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FOOD MATTERS FEEL THE BURN

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|| A&E INSIDE SCOOP

SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 5, 2016 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

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FIND IT INSIDE

VOYAGES | PAGE 14

autumn

IN ASPEN


WELCOME MAT

INSIDE this EDITION VOLUME 4 F ISSUE NUMBER 92

DEPARTMENTS 04 THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION 07 LEGENDS & LEGACIES 08 WINE INK 10 FOOD MATTERS 11

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

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ASPEN UNTUCKED

14 VOYAGES 21

MOUNTAIN MAYHEM

23 LOCAL CALENDAR 30 CROSSWORD 31

CLOSING ENCOUNTERS

Circulation Maria Wimmer Art Director Afton Pospíšilová Publication Designer Madelyn LyBarger Arts Editor Andrew Travers Contributing Writers Amiee White Beazley Amanda Rae Busch Kelly J. Hayes Barbara Platts Stephen Regenold High Country News Aspen Historical Society

Classified Advertising (970) 925-9937

days in summer, lazy afternoons in spring. But fall, this is when Aspen shines ... literally. In

ON THE COVER

this week’s edition, Aspen Times photographer Anna Stonehouse and some of our favorite

Photo by Matt Hobbs

contributors remind us why autumn is truly the Gold Standard in Aspen.

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Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott

Read the eEdition http://issuu.com/theaspentimes

The seasons in Aspen never fail to disappoint — powder mornings in winter, adrenaline-fueled

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

Editor Jeanne McGovern

Sales Hank Carter Ashton Hewitt Amy Laha David Laughren Max Vadnais Louise Walker Tim Kurnos

18 COVER STORY

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Publisher Samantha Johnston

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HOUSE ON THE LANE

MOUNTAIN VALLEY HOME

ASPEN

ASPEN Impeccably maintained single family one mile from city market.

Sunny and inviting, a great home with an over-sized deck to soak in the big views of Aspen Mountain. Open living creates a home filled with lots of light. Completely re-built in 2010, this four bedroom home is perfect for family and friends. $2,995,000 Web Id: AR145363

Easy bus access. Large lot. Beautiful gardens and trees. Wood fireplace, Vulcan range, Subzero Refrigerator, light and bright interior, great sunny views to Aspen Mountain, spacious redwood deck for grilling and sunsets. Best value in Aspen School District! $2,400,000 Web Id#: AR143315

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CARBONDALE

MISSOURI HEIGHTS Majestic Victorian-style luxury home with endof-the-road privacy. Awe-inspiring panoramic views from Independence Pass to the Flattops. Designed for entertaining with large gourmet kitchen, grand public spaces, theater and sumptuous bedroom suites fitted with exquisite attention to detail. Viking appliances in kitchen, custom lighting throughout by Laura Lee Designs, wet bar and wine room off media room. Six-car garage. $1,665,000 Web Id#: AR142934 Nancy Emerson 970.704.3220 | nemerson@masonmorse.com

Timeless, peaceful, alluring...words that describe the ambiance of this designer created home built around 40 reclaimed doors from Mexico, South America and Morocco and beautiful hand-hewn beams. This 5,872 sq. ft. home captures the essence of true Rocky Mountain living. Brilliant architectural details enhance the way this house lives....casual and inviting. $3,590,000 Web Id#: AR144861 Carol Hood Peterson 970.920.7385 | carol@masonmorse.com

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ASPEN | 970.925.7000 SNOWMASS VILLAGE | 970.923.7700 BASALT | 970.927.3000 CARBONDALE | 970.963.3300 REDSTONE | 970.963.1061 IRONBRIDGE SALES CENTER | 970.384.5021 GLENWOOD SPRINGS | 970.928.9000 FB/ColdwellBankerMasonMorse

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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

by ANDREW TRAVERS

POPULAR MUSIC THE WHEELER Opera

House is launching its On the Rise music series this fall, giving locals a glimpse of up-and-coming acts through the offseason. The three-part series open on Saturday, Oct. 1 with the quirky 19-piece Vaud and the Villians. Part jazz orchestra, part cabaret, the band offers a genre-bending steampunk spectacle of banjos and tubas (and scantily clad dancers). Tickets for the show are $30, while a pass to all three of the On the Rise concerts is $55. “This new series was designed with the locals in mind,” says Wheeler executive director Gena Buhler. “In our discussions with patrons over this past year, we discovered there is a desire for entertainment options in the offseason. It is our hope that the three concerts on the first ‘On the Rise Series’ will meet this need. And this is only the beginning.” The next On the Rise show is gospel, soul and R&B artist Liz Vice, who headlines on Oct. 22. The Austin, Texas-based singer debuted last year with the hit gospel album “There’s a Light.” The series closes with alt-country duo Penny & Sparrow — also from Austin — on Nov. 12. The folk band’s sparse compositions on its latest album, “Let a Lover Drown You,” drew acclaim from NPR and elsewhere earlier this year, Vaud and Villians are scheduled to hit the stage at 7:30 p.m. Tickets and On the Rise passes are available at the Wheeler opera House box office and www.aspenshowtix.com.

Vaud and the Villians will open the Wheeler Opera House’s new On the Rise series on Saturday, Oct. 1.

CURRENTEVENTS THEATER

Blues band The Record Company will perform at Belly Up Aspen on Friday, Sept. 30.

Thunder River Theatre Company’s “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” opens on Sept. 30 and runs through Oct. 15 in Carbondale.

THUNDER RIVER THEATRE COMPANY begins its 2016-17 season — and its new era under artistic director Corey Seymour — with the classic horror drama of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” The production stars Thunder River regular Owen O’Farrell and Franz Alderfer leading a cast of six in a play based on the Robert Louis Stevenson split personality thriller. Opening Sept. 30, the show runs through early Halloween season and closes Oct. 15. Tickets are available at www.thunderrivertheatre.com.

POPULAR MUSIC THE MUCH BUZZED ABOUT blues band The Record Company will make its local debut on Friday, Sept. 30 at Belly Up. The Los Angeles-based rock band has been hailed as an heir to the John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters, giving the form a full-blast full-band treatment. Rolling Stone earlier this year named the band among its “10 Artists You Need to Know.” The show is scheduled to begin at 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $15, available at the Belly Up box office and www.bellyupaspen.com.

COMPLETE LOCAL LISTINGS ON PAGE 23 4

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COURTESY PHOTOS


BRIAN HAZEN

Presents...

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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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Weekend Brunch

SAT. & SUN. FROM 9AM - 3PM

Featuring our Signature Build-Your-Own

Bloody mary bar

Belgian Waffle, Pistachio Crumble, Figs, Stranahan’s Syrup Eggs Benedict, Rosemary Ham, Sriracha-Spiked Hollandaise Ricotta-Lemon Pancakes, Raspberries, Vt. Maple Syrup

SUNDAY AT THE BAR @ 9PM NATURAL TRANSFUSION BONEDALE RHYTHM & GROOVE

– food, music, libations, poetry, storytelling, dance – the atmosphere we

There is a larger theme – gather and come together – celebrate the human

experience – change the dynamic – awaken and foster social change

THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

VOX POP What’s your favorite place to take in the fall colors? ELIZABETH AITKEN : L E E C H L A K E R E S E R VAT I O N , M I N N E S O TA

“Over Independence Pass.”

c r e at e e a c h d a y – w e a r e a l l i n t h i s t o g e t h e r – s p r e a d t h e w o r d 328 E. Hyman Avenue Aspen colo. 970.429.8192 justicesnows.com

Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU! ASHLYNN PELTIER ROBINSON C A S S L A K E , M I N N E S O TA CINDY AND MINDY

Sweet, 7-month-old, female, Chihuahua/ Dachshund mixes who get along well with people and other pets. (Cindy shown here.)

(Galaway shown in photo above right.)

MURPHY + GALAWAY

Sweet, smaller-sized, male, 7-month-old Siberian Husky mixes. Innocent, friendly, but extremely shy due to lack of socialization. Need patient, loving homes in order to slowly loosen up, relax and enjoy themselves.

CATTLE DOG PUPS About 10 weeks old. Two litters. Shy black and whites and more outgoing brown and whites. Six left. Going fast!

SAMSON

Adorable 9-week-old mutt puppy who gets along with everyone. He is probably an Australian Shepherd/ Australian Cattle Dog mix.

IRIE

Six-year-old Australian Cattle Dog mix. Severely uncomfortable with strangers. Happy + relaxed once you have earned her trust, but then becomes protective and possessive of her property. Requires a knowledgable, responsible home.

BALTO

Handsome, friendly, athletic, one-yearold Siberian Husky.

LEAH

A cool, ten-monthold Cattle Dog/ Terrier mix.

MORE KITTENS

Two 20-week-old loving and playful Domestic short-haired kittens.

Our shelter and its non-profit Friends (F.A.A.S.) have neutered over 16,000 dogs + cats with our spay/neuter program!

PEACHY

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206 A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

Very cute, snuggly, strong, energetic, 7-year-old Pit Bull mix. Looks like an oversized Boston Terrier. Incredibly alert + very smart. Great with all people, including children, but best as an only pet. Not great with most other dogs.

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter

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TOM CLARK

MISSY

3-year-old Cattle Dog/Chow mix who came to us with her pups (all adopted) through a rescue organization in New Mexico. Timid with new people but is a very sweet, lovable dog.

SNOWMA SS VILL AGE

“Castle Creek.”

Gentle, 10-year-old, retired sled dog who gets along well with other dogs. She used to be shy with people, but has really come out of her shell. She loves to go on walks with volunteers.

Beautiful, 2-yearold, black and white, long-haired cat . Raised her kittens (all adopted) at the shelter. Loving and maternal.

101 Animal Shelter Road

“Hiking up to Conundrum Springs.”

CHICKEN

OREO

One-year-old, active, spunky peach-colored classic short haired tabby male Gets along greta wihr other cats and OK with dogs, too. Originally from New Orleans.

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SAM

KITTENS

These three, adorable 10-week-old kittens are happy, healthy and ready to be adopted by loving homes.

LAYLEE

Beautiful, 8-year-old Calico who gets along well with everyone, including children. Unfortunately, Laylee peed in her previous home, so she will require a stable, knowledgeable environment.

www.dogsaspen.com

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COMPILED BY ERICA ROBBIE


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

AS GOOD AS GOLD

1948 ASPEN

“ACRES OF GOLD!” declared The Aspen Times on Sept. 23, 1948. “It’s here! Once again Aspen is located in a galaxy of colors that is probably the greatest show on earth — certainly in the United States. The high altitude Aspen are beginning to lose their leaves, leaving the stark, bare gray trunks. Lower the golden color is still intermingled with still green leaves. The scrub oak and other shrubs are very much like the fall colors of the Ozarks in Arkansas, Missouri and eastern Oklahoma. The Aspen Company has been advertising in metropolitan papers that a vacation now in Aspen is the equal or better than one at any other time of the year. We can wholeheartedly endorse these ads for we have personally found that no other season of the year can quite equal the Indian summer in Aspen. On October 9, we will start our fifth year in Aspen and consequently five fall seasons. We can say without equivocation, the fall season cannot be equaled anywhere — gorgeous colors, warm, sunny days, cool, crisp nights, and still the most gorgeous sweet peas that defy frosts and below freezing weather. If it takes a look to believe, we invite you to take your next vacation in the fall — to Aspen.” This photo and more can be found in the Aspen Historical Society archives at aspenhistory.org.

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

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

WINEINK

KEEPING KOSHER

A CALIFORNIA WINEMAKER’S JOURNEY MONDAY, OCT. 3, marks the observance of the first full day of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. Many Jews will celebrate, as they have for centuries, with a glass or two of kosher wine, drinking only those wines that have been made in accordance with Kashrut, the laws that dictate how kosher foods and wines can be made. Fittingly this year, KELLY J. the joyous holiday HAYES coincides with the birth date of a California winemaker who is committed to the production of the world’s finest kosher wines. Jeff Morgan is perhaps best known for the plethora of features and articles he penned as West Coast editor of Wine Spectator in the 1990s. But for the past 14 years, he has devoted himself to making great kosher wines under the Covenant label. Covenant sources grapes from iconic Napa and Sonoma vineyards and then makes wines using “Sabbath observant hands” that meet the strict requirements for the kosher designation. But not only are they kosher, they also are extraordinary California wines reflecting the terroir of vineyards, such as Block 4 of the Rudd Oakville Vineyard and Scopus, high atop Sonoma Mountain. It is a combination of quality sourcing, contemporary winemaking practices and an ancient spiritual tradition that make the wines from Covenant distinct. A SPIRITED JOURNEY

Jeff’s path to his current calling had serendipitous beginnings. “The first piece I ever wrote for the Spectator in 1992 was on kosher wines,” Jeff recalls with irony. “Tom Mathews (now editor of the Wine Spectator) had seen a piece I had written in the New York Times on agriculture. He knew I was working at a Long Island winery…and knew I was Jewish… so he put the three parts together and said ‘here’s your chance kid.’ I didn’t know anything about kosher wines, and I was not a very observant Jew at the time. But I made a few calls, and the story came out as a five-page spread. Just in time for

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Passover,” he says with a chuckle. That led to an eight-year stint in San Francisco with the Spectator where he profiled the growth of Napa cult wines and the emergence of star winemakers, all while immersing himself in the industry. Now, nearly a quarter century later, Jeff is in partnership with noted Napa wine, food and spirits entrepreneur (and Aspen resident) Leslie Rudd, producing nearly 7,000 cases of 18 different kosher California wines and launching a new venture in Israel to make wines for the American market. “I worked for Les (as he calls his partner) at Dean & DeLuca (the gourmet food and wine shops that Rudd owned) as wine director. We would occasionally have an informal tasting session with some friends who are Jewish and pour some kosher wines,” he recalls. “That’s when I had what I call a ‘chutzpah’ moment. ‘What if we could make the greatest kosher wine in 5,000 years of kosher wine?’” While Rudd would not provide fruit from his esteemed vineyards at the start, he liked the concept enough to invest and a covenant was formed. And in 2003, the first kosher Covenant Cabernet Sauvignon was released. WHAT MAKES KOSHER KOSHER?

