the West bank of South Ruxton Creek whence the Northwest corner of Section 14, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 49° West a distance of 2,555 feet. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the NW¼ of Section 14, T 14S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 1938 feet from the West Section line and 1557 feet from the North Section line. 3. South Ruxton Creek Intake No. 2: A point on the West bank of South Ruxton Creek whence the Northwest corner of Section 14, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 51° 40’ West a distance of 2,385 feet. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the NW¼ of Section 14, T.14S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 1880 feet from the West Section line and 1363 feet from the North Section line. 4. Cabin Creek Intake: A point on the North bank of Cabin Creek whence the Southwest corner of Section 11, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 7° 55’ West a distance of 3,020 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the NW¼ of Section 11, T. 14S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 421 feet from the West Section line and 1919 feet from the North Section line. 5. Ruxton Creek Intake at Lake Moraine: A point on the East bank of Ruxton Creek at Lake Moraine Reservoir whence the Southwest corner of Section 22, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 27° 10’ West a distance of 1,070 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the SW¼ of Section 22, T. 14S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 954 feet from the South Section line and 495 feet from the West Section line. 6. Dark Canyon Intake: A point on South Ruxton Creek whence the Northwest corner of Section 14, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 23° 50’ West a distance of 4,330 feet. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the SW¼ of Section 14, T. 14S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 1776 feet from the West Section line and 1214 feet from the South Section line. 7. Lion Creek Intake: A point at the junction of Ruxton and Lion Creeks whence the Northeast corner of Section 15, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 9° 50’ East a distance of 1,600 feet. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the NE¼ of Section 15, T. 14S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 264 feet from the East Section line and 1595 feet from the North Section line. 8. Lake Moraine Reservoir: Located in the Southeast quarter of Section 21 and the Southwest quarter of Section 22, the Northwest quarter of Section 27, and the Northeast quarter of Section 28, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 9. Big Tooth Reservoir: Located in the Southwest quarter of Section 14 and the Northwest quarter of Section 23, Township 14 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. b. North Slope System (Fountain Creek). 1. French Creek Intake: A point on French Creek whence the Southeast corner of Section 26, Township 13 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 80° 43’ East a distance of 1,953 feet. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the SE¼ of Section 26, T. 13S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 140 feet from the South Section line and 1948 feet from the East Section line. 2. Cascade Creek Intake: A point on Cascade Creek whence the Northwest corner of Section 27, Township 13 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 70° 11’ West a distance of 1,322 feet. PLSS: In the NE¼ of the NW¼ of Section 27, T. 13S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 412 feet from the North Section line and 1279 feet from the West Section line. 3. Crystal Creek Intake: A point on Crystal Creek whence the Northwest corner of Section 17, Township 13 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 23° 12’ West a distance of 2,735 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the NW¼ of Section 17, T. 13S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 2549 feet from the North Section line and 1148 feet from the West Section line. 4. South Catamount Creek Intake: A point on South Catamount Creek whence the Southeast corner of Section 12, Township 13 South, Range 69 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 37° East a distance of 645 feet. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the SE¼ of Section 12, T. 13S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 387 feet from the East Section line and 480 feet from the South Section line. 5. North Catamount Creek Intake: A point on North Catamount Creek whence the South quarter corner of Section 12, Township 13 South, Range 69 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 47° 45’ West a distance of 1,535 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the SE¼ of Section 12, T. 13S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 1524 feet from the East Section line and 1135 feet from the South Section line. 6. Crystal Reservoir: Located in the Southwest quarter of Section 17, the Southeast quarter of Section 18 and the Northwest quarter of Section 19, Township 13 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 7. South Catamount Reservoir: Located in the Northwest quarter of Section 18, Township 13 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian and the Southeast quarter of Section 12 and the Northern half of Section 13, Township 13 South, Range 69 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 8. North Catamount Reservoir: Located in Sections 11, 12, 13, and 14, Township 13 South, Range 69 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. c. Northfield Collection System (West Monument Creek). 1. Intake No. 1: A point on West Monument Creek whence the South quarter corner of Section 28, Township 12 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 80° 23’ East a distance of 2,060 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the SW¼ of Section 28, T. 12., R. 67W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 234 feet from the West Section line and 418 feet from the South Section line. 2. Intake No. 2: A point on West Monument Creek whence the South quarter corner of Section 28, Township 12 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 49° 50’ East a distance of 1,255 feet. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the SW¼ of Section 28, T. 12S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 1351 feet from the West Section line and 844 feet from the South Section line. 3. Intake No. 3: A point on the North Fork of West Monument Creek whence the South quarter corner of Section 28, Township 12 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 9° 10’ West a distance of 4,288 feet. PLSS: In the NW¼ of the NE¼ of Section 28, T. 12S., R. 68W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 1036 feet from the North Section line and 1914 feet from the East Section line. 4. Northfield Reservoir: Located in the Southeast quarter of Section 25, Township 12 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 5. Stanley Canyon Reservoir: Located in Section 19, Township 12 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 6. Nichols Reservoir: Located in the Southwest quarter of Section 25 and the Southeast quarter of Section 26 and the Northwest quarter of Section 36, Township 12 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 7. Rampart Reservoir: Located in Sections 22, 23, 26 and 27, Township 12 South, Range 68 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. d. Pikeview System (Monument Creek). 1. Pikeview Intake (also known as Monument Creek Pipeline): A point on Monument Creek just upstream from the point where the Garden of the Gods Road crosses Monument Creek, in north Colorado Springs, whence the North quarter corner of Section 19, Township 13 South, Range 66 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 8° 15’ East a distance of 3,189.8 feet. This intake delivers water to Pikeview Reservoir and Pikeview Reservoir No. 2. PLSS: In the NE¼ of the SW¼ of Section 19, T. 13S., R. 66W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 2208 feet from the West Section line and 2124 feet from the South Section line. 2. Pikeview Reservoir: An off-channel reservoir located adjacent to and on the west side of Monument Creek, at a point just downstream from the point where the Garden of the Gods Road crosses Monument Creek, in north Colorado Springs, in the Northeast quarter of the Northwest quarter and in the Northwest quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section 30, Township 13 South, Range 66 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 3. Pikeview Reservoir No. 2: An off-channel reservoir located adjacent to and on the east side of Monument Creek, at a point just downstream from the point where the Garden of the Gods Road crosses Monument Creek, in north Colorado Springs, in the Northeast quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section 30, Township 13 South, Range 66 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. While Pikeview Reservoir No. 2 was decreed as a structure for conditional appropriative rights of exchange, Pikeview Reservoir No. 2 no longer exists and the land on which the reservoir was located has been sold. Applicant therefore agrees that the conditional appropriative rights of exchange to this structure have been abandoned. e. 33rd Street Diversion Intake (Fountain Creek). The 33rd Street Intake is located on Fountain Creek at 33rd Street in west Colorado Springs, whence the South quarter corner of Section 3, Township 14 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears South 12° West a distance of 535 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the SE¼ of Section 3, T. 14 S., R. 67 W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 523 feet from the South Section line and 2535 feet from the East Section line. An alternate point of diversion for the 33rd Street Intake is located at a point on the North bank of Fountain Creek in the Southwest quarter of Section 3, Township 14 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian, approximately 153 feet upstream of the original point of diversion. The alternate point of

