Aspen Times Weekly-1/31

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LIBATIONS

FINDING THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH 16

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FOOD MATTERS GETAWAY TO GATEWAY 18

JANUARY 31 - FEBRUARY 6, 2013 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

FAT CITY, FAT BIKES SEE PAGE 24


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

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Janu ar y 31, - Febr u ar y 6, 2013


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7YL]PL^Z :WLJPHSPZ[ IOHaLU'THZVUTVYZL JVT

*VSK^LSS )HURLY 4HZVU 4VYZL (ZWLU c , /`THU (]LU\L c c -PUK TVYL H[ ^^^ THZVUTVYZL JVT Exclusive Member for Aspen and Snowmass, CO

Š2012 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each ofďŹ ce is Independently Owned and Operated. Coldwell BankerÂŽ, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews InternationalÂŽ, the Previews International Logo, and “Dedicated to Luxury Real EstateSMâ€? are registered and unregistered service marks to Coldwell Banker LLC.

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

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SUPER SUNDAY SPECIALS AT SNEAKY’S TAVERN AND BUMPS AT BUTTERMILK SKI & SNOWBOARD SCHOOL

EVENTS

January 10 - February 2. Full day Private Lesson package for only $349 for you & up to four friends or family members! Includes equipment from Four-Mountain Sports and additional discounts.

Check out the rst Sneaky’s Tavern beer dinner! Just $45 plus tax and gratuity. It is limited to 20 people, and sponsored by Stella Artois Brewing. Free parking in Base Village is included. 970-923-8787.

BUTTERMILK DELUXE

BLACK DIAMOND EXPEDITIONS Offered weekly, January-March. Advanced & expert skiers join our top Pros for three days of exploring the most challenging in-bound terrain.

NEW THIS YEAR: Sneaky’s Tavern Beer Dinner, Snowmass Base Village February 1, 7 pm - 8:30 pm

Live Music at The Limelight Hotel, Aspen February 1, 2 & 4, 4 - 7 pm February 1: live music with Guilty Pleasure, February 2: Derek Brown Band, February 4: Aspen Biker Band.

Live Music at Sneaky’s Tavern, Snowmass Base Village February 1 & 2, 4 - 7 pm

WOMEN’S EDGE

Live après music with Dan Sheridan on February 1 and Bobby Mason on February 2.

Offered weekly, January-March. Whether you’re an intermediate skier looking to build con dence in your abilities or an advanced skier eager for the challenges of double-black-diamond terrain, Women’s Edge provides an opportunity to advance your skills. Join women-speci c, PSIA certi ed Pros for four amazing days of skiing. Snowmass.

Yoga for Skiers & Snowboarders, Sundeck, Aspen February 1, 2, 4 & 6, 9:30 - 10:30 am

SNOWBIKING AT ULLR NIGHTS!

Activities include: Ullr’s Ghost Ship, ice skating with free rentals, Viking sledding hill, s’mores by the bon re, live music, snowbiking, à la carte culinary celebration and indoor kid’s activities. Activities end at 8:30 pm, last download at 9 pm. 970-923-1227 | www.aspensnowmass.com/ullrnights

Join us for snowbike tours every Friday through March 29 at Ullr Nights! Meet at Four-Mountain Sports, Snowmass Base Village at 5:15 pm. Bring a helmet. Must be an intermediate skier/rider. $69. Reservations required. 970-923-1227 | www.aspensnowmass.com/schools

FOUR-MOUNTAIN SPORTS

Rent with Four-Mountain Sports and receive FREE overnight storage and transfer between each mountain. Eight convenient locations at the base of each mountain, providing the best gear and service! 970-920-2337 | www.aspensnowmass.com/rentals

Every Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Mats provided. Must have ticket to load gondola.

Ullr Nights, Elk Camp, Snowmass February 1, 5:30 pm

Super Sunday Party at Bumps, Buttermilk February 2 & 3 Enjoy live music with Hayden Greg & Tom Hills from 3 - 5:30 pm on Saturday, February 2 with drink specials from the bar. On Sunday, February 3, stop by for Bumps’ Superbowl party. The big event will be shown on the big screen tv, and there will be drink and food specials.

Sneaky’s Tavern Super Sunday Après Specials February 3, 4 pm Purchase a pitcher of beer (Bud, Bud Light or Shocktop) & Wings are on us! 3 Appetizers for $13

Limelight Beer Dinner February 5, 6:30 - 8:30 pm Just $40 for 3 courses, and sponsored by Aspen Brewing Company. For reservations, call 970-925-3025.

CONNECT. SHARE. CHECK IN: Keep up with the latest on-mountain conditions, activities, events, packages & specials in Aspen/Snowmass!

Guest Appreciation Day at Aspen Highlands Every Wednesday FREE parking, mini muf ns, rst tracks at 8 am, bowl tours, NASTAR runs from 11 am-noon and hot dogs at the base of Deep Temerity Lift! Discounts on ski/snowboard tunes at Four-Mountain Sports and food at Merry-Go-Round and Cloud 9! Call 970-925-1220 for details.

Tell your friends & family about great deals! www.aspensnowmass.com/deals 4

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

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NEW CONSTRUCTION IN THE CORE 4HPU :[YLL[ <UP[ (ZWLU c

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*VSK^LSS )HURLY 4HZVU 4VYZL (ZWLU c , /`THU (]LU\L c c -PUK TVYL H[ ^^^ THZVUTVYZL JVT Exclusive Member for Aspen and Snowmass, CO

Š2012 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each ofďŹ ce is Independently Owned and Operated. Coldwell BankerÂŽ, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews InternationalÂŽ, the Previews International Logo, and “Dedicated to Luxury Real EstateSMâ€? are registered and unregistered service marks to Coldwell Banker LLC.

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

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WELCOME MAT

INSIDE this EDITION

DEPARTMENTS 08 THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION 12

LEGENDS & LEGACIES

14 FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE 17

WINEINK

18

FOOD MATTERS

30 VOYAGES 32 AROUND ASPEN 34 LOCAL CALENDAR 42 CROSSWORD

JANUARY 21 - FEBRUARY 6, 2013 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

24 COVER STORY

28 A&E

Snowboarding isn’t the only kind of riding happening in Aspen in winter. Join writer Nelson Harvey as he explore the fat bike movement.

Arts editor Stewart Oksenhorn talks with violinist Gil Shaham about the two sides of his profession: playing music and making music.

FAT CITY, FAT BIKES SEE PAGE 24

Photo courtesy of fatbikes.com

editor’s note | While the Aspen Times Weekly searches GUEST OPINION

ON THE COVER

for a permanent editor, this space will be filled with the words of guest writers.

VOLUME 2 ✦ ISSUE NUMBER 11

General Manager Gunilla Asher Interim Editor Jeanne McGovern

REUNITED AND IT FEELS SO GOOD Our scrapers, our tire chains, our big buckets of ice melt . While some parts of the country might begrudgingly see these as necessary evils — omens of discomfort, danger and inconvenience — we in ski towns might call them our fair-weather friends. They portend the party. They join us in celebration, for the special occasion, but when those times grow fewer and farther between, they might as well have dropped off the face of the earth. But absence makes the heart grow fonder. Up until last week, Aspen was on pace to have a January with the least snowfall of any on record here. If it weren’t for some uncomfortable stretches of subzero temperatures over the previous few weeks, the heart of winter might have resembled springtime.

The cold went a long way toward preserving what little snow had already hit Colorado’s ski resorts. Despite decent December snowfall, the dry January left the depths on the slopes dismally below their historical averages. If the temperatures all month had been as unseasonable as the precipitation, the conditions underfoot might have become downright depressing. If there’s anyone besides an Aspenite who can truly appreciate the friendly sight of a snowplow’s flashing lights, it’s a farmer on the plains of the Front Range or the Midwest. Many parts of the U.S. are in the grips of deep drought with no signs of improvement. Reuters reported Jan. 29 that less than an inch of precipitation had fallen all month in the entire state of Kansas. At this rate, experts predict that millions of acres of crops could

be lost by spring. While the deteriorating state of your alpine playground might be a little hard to swallow, it’s industry that’s long since started to feel the real cause for concern. Agriculture can expect at least as many sleepless nights as tourism until we all see a lot more than a few days’ change in the weather. In the meanwhile, share the recent bounty of snow with your fair-weather friends. Enjoy your time with your snow boots, and shake hands with your shovel. Don’t take them for granted — you never know when you’ll get the chance to see them again. And while you’re at it, give your skis or snowboard a big hug, or at least a good tune. They’re the ones that have been there for you all along, through thick and — literally — thin. Evan Gibbard is production manager of The Aspen Times.

Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott Circulation Maria Wimmer Design Afton Groepper 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 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

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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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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

VOX POP What do you think is the most extreme sport on snow?

with JOHN COLSON

Stop the scheme that would ‘complete the cheat,’ right now! SOMETIMES I have difficulty believing how truly evil some people can be, but then I look at politics and I realize that evil can be pretty normal, at least for human beings. Next, of course, I start to really worry when what I’ve just written sinks in a little further. But let’s not go there just yet. I’ve been reading that the Republican Party has come up with a new way to reverse its seeming slippage in the past two elections, which might best be labeled “complete the cheat.” In the news lately has been a ploy by the Grand Old Party to get states to change the way they assign votes in the electoral college, a hazy mishmash of rules and nonrules that has made the very concept of the electoral collage essentially a joke. But it’s a bad joke, and the GOP’s solution is an even worse one. A bit of explanation for those who might have passed over these particular news stories about this arcane subject: States have different ways already of telling electors (those are the ones chosen by the parties to go to the Electoral College) which candidate they should vote for. This hoary political process is in the U.S. Constitution (the 12th Amendment, if you care) and is the real process by which presidents are chosen. We, the people, in order to continue fooling ourselves that we live in a democratic republic, cast votes in a popularity contest known as the quadrennial presidential election. In that process, we believe we are selecting which candidate our electors will be bound to vote for a couple of weeks after the popularity contest is over. In most states, except for Maine and Nebraska, electors are pledged to whichever candidate wins the popularity contest in a given state, a method called “winner take all.” In those two states, electors are chosen by the voters of individual congressional districts. Republicans want to make the entire nation follow the same rules. Now, at first blush, this might seem to be a beneficial

change, bringing the presidential election closer to the ground, so to speak. The problem is that the game is already fixed to give greater weight to Republican candidates because since the 2010 teabagging sweep, the GOP has been slavishly working to gerrymander congressional districts in every state where it has dominance. I should note that gerrymandering, the process of adjusting boundaries of the districts, is as much a sport for Democrats as it is for Republicans. It all depends on which party has the majority in each state’s Legislature, which gives that party the upper hand in the redistricting process, which takes place every 10 years in line with the U.S. Census. And the essence of gerrymandering is to redraw district boundaries so that one party or the other has more voters in as many districts as can be arranged, thereby giving that candidate’s party the edge in election members of the U.S. House of Representatives. If electors were chosen the same way, there would be more members of one party than the other doing the voting at the Electoral College. And according to many analysts, if the 2012 election had been on a district-by-district basis, Romney would have won despite having lost the popularity contest by a healthy margin. To bring all this together into a comprehensible whole, the Republicans have rejiggered the political landscape in many states and are now asking the country to tie the Electoral College to that same rejiggered landscape. Thus, “complete the cheat.” But that is not an improvement, at least to me. It is yet another example of corruption and political chicanery in our political process. What we need to do is abolish the Electoral College completely and make the popularity contest the actual method for selecting our presidents. It ain’t perfect, but it’s way better than the shortsighted, selfaggrandizing plot being hatched by the Republicans.

HIT&RUN

MYRA O’BRIEN ASPEN

“Skier- or snowboard-cross.”

ELENA HIGHT L A K E TA H O E , C A L I F. ( X G A M E S G O L D M E DA L I S T I N WO M E N ’ S H A L F P I P E )

“Snowboarding...it’s the best extreme sport on snow.”

NICK KIRBY S N O W M A SS V I L L AG E

“Stand-up tobogganing.”

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jcolson@aspentimes.com

VOX POP COMPILED BY JULIA KRYS


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

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

SEEN, HEARD & DONE

edited by JEANNE MCGOVERN

CHEERS&JEERS

FIVE THINGS TOP 5 THINGS WE LOVE ABOUT SUPER BOWL SUNDAY

O5 Shaun White celebrates his sixth-straight gold during the men’s snowboard superpipe final at the Winter X Games on Jan. 27. Record crowds converged on Aspen for the 2013 X Games, four days filled with competitions at Buttermilk and other events around town.

