Aspen Times Weekly: Nov. 29 edition

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FOOD MATTERS

THE TAPS TAKE OVER 18

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A&E THE CRAZY PROCESS BEHIND ‘LUNATICS’ 30

NOVEMBER 29 - DECEMBER 5, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

WHAT TYPE OF SKIER ARE YOU? SEE PAGE 24


BELLY UP ASPEN WHERE ASPEN GOES FOR LIVE MUSIC.

FRI 11/30

THU 11/29

GAME 6:20 | SHOW 9:30

PA S S E S

ON SALE NOW BELLY UP ASPEN BOX OFFICE

SAT 12/1

SHOW 10 PM

40 OZ TO FREEDOM

A Sublime tribute band playing hits such as “Santeria,” “What I Got” and “Wrong Road.”

ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

NFL FOOTBALL:

SAINTS VS. FALCONS NO COVER FOR GAME

,41/ 13&4&/54

VAN GHOST

Returning after playing the Snowmass Free Concert series, Van Ghost is “an ultramelodic take on epic ’70s rock” - Chicago Tribune

SHOW 9:30 PM

SHAKEDOWN STREET

1&3'03.4 &6301& A Colorado based Grateful Dead tribute performing the Dead’s legendary Europe ‘72 set.

MON 12/3

SUN 12/2

GAME 6:20 | SHOW 9:30

GAME 6:30 | SHOW 9:30

ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

EAGLES VS. COWBOYS

GIANTS VS. REDSKINS

NFL FOOTBALL: NO COVER FOR GAME

moe. Rolling Stone placed this “legendary jam band,” among their top twenty “guitar gods.” They’ve been Radio City Music Hall’s NYC act the past two years, played Lollapalooza, Vegoose & their own festivals - Snoe.down & moe.Down.

NFL FOOTBALL: NO COVER FOR GAME

AFROLICIOUS With an EP produced by Rob Garza of Thievery Corporation (who they supported this year) this Afro-Tropi-Samba-FunkDub-Disco-House band returns to the Belly Up after their Red Rocks & Belly Up performances this summer.

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THU 12/6

GAME 6:20 PM

ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

NFL FOOTBALL:

BRONCOS VS. RAIDERS

CELEBRATE THE END OF THE OFF SEASON! ALL ENTREES + DRAFT OF YOUR CHOICE ONLY $10 all night long. 16ft HD screen, drink specials, giveaways!

NO COVER

FRI 12/7

SHOW 9:30 PM

SUPER DIAMOND

This Neil Diamond tribute has sold out NYC’s Irving Plaza, DC’s 930 Club & House of Blues in Chicago, Los Angeles, San Diego, Cleveland & Dallas. “I’ve met them and I have been to their shows, they’re wonderful!” - Neil Diamond. “An uncanny imitation of Diamond’s voice” – SPIN Magazine

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www.bellyupaspen.com | BOX OFFICE: 970 544-9800

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STARWOOD PRIVACY AND VIEWS ASPEN Come home to this exquisitely private Starwood home, with fabulous views from Aspen Mountain to Buttermilk, including the Highlands, Mt. Hayden and the very top of 14,000 ft. Pyramid Peak. The property features a sunny, southern exposure, beautiful grounds with a fenced grassy yard, mature natural landscaping, plus an outdoor hot tub and sauna. There is a heated, over-sized two-car garage, indoor steam room, and

two wood burning fireplaces. Starwood is a gated community with horse, cross country ski, hiking, and biking trails. The detached guest caretaker’s apartment, with full kitchen, insures an owner’s privacy in the main house. $3,995,000 Web ID: AN127690

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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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FOUR-MOUNTAIN SPORTS

INTRODUCING: ELK CAMP

PASSHOLDER DEMO PROGRAM

OPEN FOR LUNCH, SNOWMASS

Premier, Flex, Double Flex, Senior Escape or Mountain Collective passholders are eligible. Demo the latest freshly tuned skis & snowboards all season long.

Come check out our newest on-mountain restaurant located at the top of the Elk Camp Gondola. Diners can take their pick of organic and locally harvested menu items, such as roasted chicken or pork loin served on a French baguette, or wild mushroom pizza with fontina cheese and white truf e oil. There will also be a wide selection of comfort food and health conscious items to please every member of the family. www.aspensnowmass.com/elkcamp

25 demo days $49995 ($20 per day) 50 demo days $59999 ($12 per day) Available for purchase at any Four-Mountain Sports location or by calling 977-282-7736.

SKI & SNOWBOARD SCHOOL ATTENTION PARENTS:

INTRODUCING: ELEMENT 47 OPENING SOON, THE LITTLE NELL, ASPEN

Drop off your children at the Treehouse Kids’ Adventure Center while you enjoy a few hours on the slopes! 970.923.TREE

Aspen’s newest restaurant, opens for bar service and dinner, Saturday December 1, with breakfast and lunch service starting December 2. Savor soulful contemporary cooking at The Little Nell’s latest precious offering!

SNOWMASS & ASPEN MOUNTAIN ARE OPEN & SO ARE WE!

SNEAKY’S TAVERN

Group and private lessons are now available for all levels & ages. www.aspensnowmass.com/schools

Connect. Share. Check in: Keep up with the latest on-mountain conditions, activities, events, packages & specials in Aspen/Snowmass!

OPEN FOR LUNCH, APRÈS & DINNER BASE VILLAGE, SNOWMASS Stop by Sneaky’s after spending the day on the slopes for après, specials, and live music! This Saturday, December 1 there will be music by Damian Smith and Terry Bannon from 4 - 7 pm. Also there will be $2 off all wine by the glass. 970-923-8787 www.aspensnowmass.com/sneakystavern

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

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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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WELCOME MAT

INSIDE this EDITION

DEPARTMENTS 08 THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION LEGENDS & LEGACIES

12

14 FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE WINE INK

17

20 VOYAGES 29 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT AROUND ASPEN

31

32 LOCAL CALENDAR 42 CROSSWORD

FOOD MATTERS

THE TAPS TAKE OVER 18

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A&E THE CRAZY PROCESS BEHIND ‘LUNATICS’ 30

NOVEMBER 29 - DECEMBER 5, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

18 FAMILY MATTERS

25 COVER STORY

WHAT TYPE OF SKIER ARE YOU? SEE PAGE 24

Aspen hotspot Justice Snow’s is at it again, this time allowing Sierra Nevada beer to take over its restaurant.

Writer Amanda Charles explores the realm of skiing labels, and asked a number of locals to define them. What type of skier are you?

ON THE COVER

Photo by Thinkstock

EDITOR’S NOTE

hot topic | When you grow up in the Midwest like I did, you

rarely hear about Western issues. Farming, sure, and the Chicago Cubs, definitely, but generally you assume water will never run out, bears steal picnic baskets and that nobody lives between Denver and Las Vegas. So when a storm, and has already Midwesterner or lost it. Southerner does move All that said, the out — and yes, it’s reactions across moving to ski resort Colorado have been season — they should interesting. Last expect surprise after weekend, a column surprise, including by Steve Lipsher in RYAN SLABAUGH water shortages, the Denver Post told beetles that eat entire visitors not to ski in forests and the fact that people Colorado — yet. His point was actually do live in Utah. solid. Why sell tourists on a bad I’ve lived in the West for more experience instead of just being than 12 years, and I can count this honest with them? That our snow winter as one of those surprises. is fake, the temperatures feel like While my family and friends October and any type of inbounds back in the flat states froze their skiing will involve slow lifts, white buns off during the Thanksgiving ribbons, and if you’re unlucky, a holiday, I found myself sitting on lot of crowds. my back porch in shorts and a But there is one point that I T-shirt, reading “Bossypants,” and did not agree with in his column staring occasionally at a World — and that is telling people not Cup ski race tearing down the ski to ski. Imagine if you wake up resort in front of me. every morning below the MasonYes, the ultra-warm weather Dixon Line, and are still seeing is a little more than concerning, birds chirping and temperatures especially since it follows an ultra- reaching into the 70s. Those warm spring and a relatively dry who do want to ski have no and warm summer. Even my dog options (unless it’s on water), and is confused. She started building Colorado is often the closest and a winter coat right after the first best option to scratch the itch.

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So do the conditions really matter? Sure, but not as much as Lipsher and a lot of the ski industry marketing departments think. Flatlanders arrive, they see the mountains, and no matter how many acres are open, they can still write home that they came, they skied, and they survived. So let’s not jump up and down and scare off the tourists. Let’s welcome the doors, and in our region, acknowledge the fact that we have a large number of fun things to do outside the realm of skiing. Shopping, art galleries, hiking, nordic skiing and fishing are just a few, a list that earned Aspen the “best ski area not to ski” by The New York Times in the past. At first, we thought that label was a joke, and were a bit embarrassed. As the drought continues, though, that label should make us feel lucky. Do we want it to snow? Sure. But should we let it ruin our and others’ fun? Surely not. rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

VOLUME 2 ✦ ISSUE NUMBER 02

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


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

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

VOX POP What type of skier are you?

by JOHN COLSON

The election battle will never end for some WELCOME to the election that never ended. Most of us know by now that Barack Obama has won a second term in office by a wide enough margin to put to rest any lingering doubts or questions concerning the intent of the U.S. electorate. But there remain enough people outraged at the presence of a black man in the White House, with utter disdain for anyone who doesn’t agree with their warped view of life and the world, that the rain of simpering, whining objections and obfuscations continues unabated. The tea party, of course, continues its braying calls for everything from dissolution of the Union to impeachment of the president, though it has no grounds for impeachment and no support for secession outside the narrow confines of its own limited understanding of the way the world works. But, hey, that’s what makes America great, eh? Even the most simpleminded dolt has the right to say what he or she thinks about anything that ticks him or her off as long as the results don’t kill someone else or otherwise lead to bloodshed or violations of someone else’s rights. Of course, the caveats named above leave a lot unsaid and unexplained with regard to the outcomes from hate speech, bigotry and mean-spirited, verbal vitriol. And it is in those gray areas that ugly things happen. Remember back in March 2010, when members of the Congressional Black Caucus reported being spat upon as they walked up the steps to the Capitol through a phalanx of teabagging protesters? Remember when former U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, of Massachusetts, in the same series of tea party protests, reported being the subject of anti-gay taunts and epithets? The perpetrators of these acts, hiding behind the anonymity of the mob, were never named or singled out, and the teabaggers denied that it ever happened. I guess that’s their version of standing on principle — trample the principles underfoot, jeer, spit and curse at anyone you can reach who doesn’t think just like you, and deny any involvement when it becomes news. If that’s the caliber of behavior and high-minded debate that democracy

is evolving into, we might want to admit we got off on the wrong foot a couple hundred years ago and give the country back to the British. So much for looking backward, though. Let’s take a look at our immediate future. They say the U.S. is leaning over a “fiscal cliff ” that faces Congress and the president next year. That’s when we get hit with roughly 7 trillion worth of mandatory spending cuts, termination of the Bush-era tax cuts for everybody (but which mostly benefited the wealthy), the end of extended unemployment benefits and the beginning of reimbursement cuts for Medicare services, among other things. From my perch, I think Obama is heading at least in the right direction with his prescription for our national financial malady, though I don’t believe he’s willing to go far enough to make real change. I notice that the teabaggers and their ilk don’t say a lot about the fiscal cliff in their daily missives of bile and lies. They continue to focus on Obama’s birth certificate, calling him “America’s fraud president” and pinning their hopes for the nation’s future on Arizona’s rabid and racist Sherrif Joe Arpaio and conspiracy-theory wingnut Jerome Corsi, author of two scandalously inaccurate and bilious books on then-presidential candidates John Kerry and Obama. The point is that these ranting, raving apologists for all that is bad and wrong in this country don’t really want to solve problems or improve things. No, they merely want to catch as much reflected glory and ill-gotten profit as they can by playing on the fears and ignorance of people who might otherwise be good folks. I’m sure that the majority of teabaggers are well meaning, if tragically uninformed. They’ve proven to be energetic and forceful in their determination to be heard and might be a beneficial influence if they ever got their facts straight. But we might never know if that is true as long as they are led by selfpromoting charlatans with no positive goals or ambitions. It’s too bad, really.

HIT&RUN

BRIAN FANSHEL BETHESDA, MD.

Freeride/big mountain

TIDO KRAEMER ROCKY HILL, CONN.

Freeride

JARED GOULET F LO R I D A

Recreational boarding

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jcolson@postindependent.com

VOX POP COMPILED BY MAX VADNAIS


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estO ceinAspen.com 'SRXEGX William Small, JD, CCIM 970-429-2419 Bill@friasproperties.com A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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SEEN, HEARD & DONE

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

CHEERS&JEERS

THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

FIVE THINGS Photographer Pavel Osiak climbed a tree to capture Tina Maze turning around a gate during this year’s Aspen Winternational World Cup giant slalom. Maze won.

CHEERS | To local pilots. Flying into our airport can’t

CHEERS | To local government in Pitkin County

always be fun. The Aspen chapter of the 99’s will be hosting its annual Pilots’ Holiday Party on Dec. 6 from 5 to 9 p.m. It will be held at the Mountain Chalet on the top floor of 333 E. Durant Ave. in Aspen. All aviation enthusiasts are invited to celebrate the holidays, see old friends, make new ones and talk flying. There will be a cash bar and potluck food. The event is open to the public, and admission is free.

supporting efforts by the state to beef up regulations related to oil and gas drilling. They are being smart about it. Surface rights are rarely a local issue, so supporting state efforts will most likely be the best way to reach any kind of regulation that would stick.

