Aspen Times Weekly: Sept. 20 edition

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VOYAGES A TEXAS BEACH TO ESCAPE TO 20

SEPTEMBER 20-26, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

THE SEASON FOR DOING IT ALL SEE PAGE 25


BELLY UP ASPEN WHERE ASPEN GOES FOR LIVE MUSIC.

WED 9/19 KSPN PRESENTS

SHOW 9 PM

WHEELER BROTHERS & DEAD WINTER CARPENTERS Wheeler Brothers bring “a bit of the enthusiasm and avor of The Arcade Fire into their Texas-tinged Americanaâ€? PasteMagazine. Dead Winter Carpenters is a roots-–infused country rock band that is known for dropping a little hip-hop and reggae.

FRI 9/21

EARLY SHOW 7:30 PM LATE SHOW 10 PM

NEW ORLEANS FUNK STOOGES BRASS BAND Awarded “Best Contemporary Brass Band� at the Big Easy Music Awards.

BORGORE 18+

THU 9/20

GAME 6:20 SHOW 9:30 PM

NFL FOOTBALL:

GIANTS VS. PANTHERS NO COVER FOR GAME

BIG FREEDIA

W/OPENING ACT TBA

“My favorite SXSW set: Towering transvestite New Orleans bounce-rapper Big Freedia channeling Little Richard....A show you have to see to believe� - Chuck Eddy, Rolling Stone.

SAT 9/22

SHOW 9:30 PM

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W/FIEVEL

NO COVER

Crowd surďŹ ng Israeli dubstep artist that mixes hip-hop, metal & electronic.

SUN 9/23

GAME 6:20 SHOW 9:30 PM

NFL FOOTBALL:

PATRIOTS VS. RAVENS

MATTHEW MOON

& THE DEADLY BELLES FEAT. JAI VATUK

“Tight songwriting and lush delivery prompt Colorado rock fans to tout this performer as the state’s next breakout.�- Denver Post

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ASPEN TIMES PRESENTS

TUE 9/25 KSPN PRESENTS

SHOW 9 PM

BEN TAYLOR

NFL FOOTBALL:

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Inuenced by his parents, music legends James Taylor & Carly Simon, Taylor’s music combines folk, pop, soul, reggae, & country. His album, Another Run Around The Sun, was produced by actor Kevin Bacon. His latest album, Listening was released in August.

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THE SANCTUARY

MIDNIGHT RIDGE AT ASPEN

ASPEN Total privacy and seclusion in a true sanctuary east of town. Surrounded by Natural Forest with expansive views, a trout pond, two streams under and around the house. A four bedroom main residence plus a two-bedroom guest house. Exquisite landscaping further enhance this rare and unique offering. 10 acres surrounded by National forest, wildflower beds, minutes to Aspen. $9,750,000 Web Id#: AN125480

ASPEN Brand new luxury retreat that is completely off the grid. Spectacularly located on 9.52 acres atop Aspen Mountain and surrounded by National Forest, this one-of a-kind property is 100% sustainable through stateof-the-art designed solar and geothermal systems. Located just 25 minutes from downtown Aspen. $2,500,000 Web Id#: AN122313 Ed Foran 970.920.7382 | eforan@masonmorse.com

Bob Starodoj 970.920.7367 | star@masonmorse.com

EXCEPTIONAL LIVING IN EAST ASPEN

PRIME DEVELOPMENT SITE

ASPEN Purchased for $850,000 in 2008 and priced for today’s market at $650,000, this nicely remodeled top floor unit represents one of the better values for two-bedroom units in all of Aspen. $650,000 Web Id#: AN127121

BASALT Vested entitlements for 63 unit Condominium/Hotel project with pool and 90 parking spaces. .71 acres of vacant land in Commercial General Zone. Approx. 22,000 cars pass this site daily. Prime Hwy 82 frontage with stop light access. $2,400,000 Web Id#: AN126768

Jonathan Feinberg 970.920.7361 | oxbow@rof.net

Bryan Peterson 970.920.7370 | bryan@masonmorse.com

thesource

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

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

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Stay in touch with what is going on in the community BY LOGGING ONTO THE E-EDITION OF THE ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY FOR GEAR TRENDS, AROUND ASPEN SOCIALITES, LISTINGS, EVENTS ...

