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MARCH 5 - 11, 2015 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

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FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 12


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UniqUe Aspen ski-in, ski-oUt 416 Moore Drive, Aspen | $7,875,000

Perfect in Every Season, a 5,215 sq. ft, five-bedroom home located in the exclusive Five Trees neighborhood adjacent to miles of Nordic ski trails, world-class mountain & road biking, and the Five Trees HOA’s ‘Private Access’ Ski Lift to Aspen Highlands. Walk, bike or even ski to schools, the Aspen Rec Center & Aspen Highlands. Recently renovated, the upstairs floor plan combines traditional usability and comfort with sophisticated contemporary interior finishes including hardwood floors, exposed beams, honed granite countertops and crisp white walls. Downstairs, a stacked bedroom floor plan includes a private master suite & three bedrooms, each with large windows and/or direct access to the outdoors. The fifth bedroom can be a family room, artist’s studio or lock-off caretaker unit. This must-see property is ideal for families who want to be in the Aspen School District, or buyers looking for a home in Aspen with direct ski-in/ski-out access on almost two acres. Five minutes by car to the Maroon Creek Club, Buttermilk, Town and the Golf Course. MLS# 136183

Experience is the Difference

JUDD CLARENCE 970.920.7382 judd@masonmorse.com

Coldwell Banker Mason Morse Aspen | 514 E. Hyman Avenue | 970.925.7000 | Find more at www.masonmorse.com Exclusive Member for Aspen and Snowmass, CO

©2015 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each office is Independently Owned and Operated. Coldwell Banker®, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International®, the Previews International Logo, and “Dedicated to Luxury Real EstateSM” are registered and unregistered service marks to Coldwell Banker LLC.

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WELCOME MAT

INSIDE this EDITION VOLUME 4 F ISSUE NUMBER 16

DEPARTMENTS 04 THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION 10 LEGENDS & LEGACIES 12

FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

14 WINE INK 16 FOOD MATTERS 30 AROUND ASPEN 32 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 33 LOCAL CALENDAR 42 CROSSWORD 43 CLOSING ENCOUNTERS

14 WINEINK What’s more Aspen than drinking French Champagne between runs down champagne-powdered

ON THE COVER

slopes? “Fish and chips” featuring California caviar and Boulder Canyon potato chips, perhaps?

Cover design by Ashley Detmering

Well, look no further than the Oasis pop-up bar on Ajax to get your fix. Wine writer Kelly J. Hayes gives us a taste of the high life in this week’s column.

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General manager Samantha Johnston Editor Jeanne McGovern Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott Circulation Maria Wimmer Art Director Afton Groepper Publication Designer Ashley Detmering Production Manager Evan Gibbard Arts Editor Andrew Travers Contributing Writers Amiee White Beazley Amanda Rae Busch John Colson Kelly J. Hayes Barbara Platts Stephen Regenold Tim Willoughby High Country News Aspen Historical Society Sales Ashton Hewitt William Gross Amy Laha David Laughren Max Vadnais Louise Walker Tim Kurnos Read the eEdition http://issuu.com/theaspentimes Classified Advertising (970) 925-9937


MOUNTAIN LIVING WITH MODERN LUXURIES! GLENWOOD This magnificent custom built four bedroom, four bath home in Elk Springs has the privacy you’ve dreamt of and the luxuries you deserve. The gourmet kitchen is perfect for entertaining. You will love the open floor plan and large rock fireplace. The master suite is located on the main level and the oversized three car garage has a 37’x 24’ storage/loft area above. End your day on the deck enjoying your incredible view of Mt. Sopris. $899,000 MLS#: 137826 Becky Ciani 970.704.3235 | becky@masonmorse.com

SKI-IN BUILDING SITE AT ASPEN HIGHLANDS

BRIGHT + STYLISHLY RENOVATED

ASPEN

SNOWMASS VILLAGE

Carrie Wells 970.920.7375 | carrie@carriewells.com

Seana Lee 970.236.0141 | seana@masonmorse.com Ivan Skoric 970.429.2283 | ivan@masonmorse.com

The largest, most secluded, ski-in/ski-out building site on the Thunderbowl side of Aspen Highlands. This rare offering features dramatic views of the Thunderbowl ski run yet the treed lot offers privacy like no other Aspen Highlands ski-in lot. Build up to 5,500 sq. ft. above grade with an additional 4,000 sq. ft. below grade and the unique ability to have a detached accessory dwelling unit. $4,950,000 MLS#: 137657

Gorgeous two-bedroom, two-bath, light-filled, corner townhouse in the Snowmass Villas complex. Views over the Snowmass Golf Course and conveniently located steps away from the bus stop and bike path. High ceilings, gourmet kitchen, gorgeous chocolate wood trim and plantation shutters. Bathrooms feature stone floors, custom tile and glass enclosures. Central air and humidifier system. $1,175,000 MLS#: 137693

thesource

Find more at

www.masonmorse.com

Aspen | 514 E. Hyman Ave. | 970.925.7000 Snowmass Village | 90 Carriage Way, Capitol Peak #3111 | 970.923.7700 Basalt | 727 East Valley Rd. | 970.927.3000 Carbondale | 0290 Highway 133 | 970.963.3300 Redstone | 385 Redstone Blvd. | 970.963.1061 Glenwood Springs | 1614 Grand Ave. | 970.928.9000 FB/ColdwellBankerMasonMorse

TW/masonmorse

LN/Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

YT/CBMasonMorse

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

with ANDREW TRAVERS

FESTIVAL IN ITS THIRD OUTING, the Après Ski Cocktail Classic is moving to Aspen for four days of tastings and seminars celebrating the art of slopeside spirits. The events, previously headquartered in Snowmass Village, will be based at the Little Nell and gondola plaza, running from March 5 to 8. The base of Aspen Mountain will transform into the Classic’s Grand Tasting Village featuring mixologists and brand representatives. The Grand Tastings will run from 2 to 5 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, with a Private Reserve Tasting Room inside the Nell. Seminars will run Thursday through Saturday in the Nell and at Justice Snow’s, with demonstrations and talks on Colorado distillers — one dedicated to Woody Creekborn Stanahan’s Colorado Whiskey — Champagne and fondue pairings, hot toddies, and tequila aromatics. Other events include a fireside chat series, pop-up bars, tastings, brunches and dinners. The festivities culminate with the Great Après Ski Pub Crawl on Sunday, March 8, sending participants to 10 Aspen bars to taste competing cocktails vying for the title of Best Après Cocktail, with seminars at Justice Snow’s and Chef ’s Club. “We truly have something for everyone,” Cocktail Classic co-founder Laura Albers says in a press release. Pub crawl tickets are $45. Admission for the rest of the action ranges from $85 for a grand tasting to $390 for a VIP pass. A $165 Locals Pass gets you into two grand tastings, the pub crawl and one après party. Tickets and more information at www.apresskicc.com.

The Après Ski Cocktail Classic runs March 5-8.

CURRENTEVENTS ART

Trevor Wilson will give his final performance as Justice Snow’s composer-in-residence on Sunday, March 8.

POPULAR MUSIC “Grass #10” by Chris Hassig.

CARBONDALE ARTIST CHRIS HASSIG will be spotlighted in a solo show at the Nugget Gallery, showcasing his new “Grass Series.” Hassig, who had a solo show at the gallery on the Hyman mall in 2013, has made intricate, large format pen and ink grassscapes. The show opens on Thursday, March 5 and the gallery will host a reception with Hassig on Saturday, March 7 from 6 to 8 p.m. More information at www.nuggetaspen.com

BROOKLYN-BASED SINGER-SONGWRITER Trevor Wilson has been in the valley this winter, traveling around Colorado and forging songs out of the experience as Justice Snow’s inaugural composer-inresidence. Wilson will give the final live performance of his residency on Sunday, March 8 at the bar and restaurant at 5 p.m. Wilson’s show is also the final event in Justice Snow’s 20-event Americana Music Series, which has included workshops, songwriter spotlights and performances by the band Hot Eagle. More information at www.justicesnows.com

COMPLETE LOCAL LISTINGS ON PAGE 33 6

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COURTESY PHOTOS


BRIAN HAZEN PRESENTS...

Downtown Core to...West Aspen CHATEAU DUMONT CORNER UNIT… AT THE BASE OF ASPEN MOUNTAIN • A-1 location/just steps to the Silver Queen Gondola. • Rage second floor corner unit. • South-facing with dramatic views up Aspen Mountain. • All new cabinetry, stainless steel appliances and granite counter-tops. • Airy and bright!

$1,250,000

WEST ASPEN CONTEMPORARY … STUNNING MOUNTAIN VIEWS • 5 bedroom / 5 bath + 2 powder rooms. • Attractive stone and wood design. • Contemporary architecture with clean interior spaces. • Extensive marble, stone and granite finishes. • Dramatic great room with soaring windows. • Stunning views from Starwood to Red Mountain/Independence Pass and Aspen Mountain. • Spacious top floor master suite. • Generous media/family room.

$4,450,000

Under Contract THE RESIDENCE … ON BONITA DRIVE • 5 beds / 5 baths + 2 Powder Rooms • 5,346 sq. ft. • Top floor great room overlooking Aspen Golf Course. • Stunning straight-on views of Pyramid Peak, Highlands, and Buttermilk • Located in a great family neighborhood on Bonita Drive

$5,495,000

COLDWELL BANKER MASON MORSE

514 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen 970.925.7000 | www.masonmorse.com

Brian Hazen, CRS

International President Premier Award vice president/broker associate 970.379.1270 cell | 970.920.7395 direct brian@brianhazen.com | www.brianhazen.com The area’s best-informed, most connected guide to both real estate and local life.

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

VOX POP What’s the worst experience you’ve ever had at a restaurant or hotel? SUSAN WILSON CARBONDALE

“I checked into a hotel in Vegas late at night and as I opened the door, the light shown into the room to reveal the bed and two feet under the covers. The hotel had double booked my room!”

CAROLE INGLIS CARBONDALE

“Once I was eating at a restaurant, and a cockroach fell off the ceiling onto my dinner plate.”

JOHAN MORLIND OLD SNOWMA SS

“My worst experience was in a hotel in St. George. It was the only hotel I could get into, and it was really dirty. There were pillows on the ground; it was just a mess.” C O M P I L E D B Y B E N J A M I N K O S K I / B A S A LT H I G H S C H O O L

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with JOHN COLSON

U.S. Muslims correctly nervous about hate I JUST CAN’T SEEM TO SHAKE my concern that the rising rate of ill-informed, if not outright stupid, antiMuslim sentiment around the world and in the U.S. is something we should be very worried about. I regularly get an email blast from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) with news on such matters as hate mail, screaming of insults and other indications that Neanderthals are stalking anyone who professes a belief in the Quran and all things Islam, and it’s a scary thing, I’ve got to say. To paraphrase the late, great Frank Zappa, I’m glad I’m not a Muslim, but there’s a whole lotta times I wish I weren’t a white man raised in the Christian way of doing things. That’s because there’s a lot of nutty stuff being handed out in the name of Christianity, enough to freak out even a casual observer. I should point out right here that I’m not a religious guy. I generally believe that spirituality is best left to the individual, and that we get ourselves into trouble when we try to make it into an organized thing, whichever organized thing you might have in mind. Anyway, these CAIR missives increasingly contain news of behavior so bizarre that I have to wonder if I’ve unknowingly ingested some kind of hallucinogenic drug. For instance, the KKK (Ku Klux Klan, look it up if you don’t recognize it) last month was spreading its bigoted, misanthropic message around neighborhoods in the area of Spokane, Washington — to wit, “You can sleep tonight knowing the Klan is awake” and that the Klan is specifically targeting Muslims with its nasty spotlight. The message came on a sheet of paper contained in a plastic baggie and weighted down with a number of pebbles, presumably to provide balast for being tossed out the window of a swiftly passing car — drive-by leafletting of hate and bile. An image of some bozo dressed in a white sheet and pointy white mask/hat is emblazoned at the top of the sheet, and there was a phone number for fearful neighbors to call to report sightings of crazed Islamists weilding baby carriages, shopping bags or other items that clearly are meant to disguise their evil designs on unsuspecting white Christians. More than one neighbor subjected to this campaign of hate, I should add, started gathering up the plastic-bagged papers and tossing them out, prompting some Klan apologist to go to work defending the Klan’s right to diseminate this crap based

on the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. I seem to recall the National Socialist Party of America (meaning Americans of the Nazi persuasion) using a similar argument in a Jewishdominated area of Skokie, Illinois, in 1977. The Nazis wanted to dress up in Nazi uniforms and stage a march through a community populated largely by Holocaust survivors, and the community didn’t want it to happen. The Nazis won, based on a free-speech argument, but the march got moved to Chicago, perhaps thanks to the uproar of objections. In another recent incident, a group of Christians showed up to protest Oklahoma Muslim Day at the state Capitol in Oklahoma City, where some Muslims had obtained a permit to gather and pray and speak. The “Christians” had no permit and were ushered out of the building after they started screaming epithets, calling Muslims “idiots” and the Quran “a piece of garbage,” among a lot of spicier comments I can’t use here. The ejection, of course, poured gas on the fires of rage among the Christian idiots, and their bigotry became cast in concrete. Now, I despise the acts of violence and terrorism being committed around the world in the name of Islam, but I don’t consider the perpetrators to be representative of mainstream Islamic beliefs any more than I believe the KKK (which claims to be a Christian-based brotherhood) or a ragtag bunch of rightwing, gun-toting, so-called Christians should be considered an example of mainstream Christianity. They’re all extremists, people who have decided to bundle up their personal insecurities, religious delusions and political grudges into one big, nasty bag of mental puss and use it to bludgeon to death anyone who doesn’t think the way they do. They use selected bits of their chosen religious dogma to justify their actions, when in fact their actions have no justification whatsoever, particuarly not hidden in the verbiage of their favorite holy scriptures. The KKK sludge, which has featured swastikas and Nazi symbology in more than one incident, is especially worrisome. Jews, in particular, have every right to get nervous when this kind of thing starts up in their neighborhoods. And now Muslims in America can add themselves to that list of on-edge communities, fearful of the day when the shootings, the burnings, the bombings might start.

HIT&RUN

jbcolson51@gmail.com


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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

Frank Willoughby (with the pack) on a Ski Club trip in the 1930s, good preparation for a 1950 Aspen-to-Gunnison challenge race.

SNOWSHOES VS. SKIS Tough miners commonly traveled between Gunnison and

Aspen over the Elk Mountains in winter during the mining days. They packed the route to excavations along the way or beyond for business in the city. By the time automobiles could make the journey — albeit a long one through Grand Junction and back up the North Fork Valley — few crossed the mountains in the winter except for sport.

The chambers of commerce of the two towns arranged a friendly challenge in March of 1950, a race over the mountains. Aspen’s challengers chose skis and Gunnison’s decided on snowshoes. Gunnison’s racers planned to leave from Crested Butte, snowshoe to Gothic, then head up Copper Creek and climb East Maroon Pass, and finally end the journey at the T-Lazy-7 Ranch. Aspen’s racers would leave from Ashcroft and take a shorter route, a straighter line that crossed the Elk Mountains and used Pearl Pass. Each town chose a four-man team. Gunnison tapped Mike Laton, a newspaper reporter, and Glen Songer, their ski coach. Aspen’s team included Norris Bakke, a retired State Chief Justice who managed the affairs of Aspen’s Chamber of Commerce; Charles Fifield, the local Forest Service district ranger, as well as Joe Popish and Frank Willoughby, who worked together at the Midnight Mine. The participants were experienced winter

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sportsmen familiar with their chosen routes. One of the Gunnison members flew a plane between the towns to confirm their route choice.

Willoughby had skied up and down every ridge at the end of the Castle Creek Valley. The race was to begin at noon

NO ONE WAS DECLARED A WINNER DUE TO THE WEATHER CHALLENGES AND BECAUSE TWO OF THE GUNNISON TEAM USED SKIS. ALTHOUGH ASPEN’S RACERS ARRIVED FIRST, BOTH TEAMS WERE SIMPLY HAPPY THEY SURVIVED. The teams chose different routes to avoid breaking trail for the other, and because the packed trail would be mostly downhill, skis would have a big advantage. It remained to be seen which would be faster on the uphill challenges — snowshoes or skis. The Gunnison route, about 35 miles, was longer but not as steep. The Aspen plan involved some steep climbs, but was shorter. Willoughby and Popish had years of experience climbing steep grades on skis with skins attached to the bottoms for grip. In the early years of the Aspen Ski Club,

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on Friday with arrival the following afternoon. The Gunnison men made good progress and camped in sleeping bags beneath the trees at day’s end. The Aspen team spent their first night in relative comfort in the Tagert Hut. Over the night, the weather turned sour with high winds and then snowfall. Aspen racers broke trail in fresh powder and made it to the top of the pass, but then they could not see where they were going. After hours of struggling they changed their route to one none of them was familiar with. They navigated with a topographic

map and compass. They skied into Gunnison at 10:30 p.m., hours late. The Gunnison team struggled through the deep snow and a blinding blizzard, carrying 70-pound packs. They set off an avalanche. They had not carried water, and dehydration set in. They spent an unplanned extra night outdoors, and ate snow for water. A dance party had been planned for the Aspen team’s arrival, but they were so late and so tired that two of them went to bed. Gunnison’s racers, completely drained from a frightening trip, spent the rest of Sunday recuperating and flew back to Gunnison on Monday. No one was declared a winner due to the weather challenges and because two of the Gunnison team used skis. Although Aspen’s racers arrived first, both teams were simply happy they survived. I heard about the race often when I was young, but there were never enough details in the storytelling. What seemed to me an awe-inspiring event seemed to be no big deal for the ones who lived it. It was one of those items my elders would simply recall, “remember the ski-snowshoe race,” and then move on to another subject. Tim Willoughby’s family story parallels Aspen’s. He began sharing folklore while teaching for Aspen Country Day School and Colorado Mountain College. Now a tourist in his native town, he views it with historical perspective. Reach him at redmtn2@ comcast.net.

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE WILLOUGHBY COLLECTION


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

MO O N L IGH T S K I PA R T Y

1957 A S P E N MO U N T A I N

“SKI CLUB HOLDS MOONLIGHT SKI TOURS IN JANUARY,” announced the Aspen Daily Times on Feb. 5, 1959. “The Aspen Ski Club held two moonlight ski tours last month. Eight went on the first on Thursday, January 22, while 24 skiers went on the second one. Contests and relays between two teams, organized by Dean Billings, were a highlight of the evenings with the losing teams buying pitchers of beer at the Red Onion after the moonlight descent. Supper was had at the Sundeck and the skiers came down in two groups, one led by Bill Goodnough and trailed by Bob Lewis and the other led by Ross Griffin with Billings bringing up the rear. The next one is slated for Saturday, February 21, or thereabouts.” The photo above shows people playing in the snow near the Sundeck at a Moonlight Ski Party put on by the Aspen Ski Club in 1957. This photo and more can be found in the Aspen Historical Society archives at aspenhistory.org.