CHEERS | To the X Games athletes. Year after year, you amaze us with your athleticism, enthusiasm and love of the games. May you continue to keep the true meaning of “sport” in all that you do.

CHEERS | To the snow gods, for finally sending a

JEERS | To the X Games crowds (at times). We love a

about the dog poop, but now we’ve got to harp on dog owners who can’t — or choose not to — control their pets on public property. Something’s wrong when a dog charges, and even worse bites, a person sledding down a hill. It happened just this week in Aspen, and it will happen again if you don’t start taking responsibility for your pets. Enough said.

party as much as the next guy, but try to remember that the X Games are, first and foremost, a sporting event. So tone down the drunkenness, public pot-smoking, foul language and just bad behavior so everyone can have a good time.

JEERS | To irresponsible dog owners. We’ve griped

BUZZ WORTHY PITKIN COUNTY

RULES FOR HELICOPTER FILMING MOVE FORWARD Pitkin County commissioners on Jan. 23 decided to move ahead with an addition to the county’s land-use code that prohibits the use of helicopters for filming purposes but left the door open to approving certain uses on a case-bycase basis. Possible uses that could gain approval from commissioners in the future, according to a draft of the code, include a “clear and demonstrable marketing benefit to the community,” live broadcasts such as the USA Pro Challenge bicycle race and proof that the filming activity will be safe and no danger to wildlife. While commissioners debated the language in the code that will address helicopters, they decided for the time being not to regulate the small, remote-controlled aircraft that county documents call “drones” but which are actually classified by the Federal Aviation Administration as “unmanned

aerial vehicles.” Such aircraft are increasingly used for capturing aerial photos or footage. — Andre Salvail

ASPEN

BURLINGAME CANINE CONUNDRUM GROWS INTENSE The vast majority of about 35 Burlingame homeowners indicated at a Jan. 23 meeting that they don’t want their affordable-housing development to go to the dogs — literally. Aspen city officials are pursuing a process that would pave the way for residents of the soon-to-bebuilt Burlingame Ranch Phase II development to keep a dog in their units, should they desire one. This has raised numerous concerns among residents in the 84 units and seven single-family homes of Burlingame I, ranging from the potentially vast amounts of poop that would fill their yards to the unwanted noises associated with dozens of

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Junk food and beer

O3

The “Americanness” of it all

O1

The commercials and halftime show A close game

POST US YOUR TOP FIVE THINGS jmcgovern@aspentimes.com

STAY IN THE KNOW — CATCH UP ON RECENT NEWS & LOCAL EVENTS barking dogs. Mayor Mick Ireland attended the meeting and said Jan. 24 that some of the comments were pointed toward him, even though he doesn’t have a strong position on the matter. “I told them that I don’t have a dog in the fight, but no one laughed,” vhe said. Jokes aside, Ireland said he believes the best way to settle the controversy would be to let residents of both developments decide the issue a few years from now as a single voting group rather than having members of separate homeowners associations vote on whether to allow dogs within Phase I or Phase II. This spring, the city plans to begin construction on the first section of Burlingame II, which involves 48 units of what is planned as a 167-unit development. The city’s policy is to tackle the construction in sections based on demand. — Andre Salvail

“OBVIOUSLY A REALLY TOUGH DECISION FOR ME. I LOVE X GAMES. THIS IS MY HOMETOWN. I WOULD LOVE TO JUST GO OUT THERE AND GIVE EVERYONE A GOOD SHOW.”

10

O4

O2

blanket of white our way. Would we be selfish asking for more, more, more? Please.

Having an excuse to sit on the couch all day

ASPEN

SNOW AND ICE MAKE TRAVEL DIFfiCULT Freezing rain preceded the snow that fell Jan. 28 in Aspen and the surrounding area, turning Red Mountain Road near town into an ice rink and keeping law-enforcement personnel hopping. “When it started snowing, it put a coat of snow over a sheet of ice, basically,” said Deputy Jason Kasper with the Pitkin County Sheriff ’s Office. The rash of accidents was mostly of the one-vehicle variety as cars slid off roads or into barriers; no injuries were reported, he said. Within the city of Aspen, police had responded to a dozen accidents by about 2:15 p.m., including three on lower Maroon Creek Road, but again, no injuries were reported. “We’ve just had a lot of cars sliding around,” said Blair Weyer, community relations specialist for the police department. — Janet Urquhart

SNOWBOARDER GRETCHEN BLEILER ON HAVING TO WITHDRAW FROM THE X GAMES

PHOTO BY AARON ONTIVEROZ AP/THE DENVER POST


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

GUEST OPINION COLUMN

by JONATHAN THOMPSON for WRITERS ON THE RANGE

The wild and not-so gun-loving West ON SUMMER evenings in the early newspaper editor was known former mining town of Silverton, the to have a pistol stashed in his desk. It staccato sound of gunshots used to was not an armed citizenry that kept echo through otherwise law and order, however, quiet streets. A cast of but the marshals, sheriffs stereotypical Old West and federal government. characters riddled one Rare flare-ups between another with bullets, as the area Utes and white the legendary gunfighters settlers were generally did once upon a time in handled by federal the West. Except that soldiers, not citizen those kind of shoot-’emmilitias. The only assault JONATHAN THOMPSON ups didn’t happen out rifle back then was the here. Not really. Gatling gun, which was Back in the 1950s, those available only to soldiers fake Silverton gunfights followed a at a few military posts. Richard well-timed schedule, erupting when Gatling had invented the rapid-fire the narrow-gauge train, loaded “battery gun” during the Civil War, with tourists, rolled into town in thinking — NRA-like — that a more the middle of the day. Eventually, efficient killing machine would however, a group of history-minded reduce the carnage on the battlefield. residents gained influence and He was terribly wrong. rejected the violent charade as a Comb through the region’s early mockery of their town’s history. By newspapers, and you’ll find only the 1970s, the fake gunfights were occasional mentions of killings by no more. gun. Accounts of shootings over the The West always has been a 19th century equivalent to a fenderland of myths, where visitors can bender are sparse. Madmen in the live out their dreams — and their Wild West didn’t shoot up schools misconceptions. Perhaps the or even saloons. Believe it or not, most persistent one is that of the teachers weren’t armed. gunslinging West, when ordinary Dynamite was a far more citizens were armed to the teeth, ubiquitous and more important and the only law and order came symbol of the Old West’s culture. from the end of a brave man’s Colt This was mining country, after all, .45. Today, the notion persists that and miners and road builders relied Westerners define themselves by on explosives to make a living and a their love of guns. killing. Dynamite was easy to access Like most legends, that of the and was not uncommonly used for gunfighters’ West derives from a murders and suicides over the years, morsel of truth. Yet, nourished even in more modern times. In 1975, by pop culture, movies and the a bomber blew the Silverton Depot snowball effect of falsehood, that off its foundation. Around the same myth has very little in common time, a motorcycle shop and bar with the history that spawned it. in Durango, and a watering hole in Even in late 19th-century Silverton, Silverton, were bombed. a rough-and-tumble mining town, Today, explosives are tightly ordinary residents didn’t walk the regulated. Lobbyists for the streets with sidearms. There were explosives industry, however, occasional gunfights, as when a have yet to proclaim that the only 19-year-old recidivist shot the town thing that can stop a bad guy marshal dead in 1881. There were with dynamite is a good guy with four or five shots fired in all, and the dynamite. Well-paid lobbyists do criminals were hanged, not shot, by not argue that it infringes on our vigilantes. Full-on fights like those in liberties or threatens agrarian culture old Westerns, in which the butcher, to subject a farmer to a background baker and candlemaker also were check if he buys a truckload of involved, were virtually unknown. nitrogen fertilizer. And though I’ve It’s not that guns weren’t around. known of people dynamiting ponds Hunters were armed, and at least one to catch fish easily, I have yet to hear

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

any politician arguing that regulating the sale of explosives is a threat to our traditional hunting-and-fishing culture. The Old West was, at times, quite wild, but if we’re looking for a symbol of the times, it’s not the Colt Peacemaker and certainly not

we can buy, and we’ll still be Westerners. It’s time to follow Silverton’s example and stop reducing ourselves and our region to a silly caricature manufactured by Hollywood and supported by a gun industry looking to peddle more of its deadly wares.

the AR-15. Firearms are not integral to Western culture or identity. Take away our semiautomatic guns and our high-volume ammo clips, limit the amount of ammunition

Jonathan Thompson is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (www.hcn.org). Based in Durango, he is a senior editor at HCN.

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

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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

CLASSIC ASPEN

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

A 1901 diagram of the 10th stack of timber sets 500 feet below the surface in the Smuggler Mine.

REAL LIFE CHUTES AND LADDERS IN MINING ASPEN If you have ever played the board game Chutes and Ladders you

can envision Aspen’s underground labyrinth. Below Aspen and Smuggler mountains there are chutes — stopes in mining terminology — that did not line up from bottom to surface, which formed when miners extracted countless cubic yards of ore. Shafts, like the ladders in the board game, conconnconnected vast underground chambers to sunlight.

ZONES OF MINERALIZATION formed along fault lines. Since those fractures were vertical, Aspen’s silver veins aligned in a near vertical position. The fault zones, however, also moved horizontally in large blocks so a vein that may have been a continuous 1,000-foot chimney of valuable ore when it was formed broke into displaced sections resembling, if viewed in a horizontal cross-section, the chutes in the board game, but less random. Miners preferred not to work against gravity, so when they could they mined ore bodies from the bottom up, especially the mines on the face of Aspen and Smuggler mountains, where ore bodies were hundreds of feet tall and dozens of feet wide. To accomplish that feat, and to prevent the earth from fighting back by squeezing the walls around the excavated cavities while precious

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minerals were dug, miners built elaborate timber structures. Stope timbering varied according to the inclination and size of the created cavity, but in Aspen’s larger mines they mostly followed time-

constant fault movements. The trees on Aspen Mountain disappeared into the mines. It took thousands of board feet of lumber to assemble what was called square set timbering. The square set was not

ASPEN’S STOPES WERE ENORMOUS. SOME TIMBER SETS REACHED HEIGHTS AS TALL AS A 10-STORY BUILDING AND AS WIDE AS A HOTEL LOBBY. honored designs. Picture modernday construction scaffolding: workers assemble standardized steel frames, connecting them together as they ascend and placing planks across the top to support them as they work. Stope timbering was similar, only they used wood timbers large enough to withstand the internal geologic squeezing and

Janu ar y 31, - Febr u ar y 6, 2013

an exact cube, but looking at it from above it was a series of squares. A 12by-12 inch timber was standard, with lateral members averaging 6 feet in length and vertical posts around 7 feet, dimensions just large enough for short men to pass through without having to stoop. Aspen’s stopes were enormous. Some timber sets reached heights as

tall as a 10-story building and as wide as a hotel lobby. Some stopes were (and still are) in stable rock and did not require any timbering to prevent them from collapsing. Timbering in large mines was often done by specialists, and carpenters on the surface spent their days fashioning the parts. It took a carpenter between a half-hour to an hour-and-a-half to cut the eight timbers for each square set, depending on the density of the wood and the complexity of the kind of joinery used in connecting timbers. Many sets were just straight cuts connected with long spikes, others used joinery that did not use any spikes. In some mines timbers were crushed by the movement of surrounding rock, actually condensing a 12-inch timber to half its thickness. In others, water and air exposure hastened decay and rotting weakening timbers. Miners methodically replaced weakening timber sets, or worked at their own peril. The cost of square sets was enormous, one of the major expenses in any mining operation. In some mines rather than hauling waste material to the surface it was dumped into older stopes. As a stope was refilled, timbering was removed and reused in a new stope. Stope collapses and stope timbering fires marked the mining history of Western towns because they sometimes caused mass casualties. Aspen, fortunately, enjoyed more stable geology, with its largest stope incident, a cave-in below what is now Glory Hole Park, swallowing a box car and leaving a giant pit, but claiming no lives. 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.