Read the latest edition online at

www.aspentimes.com/weekly

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PRIVATE RETREAT ON THE MAROON CREEK ASPEN An amazing private retreat along the banks of the Maroon Creek just 10 minutes from downtown Aspen yet you feel as if you are a million miles away. This 4.9 acre property has a 10,979 square foot home that has been completely renovated in 2008 and includes eight bedroom suites plus a separate caretaker residence. The charm of Colorado meets warm contemporary design with finishes that include dark stain wood floors, wide-plank white Ash floors, Colorado Buff sandstone,

Waterworks fixtures, limestone and plaster walls all beautifully composed to compliment the extraordinary setting. This private sanctuary also features extensive water rights, a pond, waterfall, Maroon Creek River frontage, outdoor custom stainless steel hot tub, large expansive lawn and garden areas perfect for entertaining.

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Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

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

Find more at www.masonmorse.com FB/ColdwellBankerMasonMorse

TW/masonmorse

LN/Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

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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 12

LEGENDS & LEGACIES

14 FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE 17

WINE INK

18

FOOD MATTERS

20 VOYAGES 32 LOCAL CALENDAR 42 CROSSWORD WILLOUGHBY

EARLY-1900S ASPEN FOOTBALL 12

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VOYAGES A TEXAS BEACH TO ESCAPE TO 20

SEPTEMBER 20-26, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

THE SEASON FOR DOING IT ALL SEE PAGE 25

25 COVER STORY

30 AROUND ASPEN

Arts editor Stewart Oksenhorn previews the offseason arts and music calendar.

Contributing editor Mary Eshbaugh Hayes attended a tribute and benefit dinner for artist and sculptor Rita Blitt.

ON THE COVER Image courtesy of the artist Yumi Roth’s “Meta Mapa,” stand-alone light jet print, made in collaboration with Andrew Blackstock and Casey McGuire, is featured in the group exhibition Continental Drift, opening in October at the Aspen Art Museum.

EDITOR’S NOTE

friendship is a funny thing | Here’s a question that

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both of our presidential candidates refuse to answer: Do they have any friends? Now, before you attack Romney. He jump up and down and gives the go-ahead to proclaim, “That is not kill Osama and then the point,” I would say uses the singular “I” I understand. Leaders when describing who must make decisions killed the terrorist without regard for leader. how people feel about Either way, it’s them, and rightfully time both candidates RYAN SLABAUGH so. If we just based start to think less decisions on feel-good emotions, about politics and more about progress would rarely happen, friendliness. Who, exactly, wants and the rest of the world would to be led by egomaniacs who use probably run right over us. drones without accountability Now, that said, both President and, in Romney’s case, offend Obama and candidate Mitt everyone they speak about? Romney are struggling to be, well, Both of them need to find a line friendly. Romney’s comment this somewhere between “fearless week alienating nearly half the leader” and “cocky blowhard.” electorate, where he defiantly And yes, it’s possible. proclaimed that all who do not Last weekend, I went camping pay income tax — including the with a couple of friends I had not 10 percent of our country who really hung out with in a couple are elderly and cannot work and of years. We used to play music the 17 percent who do not make together and shared the same an income high enough to pay bar for a long time, and as time income tax — are slackers, it’s went on, we moved to different tough to imagine him bellying up locations, one got married, and for a beer. life led us astray. Obama, meanwhile, carries a Yet we found a wonderful vibe that is equally as abrasive. campsite on Pearl Pass, one He picks a fight with China over surrounded by golden leaves and auto parts and then uses that to stunning views. We pulled out

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guitars and mandolins, and in the glow of the campfire, we played well into the evening. The Milky Way was glowing, the beer was flowing, and by the time we called it a night, we all had reflected that it felt like old times. Here is my point: Obama and Romney need to get out more, to reconnect with the people in their lives who helped them stay grounded. Family and advisers are fine, sure, but they are not in the position to be honest, to say what needs to be said. The next morning, after we crawled out of our bags, we looked around us. My friend looked at me and asked, “Why the hell did we get so far away?” It was an excellent question without an answer and needed to be said. A couple of days later, as I watched our presidential candidates bungle their attempts at being human, I thought someone in their lives needed to ask them the same question. Why, exactly, do they seem so distant? Where are their true friends when they need some? rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