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diversion was adjudicated on February 21, 1991, in Case No. 90CW29, Water Division No. 2. PLSS: In the SE¼ of the SW¼ of Section 3, T. 14 S., R. 67 W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 570 feet from the South Section line and 2612 feet from the West Section line. f. Bear Creek System (Bear Creek). The Bear Creek Intake is located on Bear Creek just south of the intersection of Gold Camp Road and Bear Creek Canyon Road, in El Paso County, at a point whence the Southwest corner of Section 15, Township 14 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 43° 14’ East a distance of 2,280 feet. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the NE¼ of Section 21, T. 14S., R. 67W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 1484 feet from the East Section line and 1656 feet from the North Section line. g. South Suburban System (Cheyenne Creek). 1. South Cheyenne Creek Intake: Located on South Cheyenne Creek at a point just west of the intersection of Mesa Avenue and South Cheyenne Canyon Road, in southwest Colorado Springs, whence the quarter corner common to Sections 34 and 35, Township 14 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 35° 16’ East a distance of 1,329.7 feet. This intake delivers water to South Suburban Reservoir and Gold Camp Reservoir. PLSS: In the NE¼ of the SE¼ of Section 34, T. 14S., R. 67W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 795 feet from the East Section line and 1537 feet from the South Section line. 2. North Cheyenne Creek Intake: Located on North Cheyenne Creek at a point approximately one mile west of the intersection of North and South Cheyenne Canyon Roads, in southwest Colorado Springs, whence the Northeast corner of Section 34, Township 14 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian bears North 7° 29’ East a distance of 4,419.2 feet. This intake delivers water to South Suburban Reservoir and Gold Camp Reservoir. PLSS: In the SW¼ of the NW¼ of Section 34, T. 14S., R. 67W. of the 6th P. M. at a point 910 feet from the West Section line and 1460 feet from the North Section line. 3. South Suburban Reservoir: An off-channel reservoir located just north of the intersection of North and South Cheyenne Canyon Roads, in southwest Colorado Springs, in Sections 26 and 35, Township 14 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. 4. Gold Camp Reservoir: An off-channel reservoir located just north of the intersection of North and South Cheyenne Canyon Roads, in southwest Colorado Springs, in Sections 27 and 34, Township 14 South, Range 67 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. G. Source of Water: The sources of water which are the subject of the Local Exchange Plan are sewered return flows and the reuse and successive use of those return flows derived from sources of supply that are not native or tributary to the Arkansas River. Those sources of supply are Colorado Springs’ ownership interest in the following: i. The Blue River Project which diverts water from the headwaters of the Blue River and its tributaries in Summit County. The 1929 water rights associated with this project were adjudicated by the decree in Civil Action No. 1710 (District Court, Summit County) dated October 26, 1937, and were modified by the decree in Civil Action No. 1883 (District Court, Summit County) dated June 15, 1953. These water rights have an appropriation date of August 5, 1929. The 1948 water rights associated with this project were adjudicated by the decree in Civil Action No. 1806 (District Court, Summit County) dated May 10, 1952, the Final Decree in Consolidated Cases No. 2782, 5016, and 5017 (U.S. District Court, District of Colorado) dated October 15, 1955, and were made absolute by the decree in Consolidated Cases No. 2782, 5016, and 5017 (U.S. District Court, District of Colorado) dated February 26, 1968. These water rights have an appropriation date of May 13, 1948. An additional component of the Blue River Project is water diverted from the Middle Fork of the South Platte River in Park County. Water from the Middle Fork of the South Platte is stored in Montgomery Reservoir pursuant to Priority No. A-207 dated September 5, 1930, by absolute decree dated May 16, 1966, in Civil Action No. 3286, District Court of Park County. ii. The Homestake Project which diverts water from the headwaters of tributaries of the Eagle River in Eagle County. The water rights were conditionally adjudicated by the decree in Civil Action No. 1193 (District Court, Eagle County) dated June 8, 1962. These water rights have an appropriation date of September 22, 1952. Applicant has the right to utilize one-half of the waters produced by the Homestake Project by virtue of the agreement dated June 18, 1962, between the City of Aurora and the City of Colorado Springs. iii. The Fryingpan-Arkansas Project which diverts water from the headwaters of Hunter Creek and the Fryingpan River and its tributaries in Pitkin County. The water rights were adjudicated by the decrees in Civil Action No. 4613 (District Court, Garfield County) dated June 20, 1958, and August 3, 1959, and were modified by the decree in Case No. W-829-76 (District Court, Water Division No. 5) dated November 27, 1979. These water rights have an appropriation date of July 29, 1957. a. The application in this case does not give Applicant any rights of use of Fryingpan-Arkansas Project structures, or any rights of ownership or rights to purchase or receive allocation of Fryingpan-Arkansas Project water or return flows from Fryingpan-Arkansas Project water, but does not alter any existing rights Applicant may otherwise have. The amount of Project water available to Applicant is determined by Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District’s (“Southeastern”) annual allocations made pursuant to its Allocation Principles, policies, and agreements. Return flows from Project water will be utilized in exchanges only after they are purchased from Southeastern. Applicant’s purchase and use of Project water and return flows therefrom shall be consistent with the Allocation Principles of Southeastern (as they may be amended from time to time), and the lawful rules, regulations, policies, procedures, contracts, charges and terms as may be lawfully determined from time to time by Southeastern, in its sole discretion. The exchange and use of Project water under this application shall be subject to and consistent with the terms of any agreement between Applicant and Southeastern for storage of Applicant’s allocated and purchased Project water and return flows therefrom in non-project facilities. iv. The Independence Pass Transmountain Diversion System (also known as the Twin Lakes Project) which diverts water from the headwaters of the Roaring Fork River and its tributaries in Pitkin County. The water rights were adjudicated by a decree in Civil Action No. 3082 (District Court, Garfield County) dated August 25, 1936, and were modified by a decree in Case No. W-1901 (District Court, Water Division No. 5), dated May 12, 1976. These water rights have an appropriation date of August 23, 1930. Applicant has the right to take and use its pro rata share of the water diverted and stored by the Twin Lakes Reservoir and Canal Company under these water rights. H. Description of Exchanges: i. Exchange and Reuse Program to the Ruxton Creek System. a. Stream Reaches of Exchanges: The reaches of Fountain Creek and its tributaries between the following points: 1. Points From Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: A. The Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfalls on Fountain Creek; B. The Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall on Monument Creek; and C. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall, including terminal storage facilities, located within the drainage of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek. 2. Points To Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: Sheep Creek Intake, South Ruxton Creek Intake No. 1, South Ruxton Creek Intake No.2, Cabin Creek Intake, Ruxton Creek Intake at Lake Moraine, Dark Canyon Intake, Lion Creek Intake, Lake Moraine Reservoir and Big Tooth Reservoir. 3. Amount: 34.70 cfs total for each point from which water is exchanged to each direct flow diversion facility to which water is exchanged, of which 18.50 cfs has been decreed absolute, and 16.20 cfs remains conditional; and 1,590.00 af total from the points which water is exchanged to the storage reservoirs, of which 258.89 af has been decreed absolute, and 1,331.11 af remains conditional. ii. Exchange and Reuse Program to the North Slope System. a. Stream Reaches of Exchanges: The reaches of Fountain Creek and its tributaries between the following points: 1. Points From Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: A. The Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfalls on Fountain Creek; B. The Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall on Monument Creek; and C. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall, including terminal storage facilities, located within the drainage of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek. 2. Points To Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: French Creek Intake, Cascade Creek Intake, Crystal Creek Intake, South Catamount Creek Intake, North Catamount Creek Intake, Crystal Reservoir, South Catamount Reservoir and North Catamount Reservoir. 3. Amount: 56.80 cfs total from each point from which water is exchanged to each direct flow diversion facility to which water is exchanged, of which 23.10 cfs has been decreed absolute, and 33.70 cfs remains conditional; and 17,430.00 af total from the points from which water is exchanged to the storage reservoirs, of which 1,538.70 af has been decreed absolute and 15,891.30 af remains conditional. iii. Exchange and Reuse Program to the Northfield Collection System. a. Stream Reaches of Exchanges: The reaches of Fountain Creek and its tributaries between the following points: 1. Points From Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: A. The Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfalls on Fountain Creek; B. The Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall on Monument Creek; and C. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall, including terminal storage facilities, located within the drainage of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek. 2. Points To Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: West Monument Creek Intake No. I, West Monument Creek Intake No. 2, North Fork of West Monument Creek Intake No. 3, Northfield Reservoir, Stanley Canyon Reservoir, Nichols Reservoir and Rampart Reservoir. 3. Amount: 8.90 cfs total from each point from which water is exchanged to each direct flow diversion facility to which water is exchanged, of which 0.28 cfs has been decreed absolute, and 8.62 cfs remains conditional and 41,770.00 af total from the points from which water is exchanged to the storage reservoirs, of which 2,574.17 af has been decreed absolute, and 39,195.83 af remains conditional. iv. Exchange and Reuse Program to the Pikeview System. a. Stream Reaches of Exchange: The reaches of Fountain Creek and its tributaries between the following points: 1. Points From Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: A. The Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfalls on Fountain Creek; B. The Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall on Monument Creek; and C. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall, including terminal storage facilities, located within the drainage of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek. 2. Points To Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: Pikeview Intake (also known as Monument Creek Pipeline), Pikeview Reservoir and Pikeview Reservoir No.2. 3. Amount: 11.00 cfs total from each point from which water is exchanged to the Pikeview Intake, of which 2.71 cfs has been decreed absolute, and 8.29 cfs remains conditional; and 204.50 af total from each point from which water is exchanged to Pikeview Reservoir and Pikeview Reservoir No. 2, all of which has been decreed absolute. v. Exchange and Reuse Program to the 33rd Street Diversion Intake. a. Stream Reaches of Exchanges: The reaches of Fountain Creek and its tributaries between the following points: 1. Points From Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: A. The Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfalls on Fountain Creek; B. The Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall on Monument Creek; and C. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall, including terminal storage facilities, located within the drainage of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek. 2. Point To Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: 33rd Street Diversion Intake. 3. Amount: 13.90 cfs total from each point from which water is exchanged to the 33rd Street Diversion Intake, all of which remains conditional. vi. Exchange and Reuse Program to the Bear Creek Intake. a. Stream Reaches of Exchanges: The reaches of Fountain Creek and its tributaries between the following points: 1. Points From Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: A. The Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfalls on Fountain Creek; B. The Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall on Monument Creek; and C. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall, including terminal storage facilities, located within the drainage of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek. 2. Point To Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: Bear Creek Intake. 3. Amount: 3.10 cfs total from each point from which water is exchanged to the Bear Creek Intake, all of which remains conditional. vii. Exchange and Reuse Program to the South Suburban System. a. Stream Reaches of Exchange: The reaches of Fountain Creek and its tributaries between the following points: 1. Points From Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: A. The Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfalls on Fountain Creek; B. The Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall on Monument Creek; and C. Any other supplemental or replacement wastewater treatment facility outfall, including terminal storage facilities, located within the drainage of Fountain Creek or the Arkansas River above its confluence with Fountain Creek. 2. Points To Which Water is Exchanged and Reused: South Cheyenne Creek Intake, North Cheyenne Creek Intake, South Suburban Reservoir and Gold Camp Reservoir. 3. Amount: 25.50 cfs total from each point from which water is exchanged to the South Cheyenne Creek Intake and the North Cheyenne Creek Intake, of which 15.17 cfs has been decreed absolute, and 10.33 cfs remains conditional; and 600.00 af total from the points from which water is exchanged to South Suburban Reservoir and Gold Camp Reservoir, of which 576.33 af has been decreed absolute and 23.67 af remains conditional. 4. Diligence: A. Integrated System. Applicant owns and operates an integrated system for water diversions, transmission, storage, treatment, and