JEERS | To Carbondale town officials for thinking about imposing a moratorium on new medical marijuana dispensaries based on fears of Amendment 64. Voters statewide recently approved the legalization of marijuana, so we’re not sure where these fears are coming from.

JEERS | To the continued secrecy by the town of Basalt about its settlement with the former police chief, Roderick O’Connor. It’s shrouding those details under the veil of a policy protecting employment matters, but we disagree. A police chief is as public of a figure as you can achieve, and the public has a right to know where its city’s money, time and efforts are going, especially when public safety is concerned.

BUZZ WORTHY PITKIN COUNTY

DISTRICT ATTORNEY TO SEEK A RECOUNT

Ninth Judicial District Attorney Martin Beeson said Nov. 26 that he will seek a recount of votes following his apparent loss in the Nov. 6 election to challenger Sherry Caloia. “I don’t want to walk out of this office wondering why I left this stone unturned,” Beeson said Monday in a telephone interview. “I don’t think the result will necessarily be different, but the margin is so close,” he said. “The only expectation I have is the recount is going to be conducted, and conducted appropriately, and we will come out with one of two results, either a confirmation or a new result.” Beeson, a Rifle Republican, was seeking re-election to his second full term in office. He also finished the

term of a previous district attorney who had been recalled. Caloia is a Glenwood Springs Democrat who runs a private law practice. — Heather McGregor

ASPEN

COUNCIL SAYS NO NEW RESIDENCES IN DOWNTOWN

There was no official vote, but the Aspen City Council on Nov. 26 hammered out a land-use policy for the downtown area that seeks to deny developers the right to build new free-market residential units. Also during a three-hour discussion within a meeting that lasted more than six hours, the council signaled that it would make other changes to the municipal land-use code that sets rules for

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O5

We don’t want to wash our car

O4

Our goggle tan is falling way behind schedule

O3

We’re spoiling the dog instead

O2

Nothing worse than forlorn lifties

O1

Because that’s what happens in the winter

POST US YOUR TOP FIVE THINGS rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

STAY IN THE KNOW — CATCH UP ON RECENT NEWS & LOCAL EVENTS the two commercial districts in the town’s center. A majority of council members decided that exceptions to the recently instituted 28-foot height limit will be allowed only for lodging and other commercial uses, such as office or restaurant spaces. An official vote and another public hearing on the height issue and related matters is planned for the council’s Dec. 10 regular meeting. — Andre Salvail

BASALT

POLICE CHIEF RESIGNS ‘VOLUNTARILY’

Basalt Police Chief Roderick O’Connor resigned from his position in a settlement with the town of Basalt that remains largely under wraps, O’Connor and the town government announced Nov. 26. O’Connor was placed on

“I NEVER THOUGHT I COULD DO THIS THING TODAY.” 10

TOP 5 REASONS IT NEEDS TO SNOW

administrative suspension with pay during the week of Oct. 8. The suspension was lifted immediately before his resignation. “The lifting of the administrative suspension is completed without a finding or implication of misconduct of any kind,” said a press statement that was released jointly by the town and O’Connor. “Further, while matters related to employment are confidential and will be kept confidential, the parties do want to stress that the temporary suspension did not involve any investigation(s) into criminal law violations and/or civil rights violations.” Town Attorney Tom Smith said town officials were bound by state law and the agreement with O’Connor not to discuss the reason or reasons related to the suspension. — Scott Condon

KATHRIN ZETTEL, AFTER WINNING ASPEN’S WORLD CUP SLALOM RACE

PHOTO BY PAVEL OSIAK


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

GUEST OPINION COLUMN

by CASEY O’MALLEY with WRITERS ON THE RANGE

Public land near Salt Lake City needs to stay public SOME  GROUPS and companies that want public land to remain open to the public have signed a petition to stop a Canadian developer from building a gondola to hook together two ski resorts near Salt Lake City. Traversing about 30 acres of what is now the Wasatch National Forest, the gondola would benefit the Talisker corporation, which plans to connect Canyons Ski Resort in Park City to Solitude Mountain Resort in Big Cottonwood Canyon. Talisker’s proposal to privatize public land, called SkiLink, has the energetic backing of Republican members of Utah’s congressional delegation, and the bill authorizing the sale of public land has already been reported out of the House Committee on Public Resources. It is true that the 30 acres of public land at stake aren’t a huge amount, but they are precious, bisecting popular hiking and cycling trails and containing a well-loved backcountry ski run. Talisker and ski industry representatives tout the increased tourism dollars and more jobs for Utah that would flow from the gondola, but the growing opposition also has a broad base, ranging from Patagonia, Mountain Hardware, Utah Rivers Council and Save Our Canyons to Salt Lake City and county commissioners, Salt Lake Public Utilities — even the Forest Service itself. Gregory Smith, acting deputy chief of staff of the U.S Department of Agriculture, testified against the SkiLink bill in December 2011, stressing that construction could damage watersheds, scar preserved areas and set a risky precedent of encouraging new private inholdings within national forests. But informed opposition like that is exactly why Talisker and its lobbyists have involved federal-level legislation to aid their construction project. If passed, the gondola bill would block the Forest Service from any involvement in the regulatory process. To understand the scheme of

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

SkiLink, one must fully grasp the geography of the Salt Lake Valley. Salt Lake City snuggles up to the Wasatch Mountains, whose canyons host several major ski resorts. The canyons run largely east to west, spilling into the increasingly populated Salt Lake Valley. Travel between these canyons is difficult because drivers must retrace their steps and return to the metro area before venturing up another canyon. SkiLink is marketed as a transportation solution, likely

Canyons Resort, a skier would need to purchase a lift ticket at Canyons (a 96 investment in the winter of 2011-12) and ride several lifts and ski several runs to reach the base of the gondola. This high admission cost makes it clear that this “transportation solution” is aimed at wealthy tourists, not commuting locals. Although the Wasatch Mountains’ ski resorts certainly help fuel Salt Lake’s tourism economy, the mountains have a higher purpose

because the Forest Service’s current policies prohibit any further skiresort expansion. The two resorts are approximately three miles apart as the crow flies, but driving between them takes 40 minutes. A gondola would, it’s claimed, reduce car trips between the two resorts. But to access the gondola from

than just downhill skiing. The population of the Salt Lake Valley — expected to double in the next 30 years — depends on the mountain range for much of its water. That is why the Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities stated its doubt that the gondola could be constructed without

harming the local watershed. Most importantly, opponents worry that its construction would make it more difficult to limit future development in the canyon, setting a precedent that favors private development over public need. The ski-industry reports that support SkiLink are based on continuous growth in that industry, counting on a steady increase of skiers each year to substantiate claims that SkiLink will generate 500 jobs and churn 51 million into the Utah economy. This ignores the reality that skier numbers depend on snow quality, and skier visits from this past year, the barren 2011-12 winter, dropped 10 percent from those of 2010-11. The past season of 2011-12 was the driest winter on record since 1976. Predictably, the number of skier days logged at resorts dropped dramatically. Climate change, as we all know by now, is going to make what used to be outlier years normal years. Dry winters and drier summers might become the new normal. Now is the time to safeguard Western water sources and develop in a responsible manner; it’s not time to allow public lands, on which key watersheds are housed, to be parceled off to whoever is doling out enough cash through Washington lobbyists. So do we really need to sell off public land that is well used and well loved by locals to cater to tourists who visit once a year? Here’s how Peter Metcalf, CEO of Black Diamond Equipment, answered that question, as reported by the Salt Lake Tribune: “What is being publicly sold as a solution to traffic is a private-interest land grab of some of the most pristine and heavily used recreational public land in the Wasatch for the benefit of a single real estate developer.” Casey O’Malley is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (www.hcn.org). She lives in Salt Lake City and is a teacher, writer and skier.

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

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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

CLASSIC ASPEN

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

Aspen’s many ore-analysis offices consumed thousands of ceramic assay cups, discarding them for future residents to discover buried in their backyards.

ASK AN ASSAYER … experienced miners could estimate the value of ore by sight and

the weight in their hand, but only for extraordinary silver quantities. For lesser-value ores, an assay was required. Investors never accepted the word of the optimistic miner; they relied only on reputable assay results. A mining town’s assayer, therefore, was as important to the industry as a rating agency is to today’s bond market. ASPEN’S MULTIPLE mines supported no fewer than seven assay offices, one located next door to The Aspen Times office on Main Street. Assay offices surrounded the Clarendon Hotel (at the north end of present Wagner Park), where miners from remote sites could spend the night while their samples were assayed. L.W. Thiele charged customers a dollar to confirm mineral content in a sample and 3 to determine the metal quantities. For mines that required multiple assays, as did most operations that consistently produced ore, Thiele charged 100 a month for as many as 200 samples. Although the science of conducting an assay had accumulated over a century, assayers’ reputations varied because the process required experience and judgment, too. Ore types varied, even within a single mine. Much of the assay was routine:

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grinding the ore from the sample to pellet size and then to a powder, mixing the powder of several samples to create an average quantity and then separating exactly 29.167 grams, an amount equivalent to one-thousandth the weight of an

interpretation required honesty from the miner. If a miner (or mining company) did not extract “average” samples from a mine, the assay results were meaningless. Many a mining stock was manipulated from non-

AN ASSAYER WOULD DETERMINE SPECIFIC QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS, BUT INTERPRETATION REQUIRED HONESTY FROM THE MINER. assay ton. Next, an assayer added quantities of other elements to facilitate the separation of minerals when the sample was heated to temperatures sometimes exceeding 1,000 degrees. Using the right mix ensured success on the first furnace firing. An assayer would determine specific quantifiable results, but

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representative assay results. An assayer’s reputation for unbiased work provided the only credibility in an industry where a few grams’ difference in a sample could swing major transactions. My father was the last assayer in Aspen. His office was in the building now housing Bandana Kids. He did most of his work in the evenings

as a second job; he spent days at the Midnight Mine. He enjoyed the social life of the office, which attracted men for social reasons —miners gathered to talk shop. Learning the quality of ore from other mines was more than idle talk, it helped to determine where ore bodies were located and how ore quality changed as neighboring mines reached greater depths or entered a different geological region. My father’s favorite gadfly was Jake Yeckle, a bachelor miner who lived in the Hotel Jerome and dropped by daily. His mining claims on Porphry Mountain near Lenado provided enough income to pay his bills at the Jerome. Yeckle’s reputation for imbibing was excessive even for heavy-drinking mining men of his time. When my father noted his habit, Yeckle said, “Yes, I have consumed at least a quart of whiskey a day for 50 years or more, but one compensation: I pay no doctor bills.” He lived to be 86. Father’s business slowed as mines closed, so he moved the office to a shed behind the Cowenhoven building, where the Midnight Mine had its office. That shed held my attention as a child, playing with the assay equipment, especially the balance scale. There was an ample supply of assay cups, some used and coated with the colorful melted residue from having been fired, others new and tan. I used them for all kinds of projects, but I felt like I found my own mother lode when I discovered that tourists, who were eager to take home a mining-era relic, would buy them from me. Tim Willoughby’s family story parallels Aspen’s. He began sharing folklore while teaching for Aspen Country Day School and Colorado Mountain College. Now a tourist in his native town, he views it with historical perspective. Reach him at redmtn@schat.net.

PHOTO BY TIM WILLOUGHBY


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

WORTHY OF CARS

1934 M A RO ON ROA D

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

“RAPID PROGRESS ON MAROON ROAD,” stated The Aspen Times on Nov. 29, 1934. Work was under way to make the road suitable for automobile travel, and “despite inclement weather conditions, the forest service road construction crew working on the new thoroughfare to Maroon Lakes is making rapid progress with the building. According to N.I. Jacobson, engineer in charge, the work will be continued, on a smaller scale now that the weather is colder, until Dec. 15. It is estimated that the entire road will be completed and open for travel by early in August of 1935.”

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

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

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Wine and Dine for Life presented by Pacifica Restaurant and Oyster Bar. Culinary creations prepared by Chef Barclay Dodge and wine donations provided by Turley, Failla and 32 Winds Wineries

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by GUNILLA ASHER

NEED TO KNOW 1½ ounces of cognac 1¾ ounces of grapefruit juice ½ ounces of clover honey syrup Shaken on top of muddled basil

PARISIAN ROOF GARDEN MY FRIEND JULIE was in town for the holiday, so we stopped by the Viceroy for a cocktail. Justin, the bartender, made me a Parisian Roof Garden, and the flavor was amazing. The atmosphere at the Viceroy is fantastic, the service was great, and the drink was exactly what I needed. I highly recommend this smooth sipper. Gunilla Asher grew up in Aspen and now is the comanager of The Aspen Times. She writes a drink review weekly in the spirit of “She’s not a connoisseur, but she is heavily practiced.”