VOLUME 1 ✦ ISSUE NUMBER 44

Editor-in-Chief Ryan Slabaugh Advertising Director Gunilla Asher Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott Design Afton Groepper Arts Editor Stewart Oksenhorn Production Manager Evan Gibbard Contributing Editors Mary Eshbaugh Hayes Gunilla Asher Kelly Hayes Jill Beathard Jeanne McGovern John Colson Contributing Writers Paul Andersen Hilary Stunda Amanda Charles Michael Appelbaum Warren Miller Contributing Partners High Country News Aspen Historical Society The Ute Mountaineer Explore Booksellers www.aspentimes.com Sales Ashton Hewitt Jeff Hoffman David Laughren Su Lum Louise Walker Classified Advertising 970-925-9937


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

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

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

with JOHN COLSON

Our homegrown imbeciles are reaching out to one another “THIS TIME, the imbeciles have won.” Quoting a French diplomat talking about the slain U.S. ambassador to Libya, J. Christopher Stevens, columnist Kathleen Parker went on to explain that a band of terrorists had managed to murder their best ally in the ongoing madness that is the Middle East when they stormed the embassy in Benghazi last week. That kind of stupidity is to be expected when dealing with zealots who cannot see beyond their own narrow comprehension of the world and whose blind hatred is fueled by a profound misunderstanding of the religious fundamentals on which their campaigns of terror supposedly are based. The Ku Klux Klan had a similar brand of tunnel vision and was equally willing to kill anyone in its path to prove its point. The Klan’s misanthropic vision, of course, had nothing to do with the Quran, or Islamic fundamentalism, but it was just as poisonous as anything the Taliban or al-Qaeda could cook up. It was Stevens’ bad luck, just as with so many others who have died in like circumstances, that he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. And if he was as honorable and compassionate a man as his mourners have described, those qualities might well have contributed to the zealots’ mad desires to kill him. That’s because those without a mind can’t stand it when they are confronted by someone whose mind is intact, vibrant and righteous. But Stevens’ fate is not the issue here. It has been vetted and analyzed well enough already. No, I want to take a comparative look at our homegrown, brain-dead imbeciles here in the U.S. — the tea party. As I have mentioned before in this space, I’m the lucky recipient of teaparty ravings every day, sometimes three or four times a day, through its online newsletter. As I also have said before, I don’t know how I got on its mailing list, but it has proved instructive. In the latest salvo, the teabaggers prattled on about President Obama (they refer to him as O’Scuma) and his plan for the “overthrow of all we hold dear, all that is constitutionally sacred and all that we believe in.” The teabaggers have been on this roll for a while, enlisting a whacked-

out lawman in Arizona, Sheriff Joe Arpaio, in a determined campaign of disinformation and lies. They hope to convince anyone who will listen that Obama is not eligible for the office he holds because he supposedly was born outside the U.S., despite the evidence to the contrary. Now, their bigoted and infantile rant is aimed at an innocuous bit of documentation called Executive Order 13603, which Obama signed earlier this year. The teabaggers claim that, with this order, Obama is preparing to declare martial law and turn the U.S. over to some shadowy entity aligned with the United Nations and Obama’s supposed socialist handlers in some fantasy land the teabaggers have dreamed up. In fact, EO 13603 is nothing more than a restatement of standing emergency-preparedness orders going back to the 1950s detailing how the federal government would react to a threat to our national security. I’ve read the thing, and while I would be the last one to say our government is innocent of dastardly hidden schemes and dark agendas, this one just ain’t it. But the teabaggers, bless their pointy little heads, are desperate. Their thinly veiled message of fearmongering and racist bile is foundering in a swamp of its own creation, and they know it. So they clearly are hoping that, by dipping into the equally dank and freakezoid waters inhabited by conspiracy-theory nutballs, they can attract the interest of the skinheads, the white supremacists and other bad actors. Besides manufacturing a fantastic mythology of government evildoers, these besotted maniacs believe that having a black man in the White House is unacceptable on its face. Thus, the teabaggers are aligning themselves with the kind of people who would not shrink from murder and mayhem on a national, even international, scale. Think back to the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. Was that any less horrifying and despicable than the 9/11 terrorist attacks? No. And you thought the tea party was just a harmless bunch of right-wing extremists. Ha!