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

by STEPHEN REGENOLD

FROSTBIKE: WHAT’S ON THE TW0-WHEEL HORIZON

THE FROSTBIKE TRADE SHOW, held each year in Bloomington, Minn., focuses on to-be-released cycling gear. Hosted by Quality Bicycle Products, the industry event gives a first look at products to be shipped this spring and beyond. Here are a few items that stood out on the show floor.

NEW KIND OF FAT-BIKE FORK: Iceland-based Lauf Forks designed a different kind of bike fork — it uses a leaf-spring setup instead of traditional suspension. At Frostbike the brand showed off a prototype fat-bike fork. It offers 60mm of travel and fits tires up to 4.8 inches wide.

BACKROADS WARRIOR: Bike racing on gravel roads is a nationwide trend. Salsa Cycle’s flagship gravel bike, the Warbird Carbon Rival 22, has a new carbon frame design. It takes large, knobby tires and has thin, arched seatstays and horizontally-oriented chainstays to better flex and absorb bumps on the gravel road.

KID RACER: UK-based Early Rider makes some of the most premium kid bikes you can buy, including this drop-bar model. Its road-bike position lets a kid grip lower, thus getting the rider’s center of gravity closer to the ground and “enabling greater leg drive,” a rep said. I simply love the look of this plush mini push-bike.

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FAT TIRE SET: Specific tread for the front and rear tires comes with a new set from 45NRTH. The wide, aggressive Flowbeist (front) and Dunderbeist (rear) tires are designed to be run in tandem; the tread increases rolling speed but keeps adequate grip while accelerating, cornering and braking, the company cites.

SPEED HAT: Belgian helmet-maker Lazer built a new kind of aerodynamic helmet. The updated Wasp Air model has a “bobbed” back end to forgive sloppy form where the wind might catch. Flexible rubber ear flaps give quicker off/on for triathletes looking to cut seconds off during transition area swaps.

HUNTER’S RIDE: Cogburn builds bikes for hunters. Its CB4 model can hold a rack capable of toting a rifle or bow and arrows. This year, the company partnered with outerwear maker Kuiu to bring a matching camo motif to the bike frame. Now your high-end jacket and bike won’t clash as you pedal backcountry trails in search of prey. Stephen Regenold writes about outdoors gear at www.gearjunkie.com


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• The great room showcases expansive vaulted ceilings, modern ribbon gas fireplace focal point, and windows opening onto endless mountain vistas • The family-friendly layout features include a billiards room, dine-in wine room, theater, fitness center, and massage/spa room • Secured entrance gate and snow melted driveway provides easy, year-round access

• For the art lover, Cerruse Italian wood walls have been thoughtfully protected with art tracks throughout the house and offers fait accompli for hanging your treasured masterpieces • The master suite features a vanishing corner that opens up to an awe-inspiring deck to greet your morning • $16,950,000 Offered Fully Furnished 5 plus bedrooms, 5 full baths, 2 half baths

Call Tom today to begin your property search

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AspenSnowmassSIR.com

970.379.1297 tmelberg@rof.net

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

WINEINK

MID-DAY AT THE OASIS IT USED TO BE THAT WHEN one heard the word “Champagne” uttered on Aspen Mountain, it was likely in homage to fluffy powder snow. That was before Sabato Sagaria’s inspired concept for the Oasis — a pop-up, movable bar on a sled that roams the slopes of Ajax spreading good cheer and dispensing KELLY J. HAYES French Champagne — changed all that. Now many a skier spends March weekends skiing champagne powder in the a.m. and sipping Veuve Clicquot Champagne in the p.m. And while Sabato, a Master Sommelier who once led the food and beverage program at Aspen’s Little Nell, has moved on to the bright lights and big city as chief restaurant officer at Danny Meyers’ Union Square Hospitality Group, he still pines for sunny afternoons spent at the Oasis. “This winter in particular, when I am trudging through the cold and gray streets of New York, I get the social media pictures on my phone and sigh,” he laughed. The Oasis is one of the most unique and luxurious on-mountain experiences to be found on any ski hill in any ski town in the world. Every weekend, between now and the end of the season, skiers can take a break from their runs for a flute of Veuve Clicquot Champagne and an order of “fish and chips” (that would be caviar and a bag of potato chips). “The idea originally was for a pop-up sled serving Ramen,” laughed Sagaria in a recent reminisce about the Oasis origins. “I was in Los Angeles and everyone was talking about this Korean Taco Truck called Kogi BBQ. Chef Roy Choi was parking this truck all around town and people were using Twitter and Facebook to find it. I thought ‘that’s cool.’ What could we do on Aspen Mountain that would create the same sort of excitement and vibe?” While the Ramen concept was nice, Sabato foresaw the difficulties

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involved with cooking and serving hot broth on a ski hill. Undeterred, he adjusted and improvised. “We had a great relationship with Moet and Hennessy (the parent company of Veuve Clicquot) and had done ‘Clicquot in the Snow’ here. I thought ‘let’s partner with them.’” Sketches were drawn, pitches were made and soon the idea began to sparkle. “We found a group in Denver called The Public Works and began to formulate what it could look like,” Sabato recalled. “The sled was fabricated and then we had to cut it in half so we could truck it in.” While Champagne was the perfect product to pour on the hill with the clientele that Aspen attracts, there were other hurdles to clear. “We worked with the town of Aspen to get the liquor approvals but they also said we could only do it if we served food.” Hence the fish and chips concept. “We decided that California caviar and Boulder Canyon potato chips fit the bill.” Launched three winters ago, the Oasis is set up in a variety of nottoo-hard-to-find venues on Ajax each weekend by the ski patrol. Pulled into place by the sleek Prinoth snow-moving machines, the idea is not to hide the sled, but rather to take advantage of the sunniest, most beautiful spots on the mountain to gaze at the beauty of the surrounding scenario. The brilliant burnt-yellow color scheme of the Veuve Clicquot brand works especially well with Aspen Mountain’s vivid blue skies and virgin white snow. A bar, under large umbrellas and surrounded by the signature Clicquot directors chairs and chaise lounges, and a solar-powered sound system, provide a perfect locale for sitting and sipping the snow-cooled Champagne. “The Oasis is one of our best achievements when it comes to our brand goals,” said Melanie Gramlich, the Colorado on-premise manager for Moet Hennessy USA and Veuve Clicquot. “Kicking up your feet, drinking Champagne and watchin’ the world go by is simply euphoric. It is an awesome experience.” Awesome it is as the Clicquotclad bartenders and tenderettes

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pour the luscious liquid into tall orange flutes. The vibe is casual luxury in an incomparable mountainside surrounding. Dancing frequently breaks out as both the bubbles and altitude combine, inspiring folks to move their snow boots to the beat. Founded in Reims, France, in 1772, Clicquot has great acidity and a creamy finish. Spring notes of apricots and brioche arise from this combination of Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier, the trio of grapes allowed in the production of Champagne. While the experience is sublime for skiers and Champagne lovers, Sabato could not help but remember some of the difficulties associated with the production of the Oasis. “Just getting it on the mountain, and then having to move

it the first time was a challenge for the ski patrol. But they were amazing,” He recalls. “Then there was the time we had a sled turn over and had a total Champagne yard sale,” he laughed. “Of course, one bottle of La Grande Dame took off like a bullet on the snow and we couldn’t find it.” A woman who was a friend of the Nell’s eventually located it and called to say she was holding it for ransom. For truffle fries.” You never know what will happen, mid-day at the Oasis.

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 1992 MOET & CHANDON DOM PERIGNON BRUT, CHAMPAGNE In 1992 my wife and I called the pick perfectly and moved from Topanga Canyon to McSkimming Road here in Aspen. A couple of years later we acquired a bottle of ’92 Dom and have carried it with us in various moves. Recently, we opened it with friends. It was a little more golden and a little less bubbly than we had expected, but the creaminess and the ripe fruit resonated. We were pleased that the vintage held up as well as we have.

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE LITTLE NELL


by KELLY J. HAYES

IF YOU GO... The price of admission to the Oasis is simply having a ski pass and the will to search a little. Follow The Little Nell’s Twitter, Facebook and Instagram accounts for clues as to where the sled can be found each weekend or look for Veuve’s signature yellow umbrellas and chaises-lounges. Oasis serves caviar, bottled water and chips, as well as Veuve Clicquot, available by the flute for $19/glass, or by the bottle for $95, both inclusive of tax.

LEFT: Little Nell assistant food & beverage director Csaba “Chubby” Oveges, toasts the opening of the Oasis with Aspen Times Weekly columnists Amanda Rae Busch and Kelly J. Hayes.

5 COURSE GRGICH HILLS WINE DINNER

PRESENTED BY EIGHT K RESTAURANT SUNDAY MARCH 22ND AT 7PM • $150 PER PERSON Amuse Bouche Chicken-fried lobster

Scallop Bake

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Duo of Rabbit

Mustard Seed-encrusted Loin of Rabbit, Confit of Rabbit Leg, Housemade Bacon, Swiss Chard Grgich Hills Zinfandel, Napa Valley, CA

Venison Osso Bucco

Slow-braised Venison, Parsnip Purée, Roasted Cauliflower, Pistachios, Cabernet Jus Grgich Hills Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, CA

Dessert Cheese Plate

Maytag Blue Cheese Ice Cream w/Port Drunk Cherries Vanilla-whipped Brie w/Blackberry-Orange Marmalade Chevre Cheesecake Crumble w/Honey-preserved Kumquat Grgich Hills “Violetta” Late Harvest Dessert Wine Executive Chef, Will Nolan Pastry Chef, Ashley Jenkin Wine Director, Rick D. Lang

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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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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

FOOD MATTERS FOOD MATTERS

MORNING GLORY

BRUNCH UP FOR THE APRÈS SKI COCKTAIL CLASSIC AT JUSTICE SNOW’S IT’S FUNNY HOW MANY people brunching at Justice Snow’s commented on my drink last Sunday. Well, maybe this wasn’t too unusual; sit at the copper bar long enough and someone is bound to spark up a conversation about a dozen-ingredient cocktail poured with earnest flourish. But it’s only after I stalk across the crowded dining room, squeeze AMANDA RAE past Hot Eagle, the house bluegrass band jamming in the foyer, and build my ultimate Bloody Mary on the side bar that I return to a chorus of queries. Wow, what is… where did you…I didn’t see…? Justice Snow’s DIY Bloody Mary bar — a tradition that owner Michele Kiley resurrected from good ol’ Bentley’s before it—is the restaurant’s well-preserved open secret: an array of seasonings and garnish hide in plain sight for those in the know, but somehow it’s missed by many. I stick with a classic pour of Woody Creek Distillers vodka, but the beauty is that imbibers may order any preferred base spirit — tequila for a Bloody Maria, gin for a Red Snapper, dark rum for a Bloody Pirate. To my spice-rimmed glass, I sprinkle a trio of Moroccan spices, extra horseradish, and a hefty squeeze of lemon before topping off with house-made Bloody Mary mix. Slivers of fresh red pepper, pickled okra, a splash of Worcestershire sauce, and a feathery celery spear complete my masterpiece. I could have built another meal in a glass from the colorful array of pickled vegetables and call it a day, but a menu of decadent Sunday brunch dishes awaits. Despite its reputation as a universally adored excuse for day drinking, brunch — the ultimate mash up of eggy breakfasts and hearty lunch fare — reaches its zenith when guided by imagination

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but doesn’t drain your wallet. I’ve had my eye on executive chef Jonathan Leichliter’s cultclassic — duck confit hash folded with crispy potatoes and Brussels sprouts leaves and topped with two béarnaise-enrobed poached eggs (pictured at right, top) — from the moment I heard someone rave about it last week. Huevos rancheros smothered in red and green chile, a mushroom frittata with chèvre and field greens, and French toast with cinnamon-apple compote are tempting, too, but I’ve had all those. It’s also hard to forego Sriracha-spiked hollandaise on eggs Benedict or the monster fork-and-knife burrito — which happens to be vegetarian with kale, roasted quash, black beans, and smothered in fire-roasted Hatch green chile sauce. (The ideal companion: A side of house-made, herbed Berkshire pork sausage.) Prior to Aspen, Leichliter lived in Santa Fe for three years, where he worked under James Beard-award winning chef Eric DiStefano at three different properties. “We’d go out for breakfast more than any other meal because it was so good,” he says of his time there. “A lot of influence on the menu comes from the Southwest and things I learned from him.” Yet ever the Francophile, I’m here for crispy cured duck leg, cooked in its own fat for eight hours then shredded and folded with salted potatoes, browned cabbage, and shallots. It’s arranged in a neat little tower that falls into a gooey mess when I break the egg yolks open, best scooped up with crusty sourdough toast. “We didn’t start doing brunch, I think, until Mother’s Day the second year we were open,” says Leichliter, who features select brunch items, including the duck hash, on his tight menu of daily breakfast dishes. “It turned out to be two of the busiest shifts of the entire week.” This Sunday, to ease into the pub crawl that caps the third

Mar ch 5 - Mar ch 1 1 , 2015

Annual Après Ski Cocktail Classic (March 5-8, see sidebar, opposite), Leichliter has created a new signature dish: Southern red-eye gravy infused with Intelligentsia espresso and bacon, poured over fluffy homemade biscuits with rosemary ham, fried eggs, and braised greens. A splash or two of Woody Creek Distillers’ new batch of rye whiskey may make its way into the gravy, too, as the spirit forms the base of “everybody’s favorite bartender in town” Keith Goode’s smoky-sweet cocktail mixed with maple syrup, more coffee, and a crushed, dehydratedbacon rim. “I was thinking of how good our coffee is and how much I drink,” Leichliter explains. How much does he drink? He pauses and tallies in his head. “Seven shots of espresso today?” Kiley’s eyes bug out for a moment, but she gets it. “Intelligentsia, out of Chicago,” she explains. “It’s a real intellectual’s coffee. Not super bitter, really well suited to the American palate.” This, as well as folk musician Jackson Emmer’s year-old community-driven Americana

Music Series, is just another reason why Justice Snow’s has cemented its status as the Aspen brunch in-between — not as extravagant as a white-tablecloth hotel spread but with a certain refinement that evades even the homiest of local greasy spoons. While some weirdos find charm in insipid diner coffee, a solid latte before a plate of farmhouse-style eggs makes all the difference to a stubbornly slow riser like myself. “It surprises me,” Leichliter says. “We have days that we open at 9 and by 9:15 we’re full until 2:15 — that’s crazy. You’d think those people would be skiing, but live music has made a huge difference. On Sundays it’s a zoo.” Seeing that the Après Ski Cocktail Classic drew an estimated 300-plus people last year — to Snowmass; this year the event moves almost entirely to Aspen — you’ll be wise to call ahead to reserve a table. Because the worst decision is to embark on a 10-stop booze tour on an empty stomach. Amanda Rae will be brunching on Sunday. Cheers! amandaraewashere@gmail.com

PHOTOS BY JESSIE CHANEY


by AMANDA RAE

MORE BOOZY BRUNCH During the Après-Ski Cocktail Classic this weekend, enjoy pre-pub crawl meals at: Jimmy’s Bodega “The Perfect Irish Coffee” Presented by Tullamore Dew & Ancho Reyes Sunday 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. 970-710-2182 | jimmysbodega.com Element 47 at The Little Nell Presented by Stoli Sunday 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. 970-920-6330 | element47aspen.com Hotel Jerome Presented by Woody Creek Distillers Sunday 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 970-920-1000 | hoteljerome.aubergeresorts.com

IF YOU GO... JUSTICE SNOW’S 328 E. Hyman Ave. | 970-429-8192 justicesnows.com Brunch: Sat & Sun, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Americana Music Series: The Crowlin Ferlies March 15 and 29 THE GREAT AMERICAN APRÈS-SKI PUB CRAWL & COMPETITION Sunday, March 8, 2-6 p.m. 39 Degrees bb’s Chair Nine at The Little Nell Chefs Club J-Bar and Living Room at Hotel Jerome Jimmy’s: An American Restaurant Jimmy’s Bodega Justice Snow’s Zeno Aspen

CHEERS! (clockwise from top): Brunch at Justice Snow’s hits high notes with its DIY Bloody Mary bar and comfort food including roasted Brussels sprouts with jalapeño, foie gras with grapefruit and pistachio, and (opposite) a spread of hearty egg dishes with Southwest and French influence.

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

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by ANDRE SALVAIL

IF YOU GO... APRÈS SKI COCKTAIL CLASSIC March 6-8 in downtown Aspen For more information, visit apresskicc.com.

THE CURIOUS JIMADOR The Curious Jimador, a banana-tequila cocktail created by Chef’s Club bartender Mattias Horseman, will be one of many creative concoctions featured during Sunday afternoon’s Great Après Ski Pub Crawl, which stops at 10 locations in Aspen. Ingredients in this entry include Don Julio “Anejo” tequila, Amontillado sherry, Orgeat syrup, Ancho Reyes liqueur and roasted banana puree. It’s shaken and served neat, garnished with dried cilantro and lemon sugar. Will this one get your vote? Libations was created by beloved Aspen Times publisher Gunilla Asher, who died June 2 after a

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

ASPEN UNTUCKED

by BARBARA PLATTS

The Generator, a workspace proposed for the second floor of the Aspen Power Plant, would include 60 desks that individuals could rent.