distribution, as well as collection and treatment of the resultant wastewater for release, exchange, and reuse. The conditional water rights herein are a part of this integrated water system comprising all water rights decreed and used for development and operation of the City of Colorado Springs’ municipal water supply system. Reasonable diligence in the development of one component of the system comprises reasonable diligence in the development of all components. B. Diligence Activities. Provide a detailed outline of what has been done toward completion or for completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures. 1. Applicant owns and operates the municipal water supply system serving the City of Colorado Springs. The conditional water rights herein are a part of that municipal water supply system, which also comprises and includes other absolute and conditional water rights, and collection, storage, and diversion and delivery systems including, but not limited to, the structures (and/or interests therein) described in paragraph 3.F above. 2. During the diligence period, Applicant has undertaken numerous projects and activities for the improvement and enlargement of its water supply and distribution systems in order to facilitate the completion of the appropriation of the conditionally decreed water rights that are the subject of this application including, but not limited to: rehabilitation of the dam face of the Upper Blue Reservoir (Continental-Hoosier Diversion System); rehabilitation of the dam face and outlet works of Montgomery Reservoir (Continental-Hoosier Diversion System); pursuit of adjudication of a decree in Case No. 03CW320 (Water Division No. 5) for so-called “substitution operations” pursuant to the Blue River Decree (Consol. Cases Nos. 2782, 5016 and 5017); participation in negotiations regarding proposed administration of Green Mountain Reservoir pursuant to the Blue River Decree; pursuit of adjudication of a Colorado River-Blue River Exchange in Case No. 03CW314 (Water Division No. 5); design, environmental permitting, and initial construction of dam face and outlet works rehabilitation/maintenance of Homestake Reservoir (Homestake Project); adjudication of Case No. 95CW272 (Water Division No.5) for the so-called “Homestake II” Project and for Eagle River MOU joint use projects; environmental permitting, design, and initial construction activities on the Southern Delivery System major delivery system project; extensive participation in the Arkansas River Exchange Program; continued development of the Colorado Canal Reuse Program; participation as an objector in numerous water court applications, in Water Divisions 2 and 5, for the protection of the water rights and operations of the Colorado Springs’ municipal water supply system. In addition, Applicant has operated the decreed exchanges that are the subject of this application to divert and beneficially use additional amounts of water so as to make absolute additional incremental amounts of the decreed exchanges. 3. Applicant’s total capital expenditures in connection with the activities described above on its integrated system during the period from March 1, 2002 through February 28, 2013 have exceeded $662,260,779.00. In addition to that amount, over $39,773,609.00 was expended on the operation of the Local Exchange Plan. 5. If claim to make absolute: Applicant has operated the decreed exchanges that are the subject of this application to divert and beneficially use additional amounts of water beyond the amounts previously made absolute so as to make absolute additional incremental amounts of the decreed exchanges, as follows: A. Date water applied to beneficial use: Between March 1, 2002 and February 28, 2013 as documented in Exhibit A attached to the Application. (All exhibits mentioned herein are incorporated by reference and may be inspected at the office of the clerk of this Court.) 1. Amounts: As set forth in the Table below (2002-2013 Exchanges): 2002-2013 EXCHANGE