On the one hand, the wines that Jeff produces at Covenant are no different from the myriad wines that are made by other high-end California winemakers. He begins by finding the best possible grapes for the label’s single varietal and blended wines. He initiates the same protocols he would use if he were making non-kosher wines, including his personal penchants for native yeasts, no filtration or fining, and a preference for single vineyards. But, to receive the tiny, nearly imperceptible kosher symbol that appears on the back of each bottle, the wines must be made only by individuals who are certified as “Shabbat-observant Jews.” Once the grapes arrive at the winery and the crush process begins, the wine can only be touched by those who have the appropriate designation. This means that Jeff himself cannot

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Rows of Cabernet vines in Block 4 of the Rudd Vineyard are sourced for the Covenant Solomon Cabernet.

touch the wine, the juice, the machinery, even the buttons that control the machinery in the winemaking process. That work is left to a small, specialized and certified team that works with the wines to Jeff ’s exact specifications. “There is great symbolism in making wines this way and I believe that the spiritual nature does have an effect on what is in the bottle,” Jeff says. “This is the oldest continuous winemaking tradition on earth, and it is one that gives the wines something special, something unique.” Jeff ’s quest has taken him beyond the vineyards and wineries to a place of more inspired personal spirituality. “I watched the people who made the wines.

Saw how they prayed. How in touch they were with the process and their religion,” he shares. While he was born Jewish, Jeff was never bar mitzvahed. That will change Nov. 5, when the 63-year-old California winemaker comes of age. L’ Chaim. Kelly J. Hayes lives in the soon-to-be-designated appellation of Old Snowmass with his wife, Linda, and black Lab named Vino. He can be reached at malibukj@aol. com.

UNDER THE INFLUENCE 2014 COVENANT ISRAEL SYRAH This month there was a cover story in the Wine Spectator on the emerging wine scene in Israel. I have not had a chance to taste this Israeli Syrah from the Golan Heights region, but I took the following tasting notes from Jeff Morgan. He has written a few in his time. “2014 Covenant Israel Syrah is full-bodied and ripe, with rich plum, black cherry and blackberry flavors at the fore. The wine also has a spicy, anise-like undercurrent that adds interest. It’s all framed in soft, silky tannins that give good structure but are extremely accessible even in the wine’s youth.”

T H I S PA G E : P H OTO B Y S T E V E N G O L D F I N G E R ; FA C I N G PA G E : C O U RT E S Y P H OTO S


by KELLY J. HAYES

ABOVE: The Cellar Crew of Covenant Winery have “Sabbath Observant Hands.” LEFT: Covenant Winery opened new digs in downtown Berkeley, California three years ago.

VERY VICEROY. VERY FESTIVE. HOLIDAY PARTIES.

The perfect setting for Holiday cocktail parties, dinners or Soirees! 15% off food & Beverage Book before Oct 28th Ask about seasonal savings on nightly rates stays. Contact Noel Chiarelli 970.923.8057 or NoelChiarelli@viceroysnowmass.com to book your Very Viceroy Holiday Party!

SNOWMASS

** For parties of 8 or more between Thanksgiving and December 20th. Viceroy Snowmass, 130 Wood Road, Snowmass Village, CO 81615 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 FOOD MATTERS

by AMANDA RAE

AFTERBURN EFFECT FINDING NOURISHMENT ON THE PLAYA

THE NIGHT the Man burned, I lost my bicycle. It was nearing midnight, and I was standing at the heart of Black Rock City in the Nevada desert, surrounded by thousands of revelers outfitted in colorful, wacky garb topped with fur coats and bedecked with twinkling fluorescent lights. We’d gathered here to watch the spectacular bonfire for AMANDA RAE which Burning Man is named, the main event at the pop-up, experimental “city” that draws some 70,000 freaks and free-spirits annually to participate in a weeklong social experiment in what is often called “conscious community.” The atmosphere is that of a utopian planet in a faraway galaxy: money doesn’t exist, love is abundant, art is wholly interactive (and climbable!), and space — to confront every niggling fear and feisty demon lurking in your psyche while celebrating individual uniqueness and charm — seems endless. Harsh natural elements — scorching daytime temperatures, chilly nights, scant atmospheric moisture, and frequent winds that can send the playa’s powdery, alkaline dust into swirling, disorienting whiteouts — only add to the mystique of the mindwarping adventure. The Burn was over And suddenly I was lost, too. A psychedelic cocktail chased by assorted party favors may have played a role, however, the landmarks that once served as reference points amid the throng were actually moving. Art cars — massive, illuminated sculptures on wheels, usually blaring thumping soundtracks and with passengers dangling precariously from every scalable surface, whether a twostory-tall trailer topped with a welded-steel heart outlined in crimson light or a golf-cart-sized LED screen in the form of Blinky from Pacman — were migrating elsewhere as crowds dispersed from Center Camp. I spun around and around, as if in an art film of my own making, dazzling lights blurring into an eerie kaleidoscope. Panic set in. Not because I was

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separated from my friends — I could return to camp and reunite with them before sunrise, maybe — but because at least 36 hours of festival shenanigans remained, and it would be virtually impossible to navigate Black Rock City’s seven square miles sans bike. Surely, I was doomed. Before I could suffer a total meltdown, a stranger approached me. In sharp contrast to my tweaked-out, distraught appearance (ratty blonde hair matted into fledgling dreads; dusty face streaked with tears), Shlomi was the very picture of tranquility. Dressed in a flowy white linen shirt and matching pants that together resembled a ceremonial frock, he had a shock of wavy gray hair that lent him a windswept, madscientist vibe. In a vaguely foreign accent, he assured me patiently that everything would be OK. “Everyone gets lost at some point,” Shlomi said, his Israeli accent as soothing as the homemade chai he’d pour when we arrived back at his camp. “It’s a rite of passage.” Getting lost to find yourself, he explained, is what Burning Man is all about. I’d learned this already, but I needed it repeated. Since Monday I’d been slingshot through an emotional otherworld that was equally exhilarating and terrifying. I felt sheer, innocent bliss one moment; soul-crushing shame, regret, and inadequacy the next. To call it a rollercoaster would minimize the journey — instead of a predetermined path, this adventure was guaranteed to end at an unknown destination. So there I was, collapsed into a lawn chair at Shlomi’s camp, located just a few “blocks” from my own temporary home. A raging fire cast just enough light for me to greet his two mates, veteran Burners with graying hair and a surplus of stories. We discussed childhood and adulthood; past lives; and obvious topics, such as how these three wise men have witnessed Burning Man mushroom in attendance and physical scope since its humble beginnings as a San Francisco beach gathering 30 years ago. Also, I feasted: on Ritz crackers

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sandwiching Pepper Jack cheese washed down with ice-cold beer, and a mountain of Cajun-spiced peel-and-eat shrimp. We laughed about this; it was Saturday, so to discover pounds of protein left in the RV fridge was nothing short of miraculous. I devoured everything. I felt…restored. At last, Shlomi dropped a bomb. “I’m leaving early tomorrow morning to go back to New York, so why don’t you take my bike,” he offered. “I was going to donate it, anyway.” He disappeared into the dark, returning a few seconds later with a Huffy cruiser wrapped with faux zebra fur, lime green lights, and a squeaky, squeezable horn. It was newer and spiffier than the basic, bent-wheel cruiser I’d been riding all week — an upgrade! I’d like to say that I was surprised by my good fortune. Yet my encounter with Shlomi and friends reiterated a truth I’d been learning all along: I’ll always get what I need, as long as I’m able to stay open and therefore able to receive it. A few days earlier, I sat on the seat of a lonely swing set. Instead of pumping my legs to send me high into the air, I was slumped over, paralyzed by a sudden bout of self-loathing and despair. A girl I’d never met tapped me on the shoulder.

“Do you need a hug?” I nodded, and Skye wrapped her arms around me. I wept into her shoulder, not wanting to let go, so grateful for human contact. It was her first time here, and, like me, she was with a crew of seasoned festivalgoers, feeling slightly out of place at times, and toggling between all the feelings. She led me to her pals, who showered me with snacks: frozen grapes, watermelon, hot mocha, a peanut butter sandwich. An accomplished artist who once spent a residency at Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Snowmass — small world! — Skye fed me when I needed fuel to simply carry on. Back at Shlomi’s camp on that fateful night, I started silently into the flames, wholly content. Wow, I exclaimed to myself. Does it get any better than this? At that moment, a shirtless dude strolled over from another camp across the way. “I just cooked this bacon,” he said, presenting a platter piled high with a tangle of hot, crispy pork. “Would you like a piece?” I grinned. Yes, I replied. That’s exactly what I need.

Amanda Rae is excited to return “home” to Burning Man next year. amandaraewashere@gmail.com


FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by JEANNE MCGOVERN

POM-MIMOSA On this, the 20th anniversary of my wedding, I wanted to make a toast to all that two decades of marriage has been — and it’s a lot. But since this is a cocktail column, I thought it best to stick to the topic at hand. So, there were the beer days, a mind-eraser tour, dry spells to have babies, martinis of all types, Bloody Marys as spicy as you can imagine and, of course, some bubbly. So on this special day — Sept. 28 — I’m thinking we mix the bubbly with my new favorite libations accent and toast the blessings we have with a Pomegranate Mimosa. Cheers to another 20 years and more! LIBATIONS WAS CREATED BY BELOVED ASPEN TIMES PUBLISHER GUNILLA ASHER, WHO DIED JUNE 2, 2014, AFTER A BRAVE BATTLE WITH CANCER. CHEERS — TO GUNNER!

MAKE IT 1 cup sweetened pomegranate juice 1 bottle Champagne Pomegranate seeds, for garnish In Champagne flutes, fill with 1/4 cup sweetened pomegranate juice and top off with champagne. Garnish with pomegranate seeds.

Sale Items! Jose Cuervo Gold 750ml - $14.97 Bollinger Special Cuvee - $56.97 Francis Coppola Votre Sante GSM - $9.97 Ch. St. Jean Bijou Chardonnay - $10.97 Eddyline Brewing 16oz 6pks - $9.97 Grey Goose Vodka 750ml - $26.97 Asombroso Rosa 750ml - $49.97

970.927.2002 | Willits Town Center | Next to Whole Foods | FREE Delivery 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

ASPEN UNTUCKED

by BARBARA PLATTS

The infamous Grump burned to the ground Saturday night in Crested Butte.

THAT MOB MENTALITY

HOW A PAGAN FALL FESTIVAL CAN HELP US PREP FOR THE NOVEMBER ELECTIONS LAST SATURDAY NIGHT, I found myself immersed in a crowd of a couple thousand people. We had all taken over a street and were waiting to be told what to do by actors dressed in flower wreaths and Slavic style, old-fashioned robes. We were waiting for a trial to start, the trial of the Great Grump who is annually found guilty and BARBARA PLATTS burned at the stake. We were just 20plus miles away from Aspen (as the crow flies) in the mountain town of Crested Butte, and we were attending the annual Vinotok Festival, a pagan celebration that dates back to the Middle Ages. It coincides with autumn, celebrating the Harvest Earth Mother and the beginning of the season. The Great Grump appears on the last night. He is a large wooden monster-like creature that’s stands at roughly 25 feet. He acts as the scapegoat

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for the rest of us. The final night of Vinotok, he is the sacrifice for all of our sins. The Grump is put on trial in the downtown area. Once he is found guilty, he is carted to an area just outside of town (for fire safety reasons, most likely) and burned at the stake. We, as the crowd, follow him out there, chanting and taunting the whole way. “Burn him, burn the grump, burn him now,” we all said in unison, over and over again. Even as the wooden structure was up in flames, we continued to yell. Every single one of us enraptured in this riot, this pseudo mob, portraying characteristics that were practically appalling. Yet, they were all so much fun. The idea of a mob or herd mentality is something that has been studied in depth by psychologists and sociologists alike, and it’s for good reason. When people join together in group solidarity, they often feel invisible and safe. They can lose their individual inhibitions

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and even their values. In place of those come the group’s inhibitions and values, which are often much more drastic. Instances of mob- or herdlike mentality practically date back to the beginning of time. Knowing the influence groups have over individuals helps us rationalize historical situations like the Salem Witch Trials, crucifixions from the time of the Roman Empire and executions in England in the Late Middle Ages. Although things may be more civil in present day, instances of mob mentality are still very prevalent, as we’ve seen from protests that have turned violent throughout the country and the world in the past several years. At Vinotok, the whole burning of the Grump is meant to be a positive thing, and it is. However, it does make one think how quickly rational thought and individual beliefs and inhibitions can be tossed by the wayside when everyone is caught up in what the group stands for.