HIT&RUN

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jcolson@aspentimes.com

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with AUDEN SCHENDLER of WRITERS ON THE RANGE

Childhood’s end

Editor’s note: We withheld Vox Pop this week due to a great column by Auden Schendler and the fact our regular Vox Pop reporter, Max Vadnais, is on leave this week. Vox Pop will return next week.

MY YEAROLD daughter The poet Julia Kasdorf says Willa came home from school the first gesture we learn is last week and said she knew goodbye. what sex was. Her friend “You look beautiful,” I said, Melissa had told her. panicking. “Open wide, I got “OK, what is it?” My wife to get the molars.” Ellen asked as I poured the One summer afternoon, bourbon for the Manhattan I I biked to the supermarket AUDEN with Willa and her 5-year-old knew I’d need. SCHENDLER brother, Elias. Almost there, “It’s when a man and a we stopped to pet horses and woman lie down together play on a stump by a ditch. The weather and kiss.” had been threatening all day. Now, There was a long and thoughtful ominous clouds billowed to the south. You pause. I looked at Ellen, holding the could see the arcing lines of precipitation; bottle of bourbon tipped, still pouring it there was thunder, lightning. It was into the shaker. Perhaps a stiff cocktail spectacularly beautiful and also terrifying. tonight. “Hey, guys, we better head out now. It’s “No, that’s not what sex is, Willa,” Ellen probably going to rain.” said. And she muttered to me, “I’ll be They played. The storm was about four damned if Melissa is going to be the one miles off ; we had maybe 15 minutes. But to teach her about sex.” the weather has been odd this year, and I can’t believe this is happening, this storm came onto us more quickly I thought. The iconic experience of than I had anticipated. parenthood coming five years early on “Yeah, OK, we gotta go here!” I said. a nondescript fall evening with no time The kids hopped on their bikes, and to prepare. within 30 seconds it was pouring. I was as Parenthood can be summed up simply: wet as if someone had doused me with a You try to insulate and protect your bucket from the blind side. children, at least for a while, and you “Come on, guys! Let’s go!” fail right out of the gate. The true nature I looked back, and they were pedaling of the world, experience, maturity, the their tiny bikes frantically, expressing meanness of things, it all sneaks up. The some slight concern, getting soaked. And world offers endless hardship along with then came the hail. its graces, and only luck can tip the scales. “Dada!” little Elias was yelling, the ice Willa and Ellen retreated to her room, hitting hard on his hands and face, on the protected by its flowered comforter and verge of tears. small glass animals. Willa looked terrified. “We have to “Uh, hey, do you want me in here? stop!” And I was thinking, Stop where? I mean … ” And do what? Crawl under a tree? Or into “NO!” Willa and Ellen both yelled. I a culvert? What could I do, short of lying started doing dishes. Then I went back on top of them? and hovered outside the door, missing “We can’t stop! We have no choice! the most important conversation of my I can’t help you!” I yelled, drowned out daughter’s life. I felt I should be there but in simultaneous lightning and thunder. was relieved I wasn’t. To be honest, I had I didn’t want to circle back because no idea what I would say, though I worried they’d stop and we’d get I’m certain my first word would have annihilated. So I stayed ahead, yelling been “Uh ... ” and exhorting like some crazy World I scrubbed at the cast-iron skillet, a War I lieutenant with a bugle and a legendary culinary instrument meant soccer ball, leading my men off into to work flawlessly, the original nonstick. catastrophe, an apt metaphor Never for me. I chipped off vulcanized for parenthood. omelet with a paring knife. Squinting back into the sidewaysI ought to have known all this was blowing, bitterly stinging hail, I watched coming. Not six months ago, I was my two children, their heads down, brushing Willa’s teeth. She asked me hands bright red, legs pumping furiously, to stop. making their way as best they could into a “What do you think of this?” She world they’d find to be part pig iron, part pulled the strap of her pajamas over her gold, and theirs alone. shoulder, a red and white ensemble that said “Cutiesaurus” below a ridiculous cartoon dinosaur, let a curl of hair hang Auden Schendler is a contributor to over her eyes, canted her hips and looked Writers on the Range, a service of High into the mirror with a sultry pout. Six Country News (www.hcn.org). He lives in years old then. Basalt and works for Aspen Skiing Co.