Structure Name (Exchange to)

Remaining Conditional Amount

Total Amount Previously Made Absolute

Additional Amount Claimed Absolute

New Total Amount Claimed Absolute

Ruxton Creek System Intake Structures Storage Reservoirs

16.20 cfs 1,331.11 af

18.50 cfs 258.89 af

0.00 cfs 245.09 af

18.50 cfs 503.98 af

33.70 cfs 15,891.30 af

23.10 cfs 1,538.70 af

0.00 cfs 106.87 af

23.10 cfs 1,645.57 af

8.62 cfs 39,195.83 af

0.28 cfs 2,574.17 af

0.00 cfs 0.00 af

8.29 cfs 0.00 af

2.71 cfs 204.50 af

0.00 cfs 0.00 af

2.71 cfs 204.50 af

13.90 cfs

0.00 cfs

0.00 cfs

0.00 cfs

3.10 cfs

0.00 cfs

0.00 cfs

0.00 cfs

10.33 cfs 23.67 af

15.17 cfs 576.33 af

0.00 cfs 0.00 af

15.17 cfs 576.33 af

North Slope System Intake Structures Storage Reservoirs Northfield System Intake Structures Storage Reservoirs

0.28 cfs 2,574.17 af

Pikeview System Intake Structures Storage Reservoirs 33 Street System rd

Intake Structures Bear Creek System Intake Structures South Suburban System Intake Structures Storage Reservoirs

B. Uses: All beneficial uses for which the water to be exchanged and reused are decreed, including those set forth in the Decree in Case No. 84CW202. The uses include municipal purposes within the Colorado Springs municipal water supply service area, including replacement/augmentation of evaporation on Colorado Springs Utilities Reservoirs. C. Description of place of use where water is applied to beneficial use: The service area of the Colorado Springs municipal water supply utility, and Colorado Springs Utilities Reservoirs. 6. Names and addresses of owners of the land upon which any new diversion or storage structure, or modification to any existing diversion or storage structure is or will be constructed or upon which water is or will be stored, including any modification to the existing storage pool: A. City of Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs Utilities, c/o M. Patrick Wells, P.E., P.O. Box 1103, Mail Code 930, Colorado Springs, CO 80947-0930. (Las Vegas Street Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall; Ruxton Creek System; North Slope System; Intake No. 1, Intake No. 2, Northfield Reservoir, Stanley Canyon Reservoir, Nichols Reservoir, and Rampart Reservoir, of the Northfield Collection System; Pikeview Reservoir of the Pikeview System; 33rd Street Diversion Intake and Alternate Point of Diversion; Bear Creek System Intake; North Cheyenne Creek Intake, South Suburban Reservoir, and Gold Camp Reservoir of the South Suburban System) B. Air Force Academy, Attn: Real Estate Office, 8120 Edgerton Drive, Suite 40, USAF Academy, CO 80840. (Air Force Academy Wastewater Treatment Facility Outfall; Intake No. 3 of the Northfield Collection System) C. Pike National Forest, 2840 Kachina Drive, Pueblo, CO 81008. (Crystal Reservoir, South Catamount Reservoir, and North Catamount Reservoir of the North Slope System (with Applicant); Nichols Reservoir, Rampart Reservoir of the Northfield Collection System (with Applicant)) D. Crestline MHC LLC, c/o Continental Communities, 2015 Spring Road, Suite 600, Oak Brook, IL 60523. (Pikeview Intake (also known as Monument Creek Pipeline)) E. R.W. Case, Long Hope Joint Venture LLP, 2432 Parkview Lane, Colorado Springs, CO 80906. Pikeview Reservoir No. 2) F. Seven Falls Co., c/o Ad Valorem Tax Department, 1601 Elm Street, Suite 4700, Dallas, TX 75201. (South Cheyenne Creek Intake of the South Suburban System) 7. Remarks or other pertinent information: A. PLSS Descriptions. PLSS descriptions are included herein in compliance with Water Court forms. In the event of a discrepancy between the decreed location and the PLSS descriptions herein, the decreed location is controlling. Any person reading this application should rely on the terms of the decree in Case No. 84CW202 adjudicating the conditional water rights herein. WHEREFORE, Applicant requests (1) that a finding of reasonable diligence be entered, and the conditional water rights that are the subject of this application be continued in force; and (2) that the conditional water rights be made partially absolute in the additional amount set forth in Paragraph 5 above. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------THE WATER RIGHTS CLAIMED BY THE FOREGOING APPLICATION MAY AFFECT IN PRIORITY ANY WATER RIGHTS CLAIMED OR HERETOFORE ADJUDICATED WITHIN THIS DIVISION AND OWNERS OF AFFECTED RIGHTS MUST APPEAR TO OBJECT AND PROTEST WITHIN THE TIME PROVIDED BY STATUTE, OR BE FOREVER BARRED. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that any party who wishes to oppose this application, or application as amended, may file with the Water Clerk a verified statement of opposition setting forth facts as to why the application should not be granted, or why it should be granted only in part or on certain conditions, such statement of opposition must be filed by the last day of May 2013, (forms available at www.courts.state. co.us; filing fee $130.00). The foregoing is a resume and the entire application, amendment, exhibits, maps and any other attachments filed in the case may be examined in the office of the Clerk for Water Division No. 2, at the address shown below. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Witness my hand and the seal of this Court this 8th day of April, 2013. /s/ Mardell R. DiDomenico ________________________________ Mardell R. DiDomenico, Clerk District Court Water Div. 2 203 Judicial Bldg., 320 W. 10th Street Pueblo, CO 81003 Tel. 583-7048 (Court seal) Published: April 18th, 2013 Published in the Eagle Valley Enterprise April 18, 2013