So, what was the takeaway lesson from this (besides that Vinotok is a funky, fun event and I highly recommend everyone attend at some point)? Perhaps the takeaway is that we all have to make a concerted effort to think for ourselves, even in turbulent and confusing times when just following the group or the trend seems like the easy and logical option. I believe this is particularly important to think about right now, as we are in an election season, and we all have several big decisions to make very soon. I’m not trying to sway anyone in a certain direction, on a local, regional or national level, I’m simply suggesting that we look at all of the facts in front us before casting our votes. Happy election season! Barbara Platts has always been a big group person. She constantly has to remind herself that what the group wants may not always be the rational choice for her. Reach her at bplatts.000@gmail.com.


To Support The Gunilla Israel Asher Scholarship Fund linda israel

Limited Edition “G a Bear” Giclee, 30” x 30.” Original artwork by Linda Israel.

IN THE OF OUR The Aspen Times established the SPIRIT Gunilla Israel Asher Scholarship to provide college scholarships toBELOVED Aspen HighLATE SchoolPUBLISHER students. The scholarship will be funded, in part, by the sale of 100 giclees of an original painting by Gunilla’s sister, renowned artist Linda Israel. Aspen Times hasall created scholarship – The Gunilla Israel Asher Scholarship “G The a Bear” embodies that awas Gunilla:fund beauty, tenacity, strength, power and Fund – to support the future educational endeavors of Aspen students. Gunilla mystery. originally commissioned her sister, Linda Israel, to paint an “Aspen Times Bear” to be the new Aspenedition Times office. We, with Israel, contact have To displayed purchasein your limited giclees of “Gtheasupport Bear,” offorLinda $1,000, decided toJohnston sell 100 giclees of theAspen original painting a means to fund the Samantha at The Times, as970-925-3414 or scholarship. by email at “G a Bear” embodies all that was Gunilla: beauty, tenacity, strength, power and mystery. sjohnston@aspentimes.com. “G a Bear” is available for purchase for $1,000 by contacting Samantha Johnston at

Gunilla Asher

The Aspen Times at 970-925-3414 or by email at sjohnston@aspentimes.com.

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

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VOYAGES

DESTINATION | MEXICO

FINDING SHELTER IN JUÁREZ DRIVING THROUGH Aspen last June on route to my granddaughter’s graduation from CRMS in Carbondale, I felt a searing pain as I came to the corner of 2D and Frances streets and the former home of my inlaws, Bob and Barbara Anderson. Although I grew up on the North Star Ranch (now the North Star Nature Preserve) it was this house — the Red House, as we called it — where my relationship began with Julie, their daughter. Although we never lived in Aspen, she took care of the house from the time of our marriage in 1965 to its sale many years later. For us, our time at that house and in Aspen was unforgettable Julie died suddenly April 3 of this year. The one bright spot about this devastating loss, however, is another house far from Aspen. Using donations made in her memory to a nonprofit in El Paso, Texas called Siguiendo los Pasos de Jesús (SPJ) or Following the Footsteps of Jesus, a house has been built in Juárez, Mexico for a family we had been helping for almost six years. The result is a success

story, and that isn’t always the case with the Mexico projects I get involved in. The story began February 23, 2011 when I made my first visit to Vision in Action, an asylum for the mentally ill on the edge of Juárez. Notwithstanding the dozens of patients milling around me, what surprised me most were two little kids in the middle of all those patients. Why were they, so young, in a mental asylum? Later, I learned that they were Hector (13) and Yeira (12) Beltrán, the grandchildren of Elvira Romero, the cook, and she brought them to the asylum every weekend because to stay in their home without her was too dangerous. I cannot imagine my grandchildren having to be in such a situation. What was particularly motivating was that Yeira is two weeks younger than my granddaughter who just graduated from Coorado Rocky Mountain School yet their lives are so different. Evira is technically their grandmother but, in effect, she is really both their mother and father. The real father lives in

Juárez, has money but provides no help. The mother lives in Sonoyta, is a drug addict and probably a prostitute. Elvira, Hector and Yeira have always had to struggle to survive. They would find scrap metal and haul it up to the Chihuahua-Juárez highway to sell. To warm their house they would dig chunks of plywood out of the sand, bring them home in the old baby carriage, pound them on the floor to knock the sand off and burn them to heat their home. Sometimes there wasn’t food. I began visiting the asylum at least once a month and, rather than just give them money, would pay Hector and Yeira for various projects — essays about their family histories and their hopes for the future or interviews of patients I was documenting. Once, when I was not there, Yeira interviewed a patient named Aron Carrasco. I was horrified when I found out because he

was an assassin who had murdered at least 15 people. “I wasn’t afraid,” Yeira said to me. “He was the one who was crying. In August 2014, Yeira had her quinceañera, a night of happiness for the whole family. Pastor Galván, the founder of Vision in Action, and I were the” padrinos” or sponsors. But instead of this being a leap forward, everything continued to decline for this family. Elvira lost her job at Vision in Action and her health problems became worse — diabetes, very high blood pressure, problems with her eyes. Yeira graduated from middle school but then, because of a lack of money, she and Hector both had to drop out of high school and go to work in a maquila where they only made about $50 a week. Elvira then made a down payment on some desert land, and they built a shack for temporary shelter, hoping that one of several

ABOVE: Using these old baby carriages is a common way of hauling things there but they don’t hold much or last long. LEFT: The new home.

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PHOTOS BY MORGAN SMITH


by MORGAN SMITH

U.S. nonprofits would build them a new house. Their first shack collapsed in the wind, so they built another one, but it too was miserable. And all the house building programs in the area not only had long waiting lists but needed the applicants to find sponsors to help with the costs. “Morgan, it snowed during the night and when we woke up in the morning, our hair was all covered with snow,” Elvira had said last winter. This was what life was like in the shack but I didn’t have the money or the sponsors to do anything about it. Then after Julie’s death, there was an outpouring of donations to SPJ in her memory. Very quickly we had enough funds for a house for Elvira and her family. Under the leadership of Jane Fuller, the founder and Executive Director of SPJ, however, much more is involved here than just a house. The nonprofit also has a clinic and brings medical personnel over from El Paso at least once a month. It has a library, a park where kids can play, food assistance, a market where local people can sell their goods and a focus on education. In the case of Elvira’s family, this means help with her vision problem which will allow her to go back to work. For Hector and Yeira, it means finding better jobs as well as schooling on Saturdays so that they can get their high school degrees. Now, the house has been completed. “Estamos en la Gloria,” Elvira Romero says as we sit there in early September. I agree; this is like being in Heaven compared to the hovel they had been living in. But the house is more than just a structure or, in my case, a memorial. It’s the long-awaited leap forward for this stoic, enduring family. For the first time, I see the potential for these two kids to reach for the dreams they described in those papers they wrote for me years ago. At last, instead of just enduring, they are finally moving forward.

TOP: Elvira, Yeira, her cousin, Amy and Hector. ABOVE: The dilapidated shack is where they lived before to moving to the new house in September. LEFT: Yeira with her quinceanera dress.

Former Aspenite Morgan Smith lives in Santa Fe but travels to the border every month to assist various humanitarian programs there. He can be reached at Morgan-smith@comcast.net.

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New Listing!

Truly Unique Property in Aspen

1.70 acre lot is just two minutes from the downtown core. Open floor plan with master suite and all living areas on main level. Outdoor entertaining areas, patios and decks on a large, private flat yard. Private trail down to Castle Creek. $7,950,000 Furnished Rob Bordan – 970.948.1805

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Circle R Ranch in Woody Creek

Majestic Five Trees Estate

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Private and pristine 244 acre ranch. Perfect for family compound or corporate retreat. Six separate single-family homes with a total of 22 bedrooms, 18 baths and 5 half baths. Adjacent to National Forest. Irrigated hay fields. $39,900,000 Partially Furnished Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

5 bedroom, 8 bath, 8,983 sq ft Tuscan-style estate featuring stone archways, vaulted ceilings, patio with waterfall and breathtaking views. Located just minutes from airport, skiing and downtown core. $13,500,000 Garrett Reuss – 970.379.3458

Completely remodeled, quality finishes. Oversized lot, pool, putting green. 6 bedrooms, 7,059 sq ft. Construction completion Thanksgiving 2016. $12,950,000 936KingStreet.com Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125 Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

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Legacy Ranch on 153 rolling McLain Flats acres of hayfields, allows over 16,374 sq ft of improvements with complete privacyand 1195 Salvation Ditch shares. Views are incredible in all directions, build lakes, polo fields... Just reduced from $12,500,000 to $9,950,000 Robert Ritchie – 970.379.1500

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Contemporary 4 bedroom, great living spaces and classic views. Pool, snowmelt driveway and central A/C. Construction completion anticipated late 2016. $9,750,000 47Bennett.com Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125 Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

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Victorian remodel with modern addition. Completion in late 2017. Four en-suite bedrooms. Create a compound with adjacent property. $8,250,000 530HallamCorner.com Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125 Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

Five-bedroom log home with views and privacy ovelooking prisitine Spring Creek Reservoir. Fantastic 40 + acre horse property with irrigated meadows. Located adjacent to National Forest and Basalt Mountain. $6,000,000 Terry Rogers – 970.379.2443

Breathtaking mountain views with 4 acres of serene privacy. Newly constructed 5-bedroom home with gorgeous Robert Trown interiors. Two guest suite ‘’out buildings’’ are perfectly private for your guests. $5,500,000 Furnished Maureen Stapleton – 970.948.9331

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35 secluded acres with 1,200 ft of river frontage, Two miles from the Campground Lift. 3 bedroom home with high quality finishes and 450 sq ft guest apartment. Ski area and mountain views. $4,900,000 Kathy DeWolfe – 970.948.8142

This 4-bedroom, 5,767 sq ft home is exquisite with fine craftsmanship, hundreds of feet of river frontage, large outdoor decks and separate guest house. $3,980,000 Furnished Maureen Stapleton – 970.948.9331 Rob Bordan – 970.948.1805

Rose Camp includes two separate parcels: 35 acres undeveloped with building rights and 362 acres bordering the Maroon Bells Wilderness. Unobstructed mountain views. State-of-the-art solar. $3,500,000 Mark Overstreet – 970.948.6092 A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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GOLD

Standard

AS ANY LOCAL WILL TELL YOU, fall in Aspen is one of the best times of the year. And it’s the city’s namesake that truly bespeaks the spectacular during the fall. Explosions of color from the numerous aspen groves that paint the mountainsides of nearby valleys and vistas are breathtaking and easy to access by foot, bicycle or car. Here we offer you a few images because sometimes a picture really is worth a thousand words. Walk outside and see it for yourself.

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P H OTO S B Y A N N A S TO N E H O U S E , C H E R R I E C AT L I N , M AT T H O B B S


PHOTOS BY ANNA STONEHOUSE

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“AND ALL AT ONCE, SUMMER COLLAPSED INTO FALL.” - OSCAR WILDE

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P H OTO S B Y A N N A S TO N E H O U S E , H A L W I L L I A M S , M AT T H O B B S


MOUNTAINMAYHEM

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

by MAY SELBY / photos by ALICE KOELLE

OFFSEASON IS ON

MAY SELBY

TRANSITIONING FROM one of the busiest summers in Aspen on record (just looking at the lodging bookings reported for July and August alone) to a highly anticipated winter ahead with benchmark anniversaries and events (think Gay Ski Week’s 40th celebration in January and the World Cup Finals in March), off-season offers a welcome of respite in between the two. Festivals like Aspen Film’s 38th annual Filmfest last week. Next up — The Meeting from Oct. 6 to 8, featuring ski industry films, music, a conference and networking opportunities leading up to ski season. Staycations and weekend getaways to Aspen are inviting with specials at hotels, shops and restaurants.

As fall colors are peaking, they offer the perfect backdrop for running, biking, hiking or driving. A favorite activity of mine is joining the Aspen Historical Society for one of their fabulous tours that take place through Oct. 8. Take part in a Historical Pub Crawl, Hotel Jerome tour, Marolt Open Space site visit, West End Walking Tour or a History Coach tour. Visit www. aspenhistory.org for details. Wrapping up an action-packed season in Snowmass, the Snowmass Bike Park is open for one last weekend, Saturday, Oct. 1, and Sunday, Oct. 2, with 2,897 vertical feet of downhill trails, all accessed by the Elk Camp gondola and Elk Camp chairlift.

For new riders, sign up with a bike pro to help master technique in the skills park, then go for a ride with a guide down Verde Trail. For advanced and expert riders, you’ll find Viking, Vapor, and Valhalla trails suitable for thrill-seeking adventure. Visit www.aspensnowmass.com for details. Contact May with insights, invites or info: allthewaymaymay@hotmail.com

College roommates Karen Patchell, of New York, and Bernie Alers, of Chicago, on vacation at Dancing Bear Aspen this fall.

Pamela Ross and Jack Biegler at an offseason soirée at Dancing Bear. Nina Gabianelli with the Aspen Historical Society leads a history tour of Aspen.

Going downhill at the Snowmass Bike Park, open one last weekend, this Saturday, Oct. 1, and Sunday, Oct. 2.

Daryl Wickstrom with Anneke Scholten at a rooftop reception at Dancing Bear.

Matt Layne and Andy Luersen working on a trail crew with Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers.

Anjali Nayar, director of the film Gun Runners, after its U.S. premiere at the Wheeler during Aspen Filmfest on Sept. 23.

Denver friends Charlotte Delay and Elle Ethington enjoy a weekend getaway in Aspen this fall.

Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers doing trail crew work on Village Bound trail in Snowmass.

Early risers Katie Kowalski, Kim Levin, Lissa Ballinger, Megan Shean, Christine Benedetti and Kat Fitzgerald on a morning run through the fall colors.