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE WILLOUGHBY COLLECTION


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

FAT T I R E S

1986 WOM E N ON BI K E S

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

“HORROR OF HORRORS,” exclaimed an article in the Aspen Times on July 16, 1896, “here comes the bicycle foot! Think of it, madam. If you persist in bicycling it will eventually swell your foot! It will swell the muscles and thicken the bones, spread the joints, enlarge the cartilaginous tissues, destroy the contour of your ankle, broaden your heel and – this in strict confidence, madam – it will make you wear a bigger shoe. The important question before wheelwomen today is: Shall bicycling be abandoned and the diminutiveness of the foot preserved, or shall the health of the body be preserved, even at the expense of the poor foot? This, of course, is a matter that each lady must solve for herself. It lies entirely between her conscience and her foot.”

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

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

NEED TO KNOW

125

• Extremely waterproof, totally windproof • Articulated cut for dexterity • Full coverage gauntlet • Nose wipe patch on thumb

MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR MEN’S JALAPENO GLOVES Created for “snowsport professionals,” the Mountain Hardwear Men’s Jalapeno Gloves are just as good for recreational athletes. Designed with OutDry Waterproof Technology, these gloves offer exceptional protection against water, wind and cold — something most local skiers, riders and backcountry enthusiasts know plenty about. Plus, the Jalapeno is easy to wear for all-day adventures, with durable goatskin leather fingers and palm, one-handed gauntlet closures and a nose wipe patch on the thumb. We guess you could say the Mountain Hardwear Men’s Jalapeno Glove is one hot ticket.

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— Ute Mountaineer staff

P H OTO C O U RT E S Y O F M O U N TA I N H A R DWA R E


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$135,000/$140,000 ST. REGIS RESIDENCE CLUB #B32 2 bedroom 2 bath Lifestyle flexible use schedule 2 blocks to gondola & downtown Aspen

$685,000 CARBONDALE - MISSOURI HEIGHTS 4 bedroom 3.5 bath Large open floor plan, tall ceilings New kitchen & media room, spectacular views

$1,795,000 CHATEAU EAU CLAIRE #27 3 bedroom 2 bath Top floor unit, magnificent views Pool, hot tub, conference room

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by GUNILLA ASHER

NEED TO KNOW Fountain of Youth Serves 1 Recipe courtesy of James Meehan

FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

• 1 1/2 ounces Spring 44 Honey Vodka • 3/4 ounce lemon juice • 1/2 ounces honey syrup • 1 dash Peychaud’s Bitters

I AM SURE THAT EVERYONE wants to drink from the Fountain of Youth, and Aspen is far, far away from the world-famous waters at St. Augustine. So I was pleasantly surprised to learn that the Chef’s Club

Shake with ice, and strain into a chilled glass. Top with 1 ounce Moet Imperial Champagne. Garnish with a lemon twist.

has a cocktail called the Fountain of Youth because it was a lot easier to get to the St. Regis than to Florida to see if it worked. This drink, created by James Meehan, was a breath of fresh air. I never would have thought of mixing vodka and Champagne, but Meehan has really concocted something special here. And I am going to keep on drinking them because if this Fountain of Youth has any correlation with the actual Fountain of Youth, then this is my winter beverage of choice. Gunilla Asher is the general manager of The Aspen Times. She writes about libations without any real training, other than in the spirit of “She is not a connoisseur, but she is heavily practiced.”

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CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS


WINEINK

WORDS to DRINK BY

by KELLY J. HAYES

A LITTLE BREAK FROM THE GRAPE SHORTLY BEFORE the pioneering California winemaker Robert Mondavi passed away in his Yountville, Calif., home in 2008 at the ripe (pun intended) old age of 94, he was asked what he attributed his longevity to. He replied that he had benefited from drinking wine every day. Mondavi, in so many ways, was ahead of his time. He recognized that in addition to being a pleasurable experience, the moderate consumption of wine on a daily basis can have many measurable, KELLY J. HAYES positive impacts on our health. As early as 1992, researchers at Harvard concurred with earlier studies and stated that moderate consumption of wine was one of “eight proven ways to reduce coronary heart disease risk.” Scientists have cited the antioxidants flavonoids, which are abundant in the skin of red grapes, as being beneficial in reducing the production of LDL cholesterol (the bad stuff ), boosting HDL (the good stuff ) and limiting clotting in blood. The famed French Paradox studies, done at the University of Bordeaux in France in the 1990s by Dr. Serge Renaud, observed a marked decrease — as much as 30 percent — in the incidence of coronary disease in those who drank red wines from those who didn’t. While further studies have questioned whether the Paradox was accurate in describing the depth of the phenomenon, there have been numerous studies since that also have pointed to reductions in coronary disease levels and cancer rates among wine consumers. And there is tremendous interest in new studies that show health benefits accruing from ingestion of Resveratrol, a compound also found in red grape skins. Perhaps most promising, researchers at the University of Western Australia have concluded, “There is a lack of consensus on whether alcohol consumption may in fact be beneficial to erectile function.” Yes, according to their study of 1,580 stout Aussie men ages 20-81 who drank alcohol in moderation,

XXX

the group was 30 percent less likely to report impotence problems. Regardless of age. And a few years back, the journal Gastroenterology published a study that linked the consumption of seven to 14 glasses of wine per week to a 56 percent drop in the chances of developing Barrett’s esophagus, a disorder that frequently leads to cancer of the esophagus. Despite all of the above, I am cutting back a bit on my consumption for a while. This is not a big deal mind you, just a personal decision to drop it into a lower gear for a bit, take off a few pounds and refresh the palate. A little spring cleaning, if you will. There are numerous ways one can cut back on wine consumption. Cold turkey works for some. But short of that are other options, such as changing the wines that we drink with regularity from, say, higher-alcohol Zinfandels, which frequently contain more than 15 percent alcohol, to wines that have much lower levels. In recent years, there has been a marked increase in alcohol levels in wines as producers make “bigger” wines. But there are many producers and varietals that are much lower in alcohol, and sometimes trying new wines can be a revelation. Then there is the obvious: buy a half-bottle for a meal instead of a 750 milliliter bottle. There are terrific wines available these days in the smaller size, and if you are the type that drinks the last glass of a big bottle just because it’s there, then a half-bottle may be all you need to complement your dinner. And no one says that tasting can’t be an alternative to drinking when it comes to wines. I fully intend to sip and spit when the situation arises. None of this is to suggest that anyone stop drinking wine. To the contrary, how one drinks, and yes,

KJ’S CALL even how much one drinks, is a personal decision provided no one other than the drinker is affected in a detrimental manner. For me, a break is a good thing. Period. In most things wine, I rely on the words of Mondavi, especially these from his “Mission Project” of the 1980s: “If wine were a prescription, we would prescribe two glasses with each meal because it enhances food, it reduces

SO WHAT TO DRINK WHEN YOU’RE NOT DRINKING?

Despite the Federal Trade Commission’s recent 5-0 decision barring POM Wonderful (owned and marketed by Roll International, which is owned by part-time Aspen residents Lynda and Stewart Resnick) from touting their product as being “effective in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of any disease, including heart disease, prostate cancer, and erectile dysfunction, unless the claim is supported by two randomized, well-controlled, human clinical trials,” I’m sticking with it. The antioxidants in the stuff alone have been documented in peer review studies to be beneficial to your health. And besides it just makes me feel good. I recommend a POM a day. I cut mine with water. You’ll glow, even if the FTC says you might not.

stress, it encourages friendship and it kindles romance. In moderation, it helps digestion, it protects the heart, it promotes good health and it improves our disposition. However, if abused, it is unsafe, potentially dangerous and decidedly uncivilized.” Hear, hear. 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.

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

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

FOOD MATTERS

THIS IS RED ROCKS

DISCOVERY CHANNEL FOUNDER STARTS NEW CHAPTER AT HIS GATEWAY CANYONS RESORT TWO HOURS from Aspen, southwest of Grand Junction in the Delores River Valley, is a town and resort that feel like a different land, state, country — a different universe. With towering spires, highdesert landscapes and a river running high, it is a small piece of Colorado left undiscovered ... almost. Discovery Channel founder and chairman AMIEE WHITE John Hendricks grew BEAZLEY up hearing about the American West and of Red Rock country from his father. At age 22, “I got my first look at the Rocky Mountains and fell in love,” he says. “It was all my father had ever talked about and more.” Soon he and his wife, Maureen, had found a ranch in that Red Rock country, in a barely-there town called Gateway. Anchored by the imposing Palisade rock formation, the landscape so enamored Hendricks, a former Nature Conservancy board member, that he felt compelled to preserve the land, share it with others, and at the same time help revitalize the local ranching community. When the 54-room Gateway Canyons resort With more than 45 cars on display, the Gateway Canyons Automotive Museum offers a glimpse into America’s opened in 2005, Hendricks automotive history. wanted a resort that would the Gateway Canyons Automotive use the landscape as the Museum, it is a precious timeline of main attraction, have an education American automotive history. aspect to it, and be a place where “A car embraces the state of guests could unpack once and have the technology at that time,” says everything onsite. The resort today is Hendricks. “Seeing that reflected home to the state-of-the-art Palisade through the years was a passion of Event Center, the fine-dining Entrada mine. I really think of (classic cars) as Restaurant, a full-service spa and the sculptural art.” Gateway Canyons Adventure Center Gateway Canyons is also home to — where guests can be outfitted Discovery Retreats. Hosted at the and guided on outdoor adventures resort, this educational and vacation surrounding the resort, including series will be held in conjunction horseback riding, rafting and even air with the “Curiosity” series on tours in the resorts’ Cessna Caravan, Discovery Channel. The intent, says “Big Red.” Hendricks also chose to house his Hendricks, is to bring people and personal classic car collection, valued experts from the show together for at more than 10 million, in Gateway. in-depth discussions and outdoor With approximately 45 cars on display, adventure while digging into life’s

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Entrada Restaurant offers resort guests a fine-dining experience.

Opened in 2005, Gateway Canyons has all that a resort guest could want onsite.

big questions, such as “Are We Alone in the Universe?,” “The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence,” and “Tracking Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Creatures.” “I’ve always had this mental list of things I’ve wanted to do,” Hendricks says, “I’m beginning to bring to life that list I had made up in my mind

over the previous 20 years.” 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.com.

PHOTOS BY SCOTT COLEE


by AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

GATEWAY CANYONS LOCATION: Gateway, Colo. TRAVEL TIME FROM ASPEN: Approximately 2.5 hours by car, 30 minutes by plane (Gateway Canyons can y you to/from Aspen) WHY GO: Unique and pristine Red Rock topography, Entrada Restaurant, rafting, hiking, horseback riding ATTENTION-GRABBER: Gateway Canyons Automotive Museum

Gateway Canyons resort is nestled under the towering Palisade rock formation in the picturesque Delores River Valley. A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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WhitmanFineProperties Aspen’s Best Real Estate Opportunities NEW LISTING

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FEBRUARY 7

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BEST SKI-IN BUILDING The only South Point unit on the market, this fully renovated two bedroom, two bath condo boasts woodburning fireplace, hardwood floors, and stunning views of Aspen Mountain. Well maintained building with enclosed hallways, elevator, private ski locker, great owner storage, and underground parking garage. $1,265,000

DOWNTOWN LOFT

TÉA OBREHT

in conversation with Seth Fishman One of America’s brightest literary talents, Téa Obreht will speak about her success as a young novelist and discuss her award-winning novel The Tiger’s Wife, which explores the folk culture of Southeastern Europe where Obreht was born. In a moderated discussion with the agent who discovered her, Téa will explain her personal connection to the book and how she was inspired to craft this imaginative and fantastical literary debut.

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This contemporary penthouse studio is beautifully designed with every consideration to maximize space and efficiency. Tremendous natural light and ample storage! Huge private deck facing Red Mountain, elevator, bonus sleeping loft and includes underground private parking. $1,499,000

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wendalin@whitmanaspen.com

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Take your time. Breathe in the mountain air. Reconnect with friends and family.