Water Rightsâ€?) that are described in Paragraphs 3 to 6 below. A map depicting the Subject Water is or will be constructed or upon which water is or will be stored, including any modification to Rights, Exhibit A, is available for inspection at the office of the Division 5 Water Court. 3. Name the existing storage pool: Applicant. WHEREFORE, the Applicant respectfully request that this of Structure: TRR Cameron Pond. A. Date of Original Decree: March 5, 2007, Case No. Court enter a finding of reasonable diligence for the conditional water rights for TRR Cameron 2. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED 03CW331, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent decrees awarding findings of Pond, TRR Upper Recreational Pond, TRR Meadow Pond, and TRR Recreation Ditch adjudicated THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS diligence: not applicable. B. Legal Description: TRR Cameron Pond is located in the NE1/4 of in Case No. 03CW331, Water Division No. 5. (10 pages) AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER the NE1/4 of Section 30, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the 6th P.M., at a point approximately YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of MAY 2013 to DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH 2013. The water right claimed by this 760 feet from the North Section line and approximately 960 feet from the East Section line. (i) If file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within off-channel reservoir, name and capacity of ditch used to fill reservoir, and legal description of this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time point of diversion: Horn No. 2 Ditch and Horn No. 2 Ditch Enlargement, from the right bank in conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or th provided by statute, or be forever barred. the NE1/4 of the NE1/4 of Section 30, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the 6 P.M., at a point the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the 13CW23 GUNNISON COUNTY, CRYSTAL, ROARING FORK AND COLORADO approximately 450 feet from the North Section line and approximately 470 feet from the East Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water RIVERS. Application for Finding of Reasonable Diligence and for Change of Conditional Water Section line. (ii) TRR Cameron Pond is part of a flow through fish habitat system and is part of Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. Right. Larry Darien and Dana Darien, c/o Jefferson V. Houpt, Beattie, Chadwick & Houpt, LLP, the Fish Habitat Project. The point of return to Rock Creek is in the NE1/4 of the NE1/4 of th 932 Cooper Ave, Glenwood Springs, (970) 945-8659. Structure: Darien Pipeline No. 1. Original Section 30, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the 6 P.M. at a point approximately 960 feet 10. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED decree entered on 03/18/07 in Case No. 06CW2. Location: SWÂźNWÂź of Sec 29, T 11 S, R 88 from the North Section line and approximately 760 feet from the East Section line. C. Source: THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS W, 6th PM, 1,669.32 ft from N sec line and 4,348.7 ft from E Sec line. Source: Rapid Creek, trib Surface and groundwater tributary to Rock Creek, tributary to the Colorado River. D. Appropriation AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER to Crystal River, trib to Roaring Fork and Colo Rivers. Appropriation date: 01/11/06. Amount: Date: May 15, 1998. E. Amount: (i) 14.32 acre feet, of which 6.81 acre feet is absolute and 7.51 DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH 2013. The water right claimed by this 3.0 cfs, conditional. Use: Generation of electricity and power production. Applicant proposes to acre feet is conditional. (ii) If off-channel reservoir, rate of diversion in c.f.s. for filling the application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within change the point of diversion decreed in 06CW2. The actual point of diversion of this water right reservoir: 5.0 c.f.s., absolute, through the Horn No. 2 Ditch and Horn No. 2 Ditch Enlargement. this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time is described as follows: (a) Easting 305048.94 and Northing 4327283.53; (b) Longitude -107 Legal description of the Horn No. 2 Ditch and Horn No. 2 Ditch Enlargement: from the right provided by statute, or be forever barred. degrees, 15 minutes, 12.917 seconds W, Latitude 39 degrees, 4 minutes, 22.654 seconds N; and bank in the NE1/4 of the NE1/4 of Section 30, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the 6th P.M., 13CW31 EAGLE COUNTY. BLUE CREEK. Crawford Properties, LLC, c/o Patrick, Miller, (c) SWÂźNWÂź Sec 29, T 11 S, R 88 W, 6th P.M., 1,708 ft from N sec line and 939 ft from E sec line at a point approximately 450 feet from the North Section line and approximately 470 feet from the Kropf & Noto, P.C., Kevin L. Patrick, Esq. and Danielle L. Van Arsdale, Esq., 229 Midland of said Sec 29. No change to this water right other than the description of the point of diversion East Section line. (iii) The groundwater component of this appropriation is limited to the amount Ave., Basalt, CO 81621, (970) 920-1028. APPLICATION FOR FINDING OF REASONABLE is proposed. Owners of land upon which structure may be located: Applicants and the U.S. Forest of evaporative loss, which is 3.62 acre-feet per year, absolute. F. Use: Augmentation, exchange, DILIGENCE. First Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence. Name of structure: Crawford Service, 900 Grand Ave, Glenwood Springs. (5 pages). recreation, piscatorial, wildlife watering, and fire protection. G. Surface area of high water line: Dam No. 2. Description of conditional water right: Date of original Decree: May 18, 1978, Case YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of MAY 2013 to 1.11 acres. (i) Height of dam: Approximately 6 feet. (ii) Length of dam: Approximately 300 feet. No. W-3368, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees District Court, file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why H. Total capacity of reservoir in acre feet: 6.81 acre feet absolute, 7.51 acre feet conditional. All Water Division No. 5: August 15, 1981, Case No. 80CW364; June 26, 1986, Case No. 86CW24; this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain the 6.81 acre feet is above the water table and is active storage. All the 7.51 acre feet (when October 16, 1992, Case No. 90CW63; March 9, 1999, Case No. 98CW195; March 15, 2007; conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or constructed) will be below the water table and will be inactive storage. Water released for Case No. 05CW48. Legal description: The SW Corner of the centerline of the axis of the dam the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the augmentation and exchange purposes will be limited to the volume in active storage above the is located at a point whence the SW Corner of Section 26, T. 7S, R87 W. of the 6th P.M. bears S. Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water water table. 4. Name of Structure: TRR Upper Recreation Pond. A. Date of Original Decree: 24°00’ W. 1,175 feet in Eagle County. See Exhibit A. Source: Blue Creek, tributary to the Roaring Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. March 5, 2007, Case No. 03CW331, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent decrees Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: March 1, 1977. Amount: 56 awarding findings of diligence: not applicable. B. Legal Description: TRR Upper Recreation acre feet, total, decreed. See Application for a table showing the amounts and uses made absolute 7. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED Pond is located in the NE1/4 of the NE1/4 of Section 31, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the in subsequent diligence cases. Uses: Piscatorial, recreational, municipal, domestic, irrigation, th THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS 6 P.M., at a point approximately 50 feet from the North Section line and approximately 400 feet mechanical, manufacturing, generation of power, power generally, fire protection, sewage AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER from the East Section line. (i) If off-channel reservoir, name and capacity of ditch used to fill treatment, street sprinkling, watering of parks, lawns and grounds. Detailed outline of work DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH 2013. The water right claimed by this reservoir, and legal description of point of diversion: TRR Recreation Ditch, from the left bank performed toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to the conditional th application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within in the SE1/4 of the SE1/4 of Section 30, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the 6 P.M., at a uses decreed during the relevant diligence period, including expenditures is on file with the Court. this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time point approximately 530 feet from the South Section line and approximately 950 feet from the Applicant owns the land on which structure is or will be located, upon which water is or will be provided by statute, or be forever barred. East Section line. (ii) The TRR Upper Recreation Pond is part of a flow through fish habitat stored, or upon which water is or will be placed to beneficial use. (6 pages) 13CW28 (06CW170) EAGLE COUNTY. EAST COULTER CREEK, TRIB. TO CATTLE system and is part of the Fish Habitat Project. The points of return to Rock Creek are located: a. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of MAY 2013 to CREEK, TRIB. TO ROARING FORK RIVER, TRIB. TO COLORADO RIVER. In the SE1/4 of the NE1/4 of Section 31, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the 6th P.M., at a file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why APPLICATION FOR FINDING OF REASONABLE DILIGENCE. Applicant: Mary Teresa point approximately 1,510 feet from the North Section line and approximately 660 feet from the this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain McNulty Homeowners’ Association, Inc., Attn: Rita Belle, President, 7649 East Vista Drive, East Section line; and/or b. In the NW1/4 of the SW1/4 of Section 32, Township 1 South, Range conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or th th Scottsdale, AZ 85250, c/o Garfield & Hecht, P.C., 420 7 St., Suite 100, Glenwood Springs, 83 West of the 6 P.M., at a point approximately 2,000 feet from the South Section line and the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the CO 81601, phone (970) 947-1936. Name of structure: Mary McNulty Subdivision Well. approximately 180 feet from the West Section line. C. Source: Surface and groundwater tributary Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water Original decree: Entered on April 9, 1985 in Case No. 83CW140, Dist. Court, Water Div. No. 5. to Rock Creek, tributary to the Colorado River. D. Appropriation Date: May 15, 1988. E. Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. Subsequent decrees: Case No. 92CW060 entered on Oct. 12, 1993; Case No. 99CW225 entered Amount: (i) 3.13 acre feet, absolute, which is the amount of annual evaporative loss. (ii) If offon July 6, 2000; and Case No. 06CW142 entered on Mar. 5, 2007. Location: The SE Âź of the channel reservoir, rate of diversion in c.f.s. for filling the reservoir: 1.6 c.f.s., absolute, and 3.4. 17. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED NE Âź of Section 33, Township 6 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point whence the c.f.s., conditional, through the TRR Recreation Ditch. F. Use: Recreation, piscatorial, wildlife THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS Southeast Corner of said Section 33 bears South 17° East a distance of 3,090 feet, in Eagle watering, and fire protection. G. Surface Area of High Water Line: 1.02 acres. The Pond is an AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER County, Colorado. Source: Groundwater tributary to East Coulter Creek, tributary to Cattle excavated structure. H. Total Capacity of Reservoir in Acre Feet: 6.77 acre feet existing, and 3.59 DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH 2013. The water right claimed by this Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Date of appropriation: acre feet under proposed enlargement. 5. Name of Structure: TRR Meadow Pond. A. Date of application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within October 30, 1981. Amount: 30 g.p.m. total; 15 g.p.m. absolute and 15 g.p.m. conditional. In Original Decree: March 5, 2007, Case No. 03CW331, District Court, Water Division No. 5. this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time Case No. 99CW225, the water right was made absolute in the amount of 15 g.p.m. for ordinary Subsequent decrees awarding findings of diligence: not applicable. B. Legal Description: TRR provided by statute, or be forever barred. household uses inside one single-family dwelling and the irrigation of up to 1,500 square feet Meadow Pond is located in the NW1/4 of the SW1/4 of Section 32, Township 1 South, Range 83 13CW39 EAGLE COUNTY. GROUNDWATER AND LOCAL RUNOFF TRIBUTARY TO of lawns and gardens. Uses: Irrigation, domestic, stock watering, and fire protection purposes. West of the 6th P.M., at a point approximately 2,460 feet from the South Section line and BLUE CREEK, TRIBUTARY TO THE ROARING FORK RIVER, TRIBUTARY TO THE Remarks: The well is permitted as Well Permit No. 37437-F. Claim for Finding of Reasonable approximately 200 feet from the West Section line. (i) If off-channel reservoir, name and capacity COLORADO RIVER. Alex and Laura Foster Kim, c/o Robert M. Noone, Esq., The Noone Law Diligence: The Application contains a detailed outline of what has been done toward completion of ditches used to fill reservoir, and legal description of each point of diversion: TRR Recreation Firm, P.C., P.O. Drawer 39, Glenwood Springs, CO 81602. (970) 945-4500. Amended Application nd of the appropriation and application of water to beneficial use as conditionally decreed. Name and Ditch, Frank Groh Ditch, and/or Frank Groh Ditch 2 Enlargement. The TRR Meadow Pond will for Finding of Reasonable Diligence. First Claim: for finding of reasonable diligence: Dragonfly address of owner of the land upon which the subject water right is located: Rita Veronica Belle also be filled and maintained (in part) by seeps and springs which are intercepted by the Frank Well. Original Decree: March 19, 2007. Case No. 2005CW114, Water Court, Division No. 5. Trust, 7649 East Vista Drive, Scottsdale, AZ 85250. Wherefore, Applicant requests the Court to Groh Ditch. Per the decree in Case No. 91CW250, the headgate of the Frank Groh Ditch is Subsequent Decrees Awarding Findings of Diligence: N/A. The Dragonfly Well is located in the enter a decree finding and concluding that the Applicant has shown reasonable diligence in the located in Routt County, Colorado on the East (left) bank of Rock Creek, at a point from which SWÂźSEÂź, Sec. 27, T. 7 S., R. 87 W., 6th P.M., 800 feet from the South line and 2000 feet from the th development of the remaining conditional portion of the Mary McNulty Subdivision Well water the NE corner of Section 31, Township 1 South, Range 83 West, of the 6 P.M., bears N. 68Âş 14’ East line of said Sec. 27. A map is on file with the Court. Source: Groundwater tributary to Blue right and continuing such conditional water right in full force and effect. (5 pages) 50â€? E. 545.58 feet. The legal description for the TRR Recreation Ditch is described in Paragraph Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation Date: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of MAY 2013 to 4(B)(i). (ii) TRR Meadow Pond is part of a flow-through fish habitat system, and is part of the June 30, 2005. Amount: 15 gpm, conditional. Uses: In-house domestic use for four (4) singlefile with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why Fish Habitat Project. The point of return to Rock Creek is located in the NW1/4 of the SW1/4 of family homes, four (4) accessory dwelling units (ADUs), a barn, a commercial kitchen, irrigation th this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain Section 32, Township 1 South, Range 83 West of the 6 P.M., at a point approximately 2,000 feet of up to 20,000 square feet for lawn and garden (to be taken from the Well or the Pond), pond conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or from the South Section line and approximately 180 feet from the West Section line. C. Source: evaporation replacement, and fire protection. Depth of Well: 300 feet Second Claim: for finding the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Surface and groundwater tributary to Rock Creek, tributary to the Colorado River. D. of reasonable diligence: Laura’s Pond. Original Decree: March 19, 2007. Case No. 2005CW114, Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water Appropriation Date: July 24, 2002. E. Amount: (i) 21.40 acre feet, conditional. (ii) If off-channel Water Court, Division No. 5. Subsequent Decrees Awarding Findings of Diligence: N/A. Laura’s Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. reservoir, rate of diversion in c.f.s. for filling the reservoir: 5.0 c.f.s. through the TRR Recreation Pond is located in the SWÂź, SEÂź of Section 27, Township 7 South, Range 87 West, of the 6th nd Ditch and/or Frank Groh Ditch 2 Enlargement. (iii) The groundwater component of this P.M. in Eagle County a distance of 550 feet North of the South line and 2010 feet West of the East 8. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED appropriation is limited to the amount of evaporative loss, which is 6.94 acre feet per year, line. A map is on file with the Court. Source: Tributary local runoff and the Dragonfly Well, which THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS conditional. F. Use: Augmentation, exchange, recreation, piscatorial, wildlife watering, and fire diverts from groundwater tributary to Blue Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER protection. G. Surface area of high water line: 2.00 acres. (i) Height of dam: Approximately 9.9 to the Colorado River. Appropriation Date: July 5, 2005. Use: In-house domestic use for four (4) DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH 2013. The water right claimed by this feet. (ii) Length of dam: Approximately 500 feet. H. Total capacity of reservoir in acre feet: 21.4 single-family homes, four (4) accessory dwelling units (ADUs), a barn, a commercial kitchen, application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within acre feet, all active capacity (above the water table). Water released for augmentation and irrigation of up to 20,000 square feet for lawn and garden (to be taken from the Well or the Pond), this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time exchange purposes will be limited to the volume in active storage above the water table. 6. Name pond evaporation replacement, and fire protection. Amount: 2.3 acre feet, conditional. A detailed provided by statute, or be forever barred. of Structure: TRR Recreation Ditch. A. Date of Original Decree: March 5, 2007, Case No. outline of what has been done toward completion or for completion of the appropriation and 13CW29 (03CW331) APPLICATION FOR FINDING OF REASONABLE DILIGENCE, 03CW331, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent decrees awarding findings of application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures, is on ROUTT, GRAND, EAGLE, AND PITKIN COUNTIES. 1. Name, address and telephone diligence: not applicable. B. Location: See Paragraph 4(B)(i). C. Source: Rock Creek, a tributary file with the Court. The Dragonfly Well and Laura’s Pond are components of an integrated water number of applicant: Table Rock Properties, LLC (“Table Rockâ€?), c/o Ron Wilson, 1100 to the Colorado River. D. Appropriation Date: May 15, 1988. E. Amount: 1.6 c.f.s. absolute and supply project involving both of the water rights described in this application, and decreed in Louisiana, Suite 320, Houston, TX 77002-5299, (713) 659-1221. Copies of all pleadings to: 3.4 c.f.s., conditional. F. Use: To fill and refill continuously the TRR Lower Recreation Pond, Case No. 05CW114. (5 pgs) Charles B. White, Petros & White, LLC, 1999 Broadway, Suite 3200, Denver, Colorado 80202, TRR Upper Recreation Pond and TRR Meadow Pond to maintain full pond levels, and for YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of MAY 2013 to (303) 825-1980, cwhite@petros-white.com. 2. Introduction: Table Rock was decreed absolute recreation, piscatorial, fire protection, and wildlife watering purposes. 7. Detailed outline of work file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why and conditional water rights in Case No. 03CW331 that together comprise an integrated Fish done to complete project and apply water to beneficial use: The Subject Water Rights, described this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain Habitat Project within the Table Rock Ranch (“Ranchâ€?) on Rock Creek. The Fish Habitat Project above, are an integral component of Table Rock’s Fish Habitat Project. During the Diligence conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or water rights and features include the Oxbow Fishery Channel (a restored historic channel of Rock Period, Table Rock has incurred considerable expenses in developing its integrated project. The the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Creek), TRR Cameron Pond, TRR Lower Recreation Pond, TRR Upper Recreation Pond, and application contains a summary of specific projects and work undertaken during the Diligence Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water TRR Meadow Pond, together with associated open channels, fill ditches, and return structures to Period and is available for review at the office of the Division 5 Water Court or via LexisNexis Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. Rock Creek. This Application seeks a finding of reasonable diligence for the period from March CourtLink. 8. Name(s) and address(es) of owner(s) or reputed owners of the land upon which any 2007 to the present (“Diligence Periodâ€?) relating to the four conditional water rights (“Subject new diversion or storage structure, or modification to any existing diversion or storage structure Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on April 24, 2013. 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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by Melissa Hart for High Country News