THE ASPEN POWER PLANT SUPPORTING THE NEXT GENERATION

WHAT IS AN ASPEN YOUNG PROFESSIONAL? Since the dawn of this column, I’ve been trying to define one: the mid-20s or early-30s resident who can thrive while in a state of constant vacation. We are innovators, entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, writers, politicians and philanthropists. We BARBARA PLATTS work hard for what we want, and one of those wants is to reside in this town. As wonderful as our community is, it doesn’t always appear supportive of us young professionals. Real estate prices are through the roof. Shopping locally will most certainly end in debt. And, no matter how dedicated one is, there is a limited amount of “real jobs” to employ us. Ideas abound among the younger generation. But how often do any of them come to fruition? Enter the Aspen Power Plant, one of the five proposals currently on the table for the former Aspen Art Museum building. First formulated several years ago, this idea was the brainchild of Duncan Clauss, the owner and co-founder of the Aspen Brewing Co. He envisioned the space as an old-time brew hall when the company was at its original location across Mill Street from the museum. “I would stand on our back loading dock and just look at that building and imagine and dream of how cool RENDERINGS BY GAVIN MEVLINO

a space that would be to pull off a brewery,” Clauss said. To maximize the full potential of the space, Clauss knew he would have to incorporate more layers into it, which brought in David Cook and Spencer McKnight, co-founders of Aspen 82, who want a space for a multimedia studio, and locals Lady Fuller, Gordon Bronson and Gavin Merlino, who were eager to create a shared workspace in town. Bronson had actually attempted to do so twice before, but high real estate costs prevented it. “There is a landscape of young professionals that are here because they like the lifestyle, but they work remotely,” Bronson said. “Most are in their homes or coffee shops and they don’t have involvement in the community. That’s why I think people would really like this.” The Aspen Power Plant would incorporate four venues: a brewery/ restaurant, a media studio, a workspace and an event venue. The

workspace, called the Generator, would be upstairs and have more than 60 rentable workspaces available for daily or long-term use. All of the rent money made from the Generator would go back into the community, making it a net neutral LLC. “I can’t afford a place to work in town,” Merlino, a local designer, said. “Having a space that breeds motivation and focus is something I would definitely use.” The multimedia studio and the brewery would be located downstairs. Cook would like to make the multimedia studio a home for Aspen 82, where they could have a Today Show-type set and be able to produce quality shows that could possibly get picked up by regional or national networks. He also wants to use the studio to provide an educational opportunity to students in the Roaring Fork Valley who want to learn more about different forms of media. “Aspen has so many important

stories to tell,” Cook said. “We want to be able to share the mind, body and spirit of Aspen.” The Aspen Brewing Co. would, for the first time, serve food and even bring in some liquor and wine. Plus, it would be a place people could hang out in and use free, fast speed Wi-Fi. The other proposals for the space are to make it a spiritual gathering place, a performance and event center, a science center or a media powerhouse by Grassroots TV. Out of the five, the Power Plant is the only contender for the space that includes for-profit businesses, but Clauss and Cook don’t consider that a disadvantage. They believe that their idea meets the criteria for a community hub, something that the city said was necessary for that space. “We definitely feel like we delivered on all of the pillars that the city was asking for,” Cook said. “It’s a home run.” I would have to say that I fully agree. To learn more about the Power Plant, visit www.aspenpowerplant. com. Show your support by liking the Facebook page (www.facebook.com/ aspenpowerplant), write a letter to the editor or City Council and make sure to show up for public comment at City Hall at 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 10. Barbara Platts doesn’t always get involved in politics, but when she does, she supports Aspen Power Plant. Reach her at bplatts.000@gmail.com.

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CONNECTIONS Gold Rivers Riverfront Property 755 Gold Rivers Court. Great top floor ASPEN REAL ESTATE riverfront two bedroom, two bath, plus 500 sq. ft. loft condominium offers an CONNECTIONS

RIVERS COURT, 455 GOLD RIVERFRONT PROPERTY FOR LEASE RIVERSIDE PLAZA

open living space, southern exposure, large arched windows, decks overlooking the river, one car garage & storage, in excellent condition, located in the heart of downtown Basalt. Offered for $649,000 NOW $585,000

On the River at the entrance of Basalt, This Incredible turnkey 3,338 sf walk-in first floor Commercial Space is beautifully finished offers a large reception area, eight private offices, five cubicles, two restrooms, full kitchen, picture windows/ natural river location Midland street frontage, Forlight, Sale oroutstanding Lease Riverside Plaza for November On the River at the ready entrance of Basalt, 30th Thisoccupancy. OFFERED FOR LEASE $22.00 NNN Incredible turnkey 3,338 sf walk-in first floor Commercial Space is beautifully finished offers a large reception area, eight private offices, five cubicles, two restrooms, full kitchen, picture GOLD RIVERS COURT windows/ natural light, river and street frontage and outstanding location is ready for immediate FOR LEASE occupancy. Offered for sale $2,250,000 or lease. RIVERSIDE PLAZA Offered for sale $2,250.00 or lease $21.00 NNN Custom Built Office for Spacious office or Call Center available Immediately. Please ask about leasing in Riverside The w high ceilings, arched windows, light and bright, Convenient ExcellentPlaza. location, Center is filling up, with only four commercial units to shops, restaurants, Next the river with great views of Basalt Mountain. Suite available. Join in, open your business 200,210atis Basalt’s 1,584.50 and Adjacent Suite 220,230 is 2,143.80 for a total of highest visibility downtown location. Located on on the second floor. Can be leased individually or combined, 3,738.30sf located Two Rivers Road and Midland Avenue. Rental rate of $19 psf NNN. Please inquire about purchase. Zoned for office and Now $21-30use. NNN Residential Floor Plans for Condo conversion available.

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Please ask about leasing in Riverside Plaza., with only four commercial units Mt. Sopris Single Family available. Join in, open your business at Basalt’s highest visibility downtown location. Located on Two Rivers Road Midland Avenue. 43and Acres Homesite

RIVERSIDE PLAZA PRIME RESTAURANT SPACE FOR LEASE Available immediately In Basalt, Suites 130 & 140 is 2,531.50 sf located on Two Rivers Road in Town. Zoned for restaurant/retail/mixed use. Excellent location, w/ high ceilings, great visibility. CALL FOR DETAILS

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New Listing

The Quintessential Mountain Compound • Nestled in the Castle Creek Valley approximately 10 miles from Aspen • 4 separate parcels totaling 82.6 acres • 13 buildings including the 14,987 sq ft main lodge, additional single family homes, historic cabins, and recreation and maintenance facilities • Total of 28 bedrooms, 25 baths, 5 half baths, recreation and entertainment hall, indoor sports court, walk-in wine room, and multiple spas • Trout-stocked ponds, breathtaking views $100,000,000 Furnished Craig Morris | 970.379.9795

This Starwood Property Has It All!

Riverfront Ranch in Old Snowmass

7 bedrooms, 8 baths, 9,307 sq ft Barn for horses or toys, amazing views Guest/caretaker wing, gym, media room $13,900,000 Carol Dopkin | 970.618.0187 www.StarwoodEquestrianEstate.info

One of a kind ranch property – 35+acres Main House: 4 bedrooms, 4 full, 2 half baths Guest House: 2 bedrooms, 2 baths $12,500,000 Terry Rogers | 970.379.2443 Doug Leibinger | 970.379.9045

Unique Ski-In/Ski-Out Home 6 bedrooms, 6 full, 2 half baths, 9,109 sq ft Ski-in/ski-out to Tiehack ski area Two master and guest master suites Theater, billiards, exercise & wine rooms $8,750,000 $7,995,000 Furnished Larry Jones | 970.379.8757

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Colorado Rocky Mountain Grand Estate Architectural masterpiece on 36 acres 6 bedrooms, 6 full, 3 half baths, 11,311 sq ft 3,000 sq ft of decks and patios Unlimited High Aspen Ranch amenities $7,995,000 $6,775,000 Furnished Llwyd Ecclestone | 970.456.6031

West End Duplex Opportunity Own an entire duplex, blocks from downtown Handsome architectural details throughout 1-bedroom apartment with separate entrance 10 bedrooms and great outdoor spaces $9,875,000 WestEndDuplex.com Andrew Ernemann | 970.379.8125

Maroon Creek Club Lifestyle 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, 5,870 sq ft Open floor plan with vaulted ceilings Formal dining room, private gourmet kitchen Hiking, biking, tennis, skiing and golf $5,795,000 Michael Perau | 970.948.9122

rtfully uniting extraordinary homes with extraordinary lives. F

Mar ch 5 - Mar ch 1 1 , 2015


Classic Colorado Style Custom Home • 5 bedrooms, 5 baths, 11,645 sq ft • Situated on 16 acres of beautifully manicured grounds with pond, reflecting pools, wildflower meadows, covered patio and amazing views • Private master and guest master suites • Gourmet kitchen with breakfast nook and butler’s pantry, formal dining room • Recreation room, theater, wine room and exercise rooms • 4-car garage $20,000,000 Luxuriously Furnished Craig Morris | 970.379.9795

West End Charmer

Starwood’s Garden of Eden!

Sophisticated urban living! High-end 5 bedroom, 5.5 bath, 4,080 sq ft duplex just blocks from downtown 1 bedroom apartment with own entrance $4,995,000 Furnished 103SouthSeventh.com Andrew Ernemann | 970.379.8125

4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 6,350 sq ft, 3.83 acres Waterfall, hot tub, indoor pool, views Study, artist’s studio/mother-in-law cottage $4,950,000 Pat Marquis | 970.925.4200 Chris Klug | 970.948.7055

Highlands Ski-In/Ski-Out

Ski-In/Ski-Out Luxury 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, 6,458 sq ft Sleeps 18, elevator, media room, wet bar Ritz Carlton amenities covered by HOA Unbeatable value at $736/sq ft! $5,150,000 $4,750,000 Furnished Matt Holstein | 970.948.6868

Build up to 9,000 sq ft in Aspen Highlands Only ski-in/ski-out lot available Includes Ritz Carlton Club amenities $4,350,000 $4,250,000 Tom Hineline | 970.355.4575 Zack Feast | 970.404.7654

The Ultimate Family Compound! 6 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, 5,763 sq ft 2-acre riverfront estate, 10 minutes to Aspen A spectacular private setting Main log home plus guest home $5,500,000 $4,950,000 Robert Ritchie | 970.379.1500

Rose Camp 397 acres bordering National Forest 3 bedroom, 3 bath, 4,391 sq ft log cabin Direct access to back-country activities Luxury “off the grid” solar independent living $3,500,000 Mark Overstreet | 970.948.6092

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MAGNIFICENT VIEWS ASPEN

A diamond in the rough, this spacious open floor plan features almost 7,000 sq. ft. with a roof top deck, five bedrooms, four baths and windows that open to a world class view of the ski mountains. Virtually every room enjoys stunning panoramas of all four ski areas. Located in Starwood an exclusive gated Aspen community. Starwood is a spectacular rural and natural setting of 960 acres including Nordic and equestrian trails, tennis courts and around-the-clock guarded entry. Also included in the Starwood lifestyle is common horse pastures and numerous hiking trails all within minutes of downtown Aspen. $4,900,000 MLS#: 136092

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ASPEN | 970.925.7000 ASPEN HIGHLANDS | 970.429.2283 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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S P A L R LUNA THE FULL MOON NG CELEBRATI E M I T S A P N E P S A IS AN by JILL BEATHARD

MOUNTAINS BATHED IN MOONLIGHT ARE A SIGHT EVERYONE SHOULD SEE AT LEAST ONCE. In Aspen, the full moon beckons everyone out to play — from locals to firsttime visitors. And while everyone has a different way of celebrating, the most popular involve a hike up to some destination where the Roaring Fork Valley below is in plain view, brilliantly reflecting the

PHOTO BY JEREMY SWANSON

light from above. Once you do it, it’s easy to see why the full-moon hike has become an Aspen pastime. Walking in the woods at night, you’re acutely aware that you’ve never experienced the ski slopes so quiet. As you reach the top of whatever hike you’re doing and the view

opens up to the valley below, it seems almost as bright as day. Everything is in plain sight and seems almost clearer somehow without the distractions of daytime: the snowcats moving up and down the mountain; the lights in town; the peaks, valleys and minute details of our incredible landscape.

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

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FULL MOON FEVER DON’T MISS OUT ON YOUR CHANCE TO PARTICIPATE

March 5 April 4 (also a lunar eclipse)

May 4 June 2 July 2 July 31 (blue moon)

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My hike of choice is usually up West Buttermilk to a backcountry area above the warming hut. Having never invested in an AT setup, I usually have to uncomfortably slog my skis and boots up on my back; I stop at the warming hut to drop off my gear and keep it cozy. I then continue up about 200 yards, where someone usually has started a bonfire in a pit with a direct, breathtaking view of Pyramid Peak and the Castle Creek Valley. Whiskey gets passed around, stories of past adventures and future plans are shared, and every now and then, you just look around in awe. My most recent excursion there

Mar ch 5 - Mar ch 1 1 , 2015

was just last month. Being a “school night,” we started up not long after dark and met up with a group of other young professionals, some of whom had lugged up a small grill and brats, buns and condiments to share. After an hour at the top, we began making our way back down, all the while passing more pilgrims on their way up for the late-night shift. I was part of that crew when I had a different work schedule, and I clearly remember one year when several people got hurt coming down. After some revelers left litter and vomit in the warming hut one night last year, Buttermilk Ski Patrol temporarily locked the structure.

But it has since been reopened, and Aspen Skiing Co. hasn’t had consistent problems with full-moon hikers, said spokesman Jeff Hanle. “I don’t think that was a group cultural problem,” Hanle said. “It was a few bad apples trying to ruin it for everyone else.” Hanle has said before that Skico doesn’t have a problem with people recreating on the slopes at night. The company just asks that users be safe, keeping in mind that no ski patrollers are present but that snowcats and snowmaking employees might be working; they also ask people to clean up after themselves and their dogs.

P H OTO S B Y TA M A R A S U S A A N D B Y T H O M A S O ’ B R I E N ( B OT TO M R I G H T )


NIGHTTIME ADVENTURES FULL MOON YOGA 6-7:30 p.m., Thursday, March 5 $20 Shakti Shala ULLR NIGHTS 5:30-9 p.m., every Friday $8 Elk Camp, Snowmass ski area Snowbiking, tubing, ice skating, live music and more

ALL ARE WELCOME Buttermilk is probably the most well-known full-moon party in the Aspen area, but smaller gatherings of friends happen on other ski slopes, 10th Mountain Division Huts and open spaces in the valley. Photographer Vanja Cucula, of Aspen, celebrates the full moon with friends almost every month, usually at the top of Snowmass or Buttermilk or at the Penny Hot Springs. “I don’t miss my full moons,” Cucula quipped. In the summertime, the group goes camping, and Cucula and her business partner Tamara Susa can often be found lugging camera equipment to capture the beauty of the moment. “Hiking and riding in the full moon, it’s amazing,” Cucula said. “I think it’s the most beautiful thing you can experience. ... It’s also a challenge.” Roaring Fork Valley organizations also hold lunar celebrations. The Aspen Center for Environmental Studies led a full-moon “owl walk” in January, and Shakti Shala offers a monthly yoga class. Complete with a

DJ, the full-moon sessions are more high-energy than other classes, said owner Jayne Gottlieb. “The theme is centered around the full moon of that month,” Gottlieb said. “It’s meant to use that extra energy that the full moon brings out of you.” Aspenites seem to acknowledge the full moon more than other communities. Cucula’s not surprised. “We celebrate nature more than other places,” she said. “People here love nature and love enjoying nature. (The full moon) is kind of a natural thing happening by itself. ... Once a month, you celebrate the beautiful thing of this place.”

OWL WALK 6:30-7:30 p.m., Monday, March 16 Free for ACES members; nonmembers $5 or $10 per family Rock Bottom Ranch

jill@snowmasssun.com

“HIKING AND RIDING IN THE FULL MOON, IT’S AMAZING. I THINK IT’S THE MOST BEAUTIFUL THING YOU CAN EXPERIENCE. ... IT’S ALSO A CHALLENGE.” - VANJA CUCULA, PHOTOGRAPHER

P H OTO S B Y TA M A R A S U S A ( TO P L E F T A N D M I D D L E ) A N D J E R E M Y S WA N S O N ( TO P R I G H T A N D B OT TO M )

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VOYAGES

ESCAPE ARTIST | “REAL: ASPEN”

by AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

GET REAL

TRAVEL CHANNEL POINTS ITS LENS TOWARDS “REAL: ASPEN” IT APPEARS TO BE a typical Friday night outside of The Red Onion. A group of friends – most of whom I recognize as Aspen locals – stand on the Cooper Avenue Mall, talking and laughing, catching up about their day on the hill. It is only when prompted by someone inside, do they cut the conversation and walk through the double doors to a table inside. AMIEE WHITE The group of four sits BEAZLEY beneath red and blue lights, and two small cameras follow their every move, recording every word. “Sometimes you have to enhance reality just slightly through the use of lenses, color treatments and sound to make a moment work,” says Jim Morley, director of digital programming at Travel Channel. Morley was in Aspen last weekend, along with cinematographer/ producer Shane Reynolds and host Kinga Philipps, to film the second episode in the TravelChannel.com original web series, “Real.”

“Real” is the kind of show Aspen locals will love — a look at the side of Aspen where issues like affordable housing and opportunities for working class residents are topics of conversation, instead of focusing on the latest celebrity visitor, or haute couture store opening. They might not be the topics Aspen marketers necessarily want shared on a national platform, but that’s the point, says Morley. “This series is the true stories of resort towns,” he says, citing Malibu as the series’ first destination. “These are picture perfect, postcard towns, but what we want to do is flip over that postcard and see what’s on the other side.” The show was conceptualized by Morley, who believes that web episodes, or webisodes, running approximately five to 15 minutes each, have a great future in travel storytelling. Compared to traditional TV, often more costly and requiring a bigger crew, web video production provides storytellers the ability to take risks

and bring travel tales to the next level of authentic experience. “I love stories that can pique someone’s curiosity by capturing a sense of place,” he says. “As a viewer, I want to experience a location through all five senses. We can do that.” Morley’s experience in the television industry goes back just five years. After graduating from Cornell University, he began in Hollywood writing what he describes as “B movies,” such as 1999’s “Final Voyage” with Ice-T. “I don’t know what it’s like to have a big budget,” he says. “My whole career I’ve had to scratch and claw. First it was shoot, edit and cut my own work. Then, in order to make the changes I wanted to see in film, I moved into a newer role. I’ve had to give up the handson work, but I’m still obsessed with the little things.” One of those things is bringing together the right combination of professionals for his “tightknit” team, to which he credits much of his success. Morley has been working with Reynolds on

Travel Channel series for five years. (Besides his work behind the camera, Reynolds is also a TravelChannel.com host of “Top 10 Locals List”). He then brought Philipps into the fold to star in his first web series for Travel Channel, called “The Wild Side.” It is Philipps’ combination of curiosity, easygoing attitude and ability to disarm her guests that makes her web series work, he says. “She gets what I am trying to do,” he says. “That is put real people into a room, set them up and let them go.” In addition to the scenes shot at The Red Onion, “Real: Aspen,” host Philipps goes snowboarding with Chris Klug, takes in the view from Michael Goldberg’s Red Mountain home, goes fat-biking with Mayor Steve Skadron and kicks around Ashcroft with Nina Gabianelli from Aspen Historical Society. Her experiences are not unlike what a typical Aspenite might do. “It’s normal people talking Aspen, not playing into the ‘famous’ parts of town, but telling other travelers where else they should go, like Little Annie’s – those mom-andpop spots – and, yes, talking honestly about why it might be leaving,” Morley says. As the landscape of travel storytelling evolves, expect to see more original webisodes like “Real” on TravelChannel.com. The digital space is not only a place to experiment with storytelling, it is also the perfect arena in which to foster new talent. In fact, the company is currently hosting a competition to find its next Travel Channel Star with bi-coastal auditions and calls for entries on its website. That winner will host his or her own web series, executive produced by Morley, in the upcoming year. “People want to see something exploratory, with beautiful images,” says Morley. “A combination of those two things creates something special.”