VOX POP COMPILED BY MAX VADNAIS


Leaves are changing. You can feel it in the air.

WINTER IS COMING

AND WE ARE READY‌

WINTER IN

expa and c nded o dinin mplete g sec tion

Please contact your local advertising representative to reserve your space in Winter in Aspen today! 970.925.3414 | aspentimes.com A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

SEEN, HEARD & DONE

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

FIVE THINGS CHEERS&JEERS

CHEERS | To the Sheriff ’s Office for its recent handling of incidents, including a murder-suicide and a standoff that lasted nearly a day. No innocent bystanders were injured or hurt in either, and the standoff was closed with little fanfare and with no violent invasion on the part of the Sheriff ’s Office. summer, the latest occurring this month when a climber fell hundreds of feet. This puts a big strain on the rescue team as well as on loved ones of the deceased. Here’s to being extra careful.

CHEERS | To the Basalt Town Council for ditching plans to alter the way its members handle conflicts of interest. The fact that they had the discussion behind closed doors would only add to the public’s suspicion that something is up with their dealing with the issue, so dismissing it entirely is the next-best option.

The Milky Way was shining bright on Sept. 14, especially for those camping beyond the reach of the city’s light pollution.

that the USA Pro Challenge cycling race “hurt” their business when it was in town. While we understand if day-of sales were down, in the long run, the marketing will bring cyclists to town from all over the world. And cyclists are the exact customers a town wants — those with high incomes who like to travel — so luring them here once a year should only be a boon in the long run.

BUZZ WORTHY ASPEN

CLIMBER DIES NEAR ASPEN

A climber who fell 800 feet to his death while ascending North Maroon Peak on Sept. 15 has been identified as Derek Kelley, 34, of Colorado Springs. Kelley fell when a boulder came loose, according to Eric Hansen, Pitkin County deputy coroner. His death was caused by traumatic brain injury, Hansen said in a statement Sept. 16. A Pitkin County Sheriff ’s Office statement Saturday said rescue personnel believed the climber had been wearing a helmet but not a harness. Authorities were first notified at 9:20 a.m. Saturday that a man had fallen in an area known as the “second gully.” Initial reports placed the climber at 300 feet from the peak’s summit at the time of the fall.

We can try out different things in the Weekly (like this edition)

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Fewer people, more beauty

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Parking available at City Market

A party of climbers that was not with Kelley reportedly reached his body soon after the Sheriff ’s Office received the initial call. The climbers determined that the man, later identified as Kelley, had died of injuries suffered in the fall. — Andre Salvail

DENVER

DENVER WINS AGAIN AT RUGGERFEST

A Denver Barbarians player wrapped an arm around a beaming teammate Sept. 16 in a far corner of the Wagner Park pitch. “That was the best game of rugby I’ve ever been a part of,” he proudly proclaimed. Sterling performances are becoming customary for the Barbos at Ruggerfest. Denver put on quite a spectacle — albeit one devoid of drama — in

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The piney smell of fall The first snow

POST US YOUR TOP FIVE THINGS rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

STAY IN THE KNOW — CATCH UP ON RECENT NEWS & LOCAL EVENTS Sunday’s open-division final at a packed Wagner Park. As a result, it secured a third consecutive title in the annual showcase. The Barbos’ relentless, quick-strike offense erupted for 19 points in the first 10 minutes against an overmatched Glendale Raptors defense. They led by 23 at the half and continually applied pressure down the stretch, routing their Front Range rivals, 73-21. — Jon Maletz

FALL COLORS STARTING TO PEAK

Hints of autumn came early to the mountains surrounding Aspen this year. Then, suddenly, the show was on. Pockets of aspens in the high country were flashing gold by late August, and the trees on the slopes of Buttermilk were bathed in

“PEOPLE HAD GIVEN GENEROUSLY, AND AT THIS STAGE IN JACK’S LIFE, IT WAS MORE IMPORTANT TO SHARE THAT GENEROSITY WITH OTHERS.” A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

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JEERS | To another death in the Maroon Bells this