REMEMBER TO LIVE

TM

Discover the exclusive privileges of whole ownership at the only ultra modern, highly amenitized, ski-in/ski-out resort in Aspen Snowmass. Built to Related’s standards of excellence and offering The Viceroy Hotel Group’s unsurpassed level of service, Viceroy Snowmass is the #1 rated resort in Aspen Snowmass. (Condé Nast Traveler Readers’ Choice Awards 2012) STUDIO – FOUR BEDROOM WHOLE OWNERSHIP RESIDENCES FOR SALE. PRICES ON REQUEST. 130 Wood Road, Snowmass Village, CO 81615 | 855 923 4500 | viceroysnowmasssales.com

THE RESIDENCES AT THE VICEROY SNOWMASS ARE NOT BEING SOLD BY VICEROY HOTELS, LLC, THE VICEROY HOTEL GROUP AND/OR ANY OF THEIR AFFILIATES (“VICEROY”). DEVELOPER’S USE OF THE VICEROY AND REMEMBER TO LIVE MARKS IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEVELOPMENT, OPERATION, MARKETING AND SALE OF THE PROJECT IS PURSUANT TO A PRIVATE AGREEMENT WITH VICEROY, WHICH MAY EXPIRE OR TERMINATE WITHOUT BEING RENEWED. THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS NOT AN OFFERING. IT IS A SOLICITATION OF INTEREST IN THE ADVERTISED PROPERTY. NO OFFERS TO PURCHASE WILL BE ACCEPTED FROM ANY PERSON WHO RESIDES IN A STATE WHERE THE OFFERING HAS NOT BEEN REGISTERED OR IS NOT EXEMPT FROM APPLICABLE REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS. THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS MADE IN ACCORDANCE WITH COOPERATIVE POLICY STATEMENT NO.1, ISSUED BY THE NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF LAW. FILE NO. CP12-0049. DEVELOPER IS SNOWMASS ACQUISITION COMPANY LLC, C/O THE RELATED COMPANIES L.P. 60 COLUMBUS CIRCLE, NY, NY 10023.

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

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A 22

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SNOW RIDERS

THE RISE OF ASPEN’S WINTER BIKING SCENE by Nelson Harvey

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“i haven’t ridden that trail yet this year, but we could try it if you’re up for a little adventure,” Bill Boughton said as he sat waiting for me near the top of Smuggler Mountain, his dog Millie panting by his side. I paused. We’d been riding for nearly two hours, and I had managed to stay reasonably close to Boughton, though I suspected he was going easy on me. We’d covered a popular route, climbing Smuggler and descending into the Hunter Creek Valley, with a single twist: It was mid-January, and the ground was covered with snow.

A

AS HE STOOD waiting for me, Boughton leaned on the bars of his fat bike, a rig equipped with 4-inch-wide tires designed to plow through the fluff y stuff. He’d agreed to show me the ropes of this young but increasingly popular sport and suggested we ride something that offered the “giggle factor” of a fast descent. “What the hell,” I said, nervous but not wanting to cramp my guide’s style. “I’m in no hurry. Let’s give it a shot.” We dropped into the narrow trail, following a 10-inch-wide band of packed snow in the center that was flanked by drifts of deeper powder. Within seconds, Boughton was out of sight, and I struggled to navigate the snowy singletrack as it descended through the woods. Suddenly my front tire drifted off of the packed trail and augured into a snowbank, throwing me over the handlebars. I landed with a poof in a foot of snow, shaken but unhurt. In the summertime, such a fall certainly would have drawn blood, but this one had merely fogged my glasses. Softness seemed to be the norm — minutes before we had been speeding downhill toward Hunter Creek, on trails whose stumps and rocks were smoothed by the snow into a slick, fast carpet of white. I rose and brushed myself off. This, I decided, was fun.

READING THE SNOW Fat bikes have been around for years, though in Aspen their popularity has mainly been limited to a circle of gung-ho bike racers looking to stay fit all winter long. For such seasoned cyclists, the sport offers a way to rediscover the joy of riding a bike. And as curiosity about fat bikes has grown recently, many of their early adopters have become evangelists, spreading the fat-bike gospel to all who will listen. “I remember the first time I got on a fat bike, I was riding the Ditch Trail in Snowmass in about 10 inches of powder and just laughing my ass off,” said Eric Skarvan, who owns the local adventure company Sun Dog Athletics and recently started offering fat-biking lessons. “The last two winters, I haven’t been skiing as much because the fat biking has been so good,” Boughton added.

PHOTO COURTESY UTE CITY CYCLES

“People have been riding these bikes for a long time,” said Randy Tuggle, a dedicated fat biker who sells the bikes at the Gear Exchange in Glenwood Springs. “But no one really took notice, and over the last two years it’s just exploded. These bikes are no longer a novelty — it’s a true functional, fun, fast race bike.” Along with Gear Exchange owner Darin Binion, Tuggle leads fat-bike night rides up Sunlight Mountain Resort twice a week, and riders also flock to the Prince Creek trails outside Carbondale. Upvalley, the Maroon Bells, Smuggler and Hunter Creek are popular routes, and Ute City Cycles, the biggest retailer of fat bikes in Aspen, is now organizing a weekly fat-bike ride. Boughton recently rode up to the Independence ghost town on his fat bike, but the snow was too deep there to go any farther. “My next goal is to ride Little Annie’s Road and come down Spar (Gulch),” he said, referring to the run on the front side of Aspen Mountain. “We’ll see how that goes.” Even for the seasoned mountain biker, it takes time to adjust to the width and weight of a fat bike. The upside of that girth, though, is a supremely stable ride. “The stability you get with those fat tires makes it feel like you’re on a dirt bike without a motor,” said Dave Carter, manager of Ute City Cycles. “We ride the same trails that we would ride on fullsuspension mountain bikes in the summer.” Fat bikes don’t excel in all snowy conditions — they certainly won’t float in a field of untracked powder. In general, hard-packed snow is best. “You typically have to wait for two or three days after a big dump before you ride,” Boughton said. “And you learn to read the snow. Anywhere people have taken snowmobiles is a good place to ride.” Dressing for a fat-bike ride also remains an inexact science, as the sport is characterized by periods of high exertion followed by cold and fast downhill stretches. “You generate a lot of heat on those climbs, and it gets very cold on the descents,” Skarvan said. Fat bikers favor multiple polypropylene layers, shoe covers, neck and ankle gaiters, spare jackets, insulated water bottles and sometimes even ski pants. Even with all that gear, Boughton said,

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“Fat biking can sometimes be cold and miserable.” FATTER, HEAVIER, MORE ADAPTABLE A definitive history of fat biking is hard to pin down, but the sport has its roots in cold northern winters. Mark Gronewald, of Alaska-based bike-maker Wildfire Designs, is widely credited with building the first fat bike, and Minnesota-based bike company Surly produced the first mass-market bike, the Pugsley, in 2005. The innovations that distinguish fat bikes from their conventional cousins in the mountain-bike world reside mainly in the wheels: Fat bike tires can be up to 5 inches wide, compared with 2.25 inches for typical mountainbike treads. To increase traction, the tires are inflated to anywhere between 3 and 9 pounds per square inch, which is about a quarter of the pressure common in summer mountain-

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bike tires. Such fat tires require wider rims, along with frames whose forks and bottom brackets can accommodate the wheels. To avoid pedal contact with the wheels while riding, the spindle connecting the bike’s cranks also must be wider. Because of their girth, the bikes are significantly heavier than conventional mountain bikes. “The stock Surlys are coming in at between 35 and 37 pounds,” said Ute City Cycle’s Carter. His shop sells a titanium frame made by Carver Bikes, of Maine, which he says can bring the bike down to around 27 pounds. Today, Surly dominates the fat-bike market along with sister company Salsa — both firms are owned by the bike-supply company Quality Bicycle Parts. However, a suite of boutique bike-makers also has sprung up. The Alaska-based company 9:Zero:7 makes an aluminum snow bike, and Carver makes a titanium frame.

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For now, other than doing some welding of your own, there’s no cheap way to get into the fat-bike game. A Surly Pugsley starts at 1,500, and a Carver titanium fat bike with nice components could run upward of 5,000. Recently, there have been rumors in the fat-bike blogosphere that bike behemoth Specialized might enter the market. That could mean the introduction of an entry-level bike priced at less than 1,000, which would surely push more people to try the sport. A BIKE FOR MILDER TIMES While recent advances in fat-bike technology have been impressive, gear improvements aren’t the only thing driving increased interest in the sport. In western Colorado, recent weather has certainly played a role. During the 2011-12 ski season, area snowpack was well below historical averages, and the same has been

true this year. With less powder comes a decreased interest in skiing, particularly among local powderhounds, who then hunt for something else to do. “We are looking at getting into (fat biking) for next winter,” said Morgan Vail, manager of Ajax Bike and Sport in Aspen. “With two years in a row without a lot of snow, we’re looking for other ways to pay the rent, and this is one of them.” “We’ve been getting increased demand for the bikes, and we want to carry them for rental and sale,” said Ed Garland, owner of Aspen Bike Rentals. “We’re getting some 9:Zero:7 bikes in any day now.” Ute City Cycles has been carrying the bikes for nearly four years, longer than any other Aspen shop. Skarvan has an agreement to use Ute’s fleet for fat-bike lessons, and shop manager Carter says fat bikes represent between 50 and 60 percent of Ute City’s sales during the winter.

P H OTO S C O U RT E S Y E R I C S K A R VA N / S U N D O G AT H L E T I C S A N D B I L L B O U G H TO N


Fat-bike riding — on the snowpacked trails around Aspen and up to the Maroon Bells — is becoming increasingly popular with locals and visitors (and dogs).

In the past year, though, Carter says fat biking has become so popular that it’s become hard to find parts for the bikes. “We go to order parts, and they’re not available,” he said. “They are already out of stock on a lot of wheels until next year.” EVOLUTION OF THE FAT Charlie Tarver, owner of The Hub of Aspen bike shop, has been riding bikes in the snow for a long time. In fact, he nearly died in the winter of 2002 when he crashed trying to set the world speed record on a specially designed bike at Snowmass Ski Area. He reached 98.65 miles per hour before the accident. Even before that, though, Tarver and his friends would weld mountain bike rims together and run two tubes beneath extra-fat tires, using the rigs to ride up Independence Pass or over Vail Pass during the winter. In 1987, Tarver used a similar setup

to compete in the Iditabike Race in Alaska, a 274-mile winter ride that some say marked the birth of the modern fat-bike movement. These days, Tarver’s shop seems to be the only one in Aspen without plans to stock up on fat bikes. He carries the Surly Pugsley but has only one in stock, and he says the bulk of his revenue comes from selling highend road bikes year-round. Perhaps it’s not surprising, then, that Tarver doesn’t ride fat bikes himself — he’s content with an ordinary mountain bike to get around town, and he still likes skiing. (The backside of the “Open” sign on his shop door says “Gone Skiing — You Should Too!”) Still, even Tarver sees the appeal of this emerging sport. “Just like fat skis are better for powder than narrow skis, fat tires are better for snow than narrow ones,” he said. “It’s going to be more fun.”

“PEOPLE HAVE BEEN RIDING THESE BIKES FOR A LONG TIME,” SAID RANDY TUGGLE, A DEDICATED FAT BIKER WHO SELLS THE BIKES AT THE GEAR EXCHANGE IN GLENWOOD SPRINGS. “BUT NO ONE REALLY TOOK NOTICE, AND OVER THE LAST TWO YEARS IT’S JUST EXPLODED. THESE BIKES ARE NO LONGER A NOVELTY — IT’S A TRUE FUNCTIONAL, FUN, FAST RACE BIKE.”

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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

PLAYING MUSIC AND MAKING MUSIC there’s no question that Gil Shaham has deep feelings for

Schubert and Bach. The violinist, with guitarist Göran Söllscher, made an entire album, 2003’s “Schubert for Two,” devoted to duet works by the former. And of the latter, Shaham told the Toronto newspaper the National Post last year that he held off from playing Bach for a long while till he felt he could play the music properly. “I was worried about doing it justice,” Shaham said. “But over the past five years, I’ve started playing it, and there’s no greater joy, nothing more inspiring and uplifting.”