Amiee White Beazley writes about travel for the Aspen Times Weekly. Reach her at awb@awbeazley.com or follow her @awbeazley1.

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AROUNDASPEN

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

photography by NANCY MAYER

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KLAUS ASPEN ICON KLAUS OBERMEYER celebrated his 95th birthday on Dec. 2 with a little help from his friends. Obermeyer sang and yodeled with a Bavarian oompah band that entertained a crowd of about 50 well-wishers at the Aspen Business Center headquarters of Sport Obermeyer, the ski-wear company Obermeyer founded in 1947. The crowd also was treated to apple strudel and whipped cream. Obermeyer arrived in Aspen in 1947 and went to work for the ski school. He made an educated guess that he could retain business if he could ensure that skiers stayed warm and dry. He created a down ski parka from a goose-down comforter. The company bearing his name has been making innovations in the industry ever since.

OBERMEYER Klaus and Nome Obermyer, Alex Etkin, Klaus Jr., and Michelle.

OBERMEYER

OBERMEYER Bill Tomchich, Nancy Mayer and Mike Kaplan.

Jeannie and John Walla.

OBERMEYER Rita and Gene Clausen.

OBERMEYER

OBERMEYER

Matt Vreeland, Paul Tefft and Klaus Jr.

OBERMEYER Klaus and Claude Salter.

OBERMEYER David Perry, Lauri McBride, Klaus Jr., Klaus Obermeyer and John McBride.

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Tony Vagneur and John Walla.


Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!

Are you a Community Association Manager?

K SNOOKIE

Tiny, 3.5-month-old Chihuahua/Yorkie/ Pomeranian mix who melts your heart. She came to the shelter with her brother, Wolfie.

WOLFIE

Precious, 3.5-monthold Yorkie/ Pomeranian/ Chihuahua mix who is as sweet as they come. He came to the shelter with his sister, Snookie.

YEAGER

Happy, friendly, athletic, affectionate, 1.5-year-old Border Collie/Australian Shepherd mix who gets along great with people and other dogs. He is cute in both personality and appearance.

GEMMA

SAM

Absolutely adorable, affectionate, 5-month-old Yorkie/ Chihuahua mix. She is too cute for words. Enough said!

Handsome, affectionate, fiveyear-old Border Collie/Australian Shepherd mix who gets along well with people and other dogs.

JUNO

Happy, friendly, affectionate, 6-month-old Yorkie/ Pomeranian mix who gets along great with everyone. He will steal your heart with his funky appearance and endearing personality.

ey changes that will affect the way you do business are coming your way. Beginning July 1st, the state of Colorado will require that most Colorado community managers obtain a license to continue working in their field. Earning the Certified Manager of Community Associations (CMCAÂŽ) credential is a smart path to manager licensure in Colorado. Find out more about earning your CMCA and Colorado community association manager licensure at www.camicb.org.

www.camicb.org

TRISTAN

Friendly, affectionate, 2-year-old Pomeranian/Yorkie mix who gets along well with people and other dogs. The kids love his messy appearance and sweet disposition.

TUKO

Beautiful, athletic, 3-year-old Siberian Husky who gets along well with people and other dogs. He is not trustworthy off-leash, and will require a knowledgeable, responsible, active home.

BALTO

Mellow, dignified, handsome, 9-year-old Maremma Sheepdog (an Italian livestock guardian that is related to the Great Pyrenees) mix. Rescued from Italy. Very popular with our dogwalking volunteers. Ready for his new American home!

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206

MONTANA

Sweet, shy, 3-yearold sled dog. Fine with people and other pets. Despite the fact that he is an Alaskan Husky, bred to pull a sled, he looks more like an Australian Shepherd mix. Ready to find a loving home where he can transition from working dog to house pet.

SAM

Very cute, strong, energetic, 7-year-old Pit Bull mix who looks like an oversized Boston Terrier. Incredibly alert + very smart. Great with all people, including children, but might be best as an only pet. Has started playing with larger males! Loves to play and snuggle!

PATCH

Very cool, sleek, athletic, 10-year-old sled dog. Gets along well with people + other dogs. Everyone loves the patches around his eyes. Loves to cuddle once he knows you a little + really enjoys a nice back massage. Needs a responsible home as not good off-leash.

YENTL

ROCKET

Gentle, affectionate, 10-year-old retired sled dog. Blind due to complications from diabetes which is now under control. Needs a special home with people willing to give him lots of love.

HONEY

Beautiful, loving, athletic, 7-year-old Australian Shepherd female. Bonds tightly w/ her person, but can be territorial with people + other dogs, esp. in her home. With the right person, she will blossom!

Loyal, affectionate, 11-year-old Chihuahua. Bonds intensely with her people, but can be a bit aloof + protective of her space with strangers.

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter

101 Animal Shelter Road

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MAJOR PRICE REDUCTION NOW $3,500,000!!! Best Riverfront Home in Woody Creek The sound of the Fork and pastural view of Woody Creek ranch land is your morning wake up call. Ten minutes from Aspen sits a house overlooking the Roaring Fork River. Away from the hustle and bustle of Aspen awaits a high quality, 5 bedroom mountain contemporary home where only the sound of the river is heard. The Robin Ferguson engineered and built home has vaulted ceilings providing an abundance of natural light and room for your whole family. Convenient access to the Rio Grande Trail connects you to the Roaring Fork Valley. Your children can catch the Aspen School District bus at the top of the drive so your day can start right after you chase them out the door. When it comes to value, this Woody Creek home is one of the best. Oh yeah, 400 feet of private fishing is included! $3,800,000 Now priced at $3,500,000

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Call Tom today to begin your river property search

TOM MELBERG

970.379.1297

tmelberg@rof.net AspenSnowmassSIR.com A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

by ANDREW TRAVERS

STORIES FROM ‘THE OTHER 1 PERCENT’ ABOUT 12 PERCENT OF AMERICANS served overseas in the military during World War II. As a result, most civilians were in regular contact with veterans when they came home and familiar with the sacrifices they’d made and the circumstances of adjusting to the homefront. Today, the gap between the American people and those defending them in the armed services is far wider. Some have begun referring the new generation of veterans — those serving in America’s post-9/11 wars — as “the other 1 percent.” Paul Andersen, director of the nonprofit Huts for Vets and an Aspen Times columnist, notes that it’s actually fewer than 1 percent of the population — about .5 percent — that’s shouldering the burden in active military service. The result is an increasing disconnect between vets and the rest of us. Andersen’s new “War Stories” discussion series at the Basalt Regional Library, which begins March 11, aims to close the gap of understanding between veterans and the communities to which they return. To do so, Andersen is using literature and writing by veterans. “The idea is that, as civilians, those of us who don’t serve, it’s our obligation to expose ourselves to the difficult and often sobering truth that veterans have faced, and take it upon ourselves to shoulder some of their burden,” he says. Returning home to communities like the Roaring Fork Valley, today’s veterans are often the only people around who’ve experienced combat, which, Andersen argues, makes it more difficult to readjust to the homefront. “When they leave the service, they often become isolated from their brothers and sisters in war and service,” says Andersen. “So they end up isolating themselves further, and a lot of them feel a stigma about being identified

as a veteran. They don’t want to be identified as anything different. They want to just march back into normal life.” Over the two years since he founded Huts for Vets, through which Andersen brings military veterans to backcountry huts in the summertime,

he has immersed himself in the literature of war. One book, Ed Tick’s “Warrior’s Return,” stood out, he says, and inspired the idea for the “War Stories” discussion series. “Tick’s book really speaks to the need to heal the whole community,” he explains. “It’s not just about the

veterans. It’s about healing the whole community to reintegrate veterans.” Along with Tick’s book, readings for the series include selections from classics like Erich Maria Remarque’s bracing World War I novel “All Quiet on the Western Front,” the St. Crispin’s Day speech from Shakespeare’s “Henry V” (“We few, we happy few, we band of brothers”), Ernie Pyle’s World War II dispatches and some of Bill Mauldin’s “Willie & Joe” cartoons. More contemporary works include Karl Marlantes on the Vietnam War and Phil Klay’s short story collection, “Redeployment,” which won the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award for 2014. Andersen will also share writing by Chris Barker, an Army veteran of the Iraq war associated with Huts for Vets, who kept a journal of his combat experience. A little-known piece by a young Ernest Hemingway is also included. Titled “War Medals for Sale,” the 1923 story from Hemingway’s time as a reporter at the Toronto Star is about World War I medals in pawn shops around the Canadian city. It is collected in Hemingway’s “The Wild Years.” Andersen has purposefully selected some unflinching descriptions of war and works that depict the psychological landscape of war veterans. “It can be heavy stuff,” he says. “It can be graphic. But it is what it is. So I’m using super-realism to get across what these veterans have been through.”

atravers@aspentimes.com

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Phil Klay’s “Redeployment”; “War Medals for Sale” is among the newspaper stories by Ernest Hemingway collected in “The Wild Years.”; Erich Maria Remarque’s “All Quiet on the Western Front”; Edward Tick’s “Warrior’s Return”

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THELISTINGS

MARCH 5 - 11, 2015 by museum staff. 970-925-8050 PHOTOGRAPHY OPENING: BARBARA SHAW, THE GRANDE RIVER TRAIL — 5 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center, 006 Woody Creek Plaza, Woody Creek. Photos from the Woody Creek and Snowmass area. “HAMLET” — 7:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre Company, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. 970-963-8200 ENCORE — 8 p.m., Zeno’s Aspen, 501 E. Dean St., Aspen. Live music featuring Steve Peer, Terry Bannon and Damian Smith.

SUNDAY, MARCH 8

HEAR ABBA Mania, a touring tribute to the Swedish pop group ABBA, will perform at the Wheeler Opera House on Friday, March 7 at 8 p.m.

THURSDAY, MARCH 5 “THE MERRY WIDOW” — 5:30 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, 320 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. 866-449-0464

67 Promenade, Carbondale. 970-963-8200 “ABBA MANIA” — 8 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, 320 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. 866-449-0464

FRIDAY, MARCH 6 LP HERD — 3 p.m., Nest Public “HAMLET” — 7:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre Company,

SATURDAY, MARCH 7 GUIDED TOURS — 1 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 637 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Drop-in spotlight tours led

“HAMLET” — 2 and 7:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre Company, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. 970-963-8200 COMPOSER IN RESIDENCE: FINAL PERFORMANCE — 5 p.m., Justice Snow’s, 328 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Featuring Brooklyn, New Yorkbased composer Trevor Wilson. 970-429-8192

MONDAY, MARCH 9 MONDAY DOCS: “THE GREAT INVISIBLE” — 7:30 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, 320 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. A comprehensive film overview of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil-rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico and its aftermath. 866-449-0464

TUESDAY, MARCH 10 HISTORY TOUR — 1:30 p.m., Hotel Jerome, 330 E. Main St., Aspen. “THE ASPEN COMMUNITY VAGINA MONOLOGUES” — 7 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, 320 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Benefit performance aims to remove the taboo around women’s sexuality and raise awareness about sexual and domestic violence against women. All proceeds will be donated to Response. 866-449-0464

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11 GUIDED TOURS — 1 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 637 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Drop-in spotlight tours led by museum staff. 970-925-8050

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V A C AT I O N R E N TA L S

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PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

970 920 2300

stirlingpeak.com

600 E Main Street Ste 103 Aspen CO 81611 find us on f t

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C L AS S I F I E D S @ AS P E N T I M E S .CO M

Drivers Transportation P/T Shuttle Drivers

Jobs Agriculture/ Animal Jobs Dog Washer/Assistant Dog Washer/Assistant Barking Beauties, 970-925-3647 , 601 Rio Grande Pl. #116 Aspen

Looking for shuttle drivers with guest service skills, must be 25 year of age, clean driving record and valid CO license. $10 hourly plus tips. Email jobs@aspenclub.com

Hospitality

Barber/Beauty Stylist/Booth Rental Stylist/Booth Rental Bloom Salon has chair available. As an independent Contractor you will no longer give 50% or more of your income away? Call Lisa at Bloom for further details 970-925-2224

Child Care P/T KIDS GYM ATTENDANT

Now Accepting Applications for the

WINTER SEASON for the following:

Part-Time Seasonal Housekeeper

We offer an excellent wage and benefits package! Estamos Aseptando aplicaciones para la temporada de in vierno para housekeepers. Ofreccmos un paquente slarial exelente. Buss Pass, Temporada de Bonos por favor marcor oablar To apply stop in to fill out an application. Or email

employment@ timbersclub.com Equal Opportunity

Part time babysitters needed for Kid's Gym, previous child care exp required. $10 hourly. Email resume & cover letter to jobs@aspenclub.com

Employer

Please Recycle

Blazing Adventures

Call 970-923-4544 to apply.

Customer Service Rep. Atlantic ASE F/T position. Assist pilots w/needed services associated w/ the aircraft. Must be able to multitask & computer experience A MUST. HS education or GED req. We are a drug free workplace, E.O.E. Full Benefits! Apply by going to www.atlanticaviation.com

Domestic Housekeeper Full Time at Residence near Aspen. Email or phone Andrew. 970 618 6545 smr2aspen@yahoo.com

Brokers and Resort Real Estate Specialists

Coldwell Banker Mason Morse is hiring experienced brokers and resort real estate specialists for a new office in Snowmass Village. Colorado Real Estate License Required. Please email cover letter and resume to careers@masonmorse. com

More than 165 million people read a newspaper in print or online in a typical week.

AS P E N T I M E S .CO M / P L AC E A D

Restaurant/ Clubs

Restaurant/ Clubs

Restaurant/ Clubs

Restaurant/ Clubs

AM & PM Line Cooks

All positions All positions- Venga Venga Full & Part Time openings for servers, hosts, & BOH. Located on mountain @ Snowmass. Send resume with references to: sivy@richardsandoval.c om. 970.923.7777. 105 Daly Lane Snowmass Village CO

Gosh, thanks. More than 71 percent of adults read a newspaper in print or online each week.

AM & PM Line Cooks needed! Smoke Modern Barbeque Apply in person at 241 Harris St, Willits Town Center, Basalt CO

80 percent of adults who spent $500 or more on business clothing read a newspaper in print or online in an average week.

Aspen & Glenwood Locations Now Accepting Applications for the following positions:

Crew & Managers -Insurance Benefits -Paid Vacation -Bonus Program -Free Meals / Uniforms -Career Advancement Opportunities -Flexible Schedule Please apply online at

www.mccolorado.com or in person Bartender/Bar Manager Experienced Mixologist. Extensive specialty cocktail menu. Full Time. Apply in person at 165 Midland Ave or call 970-927-3342. Tempranillo Basalt CO

Cafe Manager W o o d y C r e e k Community Center seeking Full-time Employee: Cafe Manager Position: requires food prep experience, attention to detail, great customer service skills, responsibilities include food ordering, training staff, maintaining a clean facility, working closely with WC3's director, and keeping up quality & consistency of food service at the WC3 Cafe. College degree desired, but not required. Email resume and references to Emily T a y l o r a t info@woodyc3.org 970-922-2342 www.woodyc3.org

Now Hiring:

Cops and Court Beat Reporter -Fulltime

Looking for a dynamic person w/ unique combo of skills, ability to communicate, must-do mindset & desire to push yourself. 3+yrs sales exp, hospitality background & above average work ethic, be teachable & not afraid to ask for the sale. Salary plus commission, comp membership.Local candidates only, all inquiries confidential. Email resume & cover letter to jobs@aspenclub.com

Office/Clerical Part-time Office/Warehouse Manager Fair Trade company seeks detail-oriented, computer-savvy person to fill varied position. QuickBooks experience a plus. Email cover lett e r & r e s u m e : melange9090@gmail.co m.

We’re looking for that seasoned beat reporter who knows that it takes a little digging to find the stories worth reporting. The ideal candidate will understand the ins and outs of requesting and searching records and have a proven track record of developing and maintaining quality sources and relationships. The perfect candidate will be comfortable taking news photos and videos and utilizing social media to engage with our audience. A full benefits package and subsidized housing are available.

If this sounds like the job for you, please visit

Restaurant Workers Want a Ski Pass?

Restaurant Workers needed to finish ski season at Gwyn's High Alpine on Snowmass. Full/part time positions available. Come join our team and get a full four mountain ski pass.

Call 970-923-3311 before 10:30am or send resumes to

Retail Boutique Sales Associate

Reservations/ Extranet Agent Needed full-time, year round. A desire to have FUN+ Excellent computer, written & oral communication skills. Prefer 2 years sales/ yield management Experience. Great benefits & wage package, 401K, health insurance + Monthly commission

Email or fax your resume to:

heather@friasproperties.com

Fax: attn: Heather 970-920-2020

Technology Systems Designer VIA International is looking for Systems Designers in their Aspen, Steamboat Springs, Telluride and Vail locations. CAD experience and/or A/V industry experience is preferred. Full Benefits. Visit viahome.com for more details Send resume to alison.garvey@viahome. com

Trades/ Construction CONSTRUCTION MGT Experience w/ high-end residential & const. mgt software. Strong organization skills required. S e n d r e s u m e aspenbuilder15@gmail.c om Wanted DRYWALL / METAL FRAMING SUPERINTENDENT / FOREMAN (ASPEN / VAIL) Send inquires to peakint@gmail.com

We are looking for a F/T Sales Associate to work in our Boutique. Retail experience preferred. Email resume & cover letter to jobs@aspenclub.com

Gosh, thanks. More than 71 percent of adults read a newspaper in print or online each week.

www.swiftcom.com/careers and apply to Job ID 1051.

Sales/Marketing

Come and join Aspen's Fastest growing Real Estate & Property Management team.

gwynshighalpine@gmail.com

F/T MEMBERSHIP & PROGRAMMING SALES CONCIERGE

Customer Service is seeking passionate, fun loving people to fill guiding & office sales positions for summer.