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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

by ANDREW TRAVERS

INSIDE THE INSIDER

TIMES INSIDER EDITOR SUSAN LEHMAN COVERS THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY SUSAN LEHMAN is something like an ombudsman of fun at the New York Times. As an editor of Times Insider, Lehman looks for the most compelling stories behind the stories at the newspaper, the most intriguing behind-the-scenes bits and characters at the Grey Lady, offering a look at how the sausage is made at the paper of record. For instance, in April, Insider put together a timeline of how the Times covered the Brussels Airport bombing — how three dozen staffers from around the world collaborated to gather information and get it out in the 12 hours that followed the explosions. “I’m always interested in showing readers the scale of the Times operation, its scope and the velocity with which it works,” she told me recently on the patio at Plato’s. Lehman was in Aspen in midSeptember leading an Aspen Words Readers’ Retreat — leading discussions with a small group of dedicated readers. The nonprofit has expanded its readers’ retreats beyond the summer to run year-round, with three-day gatherings through the seasons. The winter is scheduled for February, with W.W. Norton editor and Words Without Borders founder Alane Salierno Mason leading. For her readers’ retreat, Lehman chose nine nonfiction pieces — modern classics ranging from George Orwell’s “Why I Write” to Ta-Nehisi Coates’ “Between the World and Me,” from Norman Mailer’s “Superman Comes to the Supermarket” to Joan Didion’s “Goodbye to All That” and David Foster Wallace’s “A Ticket to the Fair.” “I thought a lot about great nonfiction writing that stuck in my mind years after I’d read it, and that’s what I came up with,” she says of her syllabus. “Reading is kind of about connecting. So that’s what we’re doing. It’s just a bunch of smart, interested people sharing ideas and having a good time.” That’s not unlike what she does at the Times, trying to spark reader interest and connect readers with the paper’s writers.

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A former criminal defense attorney, Lehman has had a varied career in media including work in book publishing, magazines and television. At the Times, she was a deputy editor of the Sunday Review section from 2011 to 2013 before working on Times Insider. Insider originally launched in 2014 as part of Times Premier, a $10-a-month subscription package that promised extra benefits for hardcore Times readers. Last year the paper folded Premier and doubled down on the behind-the-scenes content from Insider. She and her colleages attend the paper’s daily news meetings, looking for ideas for Insider features and guests for the Insider podcast, which Lehman hosts. The Times already publishes an average of 356 stories per day, so Lehman looks for alternative storytelling models like graphics and timelines. Some recent high points on the podcast have been a conversation with Times restaurant critic Pete Wells — the guy behind the viral

review of Senor Frog’s in Times Square and the epic all-questions takedown of Guy Fieri — about how he does his job. When the Times posted a three-minute video compilation documenting the bilespewing crowds and hate speech that Donald Trump has drawn to events on the campaign trail this summer, she taped a conversation with campaign editors about the decision. She also does a quick and irreverent weekly chat with editorial page editor Andrew Rosenthal about the news, titled “Good, Bad and Mad.” She’s guided by the kinds of questions average folks have about the Times and how it works. “If you go to a dinner party and say you work for the New York Times, there are certain questions that people are going to ask you and things they

want to know about,” she explains. “My thinking, in helping to put together Times Insider, was to recreate those kinds of conversations, to answer the kinds of questions that arise in those circumstances: ‘Whoa, you’ve covered five wars? What’s that like?’” atravers@aspentimes.com

New York TImes Insider editor Susan Lehman led an Aspen Words Readers’ Retreat in midSeptember.

Aspen Words has expanded its Readers Retreat into a year-round program. The next retreat is scheduled for February.

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COURTESY PHOTOS


THELISTINGS

SEPT. 29 - OCT. 5, 2016

FRIDAY, SEPT. 30 BANNED BOOK WEEK — 10 a.m., Explore Booksellers, 221 E. Main St., Aspen. Browse the banned book table. LP HERD/LARRY AND PATTY — 6:30 p.m., Heather’s Savory Pies and Tapas Bar, 166 Midland Ave., Basalt. Contemporary sound, country Ppop, classic rock and dance.

HEAR Delta Rae will perform at Belly Up Aspen on Tuesday, Oct. 4.

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28 BANNED BOOK WEEK — 10 a.m., Explore Booksellers, 221 E. Main St., Aspen. Browse the banned book table. FOREIGN FILM NIGHT: “MY AFTERNOON WITH MARGUERITTE” — 5:15 p.m., Basalt Regional Library, 14 Midland Ave., The Jean Becker film “My Afternoon with Margueritte.” 970-927-4311 “HARRY AND SNOWMAN” DIRECTED BY RON DAVIS — 6 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, 320 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. A special advance screening to benefit the Roaring Fork Valley Horse Council, Windwalkers and The Snowman Rescue Fund. SUZZANNE PARIS — 6:30 p.m., Heather’s Savory Pies and Tapas Bar, 166 Midland Ave., Basalt. Singer-Songwriter, originals and acoustic harmony. PENNY & SPARROW PERFORMING — 9 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Andy Baxter

and Kyle Jahnke make up Penny & Sparrow, a singer-songwriter duo hailing from Austin, Texas. 970-544-9800 LIVE MUSIC WITH LEOPARD AND THE VINE — 9 p.m., Justice Snow’s, 328 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Latin Gypsy performance art blending a musical combination of Tango, Flamenco, Caribbean and Calypso rhythms, Balkan modes and Romani vamps intertwined with elements of electronica. 970-429-8192

THURSDAY, SEPT. 29 SMOKEN’ JOE AND ZOE — 6:30 p.m., Heather’s Savory Pies and Tapas Bar, 166 Midland Ave., Basalt. Country pop, Latin pop and classic rock. BANNED BOOK WEEK — 10 a.m., Explore Booksellers, 221 E. Main St., Aspen. Browse the banned book table, hear special readings and join in for discussions of select banned books between 5 and 6 p.m.

“DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE” — 7:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre Co., 67 Promenade, Carbondale. The Jeffrey Hatcher adaptation of the classic horror story. Recommended for mature audiences only. Tickets available at www.thunderrivertheatre.com. 970-963-8200

SATURDAY, OCT. 1 ASPEN SATURDAY MARKET — 8:30 a.m., Downtown Aspen, Hyman Avenue, Hopkins Avenue and Hunter Street, Aspen. Rain or shine. Colorado produce, art and food. Food court behind City Hall in Conner Park. ANNUAL CARBONDALE POTATO DAY — 9 a.m., Sopris Park, Carbondale. Celebrating 107 years. A longtime celebration of the potato harvest. Events include a farmers market with local produce, arts and crafts, a parade on Main Street, a kids’ zone and music in the park by JAS Education. Old-fashioned barbecue and veggie potato bar, $12 per plate. 970-309-3191 FIESTA DE TAMALES — 5 p.m., Eagle Crest Nursery, 0400 Gillespie Drive, El Jebel. A fundraiser for English in Action. Activiites include a prize drawings, pinatas, bouncy house, DJ, Aspen Santa Fe Ballet Folklorico, homemade tamales and pupusas. $25 adult, $10 children.

— 7 p.m., Marble Distilling Co. and the Distillery Inn, 150 Main St., Carbondale. “DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE” — 7:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre Co., 67 Promenade, Carbondale. The Jeffrey Hatcher adaptation of the classic horror story. Recommended for mature audiences only. Tickets available at www.thunderrivertheatre.com. 970-963-8200 BANNED BOOK WEEK — 10 a.m., Explore Booksellers, 221 E. Main St., Aspen. Browse the banned book table.

SUNDAY, OCT. 2 FALL FESTIVAL — 10 a.m., Cozy Point Ranch, 210 Juniper Road, Snowmass. Panel discussion on the benefits of meat reduction, family events with farm animals and yoga. Free. ASPEN PHOTO CHALLENGE PARTY — 5 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Presented by the Aspen Chamber Resort Association in association with Outside Magazine. www.aspenchamber.org/aspenphotochallenge 970-544-9800

TUESDAY, OCT. 4 ASPEN WEEKLY WRITERS’ GROUP — 7 p.m., The Red Brick, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Self-edit your work by reading with other writers. Bring copies. Visual arts included for review. Free.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5 THE BOOK REVIEW CLUB — 6 p.m., Basalt Regional Library, Basalt. No required books. Bring what you are reading.

COMEDY NIGHT WITH JON LASTER

at Roaring Fork Crossfit

Saturday, October 1 9am-1pm $40 for adults

(includes BBQ, workout and tote Bag)

Shop

Donate

Make a huge impact on area families in need simply by donating, shopping or volunteering at our ReStore. (If you’re donating, we make it easy with our free pick-up service.) It’s a win-win for everyone involved.

HabitatRoaringFork.org COURTESY PHOTO

$10 - BBQ only

Volunteer

Join Lucky Day Animal Rescue and Roaring Fork Crossfit for a friendly competition to benefit homeless animals. Details and to sign up: www.eventbrite.com/e/crossfit-for-k9s-2016-tickets-26882557453 or call 970.618.3662 • Great Dane Division RX Competitive - Be prepared for anything • Labrador division Just-for-fun Scaled Competition A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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C L A S S I F I E D S @ A S P E N T I M E S .C O M

A S P E N T I M E S .C O M / P L AC E A D

Hire Me

./, "'$ ' & "$ ( ' & # " & "!% # !

" $ ! ! ! '##"$&

( & !% "!

& $ % "" %+ " "!& &* # $ &"$) & ! &* & ! -$ % "" %+ " Hospitality

Customer Service Customer Service

Jobs

Customer Service Basalt Printing & Art Supply. Full-time Benefits include: Health Insurance, Paid Holidays. Apply in person or by email. References required. 970-927-4075 bprint@comcast.net, basaltprinting.com

Building Services FT CUSTODIANS

Health Care

Currently hiring for: H Assistant General Manager H Bellman H Front Desk Agent H Housekeeping Manager H Overnight Houseman Email resume to: Travis.Williams@ theskyhotel.com

Human Services & Resources

To apply, visit www.rfschools.com or email Ken Melby at kmelby@rfschools. com

ProBuild Glenwood Springs Now hiring for • Driver • Admin/Cashier • Yard Foreman ProBuild Aspen Now hiring for • Receiving Clerk ProBuild offers excellent pay and benefits. If interested, please apply online at probuild.com or in person. ProBuild is an EOE/Minorities/ Females/Vet/Disability.

Customer Service

Case Manager RFSD seeks a full-time LPN (or RN) for immediate hire. Full benefits included! To apply, visit www.rfschools.com or email Kat Lange at katlange@rfschools. com

Hospitality

www.skywest.com/careers

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professional Seasoned moving to Basalt in October 2016

European Mounting and Shoulder Mounting Competitive Pricing Call Josh for details

719-989-0774

In Silt, Colorado

Buddy Program. Full-time. Responsible for cultivating trusting, constructive relationships with families and youth, volunteers, schools. Managing scholarship process. Candidate will have strong interpersonal and communication skills and will be passionate about working with youth. For full job description please email jobs@buddyprogram.org Submit resumes by Friday Oct 7th.

Eleven is custom-design global experience company seeking a full time Colorado Experience Manager (EM) to join the Operations Team in Crested Butte, CO! EMs are responsible for communicating with guests, creating logistics & managing group stays. The ideal candidate is eager, enthusiastic & organized. Strong in both guest-facing and administrative roles, experience in hospitality is essential. This job requires a flexible schedule and ability to work in a fast paced environment. Submit cover letter and resume to Jobs@eleven experience.com

ONLINE

Search locally or expand your search throughout the mountains and beyond. Professional Estate Manager/ House Manager of 19 years in search of caring and maintaining your luxury home at the highest level. Please email MountainEstate@Hot mail.com for my resume.

A great place to work!

We are seeking a Controller and HR Manager Busy condominium hotel seeks an accounting person for a permanent position. Experience essential, good communication skills, knowledge of V-12 system helpful.

Aspen Square Condominium Hotel 617 E Cooper, Downtown Aspen.

warren@aspensquarehotel.com

970-925-1000

GET OUTDOORS TO SKI AND GET PAID!

Admin/Retail Asst Mon, Wed, Fri 10-6 Great Pay/Benefits Strong Computer & Customer Service Email Resume: SpaAspen@gmail.com

Rentals Rentals General

Ski Sales Photographer

Have the best winter of your lifetime, enjoying mountain living and making new friends, while learning photography, a skill that will last forever. Are you outgoing and love to ski or board? We are currently hiring for the world class ski resorts at Snowmass, Aspen Mountain and Buttermilk. While photography experience is a plus, we are mostly looking for your outgoing personality and sales ability. You must be able to ski safely. Earn a $500 Sign-on Bonus! Receive a Ski and Bus Pass!