THE INFO Gil Shaham with Akira Eguchi

THAT MEANS the first half of the concert on Feb. 5 should be quite meaningful. Shaham and pianist Akira Eguchi will play Schubert’s Sonatina No. 2 in A minor, and Shaham will follow with Bach’s Partita No. 3 for Unaccompanied Wheeler Opera House Violin in E major, to open the performance at the Wheeler Opera House. But in terms of personal significance, it is likely that the first half will be something of a warm-up. The second half of the program features three pieces ABOVE: Violinist Gil Shaham that have been commissioned by Shaham in the past few years: Julian Milone’s “in the country of lost things... will perform Feb. 5 ,” Avner Dorman’s “Niggunim, and William Bolcom’s Suite No. 2 for Solo Violin, which will have its world at the Wheeler Opera House in the opening premiere in Aspen. concert of the Aspen Shaham estimates that he has commissioned approximately a dozen works from composers over his career, Music Festival’s Winter Music series. and playing such pieces always heightens the music-making experience. “It really is like being around for a birth,” the 41-year-old said from his home on New York’s Upper West Side. “It’s exciting to see people’s reactions. And I learn so much from these great musicians.” With this latest batch of commissioned works, Shaham has been pleased with the birthing process. “What I love about these three pieces is, they all came to life so organically,” he said. “I love the composers Feb. 5 at 6:30 p.m.

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who wrote the pieces, and there was something so natural about how they came about. I feel very connected to them, like they’re part of my family.” The Bolcom piece originated out of Shaham’s association with Music Accord, a collective of American music organizations. After Shaham did a recital tour last year for Music Accord, he was approached by the group to participate in its commissioning program. “They asked who would be my dream composer. Bill Bolcom — he’s a living legend,” said Shaham, who had met Bolcom a few years earlier, when he performed the composer’s violin concerto in Toronto. In the creation of the ninemovement suite, Shaham seems to have demonstrated great deference to Bolcom, a 74-year-old whose prizes include a Pulitzer, the National Medal of Arts, and Musical America’s 2007 Composer of the Year. “He’s a master, and I just followed,” Shaham said. “Bill called me up and said, ‘It’s come along pretty quickly. I’m almost done, and I want you to see it.’ I might have said, ‘This passage works a little better this way.’ The writing was so beautiful, so fluid. It explores so much, so many different techniques for the violin.” Among the influences is Joe Venuti, the late jazz violinist who was a favorite of Bolcom’s. “He often talks about Venuti, an incredible fiddler,” Shaham said. “Like in Bill’s other violin works, there’s a lot of that influence in it. It’s something very sunny and cheery.” When Shaham played a recital in London’s Wigmore Hall two seasons ago, the venue agreed to commission a piece as part of its extensive new-music program. Wigmore paired Shaham with Julian Milone, the second violinist of London’s Philharmonia Orchestra. “He’s a mild-mannered violinist by day, and this superhero composerarranger by night,” Shaham said, marveling at Milone’s output. “These guys play three services — rehearsal, concert, recording — each day and travel a lot.” Shaham had a little more say in this collaboration. Milone floated the idea

PHOTO BY ALEX IRVIN


by STEWART OKSENHORN

WINTER MUSIC of basing a piece on “In the Country of Last Things,” a 1987 novel by Paul Auster. “Julian said, ‘Why don’t you have a read? Because I’ve got something in mind, this author I love, this particular novel,’” Shaham said. “I read the book, and it’s beautiful. A dystopian book, a city that’s been ravaged by war, the aftermath is unthinkably horrific, and this woman travels to the city to find her brother, a journalist. There’s something very bleak to it, a nostalgic atmosphere, mystical. “Then Julian sent the score a few weeks later, and I was amazed how he captured that feeling. He translated the world of words into the world of notes.” The violin sonata “Niggunim,” by Israeli composer Avner Dorman, was co-commissioned two seasons ago by Shaham; his sister Orli, a noted pianist; and New York’s 92nd Street Y, a prominent cultural center on New York’s Upper East Side. The Shahams recorded the piece recently for an album of duets to be released this spring, titled “Hebrew Melodies.” “This notion of what we call world music — at the end of the 19th century, composers were getting into this musical science, in the way the Greeks studied Norway or Glinka studied Russian music,” Shaham said. Part of this wave was a group of Russian and Eastern European composers who looked for inspiration to Jewish music, a practice that continued through the 20th century. The Shahams, interested in making an album with a Hebrew theme, wanted a new work to go with pieces by Joseph Achron, the late Russianborn composer whose sound revolved around Jewish themes, and by Swissborn Ernest Bloch, as well as and John Williams’ score for “Schindler’s List,” which originally featured violinist Itzhak Perlman. “So we called Avner Dorman, and he really delivered,” Shaham said. “It’s a tour-de-force piece. I love it. Audiences love it. It’s masterly put together.” Shaham said “Niggunim” — a Hebrew word for melody — is based

PHOTO BY STEWART OKSENHORN

on Jewish folklore about the lost tribes of Israel. The first movement is based on Libyan music, the second is built around a Georgian wedding dance, and the third is inspired by a Macedonian dance rhythm. Another commissioned piece is on the horizon for Shaham. Bright Sheng, a Chinese-American composer, is at work on a violin concerto co-commissioned by the Detroit Symphony, the Singapore Symphony and the BBC Symphony. THE BOLCOM PIECE is not all that will be new when Shaham performs in Aspen. Though Shaham has an intimate relationship with the town — he studied at the Aspen Music School for years while his late father, Jacob, an astrophysicist, attended the Aspen Center for Physics — he can’t recall the last time he played at the Wheeler Opera House. “I think I played in a master class when I was a student. Maybe not since then,” said Shaham, a regular soloist at the Aspen Music Festival over the past two-plus decades. With Harris Hall being used this year by Aspen Country Day School, the Aspen Music Festival’s Winter Music series has had to relocate. Shaham isn’t worried about playing in a venue that isn’t often used for chamber music. “We play in the moment, so the venue affects the audience, the performers,” said Shaham, who earned the Avery Fisher Career Grant in 1990 while still a teenager and has appeared as a soloist with most of the world’s leading orchestras. “Every place has its own sound. That’s part of the fun of a live performance — all of the ingredients come together, hopefully.” Among the more familiar components is the presence of Japanese-born pianist Akira Eguchi. Since meeting in Aspen more than 20 years ago, the two have remained close — collaborating on music and calling each other neighbors in New York. “He used to live across the street from me. I could see his window across 70th Street,” Shaham said.

Also in the Aspen Music Festival’s Winter Music series (all at 6:30 p.m. at the Wheeler Opera House):

TAKÁCS QUARTET (FEB. 28) Founded in Hungary at the Music Academy in Budapest in 1975, the Takács Quartet relocated to the U.S. — specifically, to Boulder, where it became quartet-inresidence at the University of Colorado — in 1983. It has remained based in Boulder, but its career has brought it to international prominence. Its 2003 recordings of Beethoven Quartets earned a Grammy Award, and its members were recently named associate artists at Wigmore Hall in London. The quartet, which appears regularly at the Aspen Music Festival, will play a program of Hayden, Britten and Brahms.

CONRAD TAO (MARCH 16) Since first coming to Aspen in 2004 as a 10-year-old violin student, Conrad Tao has switched instruments (he now mostly plays piano), become a composer (with the Hong Kong Philharmonic and Dallas Symphony commissioning pieces) and been recognized outside the music world for his influence (Forbes magazine named him to its list of “30 Under 30” young people having an impact on the world). Last summer, Tao was one of three pianists featured in the Aspen Music Festival’s season-opening concert, a Gershwin tribute in which Tao excelled. The Illinois native will spotlight his own composition, “vestiges,” along with works by Bach, Ravel, Chopin, Prokofiev and Meredith Monk.

Pianist Conrad Tao will perform in March in the Aspen Music Festival’s Winter Music series.

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VOYAGES

DESTINATION | UTAH

A GLORIOUS GULCH

TOP: Inviting yet foreboding, the depths of the gorge beckon with the promise of trials and adventure. BOTTOM: Like the edge of night, a storm cloud sweeps over desert mountains and canyon rims bringing thunder, lightning and drenching rain.

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SCOTT FROM CHICAGO had no idea what was in store for him. The next five days would demand everything he had, and then some. For Randy and me, desert veterans, the trip was demanding. For Scott it was off the charts. The trip rested on a set of maps that directed us through a desert wilderness in Utah that only Ed Abbey could have conjured. These maps were annotated by an Outward Bound instructor who happened to be Randy’s daughter. The arrows, dashes and scribbles were hieroglyphics leading us to the hidden tomb of desert spirits. We camped by the car that night under a blood red sunset. The next morning we set off cross-country on no discernible trail across the piñon/ juniper mesa. Randy seemed to know the way, though he hadn’t been there in 40 years. Soon we were dropping down slickrock ramps toward a rim of red sandstone above a vacuum of empty space, the kind that pulls at you if you stand too close to the edge. Rock cairns directed us to an improbable route down a steep wall of loose boulders. Randy disappeared over the edge and we followed. An hour and a half of intense scrambling later we stood above a narrow chasm where a gushing creek flowed with a laughing sound. Our camp beneath leafy cottonwoods on a sandy bank was about as idyllic as it gets. We gave ourselves three days to make a loop up one side canyon and down another. Starting early, we found a faint trail with no footprints other than mountain sheep. Soon we were contouring across steep slopes the color of rust and congested with cactus and yucca spears. Below was a deep, dark gorge — the alluring void. We dropped into this gorge above a magnificent 500-foot pour-over, then thrashed our way up through willows and briars as thick as the hairs on a bear. Scott kept his sense of humor, though his scratched legs looked like they had been mauled by a griz. Randy was in his element, pushing us on until dusk when we camped near fresh mountain lion tracks. The next morning we climbed out the side canyon and paced quickly over the rolling mesa on a compass bearing to the next side canyon. In an opening in the trees the ground was strewn with large pottery pieces, among which was a purplish arrowhead. Soon after,

PHOTOS BY PAUL ANDERSEN


by PAUL ANDERSEN

ABOVE: Desert rain gives the canyon slickrock a silver sheen as the sun struggles through broken clouds. RIGHT: Life in the desert is both elusive and electrifying as seen in a tarantula the size of one’s hand.

we found an arm of the side canyon and discovered fixed webbing on a gnarled piñon through which Randy looped his rope. Scott was all focus as he was belayed into a narrow defile. Several belays later we landed at the canyon floor where a spring gushed ice water. We gulped it thirstily and filled our bottles for an ensuing thrash through thick brush and a forest of poison ivy. Beneath a rock overhang we crawled next to bear tracks imprinted in the mud. We camped on a sand bar at the bottom of the canyon and were serenaded by canyon wrens as the sun’s rays swept up the canyon wall. That night the sky displayed the brightest stars I have ever seen. They glinted silver and smeared the heavenly dome with infinite shimmering pinpoints. We reached the main branch of the canyon after breakfast and navigated across rock ledges above the stream where it spread wide and shallow over a slickrock floor. Our last camp was the same as our first and we ate

heartily of the food cache we had left hanging from a tree. That night rain pattered on our tents and lightning flashed in the darkness. Deep peels of thunder seemed to shake the bedrock. In the morning we hiked out in the rain. Climbing the steep boulder field to the rim I nearly stepped on a tarantula the size of my hand. Rain came in sheets mixed with snow, creating a reflective sheen on the slickrock and flowing through every channel and pour-over. Desert plants suddenly turned green and the canyon became the most beautiful garden on earth. We paused beneath an overhang to cook pancakes over a crackling fire. A series of pictographs decorated the rock walls where others, too, had taken shelter. Scott said nothing as we complimented him for doing what no Midwesterner had the sanity to do. He smiled, threw on his pack, and led the way back across this enchanted landscape.

ABOVE: A stream spreads shallow across the canyon floor where sheer walls rise toward a gap of blue sky. LEFT: Ancient remnants of a past culture are found at a pit house on a mesa top scattered with pottery pieces and stone tools.

Paul Andersen is a freelance writer and columnist for the Aspen Times.

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AROUNDASPEN

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES

ASPEN COMMUNITY FOUNDATION THE ASPEN COMMUNITY Foundation (ACF) provides funds for all kinds of programs in the Roaring Fork Valley. Just to name a few that receive grants are Aspen Santa Fe Ballet, Colorado Rocky Mountain School, Aspen Music Festival, Colorado Mountain College, The Buddy Program, MARY Anderson Ranch, ESHBAUGH HAYES Aspen Art Museum, Lift Up, Rocky Montain PBS, Response, Pathfinders, Valley View Hospital Foundation and Wilderness Workshop. The newest project of ACF is the Cradle to Career initiative, which is headed by former Aspen Mayor John Bennett. It is an effort to increase educational and enrichment opportunities for all children from Aspen to Parachute and to further ensure that all high school students are well-equipped to enter college or career training. Recently, ACF and Don Wilson, the new owner of the Hotel Jerome, held a gala evening at the Jerome to announce the new program and to welcome many people to the newly remodeled Jerome. Undercurrent...Walk carefully on the ice. The most dangerous sidewalk in Aspen is the last pitch on the path between Clark’s Market and the Post Office.