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PHOTO BY THINKSTOCK


WINEINK

WORDS to DRINK BY

by KELLY J. HAYES

MY BOX OF WINE A FRIEND CALLED recently with a great question. It seems he wished to gift a client a case of wine in appreciation of his business. He endeavored to build a box of wines that would reflect a worldview, that would cost 50 or so per bottle and that would resonate with his client on a personal level. First of all, what a nice gesture. It is the kind of gift that not only shows you care for the person but also is something that will bring your face to mind for years to come whenever they KELLY J. open and enjoy one HAYES of the bottles. It is the perfect gift for a client. Second, it got me to thinking, especially because it is near the holidays, about what bottles I would want included in a “personal” box of wine. In other words, if someone knew enough about my wine experiences, what bottles would I want them to fill my box with? If there was to be just one case, I would want it to include a good selection of whites and reds. I would want them to be from around the globe. And I would want the wines to evoke the wine regions I have been fortunate to have visited and the people I have been fortunate enough to meet in my wine travels. Hmmm … where should I begin? That would have to be the Champagne region of France. Any great mixed case would have to include champagne, and no one could fault me for selecting a vintage Dom Pérignon. Close to a decade ago, I was blessed with a trip to Epernay for a vertical tasting of the iconic wines. Wine ambassador Richard Geoffroy was the man charged with the task of taking the wine inspired by stars (“Come quick — I’m tasting stars,” exclaimed the monk who first noticed the bubbles rising in the wine, according to legend) to the stars. That is to say boldfaced names. While I am distinctly non-bold, facially and otherwise, Richard catered to me like I was a cover boy. The 1993

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

Moet & Chandon Dom Pérignon Rosé was a revelatory wine. A more recent tasting at New York’s (and Aspen’s) Italian Wine Merchants was so much fun that I feel compelled to include a second sparkling rosé. Aleš Kristančič is a Slovenian genius and world-class character. He makes a sparkling wine from 100 percent Pinot

lunch in Los Angeles. He ate daily at a restaurant called Jimmy’s and always had fish and a bottle of Trefethen Chardonnay. It was a great example of California Chard from the early ’80s. I would choose a vintage that coincides with my migration to Aspen, the 1992 Trefethen Family Vineyards Library Selection Chardonnay, and hope

Nero grapes, which he claims must be opened under water using an elaborate method. The idea is to disgorge the yeast from the bottle in the water and then quickly right the bottle before pouring. The Movia Puro Rosé 2004 is the second rosé in my box. Chardonnay was an early love of mine beginning when I, as a young man, would meet my grandfather for

it has held true. While he is gone now, those seminal sips of a great California Chardonnay are valuable memories to this day still.

Chardonnay and watching a massive sun set over the Pacific. The man regaled me with tales of what sounded like a mythical vineyard that met the sea and was ringed by spectacular surf spots on the southwestern corner of Australia. Denis Horgan is the proprietor of Leeuwin Estate, and any box would be better with a bottle of his 2009 Leeuwin Estate Art Series Chardonnay. Still later, I went to visit Denis, and his descriptions were dwarfed only by the reality of the estate. Australia was also the place where I met Peter Gago, just the fourth man in history to helm the making of Australia’s most famous wine, Grange. After an overnight flight across the dateline and down under, I serendipitously found myself at Penfolds’ historic Magill Estate Winery, where I tasted not just the recently released 2005 Grange but the entire spectrum of Gago’s current and past releases. More than a tasting, it was an entry to the history of Australian wines. Then there was the revelation of one of the best wines I had ever tasted. A friend with a cellar that consists of many hundreds of cases, all of which dwarf my single case in quality, poured me a 1990 Ermitage Cuvee Cathelin from the house of Jean Louis Chave. This amazing Syrah changed the way I look at wine to this day. It would be a rare find, but if I could include it in my case, well … . I met the man himself, winemaker Jean Louis Chave, here in Aspen at the Food & Wine Classic a few years later. Again, I gushed. That makes a half pack, six wines, a modest box thus far. And yet so much wine and so little space. As I have run out of the latter, I think I shall go pour a glass of the former and continue to take a slow jaunt down memory lane. I’ll get back to you with the rest of the pack in a future column. Or two.

LATER IN LIFE, at an authentic Hawaiian luau on the Big Island, I met another man of grandfatherly demeanor. Together we stood picking pig, sipping a great Australian

Kelly J. Hayes lives in the soon-tobe-designated appellation of Old Snowmass with his wife, Linda, and a black Lab named Vino. He can be reached at malibukj@aol.com.

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

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

FOOD MATTERS

ONE NIGHT ONLY

“TAP TAKEOVER” IS JUST ONE EVENT THAT MAKES JUSTICE SNOW’S THE TOP SPOT FOR UNIQUE EVENTS ON NOV. , Justice Snow’s is hosting an exclusive tasting event featuring six of Sierra Nevada’s most exceptional microbrews, including standouts from its 2012 Beer Camp and the ultra-rare Ovila Abbey Barrel-Aged Quad. These six specialty beers are brewed only one time, and Justice Snow’s is one of only two bars in Colorado that have AMIEE WHITE been given the honor of BEAZLEY serving these beers on tap. In a casual, come-when-you-can format, the “Tap Takeover” event takes place from 5 to 10 p.m. Beers are offered for 5.50 each, and small plates are 9 to 11. This isn’t some run-of-the-mill beer-pairing dinner. They are rare, sought-after brews that the most hardcore hopophile will be clamoring to sip. Four of the brews are from Sierra Nevada’s Beer Camp, where skilled home brewers come together at Sierra Nevada headquarters to create craft beers, which are brewed only once and sold in very limited quantities. The Ovila Abbey Barrel-Aged Quad is the rarest of all the beers being served. Brewed in collaboration with the monks at the Abbey of New Clairvaux in Vina, Calif., it is barrelaged for two years in oak casks that once were used to age brandy. The result is an intense ale with layers of

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flavor and deep complexity. Rounding out the bunch is the 2012 Celebration Ale, my favorite holiday seasonal brew, which recently earned a score of 98 on Ratebeer.com. For the small plates, Justice Snow’s chef, Jonathan Leichliter, has created dishes to be paired with each of the brews. Leichliter is known for expertly crafting dishes that complement the complex flavors of a beer, as evidenced by his work at Justice Snow’s Beermaker vs. Winemaker Dinners last summer. The dishes he has created for Sierra Nevada’s brews range from wild boar belly sliders to pilsner braised clams to a vanilla ice cream sundae with spiced whipped cream. Here’s a look at Leichliter’s tasting menu for the Tap Takeover with Sierra Nevada: • Beer Camp Oatmeal Stout + vanilla ice cream sundae with mocha tuile cookie, dark chocolate ganache, candied oats and spiced whipped cream. About the beer: Midnight black in color with a big, roasty, mochalike aroma, silky body and round, lasting finish. • Beer Camp Imperial Pilsner + pilsner braised clams with grilled lemon, country ham, fresh thyme and grilled sourdough. About the beer: A golden pilsner that is hop-forward with a bright, crisp finish and a light-bodied yet

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complex malt backbone. • Beer Camp Floral IPA + IPAbrined buttermilk fried quail with IPA-agave drizzle and spicy herb hollandaise. About the beer: Whole-cone hop “flowers” are paired with aromatic natural rose hips and petals for complex and unexpected flavors. • Beer Camp Imperial Red Ale + slow roasted wild boar belly sliders with local apple slaw. About the beer: Big, aromatic hop notes of grapefruit, peach and melon are balanced by a smooth and surprisingly robust malt body. • 2012 Celebration Ale + rosemary grilled lamb kebabs with

chimichurri. About the beer: Lauded seasonal brew that is dry-hopped for a lively, intense aroma and robust flavor. • Ovila Abbey Barrel-Aged Quad + chef ’s whim (not even the chef has gotten to taste the beer yet!) The rarest of them all, an intense ale matured in oak casks used to age brandy — a truly distinct and flavorful brew. Amiee White Beazley writes about food-related travel for the Aspen Times Weekly. She is the editor of local food magazine edibleASPEN. Follow her on Twitter @awbeazley1, or email awb@awbeazley.com.


by AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

AT A GLANCE: SIERRA NEVADA TAP TAKEOVER, NOV. 29 FROM 5 TO 10 P.M. An exclusive tasting event featuring six of Sierra Nevada’s most exceptional microbrews, including one-time-only Beer Camp brews and the rare Ovila Abbey Barrel-Aged Quad. The chef has created dishes to complement each beer, ranging from wild boar belly sliders to pilsner braised clams to a vanilla ice cream sundae with spiced whipped cream. Beers are $5.50; small plates are $9 to $11.

PHOTOS BY AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

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

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VOYAGES

DESTINATION | SPAIN

by MORGAN SMITH

IN SPAIN, OBAMA IS ‘KENNEDY WITH MUSIC’

THE TITLE ABOVE is the one I used in a March 9, 2008, Aspen Times article about Obama’s image in Spain. I was there just three weeks before the March 2008 Spanish national elections, but to my surprise, no one was talking about the two Spanish candidates. Instead, they were astonished at the possibility that Barack Obama could win the Democratic nomination from Hillary Clinton and then go on to become president of the United States. As I wrote then, “The fact is that we’re doing something that would be inconceivable in most countries — the idea of a black man running to be our leader. Or a woman.” It’s hard to appreciate how powerfully people in other countries feel about our elections or how well informed they are. For example, while we were living in Spain in 2004, I was looking for a good photograph and drove down a remote dirt road to where a farmer was burning the weeds off his irrigation ditch. The farmer emerged from the smoke like a ghost, recognized that I was an American and immediately asked, “Bush o Kerry?” Each four years is different, however. In 2004, opposition to George Bush was the dominant issue. In 2008, it was the sense that Obama was the “Kennedy with music.”

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This year I spent two weeks around our Election Day, driving around southern Spain, interviewing dozens of Spaniards and photographing them with a postcard I made of a photo I took of Obama in 2007. Once again, he was the overwhelming favorite but much of the glow of 2008 is gone. In part, this is due to the terrible economic conditions in Spain and a deep sense of gloom about their own future. For example, a poll in El Pais on Nov. 11 showed that only 15 percent of Spaniards had confidence in their president, Mariano Rajoy. The opposition leader, Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba fared much worse with only 8 percent of Spaniards having confidence in him. One headline read, “Spain destination the third world. The abrupt ending of a period of wellbeing that we thought was eternal.” Some of the editorial comments about the U.S. were surprisingly negative. In an article titled, “The American Dream or The Power of Money?” Joaquín Rábago of La Opinión de Málaga commented on the corrupting effect of the 6 billion that was spent on our elections, arguing that most of Obama’s unfulfilled promises are due to the paralyzing power of all this money and the stranglehold of pressure groups and lobbies. Vicente Palacio argues in El

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País that the United States is becoming increasingly irrelevant. He asks what it will take, in a country so absorbed by money, for the U.S. to once again become a beacon of democracy, a country of leaders like Bill Gates and Steve Jobs. In the Diario de Cádiz, Rafael Sánchez Saus makes the same point, saying that the re-election of Obama coincides with the America’s decline and this will become more obvious as time passes. Spain is in a much deeper hole than the United States, but in reality, its problems are basically the same. For example, its housing crisis and the cruel wave of bank-initiated evictions that have resulted in several suicides, prompting the government to finally step in with remedies. Or corruption in lending practices. Half the residents in the town of Chiclana de la Frontera in southwestern Andalusia live in homes for which no building permits were ever granted, yet Spanish banks financed all these homes and the then-local officials provided services. “Unemployment brings misery,” said José Luis Galván, a burly fisherman I spoke with in Sanlúcar de Barrameda. Both Columbus and Magellan sailed from Sanlúcar centuries ago but now it’s just

a sleepy little town known for seafood and manzanilla sherry and struggling with huge numbers of unemployed. The unemployment level for Spaniards under 25 is 52.3 percent, in large part because Spain has made little effort to prepare its young people for a rapidly changing and increasingly high tech global economy. As one writer stated, “We have to recognize that we are becoming a low cost country with low cost salaries and lost cost health care and education.” But this is an American problem as well. Despite 8 percent unemployment, there are 3 million unfilled jobs in this country because Americans don’t have the necessary skills. José Luis and his friend, José Garcia did cheer up when I gave them the Obama cards. So did many of the other Spaniards I spoke with. The glow of 2008 may be gone but the many Spaniards I spoke with still have great respect for the United States. Morgan Smith is a former Aspenite who served in the Colorado House of Representatives and as Commissioner of Agriculture. He and his wife lived in Spain from 1999 to 2004. He can be reached at Morgan-smith@comcast.net

PHOTOS BY MORGAN SMITH


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experience

WINTER WORDS and the power of stories 2013 | season no. 16

ALL EVENTS 6PM / DOORS 5:30PM PAEPCKE AUDITORIUM ASPEN MEADOWS RESORT

TICKETS + PASSES ON SALE NOW! $20 GENERAL ADMISSION [author reading + book signing] $18 AWF & SOF MEMBER TICKET [author reading + book signing]

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ASPEN WRITERS’ FOUNDATION www.aspenwriters.org 970.925.3122

S p o n s o re d by Th e A s p e n Ti m e s

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Read the latest edition online at www.aspentimes.com/weekly


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Perhaps these cats were making fun of gapers, but either way, they exemplified the style. Jokingly, we call them “Breckenridge residents”.