JEERS | To those retailers who said in a survey

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TOP 5 REASONS WE ENJOY THE OFFSEASON

autumn’s glow by the first week of September, leading to predictions of an early display and dispelling worries that drought would cancel the spectacle altogether. This year’s colors are easily about a week ahead of last year’s pace, when local mountains put on one of the best shows in recent memory. The peak weekend could be this one, but it appears that the weekend of Sept. 22 and 23 could be spectacular, as well. Certainly, it seems likely the autumn display is likely to hit its zenith sometime within the coming week. At the Maroon Bells, where photographers line the shore come fall, the grove of aspens in the bowl at the base of the peaks is hitting its prime, but there are plenty of stands of still-green aspens intermixed with pockets of solid gold elsewhere around Maroon Lake. — Janet Urquhart

SHEREEN SARICK, ON ASKING HER SON TO DONATE 100 PERCENT OF HIS BAR MITZVAH GIFTS TO CHARITY, WORTH THOUSANDS

P H OTO B Y RYA N S L A BA U G H


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

GUEST OPINION COLUMN

by PEPPER TRAIL with WRITERS ON THE RANGE

A lake in retreat I’M STANDING ON the shores of Summer Lake — or, to be more accurate, what used to be a lakeshore but is now a dry lakebed in Oregon’s high desert. I’m here with a group of writers, scientists and artists, all of us gathered to talk about changes in the northern Great Basin. Sharp environmental contrasts, through both time and space, have always been a feature of life in the Great Basin. We know this because the region’s arid conditions that make living here a challenge are also ideal for preserving the remains of past life. In lake sediments, packrat stockpiles and even exquisitely air-dried human dung (coprolites), ecological change has been revealed by the painstaking work of geologists, paleontologists and archaeologists. That knowledge has recently been synthesized in a masterful book, “The Great Basin: A Natural Prehistory,” by Donald K. Grayson, of the University of Washington, and it’s required reading for anyone interested in the West. The most dramatic changes in the Great Basin over the past 100,000 years are the appearance and disappearance of lakes. The Great Basin is composed of many lesser basins that are connected to some degree but which have no outlet. In the late Pleistocene, about 15,000 years ago, the Great Basin was a labyrinth of lakes, covering almost 28 million acres by Grayson’s calculation. The largest of these, Lake Bonneville, was almost the size of Lake Michigan and reached depths well below 1,000 feet. Its shriveled remnant is the Great Salt Lake. Summer Lake, too, was part of a much larger Pleistocene lake, called Lake Chewaucan, which covered 480 square miles and reached a depth of 375 feet. At its springtime maximum these days, Summer Lake is lucky to cover 70 square miles at a maximum depth of 3 feet. By late summer, the lake has retreated to a puddle, a thin, dark smudge almost lost in the heat waves. The Pleistocene lakes existed when the continental ice sheets deflected the jet stream

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

southward. This brought both high precipitation and low temperatures, which together filled the basins of the Great Basin. In contrast, the greatest retreat of Great Basin lakes occurred during a period of high temperatures and drought sometimes called the Altithermal, from about 7,500 to 4,500 years ago. The causes

replaced by species adapted to drought-tolerant saltbush. The hardy woodrats, whose middens are such a reliable source of data on environmental conditions, disappeared from many sites, to return only after the end of the drought. Even those most adaptable of creatures, human beings, suffered

especially those in Las Vegas, rely on water sources that might not last the century, and most rural residents also depend on readily available water for farming and ranching. It is hard to imagine how these populations can be sustained in the face of conditions approaching those of the Altithermal. The dry bed, or playa,

for this climatic shift in the middle Holocene are not well understood, and its effects were not equally severe everywhere. Nevertheless, the implications for the future of the region are sobering. The Altithermal appears to have been characterized by temperatures 5 to 15 degrees higher than today; in other words, within the range of predicted Great Basin temperatures by the end of this century. And what were the effects of these temperatures? Many Great Basin lakes and marshes virtually disappeared. The frequency of fires increased, as shown by studies near Lake Tahoe. A variety of mammals associated with sagebrush were

population declines during the Altithermal. Those who survived were forced to adapt to a diet heavy in small seeds that were extremely labor-intensive to gather and process, and we know this from their, um, coprolites. All in all, Grayson singles out the Altithermal as the least hospitable time for humans in the Great Basin over the past 10,000 years. This bad time seems to be returning. And the challenges ahead will not be due to climate change alone. Human population density in the Great Basin is far greater than it has ever been, with major cities in Las Vegas, Salt Lake City and Reno, Nev. These urban populations,

of Summer Lake has a stark beauty. Every evening, our group gathers on its salty edge to watch the shadow of Winter Ridge roll smoothly across it as the sun sets. The history of the Great Basin assures us that this lake will be brim-full again — in a thousand or 10,000 years. But that is cold comfort for the hot days ahead. Pepper Trail is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (www.hcn.org). He is a naturalist and writer from Ashland, Ore., who wrote this piece during a residency at Playa, a retreat center for artists, writers and scientists on the shores of Oregon’s Summer Lake.