Call Randy at 720-277-7998 Apply at sharpshooterimaging.com/careers

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K L Y V Se pte mb e r 29, 2016

Sales/Marketing Beer Sales Rep Beer Sales Rep. Orrison Distributing. Full-time Employee. Full Benefits. Competitive Compensation. Roger Janicek 970.945.2531x103 rogerj@orrisondist.com 4919 Highway 82 Glenwood Springs CO

Rentals Housing Wanted

Aniya, 5 yr old husky, and her mom, Nicky, are looking for a place to live.Aniya is calm and well trained and mom would like to trade baking/babysitting/dog walking/services for rent.please contact me: gavans_mom@msn.com

Rentals Aspen

1 BD 1 BA 820 Sq Ft Condo Deluxe in core. Pool. No Pets. No smoking $4500/mo winter lease.Nov-May Call Nick 925-4461 ncoates@rof.net.coatesr entalhomes.com 2 BD / 1 BA Single Family/Duplex W/D, DW, garage, yard. Unfurnished No Pets. No smoking. $3500/mo First, last & security. 1 yr lease. 970-987-9176 Cemetery Ln / Aspen CO 2bd 2.5ba furnished condo near core, WD, NS $4000/mo. for 6mos + and $7k for short term. Avail 10/1-05/15 Kyle, PPM, 970-379-6011 2 Bedroom 2 Bath unfurnished condo, 3 blocks from gondola. One offstreet parking space, washer/dryer, no smokers, no pets. 12 month lease, $3200/mo. Available 9/15. Contact david@hpmaspen.com or 970-379-1554. DOWNTOWN VICTORIAN 2 Bedrooms, 3Baths SFH. $6950/ month for 12 months. Contact Brittanie Rockhill of Compass. brittanie@compass.co m 3bd/2ba. In town Designer Furn. Avail Aug 1st. $5,900/mo Long term. OR Summer $7,000/wk. View

Office/Clerical

Top pay rate & benefits. A great working environment in the heart of Downtown Aspen. Contact the General Manager at Aspen Square. Now Hiring Flexible and Reliable Customer Service Agents/Ramp Agents. Variety of shifts | Flight Benefits

Estate Household Manager/ Executive Protection specialist/ Personal Driver 720 2 3 1 8 0 6 9 andreblaauw1@icloud .com andreblaauw1@icloud .com

Find a job

NURSE (LPN)

RFSD seeks full-time school custodians for immediate hire. Full benefits included!

Management/ Executive

M O N DAY- F R I DAY 8 : 3 0 A M TO 5 : 0 0 P M 970.925.9937

1BD/1BA Modern Apartment Studio - 408 Sq Ft Fully Furnished Short-term Rental - All Utilities includes WIFI & Cable TV - Centrally located - Walking distance to shopping and dining - Pets allowed with approval - Pet Fee required - No smoking Deposit requ. - Call for Pricing Karen 720-443-6476 kmorris@silverwesthotels.com www.elementbasaltaspen.com Willits Town Center, Basalt CO

katefrankelrentals.com

773-294-2051

3 BD 3 1/2 BA Town Home. Furnished, gas fireplace, w/d, a/c, 1-car garage. On bus route, views, deck. Pets allowed with approval. No smoking. $6500/mo. Deposit required. Long-term lease. Ginny 9703798489 gmyers@sopris.net.

4 BD 3 BA Newly Remodeled Home. Aspen School District. Exceptional location. Minutes to roundabout. On Castle Creek. Hayden views. Private. $9,500/mo. Call Marshall 970-925-1825.

Rentals Aspen

4 BD furnished Brush Creek. Aspen School District. nr bus $6500/mo. 970-948-5090

Beautiful 3 BR Core Townhome. 1001 E. Cooper. 1560 Sq Ft $8,300/month. Justin 970-306-1755 Garage Underground Parking Below Butcher Block $470.00 per month Marissa 612-203-7570 info@umnrentals.com Modern Renovated Core 2BD/2BA $3950 4 Blks to Gondi. Pool W/D 504-881-6525

Rentals Basalt Area 2BD 2BA. 1 car only. NP NS. $2050/ month. Call 970-948-6959

Try a border for just five bucks!

3 BD 2 BA plus loft. 2 car garage SFH. Large yard, big views. Woodstove, many recent updates. Pets considered. N/S. $3,000/month. First, last, security. 1 yr lease. Jeff 618-6989. 5 minutes from Snowmass Conoco

Rentals Carbondale

4 BD 3 BA 1 Partial baths custom home Amazing views, contemporary design, locally hand-crafted furniture. No Pets. No smoking. 4400 unfurnished, 5800 furnished First, last & security. 1 year lease. Colorado Land Manager 970-618-2813 colandmanager@gmail.c om Carbondale Crystal C a n y o n D r i v e Carbondale CO

Rentals Snowmass Resident caretaker wanted Old Snowmass Small cottage available. Duties: lawn care/maintenance. General maintenance inside main house. Pickup/drop off airport. Rent $250/ month which covers utilities. Can accommodate horses for additional rent $. Send resume to csnydr@gilbertoncoal. com

Rentals Commercial/Retail

500 SF & 230 SF Commercial spaces avail. together or separate, located on Main St in Aspen, asking $3200/mo gross, for info call 970-309-2000

Rentals Office Space Aspen Office in beautiful Main Street Victorian. $900/mo. 970-379-3715

3 BD 3 BA Town House. Pets allowed with approval. No smoking. $2500 + utilities First, last & security. 6 month lease. Trudi @ Happy Real Estate 970-309-6200 trudiwj@gmail.com; 74 Silverado Drive, Basalt,CO

Sell your vehicle,

guaranteed,

when you place an auto photo ad for a month!

Rentals Carbondale 1 BD Nice Unit Downtown Carbondale, Close to everything. $1,250/month+Utilities, First, Last, Security, No Pets. off-street parking, storage. Avail. Oct. 1st. 970 945-4508 Lv. Mssg.

4 BD 3.5 BA home in Carb/Old Twn RVR. $3000/mo. First, last & sec dep rqd. 1+yr lease. Pets ok with aprvl & dep. No smoking. Kent Harvey 310-699-3674

Executive Offices Elegant Ski-In/Ski-Out offices at Highlands. $2500/month. 970-404-2100


Aspen - $535,000

Aspen - $1,995,000

Basalt - $362,500

Basalt - $370,000

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath - MidValley Condo Top-floor condo built in 2005. Best location with south/east exposure. Quality finishes throughout. Upgraded appliances. Large closet spaces, A/C unit & radiant heat. Great location in Willits area.

WHITE BOX - YOU BUILD KITCHEN Unique, creative, cutting edge project. May be used for Residential and/or Commercial. 16' to 19' ceiling with fabulous light. Seller financing possible.

Tom Carr

Robert Tobias

West End Carriage House Fantastic Condo Alternative! Freestanding Home on three levels with a fenced yard. No HOA dues or shared walls. A rare find in Aspen for $1,995,000!

This 1BD condo enjoys Red Mtn views, has tiled floors throughout, a wood stove and stackable W/D. Well located, near the amenities which include a pool, tennis courts and hot tubs. Downtown Aspen is within minutes of your front door.

Brittanie Rockhill

970-366-0891 brittanie@compass.com

Lisa Thurston and Jennifer Bennett 970-925-1060 hc@huntercreek.net

Basalt - $624,500

Blue Lake - $649,000 Freshly painted 3002 sq.ft. 4 bed/3.5 home with updated kitchen. Overlooking Blue Creek with fenced back yard. Open living/dining plus den/tv room with gas log fp. Upper level has roomy master suite facing the creek and 2 more beds and bath. Large basement has bedroom, bathroom, rec room and lots of storage. Laundry room, pantry, 2-car garage, storage shed, trees, mature landscaping.

3 Bedroom / 2.5 bath - Southside Excellent corner location in highly desired neighborhood. Walk to downtown Basalt, schools, parks. 2 car garage. Nice landscaping.

Sally Shiekman-Miller 970.948.7530 sally@sallyshiekman.com www.AspenSnowmassSIR.com

Tom Carr

970-379-9935 www.aspenreinfo.com

Missouri Heights - $889,000

Missouri Heights - $1,950,000

970.379.9935 www.aspenreinfo.com

970-618-1231 swift@sopris.net www.willitsbend.com

Carbondale - $314,000

Glenwood Springs - $599,000

Warm & contemporary 2BD/2BA CONDO. Beautifully remodeled sink fixtures and bathrooms, bamboo floors, new windows. Convenient location. Unit features a sunny private deck; a light touch for a classy homeowner. Move-In-Ready!

Privacy, Peace and Quiet on TEN ACRES! Between Glenwood Springs and Carbondale this 3 BR 2.5 BA Country-Style Farmhouse is an oasis from the hustle and bustle of valley life, yet minutes from town!

Gerald Mohl

Winter Van Alstine

New Castle - $355,000

970-618-9229 winter.vanalstine@hotmail.com

970-618-5262 gerald@propertiesinc.biz www.propertiesinc.biz

AREC

Properties Inc.

Snowmass Village - $585,000 Snowmass Mountain Condo Aspen School District 2 bedrooms with private loft (ideal as 3rd bedroom or office space) Great Views and short walk to Assay Hill lift.

Incredible views and privacy from this 4 bd, 3.5 bth home in Aspen Mountain View Subdivision. Close to Willits and the mid valley, community pool, tennis and lots of storage in this custom home.

Karen Peirson

970-309-0038 kpeirson@destinationholdings.com karenpeirson.com

OWNER FINANCING 6 bedroom 6.5 baths on 36.15 acres with stunning views from atop Missouri Heights. Equestrian facilities, pool, tennis, trails.

HURRY UP . . . This house won't last! Custom finishes throughout this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in Castle Valley. Hardwood floors, fireplace, large deck with a fenced yard. MLS #145695

Mogli Cooper

Michelle James

970-433-5838 mogli@planbrealestate.com www.planbrealestate.com

970.379.4997 michelle@vlgrealtors.com www.vlgrealtors.com

Gareth Williams

(970) 309-7649 gareth@gwillproperties.com http://www.gwillproperties.com

Willits - $869,000 Beautifully appointed, 4 bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2005-built furnished home. Large gourmet kitchen, open floor plan w/ high ceilings, living room plus sitting area, charming gas fp. Oversized master suite with gas fp, Jacuzzi tub, steam shower, his & hers walk in closets. Covered front porch and back patio with built-in gas grill. In-floor radiant heat plus A/C, fenced yard, 625 sq.ft garage.

Sally Shiekman-Miller 970.948.7530 sally@sallyshiekman.com www.AspenSnowmassSIR.com

Now is the time to buy a home. Call a RealtorÂŽ today.

Aspen Times Weekly Real Estate Photo Ads. 970-925-9937 classifieds@aspentimes.com A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

25


Audi Allroad 2014

Cadillac Limo 1994

Kia Sorento 2012

Lexus rx450h - 2013

Premium Plus Hatchback. Excellent condition. 25,000 2.0 turbo AWD. Sunroof. Moonlight Blue Metallic hixhome101@gmail.com $34,000.00 719-486-0661

Coach package. 4 door. Good condition. 31k miles. Auto transmission. New Tires, New Battery, Well Maintained. Leather seats. Sunroof. Blue. $7500 - 970-379-2118 Aspenstarlimo@gmail.com

4wd 4dr auto mp3 bluetooth am/fm CD blk/blk 35K miles 30mpg 10yr/100mi warn $19,750 970-309-2250

51k loaded, heated and cooled leather, remote start, navigation, camera Price Reduced! $34,800 Call: 970-274-0944

Mercedes-Benz ML350 4Matic 2011

POLARISRZR 900 4 ES 2016

Porsche 944 Cabriolet 1990

Subaru Outback 2014

Fleetwood E3 Popup 2008

P1 Package. Excellent condition. 73,500. Heated steering wheel & seats, Sunroof, Navigation, AWD, Towing.

Excellent condition. Auto transmission. INFO@ASPENBIKERENTALS.COM

$23,500.00 970-309-0705

$13,500 970-309-3784

There is No Substitute…Experience Porsche Today! 5 speed manual, leather seats. All records, Hwy MPG 28. Excellent condition. Must See! $19,250 Call Bob in Edwards 970-390-4651

4 door. Good condition. 33k miles. Auto transmission. 3.6R Heated leather, Sunroof. GPS. Rear camera, Charcoal. 2 sets tires Blizzak w/ 5k miles:$25,000 Tim: finemtnchef@gmail.com

Fully loaded with over $2k inupgrades. Toy hauler, 2 king beds, furnace, bathroom, indoor/ outdoor grills, indoor/outdoor shower, hot water. Newly sealed roof. Originally $19k asking $8,750 Eagle, CO 970-390-9787

WinnebagoWarrior 1993

BMW F650 GS 2011

KawasakiKawasaki Ninja 2000

22' Class A, 454, new AC, awning, fridge, furnace, original owners, all receipts

800 CC 30,000 Miles

Red; good condition. 13,000mi. Just had $700 tune up. epekkala@msn.com

$6,000 386-299-333

$7,200 970-390-0602

$3500 970.948.1335

Trans portation

Auto Parts/ Accessories

Utility Trailers

(4) 2014 Toyota 17"Alloy wheels w/ Dunlop GrandTrek tires $850 New, Never used, Stored inside 970-948-6742

Triangle Tube Smart 100 Indirect fired water heater, never hooked up or used. $2400 new. $ 1 2 0 0 O B O J a y (970)-309-2955 2000 Econoline gooseneck 12 ton, 20' deck 5' beavertail 2" oak deck dual wheel double axle $5400. 970-379-0866

Chevy Equinox Blizzak Tires 235/55/R18 $800 OBO Aspen Prime condition. Mary 970-618-6360 shmobie1@yahoo.com

Autos 2013 Subaru Legacy. White, loaded, tan leather, sun-roof, Blizzak snow tires, clean, $17,500. 970-319-9874

Motorcycles

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

Firewood/Fuel

Merch andise Appliances Refrigerator. Fridgidaire Stainless Steel $650 New, never used 970-948-6742

2000 Honda XR400. New tires, dog bone suspension link for shorter riders, in great shape. $1800 970-379-0866

Construction Equipment/Material

FIREWOOD

Bundles for $6. Face cord for $125. Aspen, Pine & Spruce. Delivery is avail. 970-309-8177

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

Construction Equipment/Material

Hot Tubs/ Spas & Pools

Jewelry RON"THE GOLD GUY "

I Buy Gold

REPUTABLE GOLDSMITH paying CASH for gold, silver, platinum jewelry, gold or silver coins, nuggets, sterling silver sets. Many loyal customers thank me for BEST RETURNS, BEST SERVICE and convenient appointments. I Recycle, Remake, and Repair. For today's spot see: ronthegoldguy.com. Call Ron (970) 390-8229

Miscellaneous Merchandise

450W Advanced Apollo 3W LED Grow Light, Like n e w , $ 1 5 0 . 0 0 , Carbondale, (970)-989-8116

Harley 05 FXDLI Low Rider. Like new with only 2,000 miles See online ad for the thousands in dealer installed upgrades. REDUCED $8,200 970-389-4456

26

Hot tub. Brand: Hotspring Size: 8x8x3' Free with pick-up; accessible with truck Location: Missouri Heights. Good condition. House bought with hot tub; hot tub not desired. Ola Wettergren 941-350-7055 olwe@nicedesigns.us

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K L Y V Se pte mb e r 29, 2016

925-9937 • www.aspentimes.com/placead Restaurant Equipment

Hunting

Ski Equipment SNOW IS FALLING! SO IS THE PRICE $150

Commercial Broiler 36" gas Salamander broiler $750 Used condition. 970-948-6742

Get them lining up for you! Increase your business with little effort!