RIPPERS, GAPERS AND DIE-HARDS: SKIING PROFILES DEFINED by Amanda Charles

PHOTOS BY MARK FOX

HAVE YOU EVER asked yourself the question, “What kind of skier am I?” Unlike some other mundane questions, asking yourself what kind of skier you are is often an honest question that rarely precedes honest answers. While we all like to consider ourselves a central piece in a synchronized ski team beautifully making its way down the glistening mountainside, the truth is we all have separate talents and interests that pull us apart (some better than others), and the key is not to rely on the helmet-cam footage from our GoPros, nor our friends’ boastful accounts of how sick our less-than-average turns were for the right answer.

The key to answering “What kind of skier am I?” lies in one’s ability to assess every aspect of the ski persona, from our attire upon leaving the house, to what part of the mountain we end up on, to how we interact with friends and what kind of etiquette we exhibit on the hill. And as we enter another season with our fresh jackets, shiny boots and brand new skis and snowboards we snatched at the local swap, there couldn’t possibly be a better time to get a head start on defining our individual places on the hill; otherwise, someone else will, and we all know how much of a buzzkill that can be.

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SO, WHAT KIND OF SKIER ARE YOU? A GAPING MESS

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“A GAPER IS SOMEONE WHO YOU CAN JUST LOOK AT AND KNOW THEY DON’T BELONG, FROM THE WAY THEY DRESS TO THE WAY THEY RIDE.” – WES KUBICA, ASPEN

“DUDE, you look like a gaper,” says hopefully no one to you while you’re on the mountain flaunting your best turns. Unless you are an ill-informed, inexperienced tourist, or one who purposefully plays the part for a closing day party, a gaper is not the kind of individual anyone in his or her ski practice ever truly aspires to be, and if you — the 100-day skier — happen to be called one while maneuvering down the hill, it should be in your best interest to either find out why and make a change, or ignore it and forever wonder why no one ever invites you to après.

TELLTALE SIGNS YOU’RE A GAPER: 1. If you don’t know what a gaper is. 2. If you are a first-time local, or a visitor from out of town who isn’t familiar with the mountain. 3. If most of your ski attire is from 25 years ago, and you wear neon, jeans or one-piece suits because they keep the snow out, even though the back end is always riding up your bum. 4. If a question like, “Where do they put the moguls when the season’s over?” is something you would seriously ask. 5. If you find yourself standing in the middle of the hill when everyone else is moving. 6. If a visible gap shows on your forehead between the helmet and goggles most of the time, and you think nothing of it when you’re the only one wearing ski boots at après.

OR ... “A PARK RAT IS A T-WEARING, PANT-SAGGING, GOGGLE-TAN REPRESENTING, STONY SKIER WHO LOVES IT AS MUCH AS ANYONE.” – COLTER HINCHLIFFE, ASPEN

PARK RATS BACK TO the days on the playground, this is the child who would climb to the top of the jungle gym and stroll across the bars like an acrobat on a tightrope while the teachers yelled and all the other kids clapped. Like the dire karaoke singer at the bar every Tuesday night, this raw collective is defined by bold, relentless, attentionstealing risk-takers who, at times, carry a misplaced sense of confidence only visible to those on the other side. Whether successful or not in their grabs, flips and spins, this group will continue trying well after the lifts stop running.

TELLTALE SIGNS YOU’RE A PARK RAT: 1. If you choose the park over anything else. 2. If you prefer wearing loosefitting pants with a belt a little below the waist. 26

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3. If you bring your GoPro with you everyday, and sometimes make your friends record you while you demonstrate jibs. 4. If the group of people you ride with mainly consists of gromits and kids half your age. 5. If the majority of your conversation about skiing retracts back to your day’s performance on the rail. 6. If your summer months are spent at skate parks practicing for the winter. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO


Professional skier Drew Rouse gets some fresh powder turns in Las Lenas, Argentina, before the start of the Red Bull Powder Disorder freeskiing competition.

OR ...

THE RIPPERS “A RIPPER IS SOMEONE WHO GOES AS FAST AS POSSIBLE DOWN THE HILL, WHERE THE NEXT BEST THING WOULD ONLY BE SKYDIVING.” – KILLIAN FLANNERY, ASPEN “FASTER, FASTER, FASTER!” screamed the young ripper to his father, spinning around and around by his arms in the living room. A daredevil by nature, the ripper is one who casually mouths the words, “see you at the bottom,” before bolting down the hill in roadrunner form of now you see me, now you don’t. Recognized by pure fearlessness, the ripper rarely slows down for anyone, and thus tends to carry a low profile.

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PHOTO BY SPENCER BRINSON

TELLTALE SIGNS YOU’RE A RIPPER: 1. If you are a gromit and or you started skiing upon taking your first step. 2. If a figure 11, straight-down pointing is way more fun than carving. 3. If waiting in lift lines and sitting on chairlifts sometimes give you anxiety. 4. If taking a shot or two of jaeger in between runs only jacks you up more. 5. If the words, “dare me to” often precede something outrageous. 6. If ski-patrol has threatened to confiscate your pass for unsafe skiing.

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“A FAIR-WEATHER SKIER IS SOMEONE WHO IS OFTEN MORE EXCITED ABOUT THE SOCIAL HOUR THAN THE SLOPE.” – GEMMA WILKOP, ASPEN

FAIR-WEATHER FABS DON’T BE too cold, don’t be icy, don’t be flat light, don’t be anything but bluebird and nice weather. This is the general mindset of the fair-weather skier, sometimes referred to as the longtime local who, at some point while standing in the lift lines on a windy day, became fed up with all the young, eager blood and now only shows face in perfect conditions. Non-partial to fresh powder and new runs, with little aspiration to chance the backcountry, this group tends to stick to the safe and familiar.

TELLTALE SIGNS YOU’RE FAIR-WEATHER FAB: 1. If you are OK with taking two runs and calling it a day. 2. If all your friends duck the ropes to the “out of bounds” area and fail to ask you to come along.

3. If you generally only go midway, because top to bottom takes too long. 4. If all the après and happy hour bartenders know you by first and last name. 5. If the crowds of gapers and gromits weaving in and out beside you don’t bother you, because you aren’t going that fast anyway. 6. If someone asks you if you’re a ski bum and you say, “most definitely.”

Some skiers would prefer blue skies over powder days. Jokingly, we call them “Vail residents”.

OR ...

DIEHARDS

“LISTEN MAN, I don’t care if I have to sleep on your couch, scrub dishes at night, sell my shirt for a bagel or hike the bowl 15 days in a row for a pass — I just want to f-ing ski!” This group, the original ski bums who would save everything they had for one weekend on the gangliest of peaks, is few and far between. No rules, no lines and no fear for tomorrow, the diehards are driven by the highs of the mountains and the ultimate experiences discovered along paths less taken.

“A DIEHARD IS SOMEONE WHO IS OUT THERE EVERY DAY POSSIBLE ENDURING ALL CONDITIONS, WHEN SOMETIMES THE WAY UP IS BETTER THAN THE WAY DOWN.” – MARCUS SCARTH, ASPEN

TELLTALE SIGNS YOU’RE A DIEHARD: 1. If you prefer the backcountry to any groomers. 2. If you believe chairlifts take too long and choose to skin up instead. 3. If you take extraordinary measures to reach a summit or ski down a 14er. 4. If summer months are spent hiking anything and everything to get in shape for the winter. 5. If the idea of “home” means standing with your tips over the edge of a cliff thousands of feet up. 6. If you travel with the wind and throw out every other thing others deem important in life just to pursue your dream of skiing everyday. 28

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Diehards will ski anything, but when they get to a powder day, you don’t want to get in their way.

P H OTO S D O M I N I Q U E TAY L O R


ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

by STEWART OKSENHORN

THE CRAZY PROCESS BEHIND ‘LUNATICS’

when Alan Zweibel began writing

the character Philip Horkman, for the novel “Lunatics,” he didn’t know a whole lot about where this character was headed. “Lunatics” was a collaboration with fellow humorist Dave Barry, and the two writers would trade chapters in a spontaneous “See if you can top this!” fashion.

“WE DIDN’T BLUEPRINT this thing,” Zweibel said. “We didn’t know where we were going. It was just, How far can we go? It was just responding to one another.” Zweibel did, however, have a fairly clear starting point for Horkman. He kind of knew what Horkman — a genial father, husband, and pet-shop owner — looked like, and how he

sounded. And it was a whole lot like Steve Carell, star of the TV show “The Office,” and the films “The 40-YearOld Virgin,” “Little Miss Sunshine” and “Date Night.” “When I described him, spoke his voice, wrote his dialogue,” Zweibel said of Horkman, “I had Steve Carell in mind: What does he look like? Who will play him? Steve was the prototype.”

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Carell apparently feels that he can relate to the character Zweibel based on him. “Lunatics,” which will be published next month in paperback, after being released in hard cover earlier this year, is on track to become a film; Universal Pictures has bought the rights to the novel, and Zweibel is in the early stages of working on the screenplay. Attached to the role of Philip Horkman is none other than Steve Carell. Just as Zweibel had a model in creating the character, he’s got something of a blueprint now that he’s writing for the big screen. Adapting “Lunatics,” Zweibel has been thinking of “The In-Laws,” the 1979 comedy that starred Peter Falk

getting themselves into a situation seven years ago, when they met in Washington, D.C. Both were at an after-party at the Kennedy Center, following the presentation of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor to Steve Martin. Zweibel, who had been one of the original writers for “Saturday Night Live” and whose 2006 novel “The Other Shulman” had won the Thurber Prize for American Humor, stayed in touch with Barry. They began seeing one another on book tours; their wives became friendly. The obvious next step was a collaborative novel, written while Zweibel was in New Jersey, and Barry was at his home, in Florida.

“I DON’T THINK WE EVER REALLY SPOKE ABOUT THE STORY,” ZWEIBEL SAID. “WE HAD THE BROAD IDEA THAT THE GUYS WOULD GO FROM PLACE TO PLACE, IT WOULD ESCALATE AND HAVE WORLDWIDE IMPLICATIONS. and Alan Arkin as two men with very different temperaments who are about to become related by marriage. An innocent, get-acquainted lunch date spills into an adventure that finds the two about to be executed as political spies on a Caribbean island, but ends with them safe, back home in time for the wedding, and loaded with dirty money. “It’s a different version of that. It’s two Jersey guys who get themselves in a situation,” Zweibel said. Zweibel, who lives in New Jersey’s northern suburbs, and Barry, the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and novelist, started

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For a common-ground starting point, the two settled on kids sports, a subject they know well: Barry’s daughter was a soccer player; Zweibel’s kids had played Little League baseball. Zweibel kicked off the writing by introducing Philip Horkman, a man who in chapter one contemplates how good he has it: a job he loves, a happy family, a recent Sunday spent refereeing a kids soccer game, one of his favorite pastimes. “I’ve always been the kind of person who, when given the choice, chooses to err on the side of being grateful,” concludes the first chapter. What Horkman doesn’t realize

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is that the one small stain on his Sunday — “an overzealous father who shouted his displeasure when I ruled his daughter offside” — would turn out to be a lot darker and more stubborn than he’d imagined. Enter, in chapter two, Jeffrey Peckerman, a plumber with a far angrier take on life than Horkman’s. The two become entangled over a baby lemur from Horkman’s pet store, known as the Wine Shop. (Why the business is called the Wine Shop elicits the first laugh-out-loud moment, on page one: Horkman explains that his in-laws, Lillian and Gerald Wine, loaned him money on the condition that the store be named for them. “But won’t that be confusing?” I asked at the time. “Customers will think I sell liquor.” “Then sell liquor,” they said. “But I want to sell pets.” “Then borrow money from people named Pets.” JUST AS HORKMAN couldn’t see Peckerman coming, Zweibel had no idea what to expect from his nemesis, Dave Barry. The method was for them to trade chapters, with little-to-no discussion of what lie ahead. “I envisioned a guy who played by the rules, conservative, hard-working,

a family man. And I had no idea what kind of character Dave would throw at me,” Zweibel, who made several appearances in Aspen during the days of the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival, said. “I had no idea his character would be so loud, so vile. But it made sense — it was best, conceptually, to have them as opposite as possible.” “Lunatics” unfolds as an wildly over-the-top farce. The acrimony between Horkman and Peckerman bring them to encounters with police, terrorists, gangs, bears and cruiseship passengers. “I don’t think we ever really spoke about the story,” Zweibel said. “We had the broad idea that the guys would go from place to place, it would escalate and have worldwide implications. Maybe as a result of this feud there’d be a new pope. Maybe they’d become great liberators of Cuba, bring peace to the Middle East, food to Somalia. Our editors told us, though, that we had to bring them back home.” Zweibel enjoyed the collaborative nature of writing “Lunatics.” “Everything I’m writing, it’s all lonely stuff,” he said. “This was fun. I’d send him my chapter on Monday, and know that by Thursday I’d have something in my email that would make me laugh. Working like this is like having a deranged pen-pal.”