Professional

M O N DAY- F R I DAY 8 : 3 0 A M TO 5 : 0 0 P M 970. 9 2 5 . 9 9 37

Part Time Sales Associates L'OCCITANE is looking for part-time Sales Associates to join our Aspen Boutique! Please email resume to:

Sara.white@loccitane.com

Hire Me Professor seeking employment in Aspen as a property manager or personal assistant (970) 9 0 1 - 2 9 5 1 o r dsblaney@gmail.com

Feel the power. 80 percent of adults in households earning $100,000 or more read a newspaper in print or online each week. Vehicle Delivery - Need your vehicle delivered out of state or back home to Colorado? Fast, f r e e q u o t e s . 970-319-5573

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Rentals

Rentals Aspen

Rentals Carbondale

Rentals Snowmass

1BD furn apt, on river, in town, very nice, NS/NP. $2500. Util incld. 3mo+ 970-963-0881

2 BD, Comm/resid house. Pets. NS. 970-379-8775 main st carbondale CO

5BD/2.5BA 35 Acre Ranch. katefrankelrentals.com/ snowmass. 773-294-2051

Rentals Basalt Area

Rentals Snowmass

Rentals Commercial/Retail

Rentals Housing Wanted Family of 4 with dog seeking long term rental within ASD. Min 1-yr. lease. June/July start. kkym5596@gmail.com

Lovely Basalt South Side family home. 4 BR, 3.5 baths. Unfurn. $3,300+. L T l e a se avail Apr. 1. 859-221-7903.

2BD 1.5BA DUPLEX REMODELED UNFURN, FP/WD LONG TERM NS/NP F/L/S $2100 + Avail 3/1. 970-948-5392

Commercial Kitchen for lease in Aspen. 1000sf! Fully equipped. Call for details! 970-618-2200

IMPECCABLE ASPEN SKI HOME

Tucked away in the exclusive Five Trees neighborhood in Aspen. A rare ƂPF QP CNOQUV VYQ CETGU VJKU EQPVGORQTCT[ ƂXG DGFTQQO TGUKFGPEG with ski in/ski out access offers sophistication and access to Aspen’s YQTNF ENCUU COGPKVKGU 6JG KFGCN [GCT TQWPF IGVCYC[ (QT OQTG KPHQ XKUKV YYY #URGP(COKN[5MK*QOG EQO $7,875,000 MLS#: 136183

Judd Clarence

The Source for Real Estate in Aspen 970.925.7000 | www.masonmorse.com

Rentals Commercial/Retail Hoarders be gone. Advertise your cleaning business in the Service Directory. Always in print and online. Classifieds@ cmnm.org.

MID-VALLEY SHOP AND STUDIO SPACES Workshop & studio spaces for rent in Basalt. Sizes vary. Perfect for artists, craftspeople, tradespeople, & designers. 970/618-1231

planet

Aspen - $799,000

Basalt - $139,000

Smuggler Park, new construction, 3bdrm/2bath (master suite), Aspen School district, on bus route, walking distance to town, 2 car parking + garage, storage basement, great views. Brokers protected

$799,000 ONLY 9 miles from downtown aspen and its 2300 sf house with 5700 sf lot and it has 3 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms and hardwood floors and granite counter tops and pls call us at: 970-208-2059.

52 Aspen/Basalt Mobile Home Park 2005 - Skyline - 1456 Sq. Ft.; 3BR/2BA; New Paint; New Carpet; Central Air; 8’x16’ Composite Deck; Tuff Shed, Yard Sprinkler System; Block Skirting. Great End Lot With Views.

heidihat@comcast.net

Scott

Immaculately maintained, south-facing, 3bed/2.5 bath Willits townhome. Open floor plan, stone tiled gas log fireplace with wood mantle, upgraded kitchen, tastefully appointed bathrooms, custom walnut shutters, crown moldings, Casablanca ceilings fans in the livingroom and master bedroom. Privacy and views toward the mountains from the deck and fenced courtyard area, 2-car garage.

Sally Shiekman-Miller

Sally Shiekman-Miller

970.948.7530 sally@sallyshiekman.com www.AspenSnowmassSIR.com

970.948.7530 sally@sallyshiekman.com www.AspenSnowmassSIR.com

Gary Feldman

970-948-3737 gary.feldman@sothebysrealty.com www.AspenHomeSource.com

Basalt - $875,000 Lodgepole Pine log home with expansive windows and great mountain views. 4 bed, 3 bath custom built, 3540 sq.ft., vaulted ceilings, open floor plan, hardwood & stone floors, poured concrete countertops, custom carved banisters and railings, Jacuzzi tub, versatile finished basement, passive solar, spacious decks, abuts public land, overlooking valley floor and river.

970-948-5883

Basalt - $565,000

Serene 40 acre Emma horse property adjacent to BLM. Amazing views yet minutes to Whole Foods. Updated 2 bed/3 bath, 1908 sq.ft. log home, decks, hot tub, garage and 2nd living area. Excellent well & water rights. Endless riding/hiking trails and overlooking pasturelands. Keep the existing home and build another of up to 7000 sq.ft. + out buildings. A perfect retreat to get away from it all.

Sopris Mountain Ranch A custom 3-bedroom, 6,031+/- sq ft, log home on 35+ acres in Sopris Mountain Ranch, one of the valley's premier equestrian communities.

Bill Swanson

970-208-2059 damarisroslina@hotmail.com

Basalt - $2,650,000

Basalt - $2,500,000

970.948.7530 sally@sallyshiekman.com www.AspenSnowmassSIR.com

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

Aspen - $1,189,000

970.688.1804 cell judd@masonmorse.com

Sally Shiekman-Miller

protect our

Carbondale - $595,000

Carbondale - $150,000

Carbondale - $199,900

LIONS RIDGE ~ ACREAGE AND VIEWS Room for all in this 5 bd 4.5 bth home on over 2 acres. Enjoy views off the decks of the bedrooms on 2nd level. New kitchen, carpet, septic and drain field. Located just moments to Carbondale and Basalt.

Least expensive lot at RVR. View of Mt. Sopris. Vacant Single Family Home Site 'Settlement' neighborhood of River Valley Ranch. Next to small park & walking distance to golf clubhouse & ranch house for pools & tennis.

Great location for offices in Carbondale. Flexible spaces and garage door in back. Nice finishes and large half bath. A/C, security system and 2 assigned parking spaces. Perfect for any small business.

Michael Latousek

Karen Peirson

Brenda Wild

970-379-2299 brendawildaspen@gmail.com

970-618-7768 michael@joshuaco.com www.joshuaco.com

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

Real Estate Photo Ads ~ Aspen Times Weekly

970-925-9937 classifieds@aspentimes.com 36

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K L Y V March 5, 2015


Commercial Gypsum - $125,900

Glenwood Springs - $1,150,000

Glenwood Springs - $399,000

Warehouse spaces great for business or storage - 16' clear height and 14 x 14 Overhead Doors. Sizes available for sale: • (20 x 50) for $125,900 - 1000 sq. ft. • (24 x 50) for $138,000 - 1200 sq. ft. • (30 x 50) for $172,500 - 1500 sq. ft.

Creek-side home on fenced-in four acres in Canyon Creek, west of Glenwood Springs. 3 bedroom, 4 bathroom house with large kitchen and master bedroom. One fifth mile of creek side water, Two apartments, workshop and greenhouse.

Located in Sunny West Glenwood! 4BR, 3BTH, 2074 sqft with 817 sqft garage. Quiet street, mature trees, large fenced back yard with free standing deck. Newer metal roof & high efficiency furnace, updated baths and more!

970-390-6070 greg@coloradogroup.com

Greg Fair

Call for Appointment Buyers agents welcome 970-376-3328

Carbondale - $519,000 Sweet single story 3 bed/2 bath home w/ vaulted ceilings, open floor plan, large fenced yard, A/C, garage. Updated with new paint inside and out, stainless appliances, new flooring/carpet & trex deck. Furnace and A/C condenser new in 2012. Roomy master with double vanities & 2 walk in closets. HOA amenities include the lake, playgrounds and walking trails as well as easy access to RFTA bus stops.

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

Mike Kennedy

970-379-3907 mikekennedy@sopris.net MLS#136282

Manhattan - $43,500,000

Norwood, CO - $845,000

Palisade - $2,300,000

Snowmass Village - $390,000

Snowmass Village - $5,000,000

Manhattan Townhouse Off-market opportunity for a luxury townhouse 7,500 sq ft + 2,500 sq ft rooftop deck in TriBeCa.

162-acre Norwood, CO ranch. 35 minutes to Telluride. Adjoins National Forest. Live water. Equestrian, corporate retreat, hunting lodge, farming.

Palisade Hobby Farm A scenic 100+-acre historic farm in the agricultural center of Colorado Almost one mile of Colorado River frontage.

LICHENHEARTH - TOP FLOOR CORNER Studio with HIGH CEILINGS and extra windows. Added half bath. Easy ski in ski out access. New exterior renovation with elevator. Call for showings

Two Creeks Ski-in Ski-out. Rare Single Family 5b/5b home at Owl Creek Townhomes. Most private and best skiing location in the complex with up mountain views. Open Wed 2-4pm 610 Burnt Mountain Drive.

Ryan & Matt Podskoch

212-203-5640 Info@SearchLuxHomes.com www.SearchLuxHomes.com

Nels Cary

Nels Cary

970.729.1404 nels.cary@sothebysrealty.com www.earthstarranch.com

970.729.1404 nels.cary@sothebysrealty.com www.palisaderiverfarm.com

Terry & Louellen Griggs 970-927-4365 TerrySGriggs@gmail.com www.AspenRealEstate.ws

Exclusive Properties of Aspen & Snowmass

Terry & Louellen Griggs

970-927-4365 TerrySGriggs@gmail.com www.AspenRealEstate.ws/10

Exclusive Properties of Aspen & Snowmass

Jim & Anita Bineau

970.920.7369 - Jim | 970.920.7362 - Anita thebineauteam@masonmorse.com >ëi w i«À «iÀÌ iðV

SKI IN AND WALK TO VILLAGE

SNOWMASS VILLAGE Ski in access included Ü Ì Ì Ã Ã«>V Õà >ÕÀi Ü ` ÃÌÕ` ° ,i >Ý LÞ Þ ÕÀ Ü ` LÕÀ } wÀi« >Vi À ̽à ÕÃÌ > à ÀÌ Ü> Ì Ì i Û >}i° * i ÌÞ v > i Ì ià V Õ` } a new 24 person two-tier hot tub, on-site lobby, daily housekeeping and ski storage. Good rental history. $339,000 MLS#: 133327

TOP OF THE WORLD VIEWS

ASPEN Ƃ «Ài iÀ «À «iÀÌÞ Ì >Ì vi>ÌÕÀià wÛi bedrooms, four car garage. Built in 2004 and à ÌÕ>Ìi` ÌÜ «À Û>Ìi >VÀiÃ Ü Ì >Üià i Û iÜð / i > i >à > «i y À « > with spacious kitchen, breakfast room & bar, > ` ` } À «i } Ì > «À Û>Ìi «>Ì v À outdoor dining. $3,650,000 MLS#: 134796

PALATIAL HOME WITH VIEW

SNOWMASS VILLAGE Stately Snowmass Village Àià `i Vi {È >VÀiÃ Ü Ì « VÌÕÀi «iÀviVÌ Û iÜà toward the Elk Mountain range. All carefully `ià } i`o>Ü> Ì } Þ ÕÀ w > Ì ÕV ið ÝµÕ Ã Ìi wÛi ÃÕ Ìi Àià `i Vi à «iÀviVÌ v À >À}i ÃV> i entertaining. Still under construction. Offered º>à û >Ì f ]äää]äää] À v À w à i` «À V } Ãii agent for detail. MLS#: 134598

Chevy Suburban 1999

Dodge RAM 1500 2014

Ford Excursion LTD 2003

GMC Yukon 2005

1999 Chevy Suburban. Grey. 4x4 power everything. 200K miles. Runs nice, Nice, clean interior, extra wayback seat. $3000 970-948-3129 Aspen Co.

Express Quad Cab 4x4 4 door. Like new condition. 4,800 miles Auto transmission. 5.7L V8 HEMI True Blue Pearl

Like new condition. 148,000 miles. Diesel. Lifted, leather, loaded. 3rd row seat. Sharp rig. Custom rims. Tow package.

“SOLD”

$31,900 970-948-6610

$14,600 OBO 970-274-4631

Jeep Grand Wagoneer 1990

Jeep Wrangler 2011

Lexus Ls400 1998

Subaru Outback 2003

2 sets of new tires Good condition. 85k miles Auto/V6,. ABS. AWD. Power seats/windows, Black.

Jeep Grand Wagoneer 1990 84,000 miles, garage kept, and same owner for 20 years. lg9653@aol.com $12,500/offer 313-910-9900

4 door. Excellent condition. 61,500 miles. One owner. Auto transmission. Leather seats. CD player. Sunroof. White. Tina $9500 970-379-8679

Subaru Outback 2003.161k Manual transmission. 4 cyl. Heated seats. Luggage rack. Good condition. Spencer spurvis2002@yahoo.com

$6700 616-560-2639

2011 Jeep Wrangler Fully Loaded Includes soft top and bicycle rack Perfect condition inside and out 31,000 miles $21,975 OBO 970-618-2222

Trans portation Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 1999

$3,500 805-698-4160

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

37


Ford Tioga RV 31' 1994

Newmar38' Kountry Star 2004

Honda ST1100 - 1991

Auto Photo Ads Work!

KTM 350CXF 2011

Call or go online to sell your car 925-9937 www.aspentimes.com/placead

Ford Tioga RV 31' . 1994. Good condition. 65,000miles. $9,500 970 618-8058

Newmar 38' Kountry Star 2004 $65,000.00 Excellent condition. 36,000 Auto transmission. 330 CAT Mark 970-379-8867 $65,000.00 970-379-8867

Auto Parts/ Accessories

‘1 tire only on 1 wheel’ Goodyear Wrangler P225/75-16 - & wheel from JK Jeep - $50

‘1 tire only’

B.F. Goodrich 285/75-R16 - $30.

Children/Baby Items

Merch andise Appliances

970-456-2033

Peg Perego High Chair

Three years old. Originally retailed for $275. Selling for $85. Eagle 970-390-9787

Service Directory.

Oven. Miele Microwave & Oven $3300 OBO. Aspen. Prime condition. Microwave model H4044BM 60876280 and Oven: H4844BP 60776677 Diane Hogan/Tony Zagorski 512-299-0855 Dvhogan1111@gmail.com

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

Own a piece of Snowmass history. Refurbished Elk Camp Lift Chair set up as a bench. Complete with working foot rest and safety bar. Framed certificate and photo in operation. By the owner of the company that refurbished these chairs, this was Chair #1 on the cable. Gently used condition. Perfect for your deck or patio. Will deliver. Jeff Swenson 405-694-8541 jswenson@ouroldnumbe r.com

Fireplaces/Stoves

Winter tires: Nokia Hakkar R 255/50R 19 (excellent condition: 2 seasons local driving) (5) tires plus (1) spare wheel to fit.

$425 970-309-6163

Motorcycles HARLEY DAVIDSON DOT MOTORCYCLE 1/2 HELMET

Vintage Photo

Excellent condition.

HARLEY DAVIDSON DOT MOTORCYCLE 1/2 HELMET

Hunting

970.456.3291

$250 OBO

Merchandise Wanted

Call Lisa 970-404-1701 or email lisap22@msn.com Located in Silt, CO.

1000 LB Safe $2,139.00 Clonial 50 Safe By Liberty. Price includes Professional Delivery and Installation. Ground floor only. Glenwood Springs Wayne 970-945-5625 winton84@gmail.com

European Mounting and Shoulder Mounting Competitive Pricing Call Josh for details

719-989-0774

In Silt, Colorado

Ski Equipment

Roxa X-Perience X-

Pickups

Face Boot, sie 26.0, tech fittings, Intuition liners, flex 100, worn once/too big,

$375

Call or text Chris 9735256123

$5/ft. Smoked Walnut flooring. One of a kind smoked Walnut. Hand scraped or contemporary finish. Call for a FREE sample today.

Red Yeti Flooring. 970-948-3962

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K L Y V March 5, 2015

Exercise Equipment Table. $1,200 or OBO Basalt Good condition. Lisa Angelo 970-319-1787 Angelo.lisa44@yahoo.co m

Stepmill, Stairmaster 7000PT 1200. Basalt Good condition. Chrisy 970-927-0861 chrisycathers@hotmail.c om

• Detox Programs

Pets - Dogs

Blue Heeler Puppies

Born Jan. 13th 1 female LEFT

$300

Call for information Josh 719-989-0774

Please Recycle

Try a border for just five bucks!

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

Oriental Gong with frame 60” wide x 70” tall, $10,000. 970-927-4203

• Colon Hydrotherapy • Therapeutic Massage

Brands

• Placenta Encapsulation

410 20th St. Suite 203 Glenwood Springs, CO 970.618.2492 www.ReturningBalance.com

• size Small $85

Tappen Wood Stove

Older model. Needs 5-6 inner bricks. In great condition.

RETURNING BALANCE THERAPIES

GOLF MEMBERSHIP ASPEN GLEN CLUB No initiation fee $595/month 970 274-4290

Please Recycle

970.456.3291

38

Miscellaneous Merchandise

Equipment

Carpet/Flooring

Chevrolet silverado 2006 9500 L i m i t e d e d i t i o n . 4WD 4 door. Good condition. Auto transmission. gas white marilyn 406-570-9868 marilyn_caldwell@hotm ail.com

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

Technal Dry Mount Press 500. Includes manuals. $400

Call Lisa 970-404-1701

Massage Therapy

RON"THE GOLD GUY "

SPT 3.0 cu.ft Upright Freezer - White. New Revers door, Width (in.):19.375 Height :33.75. 3 baskets, $200 o.b.o Ph: 970.309.1001

Cameras/Photo Equipment

Thousands of other autos have ALREADY sold!

All yours for $7,500 Call 970-376-0215 Located in Grand Junction Area

Golf

Excellent condition.

Furniture/Home Furnishings

• size Small $85

Jewelry

Street legal. Less than 500 miles. Like new condition. 10k with all accessories.

I Buy Gold

Collectibles

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

26315 actual miles. Excellent condition. New HEL braided brake lines. New Rifle windshield, new Corbin seat. Original owners manual & service manual. Handlebar tie down strap. $5000.00. MSTA Vinny 970-925-6103 or 970-379-3755.

Vail 50th Anniversary collectors ski. New 180 cm all mountain by Meier Skis in Glenwood Springs. All natural, early rise , lightweight, Very special! Price reduced from $800 to $ 6 5 0 / o b o ! Call 970-376-0215.

L Lazy L Brand $13,500 Aspen Jerrald 303-910-9546 jagwire@me.com Call or Text and I send you the Brand. My Grand Father Moved to GlennWood Springs in the late 1800's See on Ranch World Ads http://www.ranchworld ads.com/classified.php? listing=43129

Labradoodles! Two black males available. Current on vaccinations $1000 Please call 970-275-4828 or visit www.1-labradoodle-bre eder.com

Directory

Pet Supplies/ Services

Cleaning Service

Medium and Large Roaches for Feeders 25 cents each Superb cond i t i o n . J e r r y 970-445-7474

Shop till you drop.