Advertise in the

Bicycles

European Mounting and Shoulder Mounting Competitive Pricing Call Josh for details

719-989-0774

SERVICE DIRECTORY!

In Silt, Colorado

Call Zach to get your ad started!

Are you a numbers person? 77 percent of readers took some action as a result of advertising seen in a newspaper. To place a Classified advertisement in print and online, please call 866-850-9937 or e-mail classifieds@cmnm.org.

925-9937

Commercial Wolf Stove 48" Gas range, 6 burners, 2 ovens, and griddle $1,500 Used condition. 970-948-6742

Santa Cruz Tallboy Carbon LT Size Large XTR Components, $2850.00 Basalt Excellent condition. Jay 609-780-7661

Boats-Fishing

Salomon Q-85/160 w/XT-10 rental bindings

Call or Text 720-469-6001

FUND-RAISER

2 CU Football Game Suite Pkgs. Oct. 15 v ASU. Nov. 3 v UCLA. 18 seats & parking. $6500 Retail Value. Starting bid $3200. All money raised goes to Kids Sports/ Scholarships. Contact Knuckles 970-390-8232

Merchandise Wanted

Yamaha YPP-50 electric piano $ 225 Gently used condition $350 on Ebay call Bill 970 309 4595 billriverstudio@me.com

Thousands of others have proven this by selling their vehicle in this section.

4 Sale

Tickets/Ski Passes/ Events

Musical Everybody needs more shelving! Barely used Elfa brand shelving from the Container Store is the perfect, customizable storage solution. Add more components to meet your needs. Makes great home computer desks too! Retails $700+ asking $550 OBO. 970-331-4748

Auto Photo Ads Work!

Want to purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557, Denver, CO 80201

2012 Clackacraft Drift Boat. Used only a few times on mellow water. Includes anchor, basic oars, trailer and cover. Call or text Matt 917-715-3424. Price reduced. $6500

Firearms/Supplies Winchester Model 77 .22 cal. rifle, scope woodstock, $225 Firm. Benelli 12g pump. 2 3/4, 3, 3 1/2” shells. Realtree camo synthetic stock $295 Firm. 970-927-3662

Ski Equipment Pets - Dogs

NEW Marker Squire II

bindings. Your chance to mix it up w/mint and magenta!

$120 NEW

720-469-6001

Aussie Puppies Registered, Champion Lines, Excellent Companions, Ready to go. Guaranteed, References. 970-261-1073


Pets - Dogs

Building

Chiweenie and Maltese Mix puppies 7 weeks, small, extremely cute. $150. 970-366-6550

Cleaning Service

Log Chinking

Massage Therapy

Storage

Clutter Clearing

Mtn Log & Timber, Inc Paul 970-379-4180

SENSUAL MASSAGE Contact Sophie Aspen-Snowmass In-Calls / Out-Calls 760-397-3242

Keep your local news free! Advertise and buy through the Classified Marketplace

Transform your Life

This Clarity

Hunting Cabin/Yard Office/Util Bldg/Garden /Play House - $6,000

is a Gift Deborah 970-948-5663

16'3"Lx10'3"Wx13'H. New in 2011.. Dotsero Excellent condition. Finished Interior. Delivery Extra. Karen 262 691-2747 buelowk@att.net

Horses & Mules

Our Classified Advertising staff is ready to help. Call 866-850-9937 or e-mail classifieds@ cmnm.org.

Jacey's Aspen Massage

Fitness FEEL GOOD TODAY! Aspen Personal Trainer Free 30 Minute Trial. 970-319-3919 www.davidmillspt.com

Diversity in the workplace. Add your job listing to the national network, Diversity.

Massage Therapy

Feel the power. 80 percent of adults in households earning $100,000 or more read a newspaper in print or online each week.

Shed City

Professional Massage

Service

Directory

Landscaping, Mowing & Tilling

347-491-0722

Blue Sky Garden & Lawn

Painting

Child Care Licensed

Rags Painting & Exterior Home Cleaning, family owned and operated. We would love the opportunity to work with you and take care of your painting needs. Call for a free consultation and bid. 970-589-9554. Or shoot us a quick e m a i l a t ragspainting@yahoo.co m. We look forward to hearing from you, and Thank you in advance.

NEED A SHED FAST? See our inventory: ShedCityUSA.com •Purchase

work performed within the District. fantastic massage AnyCARE person, association of persons,OrienTAKING OF co-partnership, ALL YOUR Horse Stuff: company or corporation hasMassage: furnished Clean, labor, coGARDEN AND YARD WORK thattal •Team Tack 2 Horses materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions, prov-If you zy, & comfortable. NEEDS WITH FRIENDLY AND Leather $250. obo ender, or other supplies usedwould or consumed by such by like a massage RELIABLE STAFF •Poney Cart $450. obo contractors or their subcontractors, in or about the Masa professional Asian performance of the work contracted to be done or •New Horse Cart Free Estimates seuse come & experiGrass Hay $5.50 Aspen that supplies rental machinery, tools, or equipment $1200. obo Retails for ence a perfect Good condition. Mark to the extent used in the prosecution of the body work, mas$1500. sage!! 970-319-2188 and whose claim therefor has not been818-913-6588 paid by the 970-379-0866 contractors or their subcontractors, at any time up markv@sopris.net aspenorientalmassage.com to and including the time of final settlement for the work contracted to be done, is required to file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid, and an account of such claim,M toO theNDistrict, DAY-whose F R I DAY 8 : 3 0 A M TO 5 : 0 0 P M address is 28 Street, Edwards, Colorado, on or before the date and time hereinabove shown. Fail-970 -7 7 7- 3 1 72 ure on the part of any claimant to file such verified statement of claim prior to such final settlement P S C will H U LTZ @ C M N M .O R G release the District, its Board of Directors, officers, agents, and employees, of and from any and all liability for such claim. All of the above is pursuant to § 38-26-107, C.R.S. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS Of NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the general public DEVELOPMENT APPROVAL that on September 14, 2016, the Pitkin County W/J Metropolitan DISTRICT Notice is hereby given to the general public of the Community Development Director granted approv- By:/s/ Paul Jones approval of a site-specific development plan, and al for the Odd Couple West LLC (Case P028-16; Secretary the creation of a vested property right pursuant to Deter. #074-2016). The property is located at 200 the Land Use Code of the City of Aspen and Title West Reds Road and is legally described as Lot B, First Publication: September 29, 2016. 24, Article 68, Colorado Revised Statutes, pertain- Swales Lot Split. The State Parcel Identification Last Publication: October 6, 2016. ing to the following described property: Parcel ID Number for the property is 2737-063-09-002. This Published in: Aspen Times #2737-181-31-007, Legally described as Aspen site-specific development plan grants a vested Published in the Aspen Times Weekly September Club Condominiums, Condominium Unit D-3, property right pursuant to Title 24, Article 68, Colo- 29, 2016 and October 6, 2016. (12391746) Building D, City of Aspen, County Of Pitkin, State rado Revised Statutes. Of Colorado; commonly known as 1431 Crystal S/Cindy Houben Lake Rd. An administrative approval of a Stream Community Development Director Margin Review Exemption was granted to expand Pitkin County, Colorado an existing deck; Reception #632191, 9/14/2016. The project is depicted in the land use application Published in the Aspen Times Weekly, September on file with the City of Aspen. For further informa- 29, 2016. (12382722) tion contact Ben Anderson at the City of Aspen Community Development Dept., 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, Colorado. (970) 429-2765.

Grass

Faith Lutheran Child Care Center has immediate openings for Infants through 5 year olds. No requirement to be a member of the church. Call Janelle Tordoff at 970-510-5694!

970-618-8481

santosvigil@gmail.com

44 percent of newspaper ad readers went online to get more information about the advertised product. To place a Classified ad, call us now at 866-850-9937 or e-mail classifieds@cmnm.org

FREE DELIVERY

NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT

Landscaping NOTICE Maintenance, is hereby given that the W/J Metropolitan District ("District") of Pitkin County, Colorado, will Construction & Residential make final payment at Marchetti & Weaver LLC, 28 Clean Up, Stone Second Street,work, Edwards, Colorado, on October 17, 2016, at the hour of 4:00 p.m. to David Rippy ConDe-thatching & struction Inc,Lawn of Glenwood Springs, Colorado for all workServing done by Contractor(s) in construction Edging, Allsaid Valley Lily is here to give you a

Newspapers + Web = customers.

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Travel/Tours

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WE’LL MOVE MOUNTAINS FOR YOU

City of Aspen Published in The Aspen Times on September 29, 2016. (12396273) NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING RE: 200 S. Aspen Street - Hotel Lenado Public Hearing:

October 18, 2016, 4:30 PM

Meeting Location: City Hall, Sister Cities Room 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, CO 81611 Project Location: 200 S. Aspen Street, legally described as Lots A, B and C, Block 75, City and Townsite of Aspen and also described on the Hotel Lenado Condominiums Plat recorded February 6, 1997, in Plat Book 41 at Page 79, as Reception No. 401585, Pitkin County, Colorado Description: The applicant is proposing to redevelop the hotel with a new mixed-use building containing a mix of affordable housing units, freemarket units, and lodge units Land Use Reviews Req:Final Commercial Design Decision Making Body:Planning & Zoning Commission Applicant: DCBD2 LLC (1601 Elm Street, 8th floor, Dallas, TX 75201) More Information: For further information related to the project, contact Jennifer Phelan at the City of Aspen Community Development Department, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, CO, (970) 429.2759, Jennifer.phelan@cityofaspen.com. Published in the Aspen Times on September 29, 2016 (12396244)

NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT NOTICE is hereby given that the W/J Metropolitan District ("District") of Pitkin County, Colorado, will make final payment at Marchetti & Weaver LLC, 28 Second Street, Edwards, Colorado, on October 17, 2016, at the hour of 4:00 p.m. to David Rippy Construction Inc, of Glenwood Springs, Colorado for all work done by said Contractor(s) in construction work performed within the District. Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, company or corporation that has furnished labor, materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions, provender, or other supplies used or consumed by such contractors or their subcontractors, in or about the performance of the work contracted to be done or that supplies rental machinery, tools, or equipment to the extent used in the prosecution of the work, and whose claim therefor has not been paid by the contractors or their subcontractors, at any time up to and including the time of final settlement for the work contracted to be done, is required to file a verified statement of the amount due and unpaid, and an account of such claim, to the District, whose address is 28 Street, Edwards, Colorado, on or before the date and time hereinabove shown. Failure on the part of any claimant to file such verified statement of claim prior to such final settlement will release the District, its Board of Directors, officers, agents, and employees, of and from any and all liability for such claim. All of the above is pursuant to § 38-26-107, C.R.S. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Do you use craigslist? If so, go to craigscrimelist.org and you may change your mind. W/J Metropolitan DISTRICT By:/s/ Paul Jones Secretary

First Publication: September 29, 2016. Last Publication: October 6, 2016. Published in: Aspen Times Published in the Aspen Times Weekly September 29, 2016 and October 6, 2016. (12391746)

For information on legals, or to place a legal please e-mail pschultz@cmnm.org or call 970-777-3172 NOTICE OF FINAL PAYMENT

Notice of Final Payment from the Town of Basalt for the Midland, Pan and Fork, and Old Pond Park Project: In accordance with C.R.S. 38-26-107 (1) The Town of Basalt Public Works is hereby announcing its intentions of final payment to the Contractor Rocky Mt. Custom Landscapes Inc. at P.O. Box 480 Eagle, CO 81631 for the completion of the Midland, Pan and Fork, and Old Pond Park Project work done between 7/1/2015 and 9/1/2016 . Any entity with outstanding financial requests or claims involving the job known as the Midland, Pan and Fork, and Old Pond Park Project please file your request with The Town of Basalt, 101 Midland Ave. Basalt, CO 81621 by noon on October 7th, 2016 when payment arrangements will be made. After which, all financial claims will be assumed settled. Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on September 29th, and October 6th, 2016. (12391707)