AROUNDASPEN

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES

THE NEW ASPEN VALLEY HOSPITAL BIG NEWS this past week was the opening of the new parts of Aspen Valley Hospital with crowds of the public looking it over and getting lost in all the circular corridors. A small gathering was held the week before for some of the doctors and the public. Dave Ressler, CEO of the hospital, gave a talk in MARY the new high ceilinged ESHBAUGH HAYES entrance and told how most of the local physicians will now have their offices in the hospital instead of in town, so when there is an emergency, they can be right with the patient. The Aspen Orthopedic Associates have already moved its offices into the hospital and Laura Pritchard of their staff gave a tour of the new facilities. John Sarpa, president of the board of the hospital, told how a new foundation has been formed to help with funding for the projects still to come. It is called Aspen Valley Hospital Foundation and is separate from the Aspen Valley Medical Foundation. Undercurrent ... Now is the time to gather up all the presents that have to go in the mail to other places.

HOSPITAL Nina Eisenstat, left, who is interim director of the Aspen Valley Hospital Foundation, with Tamara Wood.

HOSPITAL Jan Sarpa, left, with Ginny Dyche, who is director of Community Relations for Aspen Valley Hospital.

HOSPITAL Dr. Bill Miltchell, left, with Joe High.

HOSPITAL Left to right are Billy and Alicia Miller with Andrea Olson, who is an administration assistant with the hospital foundation.

HOSPITAL Barbara Newton, left, with Helen Klanderud.

HOSPITAL Dr. Mindy Nagle, left, with Elaine Gerson.

HOSPITAL From the left are Albie Kern, Tom Anderson and Jeff Yusem.

HOSPITAL From the left are John Sarpa, president of Aspen Valley Hospital Board, and Elaine and Vincent Santucci.

HOSPITAL

HOSPITAL

Resting after their tour of the new part of the hospital are, from the left: Sandie Bishop, Aaron Fleck, Dexter Cirillo, Barbara Fleck and Jan Sarpa.

From the left are Dr. William Rodman, John Sarpa, Peggy Mink, Sue Kern and Dr. Barry Mink.

HOSPITAL Thompson, Sandie and Dr. Archer Bishop, who is a past president of the board.

P H OTO S B Y M A RY E S H BA U G H H AY E S

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CURRENTEVENTS

NOVEMBER 29 - DECEMBER 5, 2012

WATCH Aubrey Plaza and Mark Duplass star in “Safety Not Guaranteed,” showing Saturday, Dec. 1, and Wednesday and Thursday, Dec. 5-6, at the Wheeler Opera House.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Memphis Linzy Unplugged 9 p.m. - 11 p.m., Kenichi, 533 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen. Acoustic music night in the lounge, featuring Memphis Linzy. Call 970-920-2212. Van Ghost 9:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. In addition to singer-songwriter/guitarist/founder Michael Harris Berg, Van Ghost features the talents of decade-plus Trey Anastasio Band vocalist Jennifer Hartswick, who has shared the stage with Herbie Hancock, the Rolling Stones and the Dave Matthews Band, among others. The sympathetic interplay between her silk and sandpaper vocals intertwining with Berg’s folksy emotive lead vocals has become a staple of Van Ghost’s sound. Call 970-544-9800. Film Screening: “Solar Mamas” 5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m., Pitkin County Library, Aspen. A free screening of the PBS Independent Lens documentary “Solar Mamas.” The film follows Rafea, a 32-year-old Jordanian mother of four, who courageously travels outside of her village for the first time to attend India’s Barefoot College solar engineering program. The program will equip her to be a solar specialist, but not without setbacks along the way. 60 minutes. Call 970-429-1900. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30 Jack and Jill Hilly Billy Rock n’ Roll 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., Carbondale Beer Works, 647 Main St., Carbondale. Live music. No cover charge. Call 970-704-1216. Coat Drive 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Snowmass Chapel, Snowmass Village. The Salvation Army holds its annual drive to help those in need. Please bring coats, hats, gloves, etc. in adult and kid sizes. Snowmass Chapel8 a.m. 9 ohrs. Nov. 23-dec 23 Call 970-945-6976. Live and Local 6:45 p.m. - 7:45 p.m., Pitkin County Library, Aspen. Local musicians perform acoustic arrangements of original compositions. Call 970-429-1900. Shakedown Street Performs Europe ‘72 9:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. One of the longest running Grateful Dead tribute bands in the world returns to Aspen. Call 970-544-9800.

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John Fielder Slideshow and Book Signing 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. Renowned nature photographer John Fielder presents a slideshow and book signing featuring his latest books, honoring Great Outdoors Colorado’s 20th anniversary. Reception with Fielder at 5 p.m. is $50; admission to general presentation at 7 p.m. is $10. Call 970-963-8440. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1 Comedy for Coats 7:30 p.m. - 9:45 p.m., Steve’s Guitars, 19 N. Fourth St., Carbondale. Local comedians return to Steve’s Guitars to gather coats for the needy and dust off their funny bones for a night of stand-up comedy, Roaring Fork Valley-style. The lineup includes Don Chaney, Todd Hartley, Gail Mason, Beth Brandon, Glenn Smith, April Clark, Bob Richmond, Alexa Fitzpatrick and event producer Mark Thomas. A drawing for prizes will be held at the end of the evening. $10 admission. Call 970-618-6897. “Me, Myself and I” Concert 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., Third Street Center, Carbondale. Redstone teenager Olivia Savard presents Carbondale local Gregory Chandler, who has had Parkinson’s for many years, in concert playing original piano compositions as a benefit for Parkinson’s research. Call 970-963-9616. Live Music at Sneaky’s 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Sneaky’s Tavern, Base Village, Snowmass Village. Aprés ski music. Call 970-923-8787. 40 Oz to Freedom: Sublime Tribute 10 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. 40 Ounces to Freedom is all about Sublime, taking its name from the 1992 debut album by the Southern California ska-punk band Sublime. The tribute band, fronted by Dane Scott on lead vocals and lead guitar, won Best Tribute Band at the 2010 San Diego Music Awards. Call 970-544-9800. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2 Open Mic Night 7:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m., Carbondale Beer Works, 647 Main St., Carbondale. Bring your tap shoes, penny whistle, nose flute, poetry or guitar. No embarrassment allowed; all comers welcome. Call 970-704-1216. The Salon 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., Justice Snow’s, in the Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. An evening of artistic expression featuring six dynamic ensembles presenting music, dance and film.

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Includes singer/songwriter Jackson Emmer, jazz four-piece NorthYSur and filmmaker Will Evans. Tickets are $15; call to reserve. Call 970-948-9209. moe. 9:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. In a career that’s touched upon three decades and produced 17 albums, the progressive rock band of Al Schnier and Chuck Garvey on guitars and vocals, Rob Derhak on bass and vocals, Jim Loughlin on percussion and vibes, and Vinnie Amico on drums, continues to push the standard for performance art. Call 970-5449800. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3 Dana Wilson and The Old Time Jam Session 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Carbondale Beer Works, 647 Main St., Carbondale. All musicians welcome, experienced and beginners; bring your banjo, guitar, mandolin, fiddle, spoons, washboard or whatever and join in the fun of early American music. Call 970-704-1216. Open Mic Night 9:30 p.m., The Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Check out what Aspen’s songwriters and musicians have to offer. Call 970-925-9955. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4 Haden Gregg and Friends 7 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., L’Hostaria, 620 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Live music every Tuesday. Call 970-925-9022. Takah Tuesday 9 p.m. - 9 p.m., Takah Sushi, 320 S. Mill St., Aspen. Live music featuring local bands, starting around 9 p.m. Call 970925-8588.

THE ARTS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Arts Club 3:30 p.m. - 5 p.m., Aspen Youth Center, 0861 Maroon Creek Road. In collaboration with Aspen Youth Center, the Aspen Art Museum offers a program of six in-center art classes after school. Activities include drawing, graffiti, collage, illustration, sculpture, pottery, painting, printing and more. The classes conclude with a student-hung installation and family-and-friends gallery reception at the Youth Center. Sign up for each class separately. Sign-ups close on Tuesday before the Thursday class. Priority will be given to kids who have not participated in prior classes. Kids can sign themselves up in person

or by phone. Admission to the class; it’s open to 4th through 8th graders. Call 970-544-4130. Adult Beginning Ballet Class 9 a.m. - 10 a.m., Coredination, 520 South Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. Adult and teen beginning ballet class for those who wish to learn this movement art form in a relaxed and enjoyable environment. Taught by Alexandra Jerkunica, professional ballet dancer and certified pilates instructor. Call 970-379-2187. Art Inspired Knitting for the Holidays: Sip & Stitch 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Led by Jack Johnson for high-schoolers and adults (all skill levels) on Thursdays, Nov. 29, Dec. 6 and 13. Registration is required. Tuition is $75; members receive 10 percent off. Call 970-927-4123. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30 Bill Gruenberg: Art is Easy 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. An exhibition of contemporary sculptures and paintings by one of Aspen’s favorite artists, continuing through Dec. 20. Gallery hours are Monday-Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free and open to the public. Call 970-927-4123. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1 Luffarslojd - Swedish Wire Craft 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., ACES at Rock Bottom Ranch, 2001 Hooks Spur Road, Basalt. Learn the 20th century, tradition of Swedish wire crafting and the many different items that can be made using inexpensive wire. Some traditional items include egg-beating whisks, trivets, baskets, candle holders, coat hooks and jewelry. Materials provided; $40 for members and $50 for non-members. Appropriate for ages 12 and up. Call 970-927-6760. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3 Signup: Holiday Art Club 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Led by Nicole Nagel-Gogolak, for ages 6-11, on Tuesdays, Dec. 4, 11 and 18, from 3:30-5:30 p.m. Registration is required. Kids will create fun holiday gifts and ornaments while focusing on learning basic drawing, painting and sculpture, they will learn concepts of space, line, proportion and scale. Tuition is $60 plus $15 studio fee; members receive 10 percent off. Call 970-927-4123.

PHOTO COURTESY FILMDISTRICT AND BIG BEACH


edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

YOGA & EXERCISE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Vinyasa Flow Yoga 6:15 p.m. - 7:15 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. Class for all levels, taught by certified instructor Anthony Jerkunica. Call 970-379-8108. Adult Drop-In Basketball 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen High School Skier Dome. Play pick-up basketball for $5 per person. Get in a workout and prepare for the adult basketball league that runs January through March. Call 970948-2192. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30 Yoga For Lunch 12:30 p.m. - 1:30 p.m., Aspen Health & Harmony, El Jebel. Community yoga class. Call 970-704-9642. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1 CrossFit Trial Workout 9 a.m. - 10 a.m., Roaring Fork CrossFit, 402 Park Ave., Basalt. Free trial session. Everyone is welcome. Workouts scaled to individual ability level. Call 970-379-6309.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1 Basalt Chamber Holiday Tree Lighting 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Lions Park, 101 Midland Ave., Basalt. Visit with Santa Claus, take a wagon ride, listen to the school choirs perform holiday songs. Chili and warm drinks available for purchase. dult hot cocoa will also be available for purchase. Call 970-927-4031. Winterfaire 11 a.m. - 4 p.m., Waldorf School on the Roaring Fork, 16543 Old Hwy. 82, Carbondale. An all-ages day of children’s crafts along with food, live music, a puppet play and an enchanted story. Handmade and unique gifts and treats will also be featured. The school is located a half-mile upvalley from the Catherine Store on the frontage road next to Highway 82. Call 970-963-1960. Give Some Get Some Prom 7:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m., Limelight Hotel, Aspen. This prom and silent auction benefits nonprofits in the Roaring Fork Valley that are supported by Spring Board Aspen. Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 at the door. Go to http://

Dressage Clinic 8 a.m. - 4 p.m., Healthy Horse Boutique, 489 Rose Lane, Carbondale. Led by Kathleen Raine, who helped the USET win the team bronze medal for the Dressage World Championship at the 1994 World Equestrian Games in Holland and has had great success at numerous international events throughout her career. Space is limited; to register or for more information, call Marian Nilsen at 970-3094223 or email hhboutique@gmail.com. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2 Gingerbread House Decorating for Teens 12 p.m. - 2 p.m., Pitkin County Library. For students in grades 9-12. All supplies provided by the library. Please wear clothes you can cover in frosting. Call 970-429-1900. Sardy House Christmas Tree Lighting 6 p.m. - 7 p.m., 128 E. Main St., Aspen. The 28th annual event features the lighting of the huge spruce outside the Sardy House, strung with 10,000 LED lights, plus Mr. and Mrs. Claus and Santa’s sleigh, free hot chocolate and homemade cookies, and music from local musician Dan Sheridan, The Local Vocals, Basalt High School

Restorative Yoga 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Health & Harmony, El Jebel. An afternoon of deep release led by Faith Lipori. All levels are welcome. Pre-registration is required for this workshop. Call 970-704-9642. The Master’s Touch Meditation 4:30 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen Health & Harmony, El Jebel. Led by certified Kundalini yoga instructors Sue Beck and Dan Retuta. A 2 1/2-hour facilitated meditation will be preceded by one hour of explanation and a yoga kriya. All levels from all disciplines are invited to attend. Call 970704-9642. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3 Pole Dance Classes 6 p.m. - 7 p.m., Honey’s Pole and Aerial Fitness, Basalt. Beginning pole dance from 6-7 p.m. Learn basic lifts, spins, dance, floor and safety. All levels welcome. Pole and Aerial fitness from 7-8 p.m. focuses on functional strength and flexibility training for pole and aerial apparatus. Upper body, core and flexibility highlighted. Open to all levels. Co-ed. Call 970-274-1564. Slackline 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Aspen Recreation Department, Red Brick School, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Indoor slackline for all ability levels. No experience needed. Call 970-920-5140.