Full-time working women who shop read newspapers in larger numbers. Female newspaper readers shop at Nieman Marcus, Nordstrom, Lord & Taylor and Macy’s, just to name a few.

The Valley's Certified, Professional Dog Training! EndlessPawsibilities.biz 970-236-6729

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

Advertise in the

SERVICE DIRECTORY! Call Zach to get your ad started!

925-9937

Service

Clutter Clearing Transform your Life This Clarity is a Gift Deborah 970-948-5663

Health & Beauty

LASER TATTOO REMOVAL

Lily is here to give you a fantastic massage Oriental Massage: Clean, cozy, & comfortable. If you would like a massage by a professional Asian Masseuse come & experience a perfect body massage!! 818-913-6588

aspenorientalmassage.com

Please Recycle Swedish Massage

Dutch RN. Corine, $85 for 1 hr. In/out calls. 347-583-7362 www.GlobalHeeling.com

• Ross Dickstein, MD alluremedaesthetics.com

(970)668-0998

76 percent of adults who spend more than $500 on fine jewelry in the last year read a newspaper in print or online in an average week.

Announcements Looking for someone to drive car from Aspen to Westport, Connecticut, 1 hr from NYC. April 1st or 2nd. Expenses paid, ref’s needed. 203-216-0268 or email ruth.waldman@gmail. com


HISTORIC MAJOR DEVELOPMENT, RELOCATION, VARIANCES, RESIDENTIAL DESIGN STANDARD REVIEW, ESTABLISHMENT OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING CREDITS, GMQS

Pitkin County Court 506 East Main Street, Suite 300 Aspen, CO 81611 In re the Marriage of: Petitioner: Kathryn T. Sharkey and Respondent: Paul M. Baker Attorneys or Party Without Attorney Kathryn T. Sharkey 203 William Way, Aspen, CO 81611 (970)925-7908 E-mail: kshark63@hotmail.com Case Number: 15DR7 SUMMONS FOR: DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE To the Respondent named above, this Summons serves as a notice to appear in this case. If you were served in the State of Colorado, you must file your Response with the clerk of this Court within 21 days after this Summons is served on you to participate in this action. If you were served outside of the Sate of Colorado or you were served by publication, you must file your Response with the clerk of the Court within 35 days after this Summons is served on you to participate in this action. You may be required to pay a filing fee with your Response. The Response form (JDF 1103) can be found at www.courts.state.co.us by clicking on the :Self Help/Forms: tab. After 91 days from the date of service or publication, the Court may enter a Decree affecting your marital status, distribution of property and debts, issues involving children such as child support, allocation of parental responsibilities (decision-making and parenting time), maintenance (spousal support), attorney fees, and costs to the extent the Court has jurisdiction. If you fail to file a response in this case, any or all of the matters above, or any related matters which come before this Court, may be decided without further notice to you. This is an action to obtain a Decree of Dissolution of Marriage or Legal Separation as more fully described in the attached Petition, and if you have children, for orders regarding the children of the marriage. Notice: §14-10-107, C.R.S. provides that upon the filing of a Petition for Dissolution of Marriage or Legal Separation by the Petitioner and Co-Petitioner, or upon personal service of the Petition and Summons on the Respondent, or upon waiver and acceptance of service by the Respondent, an automatic temporary injunction shall be in effect against both parties until the Final Decree is entered, or the Petition is dismissed, or until further Order of the Court. Either party may apply to the Court for further temporary orders, an expanded temporary injunction, or modification or revocation under §14-10-108, C.R.S. A request for genetic tests shall not prejudice the requesting party in matters concerning allocation of parental responsibilities pursuant to §14-10-124 (1.5), C.R.S. If genetic tests are not obtained prior to a legal establishment of paternity and submitted into evidence prior tot he entry of the final decree of dissolution or legal separation, the genetic tests may not be allowed into evidence at a later date. Automatic Temporary Injunction - By Order of Colorado Law, You and Your Spouse are: 1. Restrained from transferring, encumbering, concealing or in any way disposing of, without the consent of the other party or an Order of the Court, any marital property, except in the usual course of business or for the necessities of life. Each party is required to notify the other party of any proposed extraordinary expenditures and to account the Court for all extraordinary expenditures made after the injunction is in effect: 2. Enjoined from molesting or disturbing the peach of the other party: 3. Restrained from removing the minor children of the parties, if any, from the State without the consent of the other party or an Order of the Court; and 4. Restrained without at least 14 days advanced notification and the written consent of the other party or an Order of the Court, from canceling, modifying, terminating, or allowing to lapse for non payment of premiums, any policy of health insurance, homeowner’s or renter’s insurance, or automobile insurance that provides coverage to either of the parties or the minor children or any policy of life insurance that names either of the parties or the minor children as a beneficiary. Date: February 2, 2015

Glenita L. Melnick Clerk of Court/Deputy

Published in the Aspen Times Weekly February 19, and 26, 2015 and March 5, 12, and 19, 2015. (10957169) NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S. Estate of Francis Xavier Gina Jr., Deceased Case Number 2015PR30009 All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Pitkin County, Colorado on or before July 7, 2015, or the claims may be forever barred. Susan Levitt, Personal Representative c/o Matthew L. Trinidad Karp Neu Hanlon, PC 201 14th Street, Suite 200 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly March 5, 12, 19, 2015. (10992674) �PUBLIC NOTICE RE: 834 W. HALLAM STREET - CONCEPTUAL HISTORIC MAJOR DEVELOPMENT, RELOCATION, VARIANCES, RESIDENTIAL DESIGN STANDARD REVIEW, ESTABLISHMENT OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING CREDITS, GMQS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Wednesday, March 25, 2015, at a meeting to begin at 5:00 p.m. before the Aspen Historic Preservation Commission, in Council Chambers, City Hall, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen. HPC will consider an application submitted by 834 W. Hallam Associates, (200 E. Main Street, Aspen, CO 81611), represented by Forum Phi LLC, for a redevelopment of the property located at 834 W. Hallam Street, legally described as Lots K & L, Block 10, City and Townsite of Aspen, County of Pitkin, State of Colorado, Parcel ID #2735-123-04-002. The applicant requests HPC approvals to demolish the non-historic additions on the existing building, to relocate the historic structure toward Hallam

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Wednesday, March 25, 2015, at a meeting to begin at 5:00 p.m. before the Aspen Historic Preservation Commission, in Council Chambers, City Hall, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen. HPC will consider an application submitted by 834 W. Hallam Associates, (200 E. Main Street, Aspen, CO 81611), represented by Forum Phi LLC, for a redevelopment of the property located at 834 W. Hallam Street, legally described as Lots K & L, Block 10, City and Townsite of Aspen, County of Pitkin, State of Colorado, Parcel ID #2735-123-04-002. The applicant requests HPC approvals to demolish the non-historic additions on the existing building, to relocate the historic structure toward Hallam Street, and to construct 2 new detached buildings on the north portion of the property. The entire project is proposed to be affordable housing units. The applicant requests conceptual Historic Preservation design reviews, Growth Management review, Residential Design Standard variances, parking waivers, setback variances, and the establishment of affordable housing credits for the project. For further information, contact Sara Adams at the City of Aspen Community Development Department, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, CO, (970) 429-2778, sara.adams@cityofaspen.com. s/Willis Pember Chair, Aspen Historic Preservation Commission Published in the Aspen Times on March 5, 2015 (10998963) NOTICE OF AMENDMENT OF THE CONDOMINIUM DECLARATION FOR THE LAURELWOOD CONDOMINIUMS TOWN OF SNOWMASS VILLAGE, COUNTY OF PITKIN, STATE OF COLORADO The Laurelwood Condominium Association, Inc. hereby provides notice that it intends to amend the Condominium Declaration for the Laurelwood Condominiums recorded in the office of the Clerk and Recorder of Pitkin County, Colorado on December 29, 1969 in Book 245 at Page 389 as Reception No. 138520, Pitkin County records. A copy of the proposed amendment can be obtained from the offices of the Laurelwood Condominiums, Attn.: Jami Downs, General Manager, P.O. Box 5200, Snowmass Village, CO 81615 (telephone number 970-923-3110) or at the offices of Paul J. Taddune, P.C., 323 West Main Street, Suite 301, Aspen, CO 81611 (telephone number 970-925-9190; fax number 970-925-9199). The proposed amendment will be considered at the Annual Meeting of the Members of the Association and Owners of Units in the Laurelwood Condominiums project to be held on March 19, 2015 at 4:00 p.m. at the Stonebridge Inn Columbine Room, Stonebridge Inn, 300 Carriage Way, Snowmass Village, Colorado. Jami Downs, General Manager The Laurelwood Condominium Association, Inc. P.O. Box 5200 Snowmass Village, CO 81615 Tel No: 970-923-3110 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly March 5 and 12, 2015. (10983799) DISTRICT COURT, PITKIN COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO CIVIL ACTION NO. 2014CV030078, Division/Courtroom 5 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY THE INDEPENDENCE BUILDING OWNERS ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff, v. DIANA HOPPES; JAMES G. HARTRICH; TOM OKEN AS THE PUBLIC TRUSTEE OF PITKIN COUNTY, COLORADO, et al. Defendant(s). Regarding: Lodge Unit 206, THE INDEPENDENCE BUILDING, a condominium, as defined and described in the Condominium Declaration for the Independence Building, a condominium, recorded in Book 506 at Page 351 of the records of the Clerk and Recorder of Pitkin County, Colorado, and the condominium map for The Independence Building, a condominium, recorded February 28, 1986 in Plat Book 18 at Page 54 as Reception No. 275993, as amended by the First Amended Plat recorded November 20, 1996 in Plat Book 41 at Page 3 as Reception No. 399268 in the records of the Clerk and Recorder of Pitkin County, Colorado; Also known as: 404 South Galena Street, #206, Aspen, CO 81611. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS, Please take notice: You and each of you are hereby notified that a Sheriff's Sale of the referenced property is to be conducted by the Sheriff's Office of the County of Pitkin, State of Colorado at 10:00 A.M., on the 15th day of April 2015, at 506 East Main Street, Aspen, CO 81611, on the front steps of the courthouse. At which sale, the above described real property and improvements thereon will be sold to the highest bidder. Plaintiff makes no warranty relating to title, possession, or quiet enjoyment in and to said real property in connection with this sale. BIDDERS ARE REQUIRED TO HAVE CASH OR CERTIFIED FUNDS SUFFICIENT TO COVER THEIR HIGHEST BID AT THE TIME OF SALE. PLEASE NOTE THAT THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN ON THE SUBJECT PROPERTY. Judgment is in the amount of $30,765.81. First Publication: February 19 2015 Last Publication: March 19 2015 Published In: The Aspen Times Weekly Published in the Aspen Times Weekly February 19, and 26, 2015 and March 5, 12, and 19, 2015. (10888387) PUBLIC NOTICE Of DEVELOPMENT APPROVAL Notice is hereby given to the general public of the approval of a site-specific development plan, and the creation of a vested property right pursuant to the Land Use Code of the City of Aspen and Title 24, Article 68, Colorado Revised Statutes, pertaining to the following described property: Parcel ID #273707306852, legally described as Lot 2 of the Amended Rio Grande Subdivision, City and Townsite of Aspen, Pitkin County, Colorado; commonly known as Galena Plaza at 425 Rio Grande Pl. The applicant, City of Aspen, was granted approval for an Insubstantial Amendment to a Planned Development Approval to upgrade the plaza area with a new drainage system, electrical/lighting system, concrete paver walkways with snowmelt, a central lawn area with terraced amphitheater style seating, landscaping and irrigation system, upgraded sanitary and storm sewer systems, a new shuttle bus stop, one-way alley and street circulation, a simplified structure for the existing garage elevator and

DEVELOPMENT APPROVAL

BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS:

Notice is hereby given to the general public of the ·Unless otherwise notified all regular and special approval of a site-specific development plan, and meetings will be held in the Board of County Comthe creation of a vested property right pursuant to missioners, Plaza One Conference Room, 530 E the Land Use Code of the City of Aspen and Title Main St, Aspen 24, Article 68, Colorado Revised Statutes, pertain"All regular meeting items 5 begin ing to the following described Parcel Mproperty: O N DAYF RIDI DAY 8:30 A M TO : 0 0atP12:00 M p.m., or #273707306852, legally described as Lot 2 of the as soon thereafter as the conduct of business all o 3w8s4.- 9 1 3 C 5h e c k a g e n d a a t Amended Rio Grande Subdivision, City and Town970. site of Aspen, Pitkin County, Colorado; commonly http://www.aspenpitkin.com or call 920-5200 for meetings. known as Galena Plaza at 425 Rio Grande L E GPl. A LThe S @meeting AS P Etimes N T for I Mspecial E S .CO M applicant, City of Aspen, was granted approval for an Insubstantial Amendment to a Planned Devel- ·Copies of the full text of any resolution(s) and oropment Approval to upgrade the plaza area with a dinance(s) referred to are available during regular new drainage system, electrical/lighting system, business hours (8:30 - 4:30) in the Clerk and Reconcrete paver walkways with snowmelt, a central corder's office, 530 East Main Street, Suite 101, lawn area with terraced amphitheater style seating, A s p e n , C o l o r a d o 8 1 6 1 1 o r a t landscaping and irrigation system, upgraded sani- http://aspenpitkin.com/Whats-New-/Calendartary and storm sewer systems, a new shuttle bus Events/ stop, one-way alley and street circulation, a simplified structure for the existing garage elevator and NOTICE OF FINAL ADOPTIONS BY THE BOARD stairway, and an enhanced staircase linking the OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ON WEDNESplaza level to the Rio Grande Park level. The Ap- DAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015: plicant will also be performing repairs to the parking garage and installing a new waterproofing The following Resolution: membrane. The changes are depicted in the land use application on file with the City of Aspen. For Resolution No. 009-2015 - Entering into an Interfurther information contact Sara Nadolny at the City governmental Agreement with the State of Coloof Aspen Community Development Dept., 130 S. rado for a Congestion Mitigation Air Quality Grant Galena St., Aspen, Colorado. (970) 429-2739. The following Ordinances: City of Aspen Published in The Aspen Times on March 5, 2015. Ordinance 004-2015 - Authorizing Acquisition of (10998996) the Smuggler Mountain Minerals 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 Board of County Commissioners, Plaza One Conference Room, 530 E Main St, Aspen "All regular meeting items begin at 12:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business all o w s . C h e c k a g e n d a a t http://www.aspenpitkin.com or call 920-5200 for meeting times for special meetings.

Ordinance No. 005-2015 Approving the Purchase of Pitkin Park Place Unit 417A for the Pitkin County Employee Housing Inventory and Authorizing the Execution of the Necessary Documents NOTICE OF CONTRACTOR'S SETTLEMENT FINAL PAYMENT:

NOTICE OF CONTRACTOR'S SETTLEMENT FINAL PAYMENT: Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Pitkin County, Colorado, hereinafter the "Board," shall make final settlement for the work contracted to be done on the project known as Improvements to the Aspen/Pitkin County Airport, AIP Project No. 3-08-0003-49/50 Schedule III - Remove and Reconstruct Existing Aircraft Wash/Holding Pad and Rehabilitate a Portion of Taxiway "A" from "A5" to "A7", to Concrete Express, Inc., hereinafter the "Contractor," on or after March 26, 2015. 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 the Contractor or its subcontractors in or about the performance of the Project contracted to be done or that supplies rental machinery, tools, or equipment to the extent used in the prosecution of the Project, whose claim therefor has not been paid by the Contractor or its subcontractors shall file with the Board written verified notice of such claims at any time up to and including the time of final settlement first stated above or forever waive any and all claims, without limitation, pursuant to C.R.S. § 38-26-107, as amended, against the Board of County Commissioners, Pitkin County, Colorado and the Project. All claims must be addressed as follows: Board of County Commissioners c/o Mr. Brian Grefe, Assistant Director of Aviation, Administration, 0233 E. Airport Road, E. Concourse, Suite A, Aspen, Colorado 81611. Jeanette Jones, Deputy County Clerk Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on March 5, 2015 (10995775)

Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Pitkin County, Colorado, hereinafter the "Board," shall make final settlement for the work contracted to be done on the project known as Improvements to the Aspen/Pitkin County Airport, AIP Project No. 3-08-0003-49/50 Schedule III - Remove and Reconstruct Existing Aircraft Wash/Holding Pad and Rehabilitate a Portion of Taxiway "A" from "A5" to "A7", to Concrete Express, Inc., hereinafter the "Contractor," on or after March 26, 2015.