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Pitkin County Treasurer 2015 Delinquent Mobile Home Taxes M000771 CAMPAIGNE CHRISTOPHER C 1 PHILLIPS RIVERVIEW SNOWMASS, CO 81654 Parcel: 246931390001 Subdivision: PHILLIPS MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E174606 SERIAL: 1235 YEAR: 1997 MAKE: PAN SIZE: 8 X 27 1 PHILLIPS RIVERVIEW Tax $204.88 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $214.88 M000812 CANAS MARIBEL 170 JAMES CIR EL JEBEL, CO 81623 Parcel: 246707490011 Subdivision: ROARING FORK MOBILE HOME PK Lot: 11 MBL HOME TITLE: 44E532357 SERIAL: GWCA21L23291 YEAR: 1996 MAKE: GW SIZE: 14 X 56 101 EMMA RD #11 Tax $345.60 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $355.60 M000719 LACHONCE ORVAL FRANCIS JR 22931 FRYING PAN #9 MEREDITH, CO 81642 Parcel: 247111490009 Subdivision: MEREDITH MOBILE HOME PK Lot: 9 MBL HOME TITLE: 57E1264406 SERIAL: CHCC021572 MAKE: CENTURY SIZE: 64 X 12 22931 FRYING PAN RD #9 Tax $198.72 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $208.72 M000051 MCINTYRE JOHN C 22 ASPEN VILLAGE ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 264306490022 Subdivision: ASPEN VILLAGE Lot: 22, MBL HOME TITLE: 57E135962 SERIAL: 1GN3670 MAKE: GREAT NORTHERN C SIZE: 62 X 14 22 ASPEN VILLAGE #22 Tax $307.36 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $317.36 M000753 PEREZ SOLIS LUIS ALEXANDER PO BOX 634 BASALT, CO 81621 Parcel: 246707490006 Subdivision: ROARING FORK MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E276985 SERIAL: 4P520312G YEAR: 1994 MAKE: WESTRIDGE/SKYLINE SIZE: 16 X 76 101 EMMA RD #6 Tax $301.48 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $311.48 M000687 PINEDA ALCIDES VASQUES PO BOX 2124 ASPEN, CO 81612 Parcel: 246707490013 Subdivision: ROARING FORK MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E260199 SERIAL: 11729AB YEAR: 1987 MAKE: KIT ROYAL OAKS SIZE: 60 X 28 101 EMMA RD #13 Tax $130.68 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $140.68 M000125 RIZZUTO PETER 39 LAZY GLEN SNOWMASS, CO 81654-9132 Parcel: 246721390039 Subdivision: LAZY GLEN Lot: 39, MBL HOME TITLE: 57E136118 SERIAL: ID57118062CO MAKE: COLUMBINEC SIZE: 70 X 14 39 LAZY GLEN Tax $80.20 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $90.20 M000098 STOM THOMAS 2 LAZY GLEN SNOWMASS, CO 81654 Parcel: 246721390002 Subdivision: LAZY GLEN Lot: 2, MBL HOME TITLE: 57E69703 SERIAL: 70142FB10253 MAKE: SHELMAN-C SIZE: 66 X 14 2 LAZY GLEN Tax $54.52 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $64.52

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC OF THE FOLLOWING MATTERS OF INTEREST REGARDING THE PITKIN COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS: •Unless otherwise notified all regular and special meetings will be held in the Pitkin County Library William R. Dunway Community Meeting Room, 102 North Mill Street, Aspen, •All regular meeting items begin at 12:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business allows. Check agenda at: http://pitkincounty.com/Calendar.aspx or call 920-5200 for meeting times for special meetings. •Copies of the full text of any resolution(s) and ordinance(s) referred to are available during regular business hours (8:30 - 4:30) in the Clerk and Recorder's office, 530 East Main Street, Suite 101, Aspen, Colorado 81611 or at: http://pitkincounty.com/Calendar.aspx NOTICE OF FINAL DETERMINATIONS BY THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the general public that on September 16, 2016, the Pitkin County Community Development Director granted approval for the Sweet Aspen Sunnyside LLC Activity Envelope and Site Plan Review (Case P039-16; Deter. #075-2016). The property is located at 292 Sunnyside Lane and is legally described as Lots 12 and 12A, Block 2, White Horse Springs Subdivision. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2643-274-00-008. This site-specific development plan grants a vested property right pursuant to Title 24, Article 68, Colorado Revised Statutes. S/Cindy Houben Community Development Director Pitkin County, Colorado NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the general public that on September 14, 2016, the Pitkin County Community Development Director granted approval for the Odd Couple West LLC (Case P028-16; Deter. #074-2016). The property is located at 200 West Reds Road and is legally described as Lot B, Swales Lot Split. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2737-063-09-002. This site-specific development plan grants a vested property right pursuant to Title 24, Article 68, Colorado Revised Statutes. S/Cindy Houben Community Development Director NOTICE OF APPLICATIONS TO BE CONSIDERED BY THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR: RE:Forre Covers/Elk Mountain Ranch LLC Activity Envelope and Site Plan Review, Subdivision Exemption for Lot Line Adjustments, and Merger (Case P069-16) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an application has been submitted by Anna Forre Covers (981 Mesa Road, Snowmass CO 81654) and Elk Mountain Ranch LLC (PO Box 1085, Aspen, CO 81612) requesting approval of lot line adjustments to merge two 2-acre parcels with the surrounding parcels, and to exchange acreage between the Forre Covers and Elk Mountain Ranch parcels .Forre Covers also proposes to establish an Activity Envelope and obtain Site Plan Review approval to construct a barn and an agricultural equipment storage building on the 35 acre parcel. The properties are located at 981 Mesa Road and Rural Mountain Way and are legally described as Parcel A: Lot 2, Douglas R. Casey Shield-O-Meadows Lot Split, Parcel B: A parcel of land situated in the NW ¼ NW ¼ of Section 23, Township 9 South, Range 86 West of the 6th P.M and Parcel C: a parcel of land situated in the SW ¼ of Section 14, Township 9 South , Range 86 West of the 6th P.M. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2645-143-00-013, 2645-232-00-004, 2645-143-00-003, and 2645-221-02-002. The application is available for public inspection in the Pitkin County Community Development Department, City Hall, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, CO 81611. Comments or objections are due by October 31, 2016. For further information, contact Tami Kochen at (970) 920-5359. Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on September 29, 2016 (12394683) Jeanette Jones, Deputy County Clerk

M000453 VASQUEZ EDGAR CHRISTOPHER PO BOX 2366 BASALT, CO 81621 Parcel: 246707490009 Subdivision: ROARING FORK MOBILE HOME PK Lot: 9 MBL HOME TITLE: 57E274451 SERIAL: GC230543 YEAR: 1973 MAKE: KIRKWOOD C SIZE: 14 X 70 101 EMMA RD #9 Tax $85.00 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $95.00 M000625 WESSELING ELLEN & RYAN PO BOX 2197 BASALT, CO 81621 Parcel: 246707300012 Tract: 46 Quarter: SW Section: 7 Township: 8 Range: 86 MOBILE SITUATED ON LAND DESC ON R015296 MBL HOME TITLE: 57E181562 SERIAL: K70141513 YEAR: 1976 MAKE: WIN SIZE: 14X70 519 EMMA EAST RD Tax $49.32 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $59.32 M000776 ZELAYA MARIA R 61 LAZY GLEN SNOWMASS, CO 81654 Parcel: 246721390061 Subdivision: LAZY GLEN Lot: 61, MBL HOME TITLE: 57E176995 SERIAL: 47981079351 MAKE: WES SIZE: 64 X 16 61 LAZY GLEN Tax $311.12 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $321.12 If the amount of such delinquent taxes, penalty, interest and advertising costs are not paid by the 10th day of October 2016, the mobile homes upon which said taxes were levied shall be subject to distrain, seizure and sale.

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Sydney Tofany Deputy Pitkin County Treasurer Published in the Aspen Times Weekly September 29, 2016

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A S P E N T I M E S W E E K L Y V Se pte mb e r 29, 2016

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Pitkin County Treasurer Delinquent 2015 Personal Property Taxes P009539 ASPEN DOLLAR BAR 301 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 301 E HOPKINS AVE COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 301 E HYMAN AVE Tax $139.44 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $30.92 Total Due: $170.36 P005444 BIG HOSS GRILL PO BOX 5698 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 Parcel: 45 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 45 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL Tax $196.44 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $39.46 Total Due: $235.90 P009377 BOOTSY BELLOWS PO BOX 1554 ASPEN, CO 81612 Parcel: 273707329010 308 E HOPKINS AVE LOWER LEVEL LL 1 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 308 E HOPKINS AVE Tax $790.12 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $850.12

P009165 FRONTIER RISK MANAGEMENT LLC 300 S WACKER DR #610 CHICAGO, IL 60606 Parcel: 602 E COOPER AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 602 E COOPER AVE Tax $176.60 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $36.50 Total Due: $213.10

P009171 MEATBALL SHACK 312 S MILL ST ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 312 S MILL ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 312 S MILL ST Tax $727.96 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $787.96

P009390 GEMORA IN COLORADO LLC 195 N HARBOR DR #4604 CHICAGO, IL 60601 Parcel: 273301339120 ASSAY HILL CONDO UNIT 238 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13138 Tax $269.04 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $279.04

P008046 QUIST AUDRA M & CHAD D PO BOX 5032 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 Parcel: 273506217014 FOX RUN LOT 14 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 190 FOX LN Tax $275.22 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $285.22

P009391 GEMORA IN COLORADO LLC 195 N HARBOR DR #4604 CHICAGO, IL 60601 Parcel: 273301339121 ASSAY HILL CONDO UNIT 240 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13140 Tax $269.04 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $279.04

P008793 COURAGE B 38 E 29TH ST 6TH FL NEW YORK, NY 10016 Parcel: 205 S MILL ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 205 S MILL ST Tax $762.24 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $772.24

P009358 GOLDENSOLV OF COLORADO LLC CALLE 74 NUMERO 6 11 APT 201 BOGOTA COLOMBIA F Parcel: 273301339176 ASSAY HILL LODGE CONDO UNIT 530 AKA 13430 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13430 Tax $269.04 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $279.04

P009257 EDLIN RICHARD & JANENE 85 BUCKINGHAM RD TENAFLY , NJ 07670 Parcel: 273718218102 918 MILL STREET TOWNHOMES CONDO UNIT: B PERSONAL 918 S MILL ST #B Tax $375.68 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $435.68

P001966 HUB OF ASPEN 315 E HYMAN AVENUE ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 315 E HYMAN AVE COMMERCIAL BUSINESS PROPERTY 315 E HYMAN AVE Tax $74.36 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $21.16 Total Due: $95.52

P004210 EL RINCON 411 E MAIN ST ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 273707330002 411 E MAIN ST COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 411 E MAIN ST Tax $715.76 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $775.76

P008878 IWM CELLARS 108 E 16TH ST NEW YORK, NY 10003 Parcel: 665 E DURANT AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 665 E DURANT AVE Tax $743.64 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $803.64

P009541 ESCOBAR ASPEN 426 E HYMAN AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 426 E HYMAN AVE COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 426 E HYMAN AVE Tax $846.88 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $906.88 P008278 EURO SKI & SPORTSWEAR LLC 416 E COOPER AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 416 E COOPER AVE COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 416 E COOPER AVE Tax $605.16 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $615.16 P090248 FENDI NORTH AMERICA INC PO BOX 59365 SCHAUMBURG, IL 60159 Parcel: 208 S MILL ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 208 S MILL ST Tax $58.81 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $68.81

P009521 JITROIS 424 E COOPER AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 273718216011 424 E COOPER AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 424 E COOPER AVE Tax $211.88 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $41.78 Total Due: $253.66 P090461 LASAIR LLC PO BOX 2347 BASALT, CO 81621 Parcel: 23400 TWO RIVERS RD #47B COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 23400 TWO RIVERS RD #47B Tax $515.48 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $575.48 P008971 MCLEMORE NINA 135 E 55TH ST 7TH FLR NEW YORK, NY 10022 Parcel: 675 E COOPER AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL 675 E COOPER AVE Tax $247.12 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $47.06 Total Due: $294.18

P008041 RICE MICHAEL & LAURA PO BOX 5957 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 Parcel: 273506101020 COUNTRY CLUB UNIT 1 LOT 7 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 193 FAIRWAY DR Tax $790.24 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $850.24 P009381 ROARING FORK ADVISORS LP 1470 RED BUTTE DR ASPEN, CO 81611-1036 Parcel: 730 E DURANT AVE #200 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 730 E DURANT AVE #200 Tax $79.16 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $21.88 Total Due: $101.04 P004164 ROCKY MTN CHOCOLATE FACTORY 265 TURNER DR DURANGO, CO 81301 Parcel: 401 E COOPER AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 401 E COOPER AVE Tax $766.08 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $776.08 P005747 ROCKY MTN CHOCOLATE FACTORY 265 TURNER DR DURANGO, CO 81301 Parcel: 11 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 11 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL Tax $490.24 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $500.24 P009555 SABBIA TALENTI GALLERY 205 S MILL ST #221 ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 205 S MILL ST #221 Tax $211.88 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $41.78 Total Due: $253.66

P009395 SNOWMASS VICEROY 314 316 LLC 3201 NE 183RD ST #2203 AVENTURA, FL 33160 Parcel: 273301339127 ASSAY HILL CONDO UNIT 314 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13214 Tax $486.56 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $496.56

P091220 WALDROUP CHANDRA D PENTHOUSE 1 DORSET ST LONDON W1U 4EE UK F Parcel: 273506215004 CLUB VILLAS PHASE II UNIT 123 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 240 SNOWMASS CLUB CIR #1413 Tax $40.48 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $50.48