BOOK review

‘The Case of D.B. Cooper’s Parachute’ In November 1971, a man traveling under the name “Dan Cooper” hijacked a Boeing 727 flying between Portland and Seattle, demanded $200,000 from the FBI and then parachuted from the plane into history, somewhere in the Northwestern wilds. The FBI has searched unsuccessfully for 42 years for any trace of either the man or the money; as recently as August 2011, agents were still investigating potential leads. Oregon author William L. Sullivan offers his own convoluted solution in “The Case of D.B. Cooper’s Parachute,” a “what if?” novel set against a backdrop of international art theft, Oregon’s community of Russian Old Believers and Portland’s infamous Shanghai Tunnels. Sullivan can tell a riveting adventure tale. His middle-aged, by Matt Ginsberg | edited by WILL SHORTZ

FITTING REARRANGEMENTS ACROSS

1 Postal ID 6 Memphis belle? 10 Raspberry 14 Kind of form 18 Cobbler’s job 20 So that one might 22 Black shade 23 Stevedore, at times 24 College student’s place 25 Dial competitor 26 British soccer powerhouse 28 “Got it” 29 Fish with a long neck 31 Procrastinators’ enablers 34 Shark, maybe 35 Beat at a Nathan’s hot dog contest, say 36 Snake in “The Jungle Book” 39 Salad bar items 40 “Le ___ de MonteCristo” 42 Visa offering 47 Of ___ (servicing) 48 Mayo containers? 49 Turned 50 “China Beach” actress Helgenberger 52 Novelist who had two spouses simultaneously 53 Abbr. on car sellers’ license plates 54 N. African land 55 “Decision Points” author 58 Repeats 61 Vague response to “When?”