THE COMMUNITY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30 All-School Meeting and Behind the Classrooms Tour 8:15 a.m. - 10 a.m., Aspen Community School, 1199 Woody Creek Road, Woody Creek. Come find out what’s planned for the new campus of this K-8 public charter school with a Behind the Classroom tour and the chance to experience a weekly all-school meeting. Additional dates on Dec. 7 and 14. Go to www. IBelieveACS.org for more information. Call 970-923-4080. KDNK Silent Auction and Community Mixer 6:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Carbondale Recreation and Community Center. KDNK hosts its Labor of Love Auction and Community Mixer, a free event featuring the Walt Smith Trio performing jazz and Christmas songs. In addition, volunteer waitresses will serve exotic finger food from Konnyaku restaurant. There will a cash bar for beer and wine. Locals and businesses have donated more than 400 items, including local art, food, sports, beauty, livestock and labors of love, for the auction. Call 963-0139 for advance registration. More information at kdnk.org. Call 970-963-0139. Middle School Night: Pool Party 6 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Aspen Youth Center, 0861 Maroon Creek Road. Bring your bathing suit. Aspen Recreation Center pool passes available for those who need one on a first-come, firstserved basis. After pool time, head upstairs to the Youth Center to play dodgeball. The program is free; pizza will be served for $1 per slice. Open to all Youth Center members in middle school. Call 970-544-4130.

PHOTO BY STEWART OKSENHORN

LISTEN Chicago rock band Van Ghost, led by singer Michael Harrison Berg, plays Thursday, Nov. 29, at Belly Up. springboard.ticketbud.com/prom for tickets. Call 314-807-2509. Holiday Story Telling and Ornament Decorating 2:30 p.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Popular local author Jill Sheeley (“Fraser the Yellow Dog” among numerous other titles) will display the original illustrations from her best-selling books by local artist Tammie Lane. In conjunction with the display, popular local Spellbinder Mary Rose Collen performs a story from the books from 2:30-3 p.m. Sheeley’s books, original illustrations and merchandise will be on display and available for purchase at the Wyly for the month of December. Between 3-5 p.m., kids can design their own holiday ornament with Wyly teachers and art supplies while they wait for Santa and the Basalt Tree Lighting in Lions Park. Events are free and open to the public. Call 970-927-4123.

Choir and Aspen High School a cappella group. A special guest will flip the switch to light the tree. Call 970-309-5783. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3 Colorado Water at a Crossroads 7:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Aspen Center for Environmental Studies, 100 Puppy Smith St., Aspen. Presented by Friends of Rivers and Renewables. Bart Miller, water program director at Western Resource Advocates, discusses the multiple water demands that are forcing Colorado to assess its future water supplies. Call 315-472-7959. Mac Monday 12 p.m. - 1 p.m., Basalt Regional Library. Get all your questions answered about the world of Mac. Call 970-927-4311.

Santa at Alpine Ace Hardware 2 p.m. - 4 p.m., 300 Puppy Smith St., Aspen. Need to give your Christmas list to Santa? This is your chance to meet and have your picture taken with the big guy. Call 970-925-3031.

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

33


Apply today Entry deadline Friday, Dec. 7!

WHAT’S BAKING? OUR PRICE

29.99

$

LUCKY DAY YAPPY HOUR

We hope to see all our friends there supporting us and having fun!

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 4:30-6:30PM FINBARR’S IRISH PUB 415 E. HYMAN AVE.

GET BAKING!

ELECTRIC COOKIE PRESS # C CP10M R

ENTER YOUR BEST COOKIE RECIPE INTO OUR HOLIDAY COOKIE CONTEST!

SUBMIT YOUR RECIPE FOR THE CHANCE TO WIN A GREAT PRIZE! Drop cookies off at our Basalt Store during the Willit’s Christmas Celebration between 12:00 and 4:30 On December 8th Judging will be at 5:00

Hours: 10-7 M-F, 10-6 Sat, 12-5 Sun | Willits Town Center, 840 E. Valley Rd., Basalt

$15 donation (cash or check) - all you can drink Aspen Brewery beer & select liquor. Celebrate the start of ski season while saving animals.

Look for the FIRST ANNUAL

970.273.0400 • www.kitchencollage.com

A SPEN Maroon R EAL E STATE Creek Club C OMPANY

WINTER 2013

WINTER 2013

ICATION OF

THE ASPEN

TIMES

Beautiful 6 bedroom ski-in/ski-out residence in the Maroon Creek Club subdivision. An easy walk to the Aspen Recreation Center, Aspen schools, and the Maroon Creek Club Golf Course.

A FREE PUBL

A FREE PUBLICATION OF THE ASPEN TIMES

A FREE PUBLIC

ATION OF THE

ASPEN TIMES

WINTER 2013

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE! Find it on line at:

vwww.aspentimes.com/artinaspen 970-925-3414

34

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

No v e m b e r 29 - D e c e m b e r 5 , 2 0 1 2

$9,490,000 MLS# 125079

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LOCAL

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Open Tues - Fri 9am-6pm Sat. 8:30am- 1pm

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AVALANCHE AUTOMOTIVE LLC

ALL FOR $125... WHAT A DEAL! $BMM

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970-927-3799

Call 970 390 0998

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3FOUBMT "TQFO 1BD Apt. Private residence. $1600/mo. "TQFO )JHIMBOET "SFB

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Sell your vehicle,

guaranteed,

when you place an auto photo ad for a month! 8PPEZ $L GVSO #% #" BQU UJMFE HBSBHF TUPSBHF QFUT 8% /4 VUJMT 57 JODM 970-923-0040

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First Month 1/2 Off! 3BD/2.5BA, Townhome, 1 car gar, MH GFODFE ZBSE /1 $1025/month 970-618-6237

3FOUBMT 4OPXNBTT

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RV sites for rent at River Meadows Mobile Home Park. 970-945-8925

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Aviation

Hangar Space ready to help. Available 1VCMJTIFE JO UIF "TQFO 5JNFT 8FFLMZ PO /PWFN Rifle Airport CFS < > 4UJMM MPPLJOH GPS MJHIU UXJO TNBMM KFU XJUI Call QPTTJCMF QBSUOFSTIJQ -POH UFSN FDPOPNJD 866-850-9937 MPDBM SBUFT $BMM or GPS RVPUF

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e-mail classiямБeds@ cmnm.org

5FMMVSJEF $PNNFSDJBM 3FOUBM TRh HSPVOE GMPPS PO .BJO 4U CFX UFFO SFTUBVSBOU BOE CPVUJRVF 4QBDJPVT XJOEPXT Three Bears Building For Lease 5IF )FBSU PG %PXOUPXO #BTBMU 4USFFU -FWFM 4NBMM 0GGJDF (SFBU 3BUF .JEMBOE "WF #BTBMU $0 Call Today 927-3734

3FOUBMT 0GGJDF 4QBDF &YFDVUJWF PGGJDF

TIBSFE SFDFQUJPO 135 W. Main Aspen Victorian. 970-379-3715 7BJM 4,* */ 4,* 065 -08 $045 $MFBO PGGJDF SFUBJM TUPSBHF TQBDFT TG TG OPX BWBJMBCMF NP NP ;&30 $". ;&30 65*-*5*&4 'JSTU MBTU TFDVSJUZ ZFBS MFBTF $BMM .JDIBFM

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Real Estate Photo ClassiямБeds. Always in print, always online and always affordable. Our ClassiямБed Advertising staff is ready to schedule your real estate photo ad. Call 866-850-9937 or e-mail classiямБeds@ cmnm.org.

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

37


3FBM &TUBUF 1IPUP "ET

Aspen

5PUUFSEPXO /PSUI #FESPPN CBUI TR GU

DBS EFUBDIFE HBSBHF 'MFYJCMF GMPPS QMBO (SFBU BDUJWF MPDBM GBNJMZ OFJHICPSIPPE "TQFO 4DIPPM %JTDUSJDU XXX 3BJGJF DPN PS 3BJGJF!3BJGJF DPN 1,130,000 Raifie Bass 970-948-7424 Aspen Sothebys I'ntl Realty

ASPEN

ASPEN

ASPEN

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

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

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

West End Condo $PSOFS OE GMPPS TUVEJP VOJU XJUI HSFBU 8FTU &OE MPDBUJPO 8BML UP NVTJD UFOU /JDF QSJWBUF BOE RVJFU MPDBUJPO PO OPSUI TJEF PG CVJMEJOH 7JFXT UP 3FE .PVOUBJO &OKPZ QSJWBUF EFDL 0QFO GMPPS QMBO XJUI MPUT PG MJHIU XJUI NBOZ MBSHF XJOEPXT $395,000 TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN

GLENWOOD SPRINGS

Basalt

BASALT

CARBONDALE

COMMERCIAL - BASALT

BDSF SBODIFUUF JO &NNB GJWF NJO VUFT GSPN 8JMMJUT #BTBMU (SBOJUF LJUDI FO HSBOJUF CBUI UISFF CFESPPNT PGGJDF TUBMM CBSO X UBDL SPPN EPH SVO CFESPPN HVFTUIPVTF UXP QBTUVSFT PGG CBDL ZBSE QPOE GVMMZ GFODFE BOE JSSJ HBUFE CBDLT VQ UP PQFO TQBDF $BMM GPS BQQPJOUNFOU #SPLFST QSPUFDUFE $1,100,000 or BO (970) 510-5131

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

Very Desirable! 2VBMJUZ GJOJTIFT QMVT B HSFBU GMPPS QMBO UIBU JODMVEFT B MPXFS MFWFM NPUIFS JO MBX TVJUF XJUI B QSJWBUF XBML PVU QBUJP -PDBUFE OFBS UISFF HPMG DPVSTFT BOE HSFBU USBJMT 'PVS CFESPPNT GPVS BOE POF IBMG CBUISPPNT BOE B UXP DBS HBSBHF )PNFQBUI 'JOBODJOH "WBJMBCMF $539,900 Ryan Jennings and Chris Patrick 970.948.7215 or 970.319.2669 Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

Downtown Ground Floor Office Space %PXOUPXO HSPVOE MFWFM DPNNFSDJBM PGGJDF TQBDF TR GU OFYU UP 4BYZhT $BGF PO .JEMBOE "WFOVF /FBSCZ TUSFFU QBSLJOH GPPU DFJMJOHT TFBMFE DPODSFUF GMPPST 1SJWBUF SFTUSPPN Triple Net Lease Approx. $3,500 per month (inclusive of triple net fees) TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN

GLENWOOD SPRINGS

GYPSUM

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DIVISION 5 WATER COURT- OCTOBER 2012 RESUME 1. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF OCTOBER 2012. The water right claimed by this application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time provided by statute, or be forever barred. 12CW145(06CW3) PITKIN COUNTY-WARREN CREEK, TRIBUTARY TO THE ROARING FORK RIVER, TRIBUTARY TO THE COLORADO RIVER.James F. Hunting; 44125 E. Hwy. 82; Aspen, CO 81611 (970)925-6260.Kuhne Pond Ditch &Kuhne PondApplication for Finding of Reasonable Diligence. Kuhne Pond Ditch- NW¼SE¼ of Sec. 20, T.10S., R.84W. of the 6th P.M. 1,300 ft. north of the south sec. line and 720 ft. west of the east sec. line. Kuhne Pond- NW¼SE¼ of Sec. 20, T.10S., R.84W. of the 6th P.M. 1,220 ft. north of the south sec. line and 850 ft. west of the east sec. line. Appropriation: Feb. 26, 1993. Amount:Kuhne Pond- 0.405 a.f., conditional, for piscatorial, recreation and aesthetic uses. 0.43 a.f., conditional, for stockwatering and irrigation uses.Kuhn Pond Ditch-0.25 c.f.s., conditional, for stockwatering and irrigation uses. An outline of work performed during the diligence period is included in the application. (6 pages) YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of DECEMBER 2012 to file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. 5. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF OCTOBER 2012. The water right claimed by this application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time provided by statute, or be forever barred. 12CW150 IN PITKIN COUNTY, COLORADO.APPLICATION FOR A SIMPLE CHANGE IN A SURFACE POINT OF DIVERSION PUSUANT TO C.R.S. § 37-92-305(3.5).IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION FOR WATER RIGHTS OF ELK WALLOW RANCH, LLC. DISTRICT COURT, WATER DIVISION NO. 5, COLORADO, STATE OF COLORADO. 109 8th Street, Suite 104, Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. 1. Name, Address, and Telephone Number of Applicant: Elk Wallow Ranch, LLC P.O. Box 7877, Aspen, Colorado 81612. Direct all pleadings to: Kristin H. Moseley, William D. Wombacher, Porzak Browning &Bushong LLP, 929 Pearl Street, Suite 300, Boulder, CO 80302 (303) 443-6800. 2. Name of Structures. (a) Hines Owl Creek Ditch (b) Hines Owl Creek Ditch – First Enlargement Remark: The locations of the structures listed above and described in Paragraph 3 below are depicted on the map attached hereto as Exhibit A. 3. Description of the Water Rights to be Changed. The Hines Owl Creek Ditch was originally decreed on March 24, 1987 in Case No. 86CW277, the District Court in and for Water Division No. 5, State of Colorado (the “Water Court”). Subsequent diligence findings occurred in Case Nos. 93CW47, 99CW106, and 05CW236. The Hines Owl Creek Ditch First Enlargement was originally decreed on October 17, 1995 in Water Court Case No. 93CW79. Subsequent diligence findings occurred in Case Nos. 01CW261 and 09CW08. (a) HINES OWL CREEK DITCH (i) Decreed Location: SW1/4 SE1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point whence the North Quarter Corner of said Section 9 bears North 7 degrees West 4,350 feet (Pitkin County). (ii) Source: Owl Creek, a tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary to the Colorado River. (iii) Appropriation Date: July 8, 1986. (iv) Amount: 1.0 c.f.s., conditional. (v) Uses: Domestic, livestock, irrigation, piscatorial, and the delivery of water with storage in the Marolt Pond and Marolt Reservoir. (vi) Amount Subject to Requested Change: 1.0 c.f.s., conditional (b) HINES OWL CREEK DITCH – FIRST ENLARGEMENT (i) Decreed Location: SW1/4 SE1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point whence the North Quarter Corner of said Section 9 bears North 7 degrees West 4,350 feet (Pitkin County). (ii) Source: Natural inflow from an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, a tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary to the Colorado River. (iii) Appropriation Date: May 28, 1992. (iv) Amount: 2.0 c.f.s., conditional. (v) Uses: Domestic, irrigation, livestock, piscatorial, fish propagation, and delivery of water into storage in Marolt Reservoir and Marolt Pond. (vi) Amount Subject to Requested Change: 2.0 c.f.s., conditional. 4. Description of the Change of Water Rights. Applicant seeks to change the diversion point for the Hines Owl Creek Ditch and Hines Owl Creek Ditch - First Enlargement to the following location: SE1/4 SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1,178 feet from the South section line and 2,654 feet from the East section line of said Section 9. UTM(x) = Zone 13, 337031.5 meters; UTM(y) = 4339774.0 meters. The originally decreed location of the subject water rights is some distance from Owl Creek and may have resulted from an error in its legal description or gradual changes in the path of the creek. Pursuant to C.R.S. 37-92-305(3.5), Applicant seeks a simple change in the decreed point of diversion to relocate to a point directly on Owl Creek. There are no intervening surface diversion points, inflows, or instream flows within the change reach. Other than the change in surface diversion point, no other changes are requested. The requested change moves the point of diversion approximately 580 feet from the original point of diversion and will not result in the diversion of a greater flow rate or amount than has been previously decreed. 5. Name and address of the owner of the land on which the subject conditional water rights are located. Applicant. WHEREFORE Applicant requests that the Water Court issue a final decree that (i) approves the simple change of water right as described in paragraph 4 above, and (ii) provides such other relief as may be appropriate and consistent with this application. (5 pgs.) YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of DECEMBER 2012 to file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. 8. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF OCTOBER 2012. The water right claimed by this application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within

this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time provided by statute, or be forever barred. 12CW153 IN PITKIN COUNTY, COLORADO.APPLICATION FOR FINDING OF REASONABLE DILIGENCE AND TO MAKE WATER RIGHTS ABSOLUTE.IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION FOR WATER RIGHTS OF ELK WALLOW RANCH, LLC. DISTRICT COURT, WATER DIVISION NO. 5, COLORADO, STATE OF COLORADO. 109 8th Street, Suite 104, Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. 1. Name, Address and Telephone Number of Applicant: Elk Wallow Ranch, LLC, P.O. Box 7877, Aspen, Colorado 81612. Direct all pleadings to: Kristin H. Moseley William D. Wombacher Porzak Browning &Bushong LLP 929 Pearl Street, Suite 300 Boulder, CO 80302 2. Names of Structures: A. Lower Meadow Spring B. Serena Spring C. Trevor Spring D. Hines Owl Creek Ditch E. Marolt Reservoir F. Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement G. Marolt Pond H. Marolt Pond First Enlargement I. Duck Pond J. Elk Wallow Pond A map denoting the decreed locations for the above referenced structures is attached hereto as Exhibit A. 3. Description of Conditional Water Rights: A. Original decree: In Case No. 86CW277 on March 24, 1987, the District Court in and for Water Division No. 5, State of Colorado (the “Water Court”) awarded conditional water rights for Lower Meadow Spring, Serena Spring, Trevor Spring, and Hines Owl Creek Ditch. In Case No. 86CW278 on June 3, 1987, the Water Court awarded conditional water rights for Marolt Reservoir, Marolt Pond, Duck Pond, and Elk Wallow Pond. In Case No. 93CW79 on October 17, 1995, the Water Court awarded conditional water rights for Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement and Marolt Pond First Enlargement. B. Decreed Location: 1. Lower Meadow Spring: The point of diversion is in Lot 2 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point whence the North Quarter Corner of said Section bears North 0 degrees East 620 feet (Pitkin County), which is alternately described as the NE1/4 NW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 620 feet from the North section line and 2675 feet from the West section line.2. Serena Spring: The point of diversion is in the SW1/4NW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point whence the North Quarter Corner of said Section 9 bears North 17 degrees West 1,730 feet (Pitkin County), which is alternately described as the SW1/4 NE1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1650 feet from the North section line and 2115 feet from the East section line. 3. Trevor Spring: The point of diversion is in the NW1/4SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point whence the North Quarter Corner of said Section 9 bears North 28 degrees East 4,300 feet (Pitkin County), which is alternately described as the NW1/4 SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1635 feet from the South section line and 710 feet from the West section line. 4. Hines Owl Creek Ditch: The point of diversion is in the SW1/ 4SE1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point whence the North Quarter Corner of said Section 9 bears North 7 degrees West 4,350 feet (Pitkin County), which is alternately described as the SW1/4 SE1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1165 feet from the South section line and 2045 feet from the East section line. Remark: The Hines Owl Creek Ditch is subject to a pending change of water right application in Case No. 12CW150, which seeks the change the point of diversion to SE1/4 SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1,178 feet from the South section line and 2,654 feet from the East section line of said Section 9. UTM(x) = Zone 13, 337031.5 meters; UTM(y) = 4339774.0 meters. 5. Marolt Reservoir: The dam axis is located at a point on the crest of the dam whence the North Quarter Corner of Section 9, T.10 S., R. 85 W. of the 6th P.M. bears N. 3 degrees E. 1480 feet; thence S. 39 degrees E. 150 feet along the crest of the dam, which is alternately described as the NE1/4 NW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1480 feet from the North section line and 2610 feet from the West section line. 6. Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement: The dam axis is located at a point on the crest of the dam whence the North Quarter Corner of Section 9, T.10 S., R. 85 W. of the 6th P.M. bears N. 3 degrees E. 1480 feet; thence S. 39 degrees E. 150 feet along the crest of the dam, which is alternately described as the NE1/4 NW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1480 feet from the North section line and 2610 feet from the West section line. 7. Marolt Pond: The dam axis is located at a point on the crest of the dam whence the North Quarter Corner of Section 9, T. 10 S., R. 85 W. of the 6th P.M. bears N. 11 degrees 30’ E. 3070 feet; thence S. 46 degrees W. 100 feet along the crest of the dam, which is alternately described as the NE1/4 SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 2450 feet from the South section line and 2105 feet from the West section line. 8. Marolt Pond First Enlargement: The dam axis is located at a point on the crest of the dam whence the North Quarter Corner of Section 9, T. 10 S., R. 85 W. of the 6th P.M. bears N. 11 degrees 30’ E. 3070 feet; thence S. 46 degrees W. 100 feet along the crest of the dam, which is alternately described as the NE1/4 SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 2450 feet from the South section line and 2105 feet from the West section line. 9. Duck Pond: The dam axis is located in Section 9, T. 10 S., R. 85 W. of the 6th P.M. whence the North Quarter Corner of said Section 9 bears N. 22 degrees E. 3990 feet, which is alternately described as the NW1/4 SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1745 feet from the South section line and 1235 feet from the West section line. 10. Elk Wallow Pond: The dam axis is located at a point on the crest of the dam whence the North Quarter Corner of Section 9, T. 10 S., R. 85 W. of the 6th P.M. bears N. 19 degrees E. 4570 feet, which is alternately described as the SW1/4 SW1/4 of Section 9, Township 10 South, Range 85 West of the 6th P.M. at a point 1120 feet from the South section line and 1255 feet from the West section line. C. Source: 1. Lower Meadow Spring: the source is a spring tributary to an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, a tributary of the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 2. Serena Spring: the source is a spring tributary to an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, a tributary of the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 3. Trevor Spring: the source is a spring tributary to an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, a tributary of the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 4. Hines Owl Creek Ditch: the source is Owl Creek, a tributary of the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 5. Marolt Reservoir: the source is an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 6. Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement: the source is an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 7. Marolt Pond: the source is an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 8. Marolt Pond First Enlargement: the source is an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 9. Duck Pond: the source is an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. 10. Elk Wallow Pond: the source is an unnamed tributary of Owl Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, a tributary of the Colorado River. D. Appropriation Date: 1. Lower Meadow Spring: July 8, 1986 2. Serena Spring: July 8, 1986 3. Trevor Spring: July 8, 1986 4. Hines Owl Creek Ditch: July 8, 1986 5. Marolt Reservoir: December 31, 1925 for irrigation, livestock, piscatorial and fish propagation use, July 8, 1986 for domestic use 6. Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement: May 28, 1992 7. Marolt Pond: December 31, 1963 for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial use July 8m 1986 for domestic use 8. Marolt Pond First Enlargement: May 28, 1992 9. Duck Pond: July 8, 1986 10. Elk Wallow Pond: July 8, 1986 E. Conditional Amount: 1. Lower Meadow Spring: 0.008 c.f.s. 2. Serena Spring: 0.104 c.f.s. 3. Trevor Spring: 0.169 c.f.s. 4. Hines Owl Creek Ditch 1.0 c.f.s. 5.