P005743 SPLATT ALEXANDER JAMES 72 ROGERS ST SPRING HILL BRISBANE QUEENSLAND AUSTRALIA F Parcel: 273302406011 INTERLUDE UNIT 104B RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 70 GALLUN LN #104B Tax $110.16 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $120.16

P009507 WINTERSTEIGER INC 4705 AMELIA EARHART DR SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116 Parcel: 601 E DEAN ST ASPEN CO COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 601 E DEAN ST Tax $894.32 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $954.32

P009277 SQUARE GROUPER 304 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 304 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 304 E HOPKINS AVE Tax $790.12 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $850.12 P001609 STEW POT INC PO BOX 5868 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 Parcel: 62 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 62 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL Tax $199.12 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $39.86 Total Due: $238.98 P009342 TARTOUS VICEROY LLC 2000 PONCE DE LEON BLVD #625 MIAMI, FL 33134 Parcel: 273301339235 ASSAY HILL LODGE CONDO UNIT 716 AKA 13616 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13616 Tax $269.04 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $279.04 P009283 UPPER CRUST 300 PUPPY SMITH ST ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 300 PUPPY SMITH ST UPPER CRUST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 300 PUPPY SMITH ST Tax $248.08 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $47.22 Total Due: $295.30

P009299 SALON MYO 525 E COOPER ST ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 273718222002 525 E COOPER ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 525 E COOPER ST Tax $2,661.44 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $2,721.44

P009529 VALENTINO USA INC 11 WEST 42ND ST 26TH FLR NEW YORK, NY 10036 Parcel: 273718224001 304 S GALENA ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 304 S GALENA ST Tax $4,233.36 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $4,293.36

P009383 SKYFALL LLC 666 FIFTH AVE 20TH FL NEW YORK, NY 10103 Parcel: 273301339110 ASSAY HILL CONDO UNIT 214 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13114 Tax $701.24 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $711.24

P009526 VIA 5299 DTC BLVD #815 ENGLEWOOD, CO 80111-3329 Parcel: COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 601 RIO GRANDE PL #101 Tax $635.00 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $695.00

P009322 WOODSON SWEENEY VICEROY LLC PO BOX 6510 LAWTON, OK 73506 Parcel: 273301339134 ASSAY HILL LODGE CONDO UNIT 335 AKA 13235 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13235 Tax $269.04 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $279.04 P009324 WOODSON SWEENEY VICEROY LLC PO BOX 6510 LAWTON, OK 73506 Parcel: 273301339136 ASSAY HILL LODGE CONDO UNIT 337 AKA 13237 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13237 Tax $269.04 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $279.04 P009365 WOODSON SWEENEY VICEROY LLC PO BOX 6510 LAWTON, OK 73506 Parcel: 273301339203 ASSAY HILL LODGE CONDO UNIT 619 AKA 13519 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 130 WOOD RD #13519 Tax $396.56 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $10.00 Total Due: $406.56 P009515 ZENO 501 E. DEAN ST ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 273718296800 501 E DEAN ST COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 501 E DEAN ST Tax $1,282.80 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $1,342.80 P009025 LULULEMON 204 S GALENA ST ASPEN, CO 81611 Parcel: 273707340001 204 S GALENA ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 204 S GALENA ST Tax $9,587.68 Interest $0.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $60.00 Total Due: $9,647.68 If the amount of such delinquent taxes, penalty, interest and advertising costs are not paid by the 10th day of October 2016, the personal property upon which said taxes were levied shall be subject to distraint, seizure and sale. Sydney Tofany Deputy Pitkin County Treasurer Published in the Aspen Times Weekly September 29, 2016

Sound too good to be true? Then it probably is. If you ever see a job or an item for sale that seems just too good to be true, there’s a chance it is just an awesome deal, but always be careful when checking it out. Verify you are dealing with a local person and don’t give away personal info until you are sure.

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WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by KELLY ARMSTRONG for THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NOTEWORTHY

BOOK REVIEW

‘BORN TO RUN’ BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN’S life is now officially an open book. The autobiography “Born to Run” takes readers on a riveting ride through the everyman rock star’s deeply lived existence. Springsteen, who scrawled his story in longhand over seven years, begins with an exquisitely detailed child’s-eye view of his 1950s working-class neighborhood. He weaves an American Land tapestry populated with his colorful Irish-Italian family. Then come the musical musings: — Young Bruce, “on fire” after seeing Elvis on TV, quickly chafed at “stupendously boring” music lessons. “I still can’t read music to this day.” — Once, in his early band, the Castiles, “we were being spit on, literally, before it was a punk badge of honor.” — Among the bucket moments: realizing a “teenage daydream” while playing with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Springsteen’s California phase yielded picture-perfect landscape descriptions, though readers will spend more time

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hanging out in — no surprise — a different state. Gauzy, dreamlike photos inside the covers depict a vanished era in Asbury Park, New Jersey, the hugely symbolic seaside city of Springsteen’s formative musical years. In one, a Ferris wheel stands proud behind the historic Palace Amusements building. Readers may need to buckle up for parts of this 508-page spin. He contemplates some deeply personal topics as a way of providing context for his art. Springsteen, 67 — who had an integrated band back when that wasn’t always popular — reveals what he wishes he’d said after the beloved Big Man was subjected to a sickening racial slur. He also shares the heartwrenching hospital scene when Clarence Clemons drew his last breath. Then, he candidly discusses his own harrowing health battles. After scary surgery, he defied doctors’ orders and crowd-surfed in Australia. Quitting his longtime antidepressants prompted crying jags: “’Bambi’ tears. ... ‘Old

by JIM HOLLAND and JEFF CHEN / edited by WILL SHORTZ

Lament after being back-stabbed Crack up Test one’s metal? Down Classic word game Dollar competitor Contemptible sort “____ linda!” (“How pretty!” in Spanish) One who’s dunzo Glossy fabric Dancer’s leader The Bulldogs of the S.E.C. Line at the side of a photo Hoopster observing Ramadan? Electric ____ Shepherd’s-pie bit River through Seoul Bakery buy Nearly dried-up Asian sea Country whose name becomes its language when you drop its last letter Frequent Winter Olympics setting Sign from a thirdbase coach, say Van Susteren formerly of Fox News Gangster Luciano performing a risqué prank? Ankle-exposing pants “____ been thinking …” Captains on The Atlantic, briefly?

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By and large Neighbor of N.Y. Young swan Colleens Uncommon spelling for a common greeting Whole ____ I.Q. test name 1982 No. 1 hit with the line “Watch out boy, she’ll chew you up” Look lecherously Hobo at the wheel? Cunningness Many web advertisements Overly indulge in Movie Hall Bridge words Evil spirits Gently jabbed Enliven, with “up” Build-it-yourself auto Sugar suffix Flatow of NPR’s “Science Friday” Drops a line Where to buy certain Christmas decorations? Early PC platform Link with Accidentinvestigating agcy. Part of STEM, for short Long tale ____-pah Subzero, maybe One whose life is in order? Lament Mild form of corporal punishment? Poor Home of the Pampas: Abbr.

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Ovum “Walden” writer “Wild Thing” rapper How many college textbooks are bought Lot of fun, informally Saint for whom a Minnesota college is named ____ Hari Powerless group? “It’s worse than you can imagine” Org. Party handouts Wicked ____ Chigurh, villain in “No Country for Old Men” It takes months to complete Cheering done in a plaza? Baked with breadcrumbs and cheese Bringing up the rear Set off, as a security alarm China display

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‘Born to Run’ Bruce Springsteen Simon & Schuster, 2016 528 pages, hardcover

Under the wire, so to speak ____ speed Cockpit datum: Abbr. Merely superficial Olympics events rarely shown in prime time Carried chairs Nephew of Cain King who’s a friend of Oprah First name in fashion Word after liquid or fixed Sword-fight sound ____ of Glamis, title in Shakespeare Corp. money pros One holding many positions Big fan of the “Lord of the Flies” author? Mirror buildup, at times Dangerous backyard projectile Pop Erroneously hit “reply all” instead of “reply,” say Late author Wiesel Thatching material Underpinning Text on an iPad, say Collars Really feels the heat See 79-Down Hoped-for result of swiping right on Tinder Hot 75-Down around a saint Wardens enforce them Emotionally, if not physically TV spinoff of 2002

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70

71 75

78

79

83

84

88

85

89

90

95

91

96

99

93

61

74

87

92

54

60

69

77

66

45

64

76

65

37

59

73

17

31

52

58

16

49

51

98

15

36

48

94

14

30 35

63

81

13

26

57

72

12

25

40

67

86

10

24

34

62

80

9

22

47

56

8

21

50 55

7

20

28

32

6

Yeller’ tears. ‘Fried Green Tomatoes’ tears ... ‘I can’t find my keys’” tears. He broke down at the beach and was comforted by “a kindly elderly woman walking her dog.” “It would’ve been funny, except it wasn’t.” His wife and new medication pulled him out of the mental abyss that his father also had known all too well. The salted wounds are soothed with sweetness: snapshots of his Growin’ Up family and the one he created with the musician Patti Scialfa . With Scialfa’s guidance, he learned to reconnect amid the musician’s life: padding into the kitchen overnight to get milk for their littlest one, and then tucking him in with a story; learning to make pancakes for their brood. Over time, he realized that “a song will always be there for me.” But “your children,” he says, “are here and gone.”

100

97

101

105

106

107

112

113

114

117

118

119

121

122

123

102 108

109

103

104

110 115

111 116 120 124

— Last week’s puzzle answers — 87 89 90

Narrow arm of the sea Part of the inner ear Channel with “Family Feud” reruns 91 Sound of a pebble hitting water 92 Galápagos Islands’ country 93 Setting for many New Yorker cartoons 95 They get wetter as they dry 99 Actor Milo 101 Bottom line

103 106 107 108 109 111

Beer ____ DVR choice Refrain syllables Pluto flyby org. Enthrall They come straight from the horse’s mouth 115 Bottom line

T H E W B

P U S H U Y P E B P R A

S T E E L G R A Y S

R I L E Y

S A M E W L A R I A G I T M C H I

F L A P

C L O S E

T H E S I S T I M E L O C K S

C R O A T

D E N S E R

W I S E D

H E I R

K O I

H A A B - C A L H W E A W E

I M E A N T H A T

S A T Y C H O E D R P A I O G - R I P U D O N W I C A T O Y S M S O I N C O S O G M U T E R O S E L T E D

S C R A P E N O B B O Y

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

E D E W N I X I D F I O R H E E E V W I L I N I - C F F E T I S T T O O R A - S N D O T O S S Y

S W A T S

U H O H

B O Z O

S A V E

E D E E S N S

C R O P C I R C L E

T A K E S D R U G S

W E D E A T A T


CLOSING ENCOUNTERS

IMAGE of the WEEK photography by ANNA STONEHOUSE

| 09.21.16 | Aspen High School | STUDENTS GET INTO THE SCHOOL SPIRIT SEPT. 21 DURING AN ASPEN HIGH SCHOOL PEP RALLY IN DOWNTOWN ASPEN. THE SKIERS LOST TO GRAND VALLEY 48-43 ON SEPT. 23, BUT THE WEEK’S HOMECOMING FESTIVITIES SEEMED TO BE A SUCCESS.

Have a great photo taken in or around Aspen? Send your high resolution images our way along with the date, location and caption information. Send entries to jmcgovern@aspentimes.com

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

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The Sales Volume Leader in Aspen/Snowmass and THE Global Real Estate Leader Aspen Snowmass Village B asalt Carbondale Glenwood Springs

AspenSnowmassSIR.com New Listing!

417WestHallam.com

In the Heart of the West End This 4-bedroom home blends the character of Aspen’s history with modern design and contemporary finishes. Perfectly situated for main level living and entertaining with an upper level master. Completion mid-2018. $9,500,000 Furnished Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125; Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

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Exclusive Red Mountain Address

Must-See Aspen Mountain Retreat

Unique Downtown Opportunity

Sweeping views of Independence Pass, Aspen Mountain, and Maroon Bells. This 5-bedroom home is built in a timeless mountain style. Flat topography and stream running through. Close to downtown. $8,950,000 Matt Holstein – 970.948.6868

Light and bright 5 bedroom, 5.5 bath, 4,382 sq ft home. Views of all four ski areas and Mt. Daly. Completely remodeled in 2014. Contemporary steel and marble finishes. Quick hop into Aspen. $7,995,000 Furnished 153HerronHollow.com Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125

Two homesites perched on a unique condominiumized parcel on the mountain side of town. Perfect for a family compound or multiple home development. Walk to everything. Incredible mountain views. Homesite #1 – $6,900,000; Homesite #2 – $4,900,000 Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

Premier Aspen Golf Course Home

Gorgeous Lush Lot in East Aspen

Historic Main Street

Tremendous views of Pyramid Peak and Tiehack Ski Area on the 2nd fairway. This 4-bedroom home has an open floor plan, lots of natural light with floor-toceiling windows. Easy access to bike trails. $5,500,000 Chet Winchester – 970.948.7710

Pond, stream, privacy and views. Fresh Pitkin County approvals. Water rights, well in place on site. Follow driveway up hill and you will be pleasantly impressed! Plans included. Across from Nature Preserve. $4,750,000 $4,250,000 Ed Zasacky – 970.379.2811

Charming, historic commercial/residential building. 2,700 sq ft on a 9,000 sq ft lot with mixed use zoning. Large parking area and a short stroll to the core of town. $2,950,000 Maureen Stapleton – 970.948.9331

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

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S e pte m b e r 29 - O c tob e r 5, 20 16


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