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62 Marsh of detective fiction 65 ___ City, Miss. 66 Gecko’s gripper 69 Turbulence 71 Local bird life 73 “Bye Bye Bye” band 75 Onetime sunblock agent 77 BB shooter 79 Galileo, for one 83 Electric ___ 84 Mishandle something, say 85 One of the M’s of 3M: Abbr. 88 Electric car 89 Football misdirection 91 Hipster’s pad 92 Charioteer’s place 94 Apt anagram for 42-Across 96 Beat it 97 Name on a museum plaque 98 Memphis-toNashville dir. 99 Opera character who sings “Largo al factotum” 101 “The ___ Show” (best-selling album of 2002) 103 “Great” 1666 conflagration 109 Birthday suit enthusiast 112 Passage 113 Video store penalty 115 Medical suffix 116 Apt anagram for 24-Across 119 Designer Picasso, daughter of Pablo 120 Coastal niche 121 They’re on the left in Britain

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

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122 “South Pacific” protagonist and namesakes 123 Former Israeli president Weizman 124 Dustup 125 Baffled 126 1978 Peace Prize recipient

DOWN 1 2 3

Cuba, por ejemplo Coupe’s couple Apt anagram for 31-Across 4 Places to hole up after holdups 5 Unvarying 6 Grant, e.g. 7 How things are generally stir-fried 8 Backs, anatomically 9 Munitions supplier 10 Black shade 11 Lover of Psyche 12 To be in Paris? 13 Buckingham Palace resident 14 Alters to allow development, maybe 15 Scotland’s “Granite City” 16 English poet who co-founded the Pre-Raphaelites 17 Begins, as a journey 19 Scratch the surface of, maybe 21 Per ___ 27 Galena and cerussite 30 Apt anagram for 55-Across 32 Egyptian sun deity

Ap r il 18 - 2 4 , 20 13

33 Reggae precursor 37 Georgia neighbor 38 Not much, as of paint 40 Fleetwood or Eldorado, informally 41 Checked out 43 Ask for change 44 “How can ___ sure?” 45 Hometown of TV’s McCloud 46 PC insert 49 Alternative to “com” 51 Banker’s concern 54 Apt anagram for 79-Across 56 Hot tar, e.g. 57 Mata ___ 59 Good protein source 60 1984 title role for Emilio Estevez 63 Apt anagram for 103-Across 64 Offshore installation 67 Sun 68 Multiple-choice choices 70 Order during an M.R.I. 72 Croatian leader? 74 Municipal facility: Abbr. 76 U.S.A. part: Abbr. 78 Alternative to white 80 “Hurlyburly” writer David 81 Tomorrow’s is tonight 82 Like Mars 85 Was congenial 86 Completely 87 Like the word “curiae” in

“The Case of D.B. Cooper’s Parachute” William L. Sullivan 411 pages, paperback, $14.95 Navillus Press, 2012

guilt-racked police Lt. Neil Ferguson bicycles around Portland maintaining law and order and keeping an eye on his autistic daughter. Reports that a “D.B. Cooper” is stealing paintings from a Russian Orthodox church propel the lieutenant into a murder mystery and in the process transport the reader into Cooper’s mind and his possible motivations for the extortion and hijacking. Pacific Northwesterners, as well as lovers of all things Portlandia, will appreciate Sullivan’s frequent references to local landmarks. Ferguson’s detective work takes him from Portland’s Grotto — a Catholic shrine and botanical garden — to the dragon boat races on the Willamette River, and up to Mount Hood’s historic Timberline Lodge. “The man who called himself Cooper was not pleased,” Sullivan

1

2

3

4

5

18

6 19

7

8

writes late in the novel. “He shuffled slowly across the Timberline Lodge lobby, pushing his walker past the big stone fireplace with its crackling pine logs. No one had ever discovered his identity before.” As befits a classic mystery, Ferguson teams up with a beautiful and enigmatic woman — in this case, a Russian translator — to solve a series of crimes. Though readers may have trouble untangling this novel’s complex political subplots, many of them will find the author’s dramatic conclusion convincing enough to declare with satisfaction, “case closed.”

9

20

23

10

11

12

13

14

21

27 31

29

32

41

42

34

43

44

45

37

55

59 66 73

74 79

85

86

92

87

67

68

75

62 69 77 81

97

90

115

116

120

121

123

124

91 96

99 103

110

111

72

84

95

102

109

71

83

98

101

64

78

82

89 94

63

70

76

88

52 57

61

80

93

51

56

60

65

39 47

50

54

58

38

46

49

53

17

30

33 36

48

16

25 28

35 40

15

22

24

26

NOTEWORTHY

104

105

106

100

107

108

112

113

117

118

114 119 122

125

126

­— Last week’s puzzle answers — “amicus curiae” 90 Melodic phrase 91 Legendary queen of the Britons immortalized by Shakespeare 93 Teetotaler 95 Cool, in slang 96 Small chickens 100 Lose it 102 Heart 104 Short pastoral piece

105 Not built up 106 Prefix with car 107 Some Siouans 108 Where Hercules slew the lion 110 Minuteman’s location 111 Stepped 114 Big ___ (sports conference) 117 Moses Malone, on the 76ers 118 N.M. setting

D E A L S

U R B A N

E R A T O

C A B I N

A W A R E

G A T O R

C I T E

A N E W

G L U M

R O L E

C H E W B A C C A

L O S T W E E K E N D T O N A I K E N

S L E E V O E K S E M A O N D C E U S T C O O R R E N M E R S

A S S A Y

T E T R A

T E N S E R

I M F

A E O N

N A N O

B E D M I M M E

F L H A R E G O N G E R Y N G I E R O R E N C D B R O R A W E N A N D M Y A R E N S T E E N D T A

J A K E A D E S W A R S S N E A S U P M C N I N T H I P O S V E R S A T U R A C N A Y N A N O F T H A S I A M E N T S A E G A L G R A G E R E G G L I U S E P

D E A T H M E T A L

C R O W E

C A R O L K R A E N F E

A S T R

B E A K

A I D S

I N S T

L U S T A S H E D E A C I R R E S P D S E N I U P I N T O G D E T H I N S T A N

H A D I N S O N G S


A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

35


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