GALA

Eric Chase, Barbara Gold, Tom VanStraaten and John Bennett, who is the head of the Cradle to Career initiative begun by the Aspen Community Foundation.

GALA

Richard Goodwin with his granddaughter, Megan Edelman.

GALA

Bruce Etkin, Colleen Delia and Daryl Cramer.

GALA

Don Wilson, owner of the Hotel Jerome of Auberge Resorts, Amy Margerum, of the Aspen Institute, and Tony DiLucia, manager of the Jerome.

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GALA

Ursula Gregg and Ron and Sue Hopkinson. P H OTO S B Y M A RY E S H BA U G H H AY E S


GALA

Tony and Deb Clancy.

GALA

Donna DeIanni and Peter Rispoli.

GALA

Pamela Paresky and Rachel Hahn.

GALA

Jane and Allen Grossman and Barbara Pitchford.

GALA

Michael and Stephanie Nardall.

GALA

Karen Lord, of the Aspen Community Foundation, and Deborah Brown.

GALA

Marc Breslin, Cindy Kahn and Steve Marker.

GALA

Diane and Tony Rutgers.

GALA

Camilla Bradley, Jeff Gorsuch and Colorado Sen. Gail Schwartz.

GALA

GALA

Jill Tasker and Charleyan Porter.

Devon and Meghan Nemechek.

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CURRENTEVENTS LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY Magician Doc Eason 6 - 10 p.m., The Artisan at the Stonebridge Inn, 300 Carriage Way, Snowmass Village. Featuring a four-time Academy of Magical Arts award winner, including two consecutive years as the Closeup magician of the year, the W.C. Fields magic bartender of the year and lecturer of the year. Call 970-923-7074. Vid Weatherwax solo piano, 4 - 7 p.m., 8K Lounge, Viceroy Snowmass, Contemporary and New Orleans jazz, Latin, R&B and blues. Call 970-923-8000. Axis LP 3 - 6 p.m., Base Camp, Snowmass Village. Après-ski live music. Call 719-685-4410.

JANUARY 31 - FEBRUARY 6, 2013

The Pharcyde with DJ Low Key and DJ Cavem 10 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St. Listening to “Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde” two full decades after its release, its sense of timeliness is unmistakable. Every song on the album inverts a hoary hip-hop cliche. With classics like “Oh Shit,” “Otha Fish,” “Ya Mama” and hit single “Passing Me By,” it is not surprising that it shipped more than a million units and garnered comparisons to De La Soul and A Tribe Called Quest. Call 970-544-9800. NorthYSur 4 - 7 p.m., Hotel Jerome, Aspen. Blending sounds of North and South American jazz and bossa nova. Call 970-222-7752. SATURDAY Axis LP 6:30 - 9:30 p.m., Little Mammoth Steakhouse, upper Snowmass Village. Live music. Call 970-923-8892.

Boo Coo 7 - 11 p.m., St. Regis Resort, Aspen.

Vid Weatherwax and Roberta Lewis 4 - 7 p.m., 8K Lounge, Viceroy Snowmass. Contemporary jazz. Call 970-923-8000. SUNDAY Smokin’ Joe and Zoe 7 - 9:30 p.m., Victoria’s, 510 E Durant Ave., Aspen. Versatile music duo performs. Call 970-927-6758. Vid Weatherwax solo piano 4 - 7 p.m., 8K Lounge, Viceroy Snowmass. Rhythm and blues/ variety. Call 970-923-8000. MONDAY Brother Ali with The ReMINDers 9:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Brother Ali has no reservations in saying that he’s “trying to be one of the greatest of all time” (on the Molemen track “Life Sentence”). Inspired by golden-era legends like KRS-One and Rakim,

No. 2 in A minor and Bach’s Partita No. 3 for Unaccompanied Violin. Call 970-925-9042. Tuesday Night Music 9 p.m., the Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Mark Yaeger offers an inspiring acoustic set. Call 970-366-0939. WEDNESDAY Damian Smith and Terry Bannon 4 - 7 p.m., New Belgium Ranger Station, slopeside on the Snowmass Village Mall. Live music for aprèsski. Call 970-236-6277. MTHDS perform The Beastie Boys with opening set featuring MTHDS originals 10 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Colorado rock/ hip-hop group playing its originals and Beastie Boys favorites. Call 970-544-9800. Vid Weatherwax solo piano 4 - 7 p.m., 8K Lounge, Viceroy Snowmass. Contemporary and New Orleans jazz, Latin, R&B and blues. Call 970-923-8000.

THE ARTS THURSDAY Young Curators of the Roaring Fork: “Plugged In” 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. The 2012-13 class of young curators chose “Plugged In” as the theme and title of their exhibition, asking artists in their schools to create works of art in any media that shed light on the experience of being a “plugged in” generation. The exhibit explores the many ways we navigate the complex network of information and technology that has, thus far, defined the 21st century. Call 970-925-8050. The Met: Live in HD 5:30 - 11 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. Featuring Donizetti’s “L’Elisir d’ Amore,” featuring Anna Netrebko, presented by the Aspen Music Festival and School. Call 970-920-5770. Film: “Soul Food Junkies” 5:30 - 6:30 p.m., Pitkin County Library, Aspen. Filmmaker Byron Hurt explores the history and social significance of soul food and its effect on African-American health, good and bad. The documentary also investigates the dark side of the food industry and the growing “food justice” movement. Healthy snacks served starting at 5:15 p.m. Call 970-429-1900. FRIDAY Young Curators of the Roaring Fork: “Plugged In” 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. The 2012-13 class of young curators chose “Plugged In” as the theme and title of their exhibition, asking artists in their schools to create works of art in any media that shed light on the experience of being a “plugged in” generation. The exhibit explores the many ways we navigate the complex network of information and technology that has, thus far, defined the 21st century. Call 970-925-8050.

HEAR The Portland Cello Project will make its local debut Feb. 2 at PAC3 in Carbondale. Dynamic, eclectic music duo featuring Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Call 970-927-6758. Karaoke 10 p.m., Red Onion. Karaoke fun. Call 925-9955. FRIDAY Damian Smith Trio 3 - 6 p.m., Base Camp Bar and Grill, Snowmass Village. Free live music for après-ski. Call 970-923-6000. Boo Coo 7 - 11 p.m., St. Regis Resort, Aspen. Dynamic, eclectic music duo featuring Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Call 970-927-6758. Joe Lovano — Us Five 8 - 10 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. Hailed by the New York Times as “one of the greatest musicians in jazz history,” Grammy Award-winning saxophonist Joe Lovano has distinguished himself for some three decades as a prescient and pathfinding force in the arena of creative music. He has earned praise not just for his compelling saxophone tone and improvisational ability but also for his forward-thinking presentation of new musical ideas and ensemble concepts. Call 970-920-5770. Rocky Mountain Rob, “No Strings Attached” 6 - 8 p.m., The Edge, Timberline Condominiums, 690 Carrige Way, Snowmass Village. Solo entertainment. Early acoustic blues and folk on harmonica. Call 970-923-4000.

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Boo Coo 7 - 11 p.m., St. Regis Resort, Aspen. Dynamic, eclectic music duo featuring Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Call 970-927-6758.

this undisputed master of ceremonies began rapping as a means of survival. Call 970-544-9800.

Haden Gregg and Tom Hills 2:30 - 5:30 p.m., Bumps Restaurant at Buttermilk. Acoustic favorites. Call 970-920-0991.

Open Mic Night 9:30 p.m., the Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Check out what Aspen’s songwriters and musicians have to offer. Call 970-925-9955.

Live music with Damian Smith and Terry Bannon 4 - 7 p.m., The Wildwood Bar in The Wildwood Hotel, 40 Elbert Lane, Snowmass Village. Live music for après-ski. Call 970-9238200. The Darkness with Hell or Highwater 9 - 11:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. The rise, fall and rise again of The Darkness contains all the ingredients of a classic rock opera. The basics are a matter of public record: unfashionable good-time hard-rock band from Lowestoft, England, slogs its way around the Camden pub circuit, builds a word-of-mouth following that can fill theaters without a record deal and then rockets to world stardom, selling more than 3 million copies of its debut album worldwide, winning three Brit awards and becoming one of the biggest British rock bands of the “Noughties.” Call 970-544-9800. Two Old Hippies Presents: Trenton Allan 4 - 6 p.m., 111 S. Monarch St., Aspen. An intimate showcase with singer-songwriter Trenton Allan. Call 970-925-7492.

Janu ar y 31, - Febr u ar y 6, 2013

TUESDAY Magician Doc Eason 6 - 10 p.m., The Artisan at the Stonebridge Inn, 300 Carriage Way, Snowmass Village. Featuring a four-time Academy of Magical Arts award winner, including two consecutive years as the Closeup magician of the year, the W.C. Fields magic bartender of the year and lecturer of the year. Call 970-923-7074. Retro Tuesday 9 p.m., Syzygy restaurant, 308 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen. Music and dancing to the hits of the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s. Admission is $5 for the first 20 people in the door, then $10. Call 310-606-1305. CD release and live show 9 p.m., the Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. CD release party featuring a full live show. Drink specials, live music. Call 720-878-5042. Winter music: Gil Shaham with Akira Eguchi 6:30 - 8 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. Presented by the Aspen Music Festival and School. Program includes Schubert’s Sonatina

Winter Words: Kevin Powers in conversation with Tobias Wolff 6 - 7:30 p.m., Paepcke Auditorium, Aspen Meadows Resort. Writer Tobias Wolff joins best-selling novelist Kevin Powers on stage in a one-of-a-kind event that explores the tragedies and triumphs of war portrayed through fiction. Both veterans, Wolff and Powers will share their firsthand accounts of serving in two of America’s most controversial wars, Vietnam and Iraq, and how those experiences inspired them to craft some of the most highly acclaimed war writing of our time. Call 970-925-3122. SATURDAY Winter Youth Audition Workshop 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., Red Brick Studio, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. For ages 10 to 14, this Theatre Aspen School workshop will teach proper cold-reading skills and voice technique as well as audition etiquette. Get personalized feedback on your song/monologue/cold reading audition. Taught by professional actor Rodney Lizcano and voice teacher/coach Tamela Kenning. A brown-bag lunch session with parents features a mock audition and secrets in preparing their children to audition successfully. $85. Register online at www.theatreaspen.org/Workshops.html. Call 970-925-9313. Young Curators of the Roaring Fork: “Plugged In” 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. The 2012-13 class of young curators chose “Plugged In” as the theme and title of their exhibition, asking artists in their schools to create works of art in any media that

P H OTO B Y TA R I N A W E S T L U N D


edited by JEANNE McGOVERN

shed light on the experience of being a “plugged in” generation. The exhibit explores the many ways we navigate the complex network of information and technology that has, thus far, defined the 21st century. Call 970-925-8050. SUNDAY Young Curators of the Roaring Fork: “Plugged In” 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. The 2012-13 class of young curators chose “Plugged In” as the theme and title of their exhibition, asking artists in their schools to create works of art in any media that shed light on the experience of being a “plugged in” generation. The exhibit explores the many ways we navigate the complex network of information and technology that has, thus far, defined the 21st century. Call 970-925-8050. MONDAY Monday Docs: “The Central Park Five” 7:30 - 9 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. The Central Park jogger crime story is legend. This brutal 1989 case seemed to epitomize everything that was wrong with America: incendiary racial tension, skyrocketing crime, tabloid media. Sarah Burns, with husband David McMahon and father Ken Burns, compellingly recounts a true crime tale of an egregious miscarriage of justice. Truth prevails but not before innocent lives are forever altered. (119 minutes) Call 970-920-5770. TUESDAY Aspen Art Museum New Media Program 6 - 7 p.m., 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. The museum unveils a new-media presentation program. This first event is a double feature of two compelling artist’s projects, each of which utilized contemporary technology at the time of its creation. The evening will start with Michael Smith’s “The USA FreeStyle Disco Championships” (1979) and will be followed by Frances Stark’s “My Best Thing” (2011, 99 minutes). Call 970-925-8050. WEDNESDAY Rock Docs: “Big Easy Express” 7:30 - 9 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. Indie heroes Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, Old Crow Medicine Show and Mumford & Sons climbed aboard a vintage train in California, setting out for New Orleans on a “tour of dreams.” The resulting film from this journey is part road movie and part concert film. “Big Easy Express” bears witness to the birth of a new musical era. Call 970-920-5770. Argentine tango 6:30 - 10 p.m., Red Brick Dance Studio, Aspen. Fundamentals of tango salon from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and Practilonga (guided practice and social dancing) from 8 to 10 p.m. Weekly through Feb. 13. Call 970-948-3963.