·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, Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, or corporation that has furnished labor, Asp e n , COUNTY C o l o r PUBLIC a d o 8NOTICE 1 6 1 1 OF o 2014 r a ANNUAL t company PITKIN GROSS SALARIES PAID (SALARIES, VACATION CASHOUTS, BONUSES, ETC.) materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions,OVERTIME, provhttp://aspenpitkin.com/Whats-New-/Calendarender, or other supplies used or consumed by the Events/ The publication of the County salaries is required by state statute. The requirement does not apply to other local Contractor or its subcontractors in any or about the or state government. The cost of this notice is $ 52.62. of the Project contracted be done The County average percentage BY of salary is paid inperformance addition to regular wages as fringe benefits to is 31%. NOTICE OFwide FINAL ADOPTIONS THE that BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ON WEDNES- or that supplies rental machinery, tools, or equipment to the extent used in the prosecution of the DAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2015: 71137.5, FACILITIES SUPERVISOR OPERATIONS COORDINATOR 77304.97, FACILITIES 75987.57, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 4981.4, SEProject, whose claim therefor has MANAGER not been paid by CURITY & LANDSIDE SPECIALIST 51628.3, FACILITIES 43724.63, FACILITIES I 47858.94, SECURITY & LANDSIDE SPECIALIST the TECHNICIAN Contractor or Iits subcontractors shallTECHNICIAN file with The following Resolution: 50417.31, AVIATION DIRECTOR 130715.62, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL verified &MAINTnotice 3187.68, SECURITY the Board written of such claims&atLANDSIDE MANAGER 69773.84, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW time up toASST and AVIATION including the time of final setRMVL &MAINT 1210, ASST AVIATION DIRECTOR-ADM DIRECTOR-OPS 98893.68, SECURITY & LANDSIDE SPECIALIST 52022.88, Resolution No. 009-2015 - Entering into an Inter- any102031.51, tlement first&stated above or forever waive any and governmental Agreement State of ColoLANDSIDE-SNOW RMVL &with SVCthe TECH 20416.04, ACCOUNTING CONTRACT ADMINISTRATOR 55793.07, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 4046.23, FAall claims, without limitation, pursuant to C.R.S. § rado for a TECHNICIAN Congestion Mitigation Air Quality Grant CILITIES II 46690.82, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 125, TRAINING/SAFETY/STANDARD COORD 61959.71, FACILITIES TECHNICIAN II 38-26-107, as amended, against the Board of 46897.7, FACILITIES TECHNICIAN II 47869.6, BADGING ADMINISTRATOR 46709.09, OPERATIONS OFFICER 54917.66, OPERATIONS OFFICER 35802.07, OPERACounty Commissioners, Pitkin County, Colorado The following Ordinances: TIONS OFFICER 49225.29, OPERATIONS OFFICER 57100.52, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 690.59, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 2693.24, OPERAand the Project. TIONS OFFICER 52418.78, OPERATIONS OFFICERof23555.12, OPERATIONS OFFICER 31290.88, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 1165, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW Ordinance 004-2015 - Authorizing Acquisition All claims must be addressed as follows: Board2947.5, of the Smuggler Mountain Minerals RMVL &MAINT 7020, SRE OPERATOR - LANDSIDE 23243.61, LANDSIDE-SNOW RMVL & SVC TECH AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 270, LANDCounty Commissioners c/o Mr. Brian Grefe, AsSIDE-SNOW RMVL & SVC TECH 8540, LANDSIDE-SNOW RMVL & SVC TECH 530, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT 12375, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL Ordinance No. 005-2015 Approving the Purchase sistant Director of Aviation, Administration, 0233 E. &MAINT 12652.5, SECURITY & LANDSIDE SPECIALIST 29950.3, OPERATIONS OFFICER 26478.94, AIRPORT INTERN 12160, AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL of Pitkin Park Place Unit 417A for the Pitkin Coun- Airport Road, E. Concourse, Suite A, Aspen, Colo&MAINT 745,Housing AIR-EQUIPMT-SNOW RMVL &MAINT radoANIMAL 81611. SAFETY OFFICER 66652.59, APPRAISER III 57372.65, COUNTY ASSESSOR 92529.09, CHIEF ty Employee Inventory and Authorizing the 585, APPRAISER-DEPUTY ASSRDocuments 86467.26, ADMINISTRATIVE DEPUTY 78569.78, APPRAISER III 60022.88, APPRAISER III 61675.06, TITLE TRANSFER TECHNICIAN Execution of the Necessary 37375.35, APPRAISER III 54566.88, APPRAISER II 47455.58, TITLE TRANSFER TECHNICIAN 47617.68, TITLE TRANSFER TECHNICIAN 3287.22, COUNTY ATTORJeanette Jones, Deputy County Clerk NOTICE OF CONTRACTOR'S SETTLEMENT NEY 176107.18, CODE ENFORCEMENT OFFICER -55352.59, PARALEGAL II 74907.56, PARALEGAL I 62366.92, ASSISTANT COUNTY ATTORNEY 146120.16, ASPublished in the Aspen Times Weekly on March 5, FINAL PAYMENT: SISTANT COUNTY ATTORNEY 103076.64, MAINTENANCE 2015 TECHNICIAN (10995775) II 34900.78, MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN II 55497.24, FACILITIES SUPERINTENDENT 92850.69, 40312.32, CUSTODIAN I 11163.5, CUSTODIAN I 38145.68, CUSTODIAL SUPERVISOR 48182.33, CUSTODIAN I 12589.25, CUSTODIAN I Notice is CUSTODIAN hereby givenI that the Board of County 28391.96, MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN II 46806.64, Commissioners of Pitkin County, Colorado, herein- FACILITIES SUPERVISOR 57393.37, CUSTODIAN I 6562, CUSTODIAN I 23490.59, MAINTENANCE TECHNIafter the "Board," shall make final settlement for the CIAN I 33417.8, OWNER’S REPRESENTATIVE 50277.5, CUSTODIAN I 4726, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT V 15394.39, MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN I - TEMP work to be done onCOMMISSIONER the project known 10350,contracted CUSTODIAN I 6492.97, 74989.96, COMMISSIONER 73834.12, COMMISSIONER 74250.96, COMMISSIONER 73545.32, COMMISSIONER as Improvements to the Aspen/Pitkin County Air75019.52, MOTORNo. VEHICLE MANAGERSchedule 48887.47, III RECORDS MANAGER 75298.71, CHIEF DEPUTY CLERK 68078.53, CLERK & RECORDER SPECIALIST 29066.43, port, AIP Project 3-08-0003-49/50 & RECORDER SPECIALIST 49597,Aircraft CLERK & RECORDER SPECIALIST 42847.76, CLERK & RECORDER 91378.08, CLERK & RECORDER SPECIALIST -CLERK Remove and Reconstruct Existing 43316.27, CLERK & and RECORDER SPECIALIST 39701.55, APPLICATION SPECIALIST TEMP 31958.73, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT - TRANSCRIPTS 17769.97, Wash/Holding Pad Rehabilitate a Portion of Taxiway "A"MANAGER from "A5" 66807.93, to "A7", to Concrete ExELECTIONS APPLICATION SPECIALIST-ELECTNS 53398.74, CLERK & RECORDER SPECIALIST 9856.64, RECORDING MANAGER 12496.4, press, Inc., PERMIT hereinafter the "Contractor," or after BUILDING ADVOCATE 64545.2,on CHIEF BUILDING OFFICIAL 88765.31, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT V 22011.17, BUSINESS ANALYST 70327.66, COMMarch 26, 2015. BO PLANS EXAMINER/INSP 67652.67, ELECTR&COMBO INSP/PLANS EXAMNR 81464.97, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT IV 28987.03, PLANNING INTERN 2652, ADMIN ASSISTANT IV 10070, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT V 22205.3, COMBO PLANS EXAMINER/INSP 21055.23, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT IV 11234.3, Any person, co-partnership, association of persons, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER 66187.77, EMERGENCY DISPATCH SUPERVISOR 72944.8, EMERGENCY DISPATCH SUPERVISOR 71735.61, EMERGENCY DIScompany or corporation thatIIhas furnished labor, materials, team hire, sustenance, provisions, provPATCH DIRECTOR 86969.2, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER II 71226.7, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER I 47464.65, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER I - TEMP 15757.7, EMERender, other supplies used orEMERGENCY consumed byDISPATCH the GENCYorDISPATCHER I 22293.62, SUPERVISOR 78098.36, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER II 57536.93, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER II 33530.69, Contractor or its subcontractors in or about the EMERGENCYofDISPATCHER II 53980.61,toEMERGENCY DISPATCHER I 34036.49, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER II 51714.1, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER I 12457.6, performance the Project contracted be done EMERGENCY DISPATCHER I 19288.87, EMERGENCY or that supplies rental machinery, tools, or equip- DISPATCHER I 16645.3, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER I 1936.88, EMERGENCY DISPATCHER I 18577.48, DEPUTY CORONER 15123.75, 55100, ADMIN ment to the extent used inCORONER the prosecution of the ASSISTANT- CORONER 7910, ELECTION JUDGE 1156, ELECTION JUDGE 1855.75, ELECTION JUDGE 1585, Project, whose claim therefor has not been paid byELECTION JUDGE 1760.75, ELECTION JUDGE 657.75, ELECTION JUDGE 880, ELECTION JUDGE 1079, ELECELECTION JUDGE 922, ELECTION JUDGE 1031.5, the Contractor or its EMERGENCY subcontractors shall file with TION JUDGE 738.35, MANAGER 82080.82, WILDFIRE MITIGATION SPECIALIST 28808.39, ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SPECIALST 57658.87, ENthe Board written verified notice of such claims at VIRONMENTAL HEALTH MANAGER 70500.27, SENIOR FUND SPECIALIST 62235.16, SPECIAL PROJECTS COORDINATOR 96963.01, BUDGET DIRECTOR any time up to and including the time of final set90555.52, PAYROLL TECHNICIAN FINANCE DIRECTOR 124774.2, FUND SPECIALIST - GENERAL 58070.01, ACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN 45326.37, tlement first stated above or forever52273.23, waive any and MECHANIC 62652.55, FLEET pursuant SHOP FOREMAN FLEET MANAGER 82309.22, MECHANIC 63764.4, MECHANIC 57510.55, MECHANIC 53798.11, RISK all claims, without limitation, to C.R.S.63809.95, § 38-26-107, as amended, against the Board of MANAGEMENT COORDINATOR 39184.33, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT III 3292.59, HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR 116521.93, COMP & BENEFITS ANALYST County Pitkin County, Colorado 79941.46,Commissioners, HR TECHNICIAN 34922.66, HR TECHNICIAN 32247.21, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT III 11473, HHS DIRECTOR 135444.42, HHS DEPUTY DIRECTOR and the Project. 91766.58, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT V 11745.85, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT V 32683.49, FAMILY ENGAGEMENT COORDINATOR 9421.5, UPS COORDINATOR 94924.33, OFFICER 67689.58, All claims must beDETENTION addressed as follows:II Board of JAIL ADMINISTRATOR 108261.4, DETENTION OFFICER II 27244.03, DETENTION OFFICER III 73346.71, JAIL OPERATIONS OFFICER 76937.86, DETENTION II 67467.04, JAIL OPERATIONS OFFICER 94960.63, DETENTION OFFICER III 69969.65, DETENTION OFCounty Commissioners c/o Mr. Brian Grefe, OFFICER Assistant Director of Aviation, Administration, 0233 E. FICER I 52878.29, DETENTION OFFICER II 58511.29, DETENTION OFFICER II 55053.26, DETENTION OFFICER II 54946.57, DETENTION OFFICER II 53287.38, Airport Road, OFFICER E. Concourse, Suite REFERENCE A, Aspen, ColoDETENTION I! 51121.11, LIBRARIAN 73547.98, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 36532.09, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 22798.35, LIBRARY DIRECTOR rado 81611. 138303.72, ASSISTANT LIBRARY DIRECTOR 94801.27, LIBRARIAN 69403.13, CHILDRENS SERVICES LIBRARIAN 81420.89, TECH SERVICES LIBRARIAN 82795.89, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 44505.39, LIBRARY COMPUTER SPECIALIST 50643.05, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 46249.29, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 47296.84, LIBRARYJones, ASSISTANT 47356.66, REFERENCE LIBRARIAN 62952.06, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 36728.91, REFERENCE LIBRARIAN 58183.03, LIBRARY ASSISJeanette DeputyIICounty Clerk Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on March 5, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 7251.15, LIBRARIAN 53495.16, REFERENCE LIBRARIAN 53307.81, LIBRARY ASTANT II 11086.25, REFERENCE LIBRARIAN 57117.65, 2015 (10995775) SISTANT II 41894.03, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 41893.86, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 41769.04, LIBRARIAN 14315.91, LIBRARY ASSISTANT II 21714.88, LIBRARY ASSISTANT-TEMP INTERN 4914, LIBRARY ASSISTANT-TEMP INTERN 3926, REFERENCE LIBRARIAN 1135.96, EXECUTIVE OFFICE MANAGER 55205.91, COMMUNITYRELATIONS COORD 77211.79, ASSISTANT COUNTY MANAGER 132978.84, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT V 54655.53, COUNTY MANAGER 158063.27, INTERN 32397.03, OST DIRECTOR 110185.72, MAINTENANCE WORKER - TEMP 13335.08, SENIOR RANGER 65970.94, ASST DIRECTORSTEWARDSHIP&TRLS 85980.39, OFFICE MANAGER 50847.97, MAINTENANCE WORKER - TEMP 25600.5, MAINTENANCE WORKER - TEMP 24134.85, SENIOR ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNER 65118.98, OST LEAD RANGER - TEMP 23203.08, LAND OFFICER 64142.82, OPERATIONS SUPERVISOR 56254.31, MAINTENANCE WORKER - TEMP 4004.64, MAINTENANCE WORKER - TEMP 32183.96, OST RANGER - TEMP 10581.01, OST RANGER - TEMP 23080.88, STEWARDSHIP OUTREACH COORDINATOR 41948.04, OST ACQUISITION MANAGER 71172.56, OST INTERN 4320, OST RANGER - TEMP 4445, COMDEV DIRECTOR 133855.31, SENIOR LONG-RANGE PLANNER 85598.27, ASSISTANT COMDEV DIRECTOR 106199.31, ZONING OFFICER 68442.19, SENIOR PLANNER 65117.7, HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICER 8275, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT IV 61564.6, PLANNER 71371.75, PLANNING ENGINEER 72258.79, ZONING OFFICER 22814.22, PUBLIC WORKS DIRECTOR 129771.95, ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN 67170.68, COUNTY ENGINEER 105959.48, OFFICE & WEED PROGRAM COORDNTR 53129.35, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 69364.79, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 57719.32, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 57001.6, TEMP SUPERFUND MANAGER 12464.33, ROAD & BRIDGE SUPERINTENDENT 76220.33, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 58475.96, ROAD & BRIDGE FOREMAN 63952.44, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 39372.92, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 48147.07, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 49863, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 4416.6, RADIO TECHNICIAN 68923, SENIOR SERVICES DIRECTOR 92466.49, PROGRAM COORDINATOR 58721.69, KITCHEN TEMP 2078, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT II 45758.01, PROGRAM ANALYST 61647.57, KITCHEN MANAGER 40019.52, ASSISTANT COOK 19880.25, KITCHEN TEMP 1150.5, DEPUTY TEMP I OR II 134.75, JUVENILE OFFICER 96622.83, UNDERSHERIFF 121172.46, PATROL DIRECTOR 92844.71, SHERIFF 112588.74, DEPUTY II 69912.71, PATROL DIRECTOR 92435.69, ORDINANCE OFFICIAL 1225, DEPUTY II 72328.02, INVESTIGATION DIRECTOR 96884.39, OFFICE MANAGER 70987.92, DEPUTY II 72421.35, PATROL DIRECTOR 88545.2, DEPUTY II 58581.94, DEPUTY II 63952.44, DEPUTY II 74626.48, DEPUTY II 76181.4, SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER 72055.97, PATROL DIRECTOR 82128.8, OPERATIONS DIRECTOR 86228.3, DEPUTY TEMP I OR II 1666, DEPUTY II 58705.97, DEPUTY III 71390.31, DEPUTY II 61254.76, DEPUTY II 56310.9, RECORDS MANAGER/ CCIC 50531.94, DEPUTY I 49577.18, DEPUTY II 76227.08, DEPUTY II 73988.78, CIVIL ADMIN/CIVIL PROCESS SVR 25984.24, YOUTH &FAMILY SERVICES MANAGER 82541.45, CASE WORKER 63245.55, CASE AID SPECIALIST 46108.16, CASE WORKER 29339.46, CASE WORKER 55361.7, CASE WORKER 63104.09, CASE WORKER 29356.49, RECYCLE TECHNICIAN II - CDL 61395.09, OFFICE MANAGER 65721.44, H&S HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE SPEC 57432.06, EDUCATION/OUTREACH COORDINATOR 50221.6, SOLID WASTE MANAGER 84852.4, RECYCLE TECHNICIAN II - CDL 53115.29, RECYCLE OPERATIONS FOREMAN 64109.66, GATEKEEPER 41506.86, SUSTAINABILITY STUDIES INTERN 10956.25, RECYCLE TECHNICIAN II - CDL 54484.8, TEMP COUNTY TECH 525, BPA - ASSESSOR CLERK TREASURER 62710.4, PST ADMINISTRATOR 73669.76, CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER 114549.31, CUSTOMER SUPPORT MGR-BPA GOOGLE ADVOCATE 75374.6, DOCMNT/RECORDS SYSTEM MANAGER 62649.71, GIS MANAGER 37289.8, GIS ANALYST 25295.6, OPERATIONS MANAGER 33539.93, TREASURER-PUBLIC TRUSTEE 87410.35, DEPUTY TREASURER 17101.91, CHIEF DEPUTY TREASURER 63255.96, DEPUTY TREASURER 15486.27, DEPUTY TREASURER 27295.88, CHIEF DEPUTY TREASURER 27177.97 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly March 5, 2015.