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Marolt Reservoir: 14.0 a.f. 6. Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement 10.0 a.f. 7.Marolt Pond: 4.0 a. f. 8. Marolt Pond First Enlargement 8.0 a.f. 9. Duck Pond: 0.10 a.f. 10. Elk Wallow Pond 0.20 a.f. F. Use: 1. Lower Meadow Spring: Conditional uses for irrigation and piscatorial purposes. Absolute decree in the amount of 0.008 c.f.s. awarded for domestic and livestock purposes in Case No. 99CW106. 2. Serena Spring: Conditional uses for livestock and piscatorial purposes. Absolute decree in the amount of 0.104 c.f.s. awarded for domestic and irrigation purposes of one acre of lawns and gardens in Case No. 99CW106. 3. Trevor Spring: Conditional use for domestic, livestock, irrigation, and piscatorial purposes. 4. Hines Owl Creek Ditch: Conditional uses for domestic, livestock, irrigation, piscatorial, and the delivery of water with storage in the Marolt Pond and Marolt Reservoir, decreed in Case No. 86CW278. 5. Marolt Reservoir: Conditional use of domestic. Absolute decree awarded for irrigation, livestock, piscatorial and fish propagation purposes. 6. Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement: Conditional use of domestic, irrigation, livestock, fish propagation, piscatorial, augmentation and exchange purposes. 7. Marolt Pond: Conditional use of domestic. Absolute decree awarded for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial purposes. 8. Marolt Pond First Enlargement: Conditional use of domestic, irrigation, livestock, fish propagation, piscatorial, augmentation and exchange purposes. 9. Duck Pond: Conditional uses of domestic, irrigation, livestock, piscatorial and fish propagation purposes. 10. Elk Wallow Pond: Conditional uses of domestic, irrigation, livestock, piscatorial, and fish propagation purposes. G. Remarks: The subject rights are part of an integrated water supply project which encompasses and includes water rights decreed in Case Nos. 86CW277, 87CW368, 93CW074, 93CW079, 93CW080, and 93CW102. Prior diligence cases concerning the subject water rights include Case Nos. 06CW09, 05CW236, 99CW187, 99CW106, 93CW102, and 93CW47. 4. Detailed Outline of Work Done to Complete Project and Apply Water to Beneficial Use: During the requisite diligence period, Elk Wallow Ranch, LLC (“Elk Wallow”) incurred expenses in excess of $200,000 in the process of developing and improving the associated real property and applying the subject conditional water rights to their decreed beneficial uses. Elk Wallow has undertaken efforts to construct, maintain, improve and beneficially use the subject conditional springs and ponds and is seeking to make portions of the Lower Meadow Spring, Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement, Marolt Pond First Enlargement, Duck Pond and Elk Wallow Pond absolute. Elk Wallow retained Resource Engineering, Inc. and Sopris Engineering to conduct surveys and design water conveyance structures in furtherance of putting the conditional water rights to beneficial use. Copies of surveys of Marolt Reservoir, Marolt Pond, Duck Pond and Elk Wallow Pond are attached hereto as Exhibits B - E. Attached as Exhibit F is a map showing irrigated acreage associated with Lower Meadow Spring. Elk Wallow also filed a water court application in Case No. 12CW150 seeking to change the point of diversion for the Hines Owl Creek Ditch and Hines Owl Creek Ditch First Enlargement and to maximize its ability to fill Marolt Pond. A schematic showing this changed location is attached hereto as Exhibit G. An engineering design for the construction of the Hines Owl Creek Ditch diversion is attached hereto as Exhibit H. Resource Engineering, Inc. was also retained in order to evaluate and design options for the development of Trevor Spring and additional use of Serena Spring and Lower Meadow Spring. Attached as Exhibits I and J are copies of spring box development design alternatives. Elk Wallow also retained wildlife consultants and installed specialized fencing and features to maximize wildlife and piscatorial habitat. Finally, Elk Wallow retained the law firms of Oates, Knezevich, Gardenswartz, Kelly & Morrow, P.C. and Porzak Browning and Bushong LLP, in furtherance of developing and maintaining its conditional water rights. 5. Request to Make Water Rights Absolute: A. Lower Meadow Spring. Lower Meadow Spring was utilized for irrigation of 11,300 square feet of pasture irrigation as denoted on the aerial photograph attached hereto as Exhibit F. Accordingly, Elk Wallow seeks to make the Lower Meadow Spring absolute for irrigation purposes associated with this usage. B. Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement. Marolt Reservoir has been improved and enlarged and the survey attached hereto as Exhibit B demonstrates that it has a total capacity of 21.1 a.f. Marolt Reservoir was previously made absolute in the amount of 14 a.f. for irrigation, livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial uses. Thus, Marolt Reservoir has been enlarged in the amount of 7.1 a.f. The full 21.1 a.f. capacity of Marolt Reservoir has continued to be beneficially used for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial purposes. Accordingly, Elk Wallow seeks to make the Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement absolute in the amount of 7.1 a.f. for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial uses. C. Marolt Pond First Enlargement.Marolt Pond has been improved and enlarged and the survey attached hereto as Exhibit C demonstrates that it has a total capacity of 9.93 a.f. Marolt Pond was previously made absolute in the amount of 4 a.f. for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial uses. Thus, Marolt Pond has been enlarged in the amount of 5.93 a.f. The full 9.93 a.f. capacity of Marolt Pond has continued to be beneficially used for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial purposes. Accordingly, Elk Wallow seeks to make the Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement absolute in the amount of 5.93 a.f. for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial uses. D. Duck Pond. Duck Pond has been improved and the survey attached hereto as Exhibit D demonstrates that it has a total capacity of 0.22 a.f. Duck Pond has been utilized consistently for livestock, piscatorial, and fish propagation purposes. Accordingly, Elk Wallow seeks to make the full 0.1 a.f. decreed capacity of Duck Pond absolute for livestock, piscatorial and fish propagation purposes. E. Elk Wallow Pond. Elk Wallow Pond has been improved and the survey attached hereto as Exhibit E demonstrates that it has a total capacity of 0.86 a.f. Elk Wallow Pond has been utilized consistently for livestock, piscatorial and fish propagation purposes. Accordingly, Elk Wallow seeks to make full 0.2 a.f. decreed capacity of Elk Wallow Pond absolute for livestock, piscatorial and fish propagation purposes. 6. Name and address of owner upon which the subject rights are located: Applicant. WHEREFORE, Applicant respectfully requests that the Court enter the following findings: a. 0.008 c.f.s. out of 0.008 c.f.s. of Lower Meadow Spring be made absolute for irrigation purposes. b. 7.1 a.f. out of 10 a.f. of Marolt Reservoir First Enlargement be made absolute for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial uses. c. 5.93 a.f.out of 8.0 a.f. of Marolt Pond First Enlargement be made absolute for livestock, fish propagation and piscatorial uses. d. 0.1 a.f. out of 0.1 a.f. of Duck Pond be made absolute for livestock, piscatroail and fish propagation purposes. e. 0.2 a.f. out of 0.2 a.f. of Elk Wallow Pond be made absolute for livestock, piscatorial and fish propagation purposes. f. Applicant has exercised reasonable diligence in the development of all water rights that are the subject of this case, and all portions thereof, not made absolute, and such rights are continued as conditional in full force and effect for all remaining amounts and uses.(10 pgs.) YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of DECEMBER 2012 to file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on November 29, 2012.

EGALS /P UBLIC

Public Notices, or legal advertisements, are an effective way for agencies of government to make official announcements. State law requires that these notices be printed in the newspaper. YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW and be informed of the functions of your government are embodied in Public Notices. In that self-governement charges all citizens to be informed, this newspaper urges every citizen to read and study these notices.

Where to find the information you need Private legals include topics such as bankruptcies, estate claims, divorces, name changes and adoptions, sales by storage companies of abandoned property. Corporate legalsincludecityandcountygovernmentproposedactionssuchaselections,bondissues,annexations, new laws, business or construction contracts, invitations for bids, public hearings, and public meetings. Public Trustee legals include foreclosure notices and public trustee sales.

N OTICES ?

Deadline to submit legal notices: All legal notices must be received by 5p.m. on the Friday before publication. Published on Wednesdays. Deadlines are subject to change due to holiday scheduling.

For more information or to place a legal ad, please contact Becca in our legals department at

925-3689 ext. 223 legals@aspentimes.com

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

41


WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by HAL HERRING of HIGH COUNTRY NEWS

NOTEWORTHY

BOOK REVIEW

‘EMPIRE OF SHADOWS’ GEORGE BLACK, a fly-fishing writer and the editor of OnEarth magazine, has written “Empire of Shadows: The Epic Story of Yellowstone,” a worthy historical doorstopper detailing exactly how the park came into existence. Why was the Yellowstone caldera so mysterious, so untouched, until long after the Civil War? The answer lies with the Blackfeet Nation, whose creation story commanded the tribe to prevent any trespass on its territory, a mandate that it followed with terrifying efficiency for centuries. Intrepid scouts like Kit Carson and Jim Bridger told campfire tales of geysers, brimstone and scalding garishly colored springs, but until the Blackfeet were vanquished, the Upper Yellowstone was simply too dangerous to explore. As Black makes clear, the history

by TIMOTHY POLIN

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Christie who played half of 3-Down Epiphanies Key of Mozart’s “Jupiter” Symphony: Abbr. John O’Hara’s “Appointment in ___” Doughnut ingredient, commercially Indian melody Promotes recessive traits, say Picked some fruit Religious scholar Prefix with byte “Atonement” Dame Joan Sutherland delivery Holy ones are hard to handle Some clerics Equine shades Section of the Medicare law covering hospital and nursing care Kind of bar Honshu city devastated by the 2011 tsunami Signature followers, for short Lighthouse, e.g. Freudian mediators O’er there Drum kit components Elocution A large one offers many courses Ties up a phone

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line, maybe Psyched (up) Floundering Sharif who played half of 3-Down Baba au ___ Team booster Mac platform Needlework, for short? Moniker for Israel’s Netanyahu “Casablanca” Air all of one’s grievances, say Dude With 8-Down, deposer of Milton Obote Safety squeeze result, for short Future race of fiction Moppet of blackand-white TV Made of a sturdy wood Sub for “Not broccoli again!” Shoot up Canonized Norwegian king Something taken by a scout Winslet who played half of 67Down Golfer Ballesteros Phrase of resignation Toronto media inits. Developers’ purchases Nitpicks Certain S.O.S. Borefest Lead-in to a juicy rumor

of Yellowstone is inextricable from the violence required to conquer the territory surrounding it. Black explores a fertile territory here: These upstanding pioneers, some of the most brutal men in the history of the West, were also the leading proponents of preserving the wonders and beauties of the Yellowstone country. Among them was Nathaniel Pitt Langford of Helena, who led Montana’s infamous Vigilantes, hanging the unrighteous and the suspect from the goldfields of Bannock to the windy prairies of the Sun River Valley. Lt. Gustavus Cheyney Doane, who would head the first hardscrabble expedition to explore the legends of the caldera and remain obsessed by the upper Yellowstone country for the rest of his life, commanded troops at the horrific Baker Massacre of Chief Heavy

| edited by WILL SHORTZ

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Runner’s band of Blackfeet on the Marias River in the winter of 1870. Once the Yellowstone region was mapped, President Ulysses S. Grant declared it a public park on March 1, 1872. Yes, the impulses were partly mercenary — a railroad, tourism, hotels and kickbacks were already in the works — but Black goes beyond this fascinating historical and political maelstrom to examine the more complex and enduring American impulses to both vanquish and preserve. “Empire of Shadows” will resonate with any reader who loves the West and hopes to preserve its Wonderlands. This book review originally appeared in the High Country News (hcn.org).

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“Empire of Shadows: the Epic Story of Yellowstone” George Black 548 pages, hardcover: $35. St. Martin’s Press, 2012.

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Is a good friend, in a way Gable who played half of 105-Across Financial shellacking Lobster trap Clique Changed in popularity Snowbird, typically Calder Cup org. Ate “Symphony in

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Black” and others Subject of a 1982 best seller on sexuality Cause for a health panic Assumed, say Cafeteria worker’s headgear Summer ermine Texter’s “ciao” Talented Lowercase letters resembling v’s

M O A T

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O N E P A G E

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T S K I T E R S A A T T T A S T S H V E E G N C O U O T E M O A Y S O U R C R I O M B N O G O O R

S P I R O T A R O T P A S S E R B Y

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O N L Y


Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU! ARTS & IDEAS SERIES

The Legacy of Rome A SEMINAR AND EVENING PANEL

TIMBER

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

MADISON

Friendly, 7-year-old German Shepherd mix female who gets along well with all people and most dogs.

2013 Pet Calendars available NOW at the shelter!

JIM

Outgoing, energetic, 11-yearold American Foxhound/Husky mix male. Gets along well with people and other dogs. A retired sled dog who came to the shelter with his brother, Buck, and his sister, Jackie.

CHICO

Chico is a feisty, handsome, energetic, 1.5-yearold Chihuahua mix male who requires a knowledgeable, responsible, active home. Best with adults.

ROXY

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

STANLEY

Friendly 2-year-old Affinpinscher mix male. Absolutely adorable with a cute underbite. Gets along well with other dogs and kids. Lots of good energy.

SPENCER

Spencer is a loyal, loving, handsome, athletic, 7-year-old Boxer. He bonds tightly to one person and due to his possessive nature, Spencer will do best as the only pet in an adult household.

JACKIE

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

FREDDY

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206

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

December 12-14, 2012

The Aspen Institute continues its series on Renaissance Italy with a seminar featuring experts on a variety of topics. Bill Cook is the familiar voice of the Renaissance, in his celebrated lectures for the Teaching Company. Former professor of istory at S eneseo and author of ve books on the Renaissance, Cook has taught on Michelangelo, the Medici, and Renaissance Florence for the past 40 years.

CLEO

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

SARGE

7-year-old male Rottweiler. Friendly + sweet. Loves people. Perfect except for severe separation anxiety. Would do best in a home with constant companionship. Ask staff for info.

Lots of great new cats. See the CATS page at dogsaspen.com Handsome 6-yearold Pomeranian. He can be a bit cranky around his food, so he will do best in an adult household with a responsible owner.

BUCK

BEAR

Ross King has written a number of best-selling books on the Renaissance, including Michelangelo and the Pope’s Ceiling about the Sistine Chapel and Brunelleschi’s Dome.

LUCY

Gentle, friendly, affectionate, 3-year-old Pit Bull female found wandering the streets of LA. Brought to Aspen to start a new life. She is the hardest dog to photograph to show how sweet she really is. Give her a chance, please.

SAM

Large, friendly, 8-year-old Mastiff male. Gets along well with everybody, but occasionally picks fights with other dogs possibly due to fading eyesight. All in all, a very cool dog.

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

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter 101 Animal Shelter Road

Jeremy Hartnett is an associate professor and chair of the Classics department at Wabash College. He has also served as an Annual Lecturer at the Archaeological Institute of America.

www.dogsaspen.com

OPEN TO EVERYONE, THIS SEMINAR IS AN EXTRAORDINARY CHANCE TO EXPERIENCE AND LEARN ABOUT THIS RICH TOPIC WITH WORLD-CLASS EXPERTS.

Fee: $895 includes seminar, evening public panel, reading materials and refreshments. Seminar Schedule: Wednesday, December 12: 8:30am-12:30pm | Thursday, December 13: 8:30am-12:30pm Evening panel: 5:30-6:30pm Friday, December 14: 8:30am-12:30pm Evening panel, December 13 at 5:30-6:30pm. Tickets ($20) are available at www.aspenshowtix.com. Please register by calling Beth Slater at (970) 544-7914 or beth.slater@aspeninstitute.org.

Look for the FIRST ANNUAL

THE SALON SUNDAY DEC 2 | 5-7 PM | $15

TIMES THE ASPEN CATION OF A FREE PUBLI

ASPEN TIMES ATION OF THE

A FREE PUBLICATION OF THE ASPEN TIMES

RESERVE YOUR TICKETS NOW – CALL 970.948.9209

WINTER 2013

WINTER 2013

WINTER 2013

A FREE PUBLIC

Founder of the award-winning performance series from Philadelphia, Andrea Clearfield returns to co-host The Salon with local choreographer Alya Howe, presenting six dynamic performances in an intimate setting. -Classical trio performing a Bach sonata -Singer/songwriter Jackson Emmer -Short film by Will Evans -North and South American jazz four-piece, NorthYSur -Ellen Stapenhorst performing original music -Multimedia performance with music, dance and film

Find it on line at:

vwww.aspentimes.com/artinaspen 970-925-3414 A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

43


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