THE COMMUNITY THURSDAY Reintroduction for Conservation: Experiences from Colorado’s Lynx Reintroduction 7:30 - 9 p.m., Aspen Center for Environmental Studies, 100 Puppy Smith St. Join ACES and Wilderness Workshop for Naturalist Nights, a free winter speaker series. The guest speaker is Tanya Shenk, who was responsible for the design and implementation of research to support the conservation of Canada lynx in Colorado. She will discuss her experience from her work with lynx in the state. Call 970-963-3977. Senior Skiing for the Season 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., Highlands, Snowmass and Aspen Mountain. Local and visiting seniors over age 60. Monday and Wednesday: Highlands. Thursday: Snowmass. Saturday: Aspen. Call 970-920-5432. Hotel Jerome History Tour 1:30 p.m., Hotel Jerome, 330 E. Main St., Aspen. Aspen’s iconic Hotel Jerome has been at the center of Aspen life since the doors opened in 1889, and it underwent an extensive remodeling in the fall of 2012. $15 per adult and $12 per senior; children 12 and younger are free. Offered by the Aspen Historical Society. Call 970-925-3721. FRIDAY Aspen’s Past to Present 1 - 2:30 p.m., downtown Aspen. Tour Aspen’s historic downtown, filled with indian legend, mining folklore and local tales. $20 per person. Reservations required; call or visit www.aspenwalkingtours.com. Call 970-948-4349. Baby sign language class 10:30 - 11 a.m., Pitkin

PHOTO BY MARJORIE COTERA

County Library, Aspen. Parents and their babies will learn how to communicate with and learn from each other using a variety of simple signs. Chelsea Bridges will teach this free, six-week course through Feb. 22. For babies younger than 24 months and their caregivers. Take the whole course or individual classes. Sign up in the children’s room, or call 970-429-1900. Class size is limited. Moms Group (and Dads Too) 9 - 11 a.m., Snowmass Chapel, 5307 Owl Creek Road, Snowmass Village. Group meets the first and third Fridays of each month. First Fridays include mom and tot playgroup, plus baby story hour with the Pitkin County Library. Third Fridays include guest speakers, free child care, coffee, crafts and conversation. Call 970-300-1213. Culinary Tour of Aspen 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., meet at the Aspen Emporium and Flying Circus on Main Street. Gourmet Girl on the Go offers Friday lunchtime tours, with tastings and behind-thescenes access to chefs and artisans. Tours are $75 to $85 per person, inclusive. Reservations are required; tours require a minimum of two guests. Call 970-205-9328.

Round, mid-mountain at Highlands. A tour with an Aspen Historical Society guide, with an emphasis on Highlands’ “maverick” reputation, the ‘70s ski culture and the birth of freestyle skiing. Call 970-925-3721. Senior Skiing for the Season 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., Highlands, Snowmass and Aspen Mountain. Local and visiting seniors over age 60. Monday and Wednesday: Highlands. Thursday: Snowmass. Saturday: Aspen. Call 970-920-5432. TUESDAY Baby Storytime 10:30 - 11 a.m., Pitkin County Library, Aspen. A lap-sit storytime for babies of up to 24 months. Songs, bounces, rocks, fingerplays, books and more. About 20 minutes, with stay-and-play afterward. Call 970-429-1900.

Ski History Tour: Snowmass 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., meet at ambassador hut at top of Village Express/Sam’s Knob. Hosted by the Aspen Historical Society, a guided ski tour with an emphasis on the Ute people, valley ranching and the Snowmastodon dig site. Call 970-925-3721. Time Travel Tuesday: The Modern Ute Journey 5:30 - 7 p.m., Aspen Community Church, 200 E. Bleeker St. The Westernization of Aspen was contingent on the removal of the Ute Indians, and representatives Roland McCook and Sklyer Lomahaftewa will discuss these journeys. McCook is related to Chipeta, who was Chief Ouray’s wife, and he addresses the Uncompahgre expedition to Utah; Lomahaftewa will share his story of returning to Aspen from the Ute reservation in northern Utah. Presented by the Aspen Historical Society. $8. Call 970-925-3721.

Ski History Tour: Aspen Mountain 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., meet at ambassador hut atop mountain. Hosted by the Aspen Historical Society, a guided tour with an emphasis on the mining era and the early days of skiing in Aspen. Call 970-925-3721. AIARE Avalanche Course — Level 1 5 p.m., Aspen Expeditions, 0115 Boomerang Road, Aspen Highlands. This three-day AIAREcertified course emphasizes awareness and avoidance of avalanche terrain and basic decision-making and rescue strategies. The course covers travel techniques, basic rescue procedures and information for traveling in the backcountry, with both classroom and field work. Call 970-925-7625. Senior Symposium: Our Seniors, The Oldest Kids in Town 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., Hotel Jerome, Aspen. The Aspen Valley Foundation will present its Senior Symposium, “Our Seniors: The Oldest Kids in Town,” sponsored by The Louis and Harold Price Foundation and in cooperation with Pitkin County Senior Services. This event is free and open to all seniors, their families and caregivers. The daylong program includes: real demographics and insights about the current senior population here, an update on the progress of the new midvalley Continuing Care Retirement Community and presentations by faculty members of the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, division of geriatric medicine, on cognitive impairment, depression, medications and exercise for seniors. A complimentary continental breakfast, lunch and cocktail reception will be served. RSVP to 970-544-1298. SATURDAY “Aspen’s Dark Side” 7 - 8 p.m., downtown Aspen. True tales from 1879 to today of Aspen’s ghosts, murder and mayhem on an entertaining evening tour. $20 per person. Reservations required; call or visit www.aspenwalkingtours. com. Call 970-948-4349. Senior Skiing for the Season 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., Highlands, Snowmass and Aspen Mountain. Local and visiting seniors over age 60. Monday and Wednesday: Highlands. Thursday: Snowmass. Saturday: Aspen. Call 970-920-5432. SUNDAY Center for Spiritual Living First Sunday Celebration 4:30 - 6 p.m., Aspen Chapel, 77 Meadowood Drive, Aspen. Featuring an inspiring message by Ashley Dwight, music by singer-songwriter Mack Bailey, meditation service by Aspen Deeksha and poetry by Kim Nuzzo of the Aspen Poet Society. Meditation begins at 4:30 p.m. with the celebration service at 5 p.m. A potluck follows. Aspen Center for Spiritual Living is an omni-denominational, global spiritual community. All are welcome. Call 970-319-4518. MONDAY “Aspen’s Past to Present” 1 - 2:30 p.m., downtown Aspen. Tour Aspen’s historic downtown, filled with indian legend, mining folklore and local tales. $20 per person. Reservations required; call or visit www. aspenwalkingtours.com. Call 970-948-4349. Ski History Tour: Aspen Highlands 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., meet at ambassador hut at Merry-Go-

SEE Novelist Kevin Powers will appear in conversation with writer Tobias Wolff on Feb. 1 at Paepcke Auditorium in the opening event of the Aspen Writers’ Foundation’s Winter Words series.

G DO WEEK

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Call Zach to get your ad started!

4&37&34 $00,4 #"35&/%&34

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Studio: Available Today /4 /1 8BML UP %PXO UPXO VUJM %FQPTJU

$P[Z #% #" )PVTF PO IPSTF QSPQFSUZ NP $BMM

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RV sites for rent at River Meadows Mobile Home Park. 970-945-8925 VILLAGE GREEN TOWNHOMES! '1 %8 8 % (SFBU DPNNVOJUZ CFBVUJGVM MBOETDBQFE QMBZ BSFB -BSHF CESNT

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3FOUBMT $PNNFSDJBM 3FUBJM -BOE GPS DPOUSBDUPST ZBSE BDSF * 'SPOUBHF 4JMU $0

Aviation

Hangar Space Available Rifle Airport 4UJMM MPPLJOH GPS MJHIU UXJO TNBMM KFU XJUI QPTTJCMF QBSUOFSTIJQ -POH UFSN FDPOPNJD MPDBM SBUFT $BMM GPS RVPUF

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$300/month. 970-250-2582.

4UPSBHF NJO UP "TQFO FBTZ BDDFTT )XZ TF DVSF

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

37


3FOUBMT 7BDBUJPO 3FTPSU

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Office 135 W. Main, Aspen $600/mo. Call 970-379-3715

# % # " $POEP %VQMFY 5PXOIPV TF 4MFFQT UP 1FUT BMMPXFE XJUI BQQSPWBM /P TNPLJOH QFS OJUF XFEVN!TPQSJT OFU "TQFO *OEFQFOEFODF 1MBDF "TQFO $0 "WBJMBCMF UISPVHI NJOJNVN OJHIUT

Local newspaper Web sites rank ямБrst in terms of the trustworthiness of the advertising. ItтАЩs time to place your ClassiямБed ad in this publication тАУ always in print and online and always a trusted source. Call 866-850-9937 or e-mail classiямБeds@cmnm.org. ASPEN

Commercial Condos for Sale 0OMZ 5ISFF 3FNBJOJOH *O UIF SFOPWBUFE $SBOEBMM #VJMEJOH CMPDLT GSPN UIF (POEPMB TG TU BOE TU UP TG DPOUJHVPVT (SFBU WJFXT HSFBU MPDBUJPO

970-948-0001 Bob Langley Joshua & Co. bob@joshuaco.com

ASPEN

ASPEN

ASPEN

i*O 5PXO (&. XJUI BMM UIF DPNGPSUT PG B MBSHFS TQBDF 4UZMJTIMZ SFNPEFMFE (SFBU GVSOJTIJOHT 1FU GSJFOEMZ

Tory Thomas 970-948-1341 Aspen Snowmass Sotheby's International Realty 5PSZ!UPSZUIPNBT OFU

Ski-In/Ski-out t #VZ PS BMM t 1FSGFDU GPS HVFTUT OBOOZ PS QJMPU t NJOVUFT UP BJSQPSU NJOVUFT UP "TQFO $1,800,000 all 8 Individual suites starting at $190,000 Doug Leibinger 970/379-9045 Aspen Snowmass SothebyтАЩs International Realty Doug.Leibinger@SothebysRealty.com

Top-floor, corner 2 bed/2 bath condo 4QFDUBDVMBS TPVUI GBDJOH WJFXT PG )JHIMBOET BOE #VUUFSNJML 3FNPEFM JODMVEFT HSBOJUF DPVOUFST OFX DBCJOFUSZ BQQMJBODFT DBS HBSBHF 1SJWBUF EFDL (SFBU PQUJPO GPS UIPTF MPPLJOH GPS "TQFO 4DIPPM %JTUSJDU PS JEFBM HFU BXBZ GPS OE IPNFPXOFS $750,000 TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN

The perfect Aspen Pied-a-Terre. $314,000

BASALT

CARBONDALE

CARBONDALE

CARBONDALE

COMMERCIAL - BASALT

Aspen Junction- Mountain Views (SFBU WBMVF GPS NJE WBMMFZ CFESPPN TJOHMF GBNJMZ IPNF .BHOJGJDFOU QBO PSBNJD WJFXT PWFSMPPLJOH UIF &NNB WBMMFZ 3FNPEFMFE LJUDIFO OFX DPVOUFS UPQT DBCJOFUT BOE NPSF 4PVUI GBDJOH XJUI QMFOUZ PG TVO BOE MJHIU $449,000 TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN

Classy, Loft-Style Residence )JQ GJOJTIFT JODMVEJOH DIFSSZ DBCJOFUT TUBJOMFTT BQQMJBODFT SBEJBOU IFBU BJS DPOEJUJPOJOH SPPGUPQ EFDL XJUI IPU UVC BOE 4PQSJT WJFXT " RVJDL XBML UP CVT BOE 3JP (SBOEF 5SBJM 5PUBM DPOWFOJFODF GPS BO "TQFO DPNNVUFS PS TFDPOE IPNFPXOFS $252,000 Nancy Emerson 970.704.3220 Coldwell Banker Mason Morse XXX NBTPONPSTF DPN

Downtown Loft Luxury (SFBU PQQPSUVOJUZ UP PXO B EPXOUPXO MVYVSZ MPGU JO UIF IFBSU PG $BSCPOEBMF POMZ POF CMPDL GSPN .BJO 4USFFU 5IJT UXP CFESPPN UXP CBUI MPGU JODMVEFT WBVMUFE DFJMJOH XJUI 1FMMB XJOEPXT BOE OBUVSBM DIFSSZ IBSEXPPE GMPPST $435,000 Buck Jones 970.319.4803 Coldwell Banker Mason Morse XXX NBTPONPSTF DPN

Grand Old Town Victorian %FMJHIUGVM BUUFOUJPO UP EFUBJM JO UIJT UBTUFGVMMZ SFNPEFMFE GJWF CFESPPN UISFF CBUI IPNF 5IJT UVSO PG UIF DFOUVSZ 7JDUPSJBO JT JO UIF IFBSU PG 0ME 5PXO PO B MBSHF GFODFE MPU &OKPZ MJHIU BOE PQFO TQBDF UPQ PG UIF MJOF BQQMJBODFT BOE IBSEXPPE GMPPST $740,000 Gabriella Sutro 970.379.3880 Coldwell Banker Mason Morse XXX NBTPONPSTF DPN

Downtown Ground Floor Office Space %PXOUPXO HSPVOE MFWFM DPNNFSDJBM PGGJDF TQBDF TR GU OFYU UP 4BYZhT $BGF PO .JEMBOE "WFOVF /FBSCZ TUSFFU QBSLJOH GPPU DFJMJOHT TFBMFE DPODSFUF GMPPST 1SJWBUF SFTUSPPN

SNOWMASS

SNOWMASS VILLAGE

Turn looky-loos into buyers! Showcase your listing here.

16#-*$ /05*$& $0.#*/&% /05*$& 16#-*$"5*0/ $34 f '03&$-0463& 4"-& /0 5P 8IPN *U .BZ $PODFSO 5IJT /PUJDF JT HJWFO XJUI SFHBSE UP UIF GPMMPXJOH EFTDSJCFE %FFE PG 5SVTU 0O /PWFNCFS UIF VOEFSTJHOFE 1VCMJD 5SVTUFF DBVTFE UIF /PUJDF PG &MFDUJPO BOE %F NBOE SFMBUJOH UP UIF %FFE PG 5SVTU EFTDSJCFE CF MPX UP CF SFDPSEFE JO UIF $PVOUZ PG 1JULJO SFDPSET

-BTU 1VCMJDBUJPO /BNF PG 1VCMJDBUJPO 5IF "TQFO 5JNFT 8FFLMZ

Nicely remodeled 1238 sq.ft. CFE CBUI UPXOIPNF X HSBOJUF DPVOUFSUPQT IBSEXPPE GMPPST WBVMUFE DFJMJOHT SPDL TVSSPVOEFE GJSFQMBDF JO VOJU XBTIFS ESZFS BOE MBSHF TPVUI GBDJOH EFDL "GGPSEBCMF )0" GFFT POF EPH JT BMMPXFE GPS PXOFST PS SFOUFST $649,000 Furnished MLS#126061 Sally Shiekman-Miller, ASSIR, TBMMZ!TBMMZTIJFLNBO DPN 970-948-7530

Top of the World - Old Snowmass %JTDPWFS B IJEEFO HFN BUPQ B TQFDUBDV MBS NFTB &OKPZ FYQBOTJWF NPVOUBJO WJFXT 5IJT QSJWBUF BDSF DPNQPVOE GFB UVSFT B MPH BOE TUPOF NBJO SFTJEFODF B EFUBDIFE CFESPPN BQBSUNFOU B DBS HBSBHF BOE B TFQBSBUF BSUJTU TUVEJP $1,345,000 TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate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h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

38

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

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Janu ar y 31, - Febr u ar y 6, 2013

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

41


WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by CATHERINE O’CONNELL on behalf of the ASPEN WRITERS’ FOUNDATION

BOOK REVIEW

‘THE TIGER’S WIFE’ MY FAVORITE BOOKS are those that give a view of another world while cocooned in a blanket of prose, especially if the author writes about that other world with authority. Though Téa Obreht left her native Yugoslavia at the age of 12, she carries enough authority from her former life that she vividly brings this other world to life in her novel, “The Tiger’s Wife.” Set in an unnamed Balkan country in the aftermath of a civil war, the book chronicles the relationship between a young doctor and her grandfather, also a doctor. Natalia Stefanovic is en route to inoculate children at an orphanage on the other side of the new border when she learns from her grandmother that her grandfather has died. Her

by YAAKOV BENDAVID | edited by WILL SHORTZ

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Like some church matters Ancient priests Dr. Moreau’s creator Go over the wall, maybe Fix, as a model plane Gradual decline Prince’s pottery equipment? Firearm company for nearly five centuries Indy entrant Bygone Saudi king City on Utah Lake Cooking meas. Words of certainty Series Lounging robes Hooter New members of society Prepares for action Madras title Soft cheese Dutch city near Arnhem Ten, for openers Manhattan area bordered by Broadway Boobs Certain sorority woman Cat on the prowl Soup kitchen needs 2006 Winter Olympics host Radio wave producer Part of one’s

inheritance 54 Those girls, to Juanita 55 Public ___ 57 Lack of enthusiasm 61 The year 151 62 “Goosebumps” writer 63 Jewelry material 64 Leaves after dinner? 65 Best Actor Tony winner for “Mark Twain Tonight!” 67 Of the blood 70 Pete Seeger’s genre 71 Punch-in-the-gut sounds 72 Have no doubt 73 Mournful rings 75 Put back up, as a blog entry 78 Kind of TV 79 Online health info site 80 Hard cheese 81 In hiding 83 “Doctor Zhivago” role 84 Hails from Rocky Balboa 87 Makes a lap 88 Modern groupmailing tool 89 Some barkers 91 Eve’s counterpart 92 Commonly, once 93 Infatuated with 95 “Yes, Cap’n!” 96 Semisoft cheese 97 Einstein’s “never” 98 Teachers love hearing them 99 Some classical statuary 101 Big name at Indy

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

102 Tumbler 104 Stop proceeding in the maze when you reach the end? 106 Kind of strength 107 Flamenco shout 108 Det. Bonasera on “CSI: NY” 109 Dead Sea Scrolls preservers 110 “The Player” director, 1992 111 What the weary get, in a saying

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Janu ar y 31, - Febr u ar y 6, 2013

grandmother is especially distraught because he died in a remote village and his body has been returned to the city without any of his things, including a well-worn, much-loved copy of “The Jungle Book.” Knowing her grandmother’s belief that the soul of a dead person remains present for only 40 days before moving on, Natalia is determined to travel to the village where her grandfather died to recoup his possessions so that his soul may visit them. Drawing upon the fortitude her grandfather instilled in her, Natalia negotiates her way through a warscarred land, one encumbered by superstition and prejudice, a landscape where a group of gypsies will dig up a vineyard in search of a body whose spirit is causing them

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to fall sick. As we follow Natalia’s journey, we are privy to the story of her grandfather’s life, of his hardscrabble childhood and how a tiger’s wife and a deathless man served to mold him into the man he ultimately became. Around these mystical bones, Obreht fleshes out a story rich in illusions and humanity. A deeply layered book, it is no surprise that “The Tiger’s Wife” earned Obreht the coveted Orange Prize for Fiction, making her, at age 25, the youngest person to ever do so.

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Hawker Polio vaccine developer Good-sized musical group Heartiness Leeway Sugar suffix Dennis Quaid remake of a 1950 film noir Govt.-issued ID

C A T T

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M A R A I U N R B I E I B E T

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O P E R E T T A

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P B E O N B C Y E A V N E G R E T M A I I N C R E A A R L T A L G E Y A Z O N T E T O U T O I L T O F I E L P S E S

L O O S E T E A

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A N T E


A SPEN R EAL E STATE V i l l a s of ASPEN C OMPANY

Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!

ALLIE

ICE

JACKIE

Shlomo Ben-Hamoo & Peggy Scharlin - - • - -  620 East Hyman Ave. 9709202006 www.AspenExperts.com

JIM

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

175 333

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GUIDE YOU

A NEW

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A BAND

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WINTER

2012/2013

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LUCY

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!

www.dogsaspen.com

The Aspen Times Weekly is a lifestyle-oriented, glossy magazine focused on the city’s culture, characters and commentary.

$

NK

WALLY

Wally is a handsome, friendly, two-year-old Australian Cattledog mix male. We are still getting to know him. Turned in because of housing. He needs a knowledgable, responsible owner.

available!

which is only

WINEI

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.

Subscriptions

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OW

BOUDREAUX

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter 101 Animal Shelter Road

$

SN NT IN

SAM

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.

Handsome 6-yearold Pomeranian. He can be a bit cranky around his food, so he will do best in an adult household with a responsible owner.

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206

17 MASS

DERMA

8-year-old male Pug/ Gorgeous Siberian Chihuahua mix Husky female, male. Good with approximately 4 years old. Athletic, with lots other dogs. No kids. Best with owner of good energy, and who is home a lot. affectionate with Has been here a everyone. Would do best in a home with an long time and loves owner knowledgeable his kennel mates but about Huskies.This is a would be very happy in a loving home. very sweet dog!

FREDDY

Beautiful, friendly, 11-year-old 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.

- MLS#124629

Shlo@gmail.com |peggy@scharlin.com

Found wandering loose at the Maroon Bells. An adorable, happy, friendly, twoyear-old Chihuahua/ Dachshund mix.Gets along well with people + other dogs. A bit shy.

2013 Pet Calendars available NOW at the shelter!

Gentle, soft-spoken, 13-year-old Husky 3-year-old Pit Bull mix female. Tall + mix. Gets along well gorgeous. Best with with people + other male dogs. Enjoys dogs. Shy with hikes. Great strangers, but bonds personality + very tightly with people sociable. Loves once she knows them. people. Has been at Has separation the shelter for a long anxiety, so she will do time but would best in a patient, really enjoy a loving knowledgeable home. home with her very own family.

$2,700,000

CLYDE

Sleek, friendly, 9-year-old Husky mix female. She is a retired sled dog looking for a loving home.

14-year-old Brittany Spaniel male. Handsome and sweet. Very friendly with people and good with other dogs. Energetic and loves walks. Turned in due to housing restrictions.

CALI

An exceptionally designed and decorated three bedroom, three and one half bath townhouse that provides a perfect setting with lovely views. This quiet end unit has recently been remodeled, with AC, wide plank hardwood floors, Italian plaster walls, surround sound with iPod docking systems and flat screen TV’s. Just a short walk to all that Aspen has to offer, including restaurants, theater and the Music Tent.

TIMBER

PATCHES

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.

GE 27

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Glamorous Starwood Estate s 0REMIER LOT WITH BREATHTAKING VIEWS FROM THIS ACRE GATED ESTATE s "EAUTIFULLY REMODELED FORMER HOME OF 2UPERT -URDOCH s BEDROOMS BATHS SQ FT s 3PACIOUS MASTER SUITE WITH ADDITIONAL GUEST SUITES PLUS STAFF QUARTERS s -AJESTIC LIVING ROOM WITH STONE lREPLACE s /UTDOOR ENTERTAINING AREAS TENNIS COURT INDOOR POOL AND CAR GARAGE s *UST MINUTES TO DOWNTOWN !SPEN 4URN +EY &URNISHED #AROL $OPKIN \

New Listing

Like No Other in West Aspen! 2ARELY AVAILABLE !SPEN COUNTRY ESTATE BEDROOMS BATHS SQ FT ACRE WITH POOL WATERFALL POND 4RULY A DELIGHT FOR THE SENSES &URNISHED 3USAN (ERSHEY \

Aspen Highlands Townhome

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Ski-In/Ski-Out in The Pines

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