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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 Board of County Commissioners, Plaza One Conference Room, 530 E Main St, Aspen ·All regular meeting items begin at 12:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business all o w s . C h e c k a g e n d a a t http://www.aspenpitkin.com 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://aspenpitkin.com/Whats-New-/CalendarEvents/ NOTICE OF FINAL DETERMINATIONS BY THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the general public that on February 19, 2015, the Pitkin County Community Development Director granted approval for the WCCP1 LLC Site Plan Review Site Plan Review (Case P097-14; Deter. #011-2015). The property is located at 10 Little Ditch Road and is legally described as Parcel 1, Compass Subdivision Exemption 2nd Amended. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2643-104-01-001. 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 IS HEREBY GIVEN to the general public that on February 19, 2015, the Pitkin County Community Development Director granted approval for the WCCP1 LLC Site Plan Review (Case P098-14; Deter. #010-2015). The property is located at 15 Little Ditch Road and is legally described as Parcel 2, Compass Subdivision Exemption. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2643-104-01-002. 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:Silver Lady Palm Beach, LLC (Castle Creek Development LLC) Activity Envelope, Minor Plat Amendment, and Minor PUD Amendment (Case P015-15) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an application has been submitted by Silver Lady Palm Beach, LLC owned by Castle Creek Development LLC (4295 San Felipe Street, Houston, TX 77027) requesting approval to establish Activity Envelopes for future construction of a single family residence. Also requested is the elimination of a GMQS allotment. The property is located on South Hayden Drive and is legally described as Lot 12, Castle Creek Valley Ranch Subdivision. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2735-264-01-004. 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 April 6, 2015. For further information, contact Mike Kraemer at (970) 920-5482. Jeanette Jones, Deputy County Clerk Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on March 5, 2015 (10995794)

COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 14-025 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On December 11, 2014, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Pitkin records. Original Grantor(s) SHAWN COX Original Beneficiary(ies) WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK, FA Current Holder of Evidence of Debt JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Date of Deed of Trust June 28, 2007 County of Recording Pitkin Recording Date of Deed of Trust June 29, 2007 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 539472 Original Principal Amount $624,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $640,765.41 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failed to make the monthly mortgage payments as required by the terms of the Note and Deed of Trust. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT A EXHlBIT "A" LEGAL DESCRIPTION CONDOMINIUM UNIT 2-E, SILVERGLO, (A CONDOMINIUM), according to the recorded Condominium Map appearing in Plat Book 4 at Page 170 of the records of the County Clerk and Recorder of Pitkin County, Colorado and as defined and described in the Condominium Declaration for Silverglo [A Condominium) recorded in Book 252 at Page 702 and amendments thereto in Book 256 at Page 698, Book 319 at Page 147, Book 320 at Page 794, Book 324 at Page 604, Book 336 at Page 537, Book 379 at Page 220 and Book 455 at Page 338. Also known by street and number as: 940 WATERS AVE #205, ASPEN, CO 81611. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 04/15/2015, at Pitkin County Courthouse, at the south front door, 506 E Main St, Aspen, Colorado, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)' heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys' fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication 2/19/2015 Last Publication 3/19/2015 Name of PublicationThe Aspen Times Weekly IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED. DATE: 12/11/2014 Thomas Carl Oken, Public Trustee in and for the County of Pitkin, State of Colorado By: Sydney Tofany, Deputy Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: MARCELLO ROJAS #46396 Klatt, Odekirk, Augustine, Sayer, Trienen & Rastede, P.C. 9745 E HAMPDEN AVE, SUITE 400, DENVER, CO 80231 (303) 353-2965 Attorney File # CO140978 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly February 19, and 26, 2015 and March 5, 12 and 19, 2015. (10942615)

DATE: 12/11/2014 Thomas Carl Oken, Public Trustee in and for the County of Pitkin, State of Colorado By: Sydney Tofany, Deputy Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: MARCELLO ROJAS #46396 Klatt, Odekirk, Augustine, Sayer, Trienen & Rastede, P.C. 9745 E HAMPDEN AVE, SUITE 400, DENVER, CO 80231 (303) 353-2965 Attorney File # CO140978 The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees' Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly February 19, and 26, 2015 and March 5, 12 and 19, 2015. (10942615)

NOTICE OF DEMAND NOTICE OF DEMAND. Please take notice that a demand has been made to the Home Supply Ditch Company to reissue share certificate no. 55R for 8100 shares to WJWJ Ranch Holdings, LLC under §§ 7-42-114 and 7-42-115, 7 C.R.S. The reason is the original share certificate is lost. The Company will issue, on or after March 19, 2015, a duplicate share certificate to WJWJ Ranch Holdings, LLC as the registered owner unless a contrary claim is filed with the Company prior to this date. Home Supply Ditch Company, c/o David Slaybaugh, CPA, 100 Elk Run Drive, Suite 125, Basalt, CO 81621, (970) 927-3507. Published in the Aspen Times Weekly February 12, 19, and 26, 2015. and March 5 and 12, 2015. (10933472)

PUBLIC NOTICE RE: WAGNER PARK CONCEPTUAL MAJOR DEVELOPMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Wednesday, March 25, 2015, at a meeting to begin at 5:00 p.m. before the Aspen Historic Preservation Commission, in Council Chambers, City Hall, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen. HPC will consider an application submitted by the City of Aspen Parks Department, represented by BlueGreen, related to their property located at 300 E. Durant Street, a parcel of land situated in the NW of Section 18, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th PM, City of Aspen, CO, Parcel ID #2737-182-20-851. The applicant requests Conceptual Major Development, Planned Development Project Review, Growth Management, Conditional Use, and Mountain View Plane approvals. The applicant proposes to construct a new utility and maintenance building in the southeast corner of the property. For further information, contact Justin Barker at the City of Aspen Community Development Department, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, CO, 970429-2797, justin.barker@cityofaspen.com. s/Willis Pember Chair, Aspen Historic Preservation Commission Published in the Aspen Times on March 5, 2015 (10999023)

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COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 14-026 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On December 18, 2014, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Pitkin records. Original Grantor(s) LAURENCE B WOZNICKI Original Beneficiary(ies) JOSEPH KHOSHABE Current Holder of Evidence of Debt JOSEPH KHOSHABE Date of Deed of Trust September 09, 2014 County of Recording Pitkin Recording Date of Deed of Trust September 15, 2014 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/ Page No.) 613541 Original Principal Amount $1,715,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $1,715,000.00 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: failure to make timely payments required under said Deed of Trust and the Evidence of Debt secured thereby.. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. See attached Exhibit “A” EXHIBIT “A” TO DEED OF TRUST LEGAL DESCRIPTION Parcel 2 of the W/J RANCH is a tract situated in Lot 8 and the NW1/4 SW1/4, (previously described as being in the NW 1/4 NW1/4) of Section 22, Township 9 South, Range 85 West of the Sixth Principal Meridian, described as follows: Beginning at a point whence the West 1/4 corner of said Section 22 bears North 7°18’45” West 1097.94 feet; Thence South 5631’00” East 416.60 feet; Thence North 0047’00” West 530.02 feet; Thence South 4835’00” West 453.70 feet to the Point of Beginning. Parcel 2 Access Easement: A perpetual, nonexclusive casement for the benefit of the Laud and Premises described as Tract A above for access and egress of every kind and nature to and h m the Land and Premises and that certain publicly dedicated right-of-way known as Bullwinkle Circle Access Easement, and for the installation, maintenance, operation and use of utilities. including without limitation, electricity, telephone, gas, cable television, sewer, and water, and together with the right to maintain said easement, and in so doing, to use and occupy such land adjacent to the easement as may reasonably by necessary or desirable for construction, maintenance and operation of the easement, snow stacking, storage of materials and the like, such easement being more particularly described as follows: A strip of land situated in Parcel C of the WIJ Ranch, located in Government Lot 8, Government Lot 9, the Government Lot 13 of Section 22, Township 9 South, Range 85 West of the 6’ Principal Meridian, being 40 feet wide, 20 feet each side of the following described centerline: Beginning at the southeasterly end of the Parcel 2 Access Easement centerline being on the westerly line of Bullwinkle Circle Access Easement whence the W1/4 corner of said section 22 bears North 6133’ 1 3” West 1884.16 feet; Thence North 375 1 ‘56” West 1 87.59 feet; Thence North 4427’05” West 200.78 ft; Thence North 0047’00” West 6.72 feet; Thence continuing North 0047’00” West 291.69 feet with the westerly sideline of parcel 2 Access Easement adjoining and being identical to the easterly property line of parcel No.2 to the northerly end of the Access Easement centerline. Also, the sidelines at the southeasterly end of parcel 2 Access Easement shall be lengthened or shortened to terminate on the westerly line of Bullwinkle Circle Access Easement. A PARCEL OF LAND SITUATED IN SECTION 22, TOWNSHIP SOUTH, RANGE 85 WEST OF THE 6TH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, COUNTY OF PITKIN, STATE OF COLORADO; SAID PARCEL BEING MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT THE WEST QUARTER CORNER OF SECTION 22; THENCE S 70°11’14”E 1097.97 FEET TO THE WEST POINT OF PARCEL 2 AS DESCRIBED IN BOOK 203 AT PAGE 151. THE POINT OF BEGINNING: THENCE LEAVING SAID PARCEL 2, S 11°32’55”W 71.40 FEET; THENCE S 81°00’04” W 99.47 FEET; THENCE S 14°24’02” E 102.25 FEET TO A POINT ON THE NORTHERN RIGHT-OF-WAY OF McLAlN FLATS ROAD; THENCE EASTERLY ALONG THE NORTHERNRIGHT-OF-WAY ALONG A NON TANGENT CURVE TO THE RIGHT HAVING A RADIUS OF 378.91 FEET AND A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 27’23’36”, A DlSTANCE OF 181. I6 FEET (CHORD BEARS S

68’37’14” E 179.44 FEET); THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID RIGHT-OF-WAY ALONG A REVERSE CURVE TO THE LEFT HAVING A RADIUS OF 448.34 FEET AND A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 23’56’32”, A DISTANCE OF 187.35 FEET (CHORD BEARS S 66°53’42” E 185.99 FEET); THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID RIGHT-OF-WAY ALONG A REVERSE CURVE TO THE RIGHT HAVING A RADIUS OF 225.35 FEET AND A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 39°52’39”, A DISTANCE OF 156.84 FEET (CHORD BEARS S 58°55’38” E 153,70 FEET); THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID RIGHT-OF-WAY S 38°59’ 1 5’ E 124.57 FEET; THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID RIGHT-OF-WAY ALONG A CURVE TO THE LEFT HAVING A RADIUS OF 560.82 FEET AND A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 08°024’18”, A DISTANCE OF 82.27 FEET (CHORD BEARS S 43’11’28” E 82.20 FEET); THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID RIGHT-OF-WAY S 47’23’37” E 81.69 FEET; THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID RJGHT-OF-WAY ALONG A CURVE TO THE RIGHT HAVING A RADIUS OF 547.16 FEET AND A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 11° ‘32’23”, A DISTANCE OF 110.20 FEET (CHORD BEARS S 41’3725” E 110.01 FEET) THENCE LEAVING THE NORTHERN RIGHT-OF-WAY OF McLAlN FLATS ROAD ALONG THE WESTERLY LINE OF THE ACCESS EASEMENT KNOWN AS WHITE STAR DRIVE, RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 39 AT PAGE 23, A NON-TANGENT CURVE TO THE LEFT HAVING A RADIUS OF 680.62 FEET AND A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 13°11’58”, A DISTANCE OF 156.80 FEET (CHORD BEARS N 19’41’45” W 156.45 FEET); THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID ACCESS EASEMENT N 55°07’33” E 20.18 FEET; THENCE LEAVING SAID ACCESS EASEMENT ALONG THE WESTERLY LINE OF A 30 FOOT ACCESS EASEMENT N 37°50’35” W 201.53 FEET; THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID ACCESS EASEMENT ALONG A CURVE TO THE LEFT HAVING A RADIUS OF 485.00 FEET AND A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 07°28’17”, A DISTANCE OF 63.24 FEET (CHORD BEARS N 41°34’43” W 63.20 FEET); THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID ACCESS EASEMENT N 45’1 8’52” W 143.21 TO THE SOUTHERN POINT OF PARCEL 2, THENCE ALONG THE SOUTHWESTERLY LINE OF SAID PARCEL 2, N 56°23’26” W 416.60 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNJNG; SAID PARCEL CONTAINING 2.560 ACRES, MORE OR LESS. Twenty-five shares of the capita1 stock of The Salvation Ditch Company, a Colorado nonprofit mutual ditch company, which shares are evidenced by a August 1,2009 Stock Certificate issued by The Salvation Ditch Company to Laurence Womicki. Also known by street and number as: 150 BULL WINKLE CIRCLE, ASPEN, CO 81611. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 04/22/2015, at Pitkin County Courthouse, at the south front door, 506 E Main St, Aspen, Colorado, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication 2/26/2015 Last Publication 3/26/2015 Name of Publication The Aspen Times Weekly IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED. DATE: 12/18/2014 Thomas Carl Oken, Public Trustee in and for the County of Pitkin, State of Colorado By: Sydney Tofany, Deputy Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: MARK E BIDDISON #17337 Stevens, Littman, Biddison, Tharp & Weinberg 250 Arapahoe Ave., Ste 301, Boulder, CO 80302 (303) 443-6690 Attorney File # WOZNICKI The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. ©Public Trustees’ Association of Colorado Revised 1/2015 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly February26 2015.

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WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by ANDREW TRAVERS

BOOK REVIEW

‘FLASH BOYS: A WALL STREET REVOLT’ MOST OF THE TIME, books that pull back the curtain on the Wall Street of the 21st century aim to infuriate with muckraking tales of materialist excess and moral deficiency. Michael Lewis’s “Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt” is one of those books. Except when it’s not. His revelatory account of highfrequency trading will no doubt infuriate you, as it details how a privileged few investors and big Wall Street banks essentially rigged the system. The technology that replaced the stock market of ticker tape and screaming brokers allowed those with access to faster technology to make trades milliseconds ahead of everyone else and bred a shady system of kickbacks. But it will also give you some hope, if not for Wall Street, then for human nature. The book focuses on a handful

by FINN VIGELAND

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“u r KIDDING!” Doesn’t tread lightly Neighbor of a delt 1958 space monkey Site of cataracts Chillax Goof “Conversely …,” online Pass Setting of 118-Across Language from which “tattoo” comes Mens ____ (legal term) Required Star of 118-Across “Roll Over Beethoven” group, briefly Chemistry-lab droppers Luggage checker, for short Hearing something? Author LeShan Botanist Carl Linnaeus, for one With 65-Down, 160-year-old fraternity founded at Miami University of Ohio Opening lyric of 118-Across Complaints Georgetown athlete Send Important factor in a crossword tournament Eclipses, to some Raid target ____ Fridays

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Duo behind 118-Across Fútbol announcer’s shout See 130-Across Lightly hammered? “Così Fan Tutte,” e.g. “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” actress Do some roof work Port authority? Honor for 118-Across Sports-bar fixture Narnia girl Curmudgeon’s review Fish dish Prefix with city or centennial Digressions It ends in Nov. Family upon whom 118-Across is based Wynken, Blynken and Nod, e.g. Whup Recondite Movie that opened on 3/2/1965 Superdietary, informally “Pics ____ didn’t happen” (slangy challenge) “Wailing” instrument Big export of Myanmar Nine-month pregnancy “Let’s Make a Deal” features Figure in a Sunni/ Shia dispute Where the Potemkin Steps are

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Two out of 11? Nicki with the 2014 hit “Anaconda” Dress to the nines Rite Aid rival Picks up Checked out “The culminating point that beauty has attained in the sphere of music,” per Tchaikovsky ____ crawl Guy’s name that’s an alphabet run Viola parts Remove any trace of 1961 Disney villainess Crime boss John Not esta or esa Disturb 2022 World Cup city Food-poisoning cause Asian capital nicknamed the City of Azaleas Hi-____ Does a real number on, say Something a trypanophobe fears In the slightest Latin 101 verb Trumpet sound Go (through) Citrus fruit Official in a turban Bit of filming ____ de México (Mexico City daily) A.L. East, e.g.: Abbr. Paperless party

Mar ch 5 - Mar ch 1 1 , 2015

planner’s option 2011 Marvel film ____ neanderthalensis 51 Checked out 52 “____ tight” 53 Singer Bareilles with the 2007 hit “Love Song” 54 Heaps 55 Interprets 56 Many a Silicon Valley worker: Abbr. 61 Heart 63 Maker of Dreamcast games 65 See 48-Across 66 Cave opening? 69 Eldest Stark child on “Game of Thrones” 70 Pivots 71 Rendezvous 72 File ____ 73 Little songbirds 74 Bigger than big 75 Luzón, por ejemplo 76 Manhattanite, e.g., for short 80 Hooters 81 12 points 82 Cuts off 83 Senator William who pioneered a type of I.R.A. 84 Seminoles’ sch. 85 Part of the food pyramid 87 Sicilian border? 88 Flight from danger 92 Orbit, e.g. 93 About 94 “Rats!” 96 Smartphone capability 100 Crown since 1952 102 Hookup in bed? 103 Annual awards in animation

NOTEWORTHY

of men who actually choose to do the right thing. They attempt to even the playing field for all traders, though the system in which they work provides them no incentive to do so. Among them is Bradley Katsuyama, who immersed himself in highfrequency trading while at the Royal Bank of Canada, and Rob Park, who teamed with Katsuyama to learn how traders exploited technology. They first create a tool — called “Thor” — that made large stock orders immune to the predatory practices of highfrequency traders. Then they founded their own stock exchange, IEX, which gives banks and traders a place to do business without the dirty tricks. Much of the book is devoted to explaining how high-frequency trading works and stock exchanges have decentralized. Lewis has a rare skill for translating the impenetrable

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Michael Lewis will speak at Winter Words on Thursday, March 12 at Paepcke Auditorium. The event is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. Tickets and more info at ww.aspenwords.com.

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jargon- and acronym-heavy world of finance into plain English, as he did previously in “The Big Short” and “Liar’s Poker.” This gripping narrative opens with the construction of a secretive new cable line from Chicago to New Jersey. It is a testament to Lewis’ skills as a writer that he can turn this ditch-digging, and the often mystifying world of finance, into page-turning reading.

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‘Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt’ Michael Lewis W.W. Norton & Company, 2014

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— Last week’s puzzle answers — 104 Site of Spaceship Earth 105 Kevin of “House of Cards” 107 Unlike much Schoenberg music 108 Formula One driver ____ Fabi 109 Haven 110 Pitfall 111 “Comin’ ____ the Rye”

112 Prince, e.g. 113 Lies 114 Year that Cambridge’s St. John’s College was founded 117 Stately trees 118 Kind of list 119 To’s partner 120 Joe 121 Civil War inits.

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CLOSING ENCOUNTERS

IMAGE of the WEEK

photography by BOB LIMACHER

| 02.28.15 | Buttermilk Mountain | A LONE SET OF FRESH TRACKS ON A SNOWY DAY AT BUTTERMILK. WINTER FINALLY RETURNED TO THE ROARING FORK VALLEY, DROPPING MORE THAN 2 FEET OF MUCH-NEEDED POWDER ON THE LOCAL SKI SLOPES.

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

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New Listing

Magnificent Views From Every Room • 360º protected views • 5 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, 10,803 sq ft (13,251 sq ft built out) • 60 acres with 9 acres of irrigated pastures for horses • Property includes water rights and pond • Media room, exercise room, music room, office/study, workshop and 3-car garage • Electronic security gates at the entrance for extreme privacy • Only 6 minutes to skiing or the airport $17,800,000 Maureen Stapleton | 970.948.9331

New Listing

Picture Perfect

Former Home of John Denver

6 bedrooms, 6 full, 4 half baths, 6,815 sq ft Master suite with incredible views Just four minutes to the central core $8,975,000 Craig Morris | 970.379.9795 Carol Hood | 970.379.0676

6 bedrooms, 6 baths, 6,489 sq ft Unique property, beautifully maintained Big views, trees, pool, large lawn area or pasture Can be purchased with adjoining property $7,150,000 www.StarwoodHouse.info Carol Dopkin | 970.618.0187

New Listing

Spacious, Light-filled Core Townhome 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 2,586 sq ft Vaulted ceilings, 2 balconies, spacious master End townhome with spectacular views Completely renovated in 2015 $5,995,000 Pat Marquis | 970.925.4200

New Listing

Contemporary Core Townhome 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3,075 sq ft Only 3 blocks to the Gondola Vaulted ceilings, Aspen Mountain views Fireplace, new stone exterior, 3-car garage $5,600,000 Tom Melberg | 970.379.1297

Hidden Gem Lot on Red Mountain Views of Ajax, Aspen Highlands and Mt. Daly Relatively flat building site with great sun Salvation Ditch flows through property Plans for 5,745 sq ft house and garage included $4,995,000 Andrew Ernemann | 970.379.8125

New Listing

Thunder Ridge at High Aspen Ranch 6 bedrooms, 6 baths, 6,006 sq ft Incredible views from Snowmass to Flat Tops Gourmet kitchen, expansive decks, BBQ area Gated community with equestrian center $2,130,000 Llwyd Ecclestone | 970.456.6031

AspenSnowmassSIR.com

Aspen | 970.925.6060 Snowmass | 970.923.2006 Basalt | 970.927.8080


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