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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

CLASSIC ASPEN

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

The undefeated Aspen High 1906 football team enjoyed an almost perfect season, trying to equal the 1905 squad.

GRIDIRON GREATS FROM A CENTURY AGO for more than a century young men have entertained Aspen

on the gridiron. Local football began in the 1890s when clubs formed to play one another; two clubs formed in 1895 played each other and then combined to play a Glenwood team. In 1899 a game between local clubs was played in February in the snow. Beginning in the early 1900s Aspen High School fielded teams to play 11-man football against other high schools. Aspen High was a Western Colorado powerhouse, champions in 1901, 1905 and 1908. Junior teams fed players from both the Washington and Lincoln grammar schools (who developed a healthy rivalry) and football became nearly as popular as baseball. There was no formal high school league or schedule. One school would contact another and arrange games; often they were cancelled or postponed — not from inclement weather. Teams had to sell enough game tickets to cover expenses, not always an obtainable goal. There was no yellow school bus. In those days teams traveled by train. Aspen negotiated with The Colorado Midland and the Denver and Rio Grande to reserve passenger cars to transport team, family and fans. With travel limited by rail lines, Aspen’s opponents

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were confined to towns along the routes: Leadville, Glenwood and Grand Junction. An attempt was made to have two games with each — one home and one away. To fill in the season (a longer one than today) Aspen High would play

shortage of willing players. Games were held at Athletic Park, the interior of the racetrack at the fairgrounds, considered out of town then, where Aspen Meadows is now. The county erected restrooms and grandstands but it is unlikely

TO FILL IN THE SEASON (A LONGER ONE THAN TODAY) ASPEN HIGH WOULD PLAY ASPEN COMMUNITY CLUB TEAMS. MORE YOUNG MEN WORKED IN THE MINES THAN ATTENDED HIGH SCHOOL, SO CLUBS FORMED AND DISBANDED, WITH NO SHORTAGE OF WILLING PLAYERS. Aspen community club teams. More young men worked in the mines than attended high school, so clubs formed and disbanded with no

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the field was sodded. Horse racing, trotting races and baseball excited fans but football also attracted big crowds, especially the Thanksgiving

Day game and one during the TriCounty October fair. Aspen’s best season was 1905, an undefeated season during which they were scored against only once. Aspen defeated Leadville 39-0 on a cold Nov. 7, playing until dark because the train arrived two hours late. My great-uncle Bill Sheehan and my uncle John Herron were on the 1906 team. Sheehan quarterbacked Aspen High from 1905 through 1908; a pint-sized Herron was the placeholder that year. In an October snowstorm they had to clear the field of snow, yet Aspen clobbered Glenwood 62-0 in 1906, a record Colorado high school score at that time. They went on to Cloud City (Leadville) in mid-November — what a cold game that must have been! Aspen High School football game day dances filled the social calendar. Pep rallies featured big bonfires on Main Street in front of the Hotel Jerome. Instead of watching Detroit on TV this coming turkey day wouldn’t you prefer to root for Aspen against Glenwood, a game to tribute a century of high school football players? Tim Willoughby’s family story parallels Aspen’s. He began sharing folklore while teaching for Aspen Country Day School and Colorado Mountain College. Now a tourist in his native town, he views it with historical perspective. Reach him at redmtn@schat.net.

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE WILLOUGHBY COLLECTION


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

HILLS OF GOLD

1905 AU T U M N

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

“HOW MANY OF our townspeople are taking time from the rush of business to enjoy the beautiful and ever-changing picture which the hillsides are presenting these autumn days?” asked the Aspen Daily Times in September 1905. “How many of us realize that we have about us continually the gorgeous landscape which makes our people from the less mountainous states look and wonder? … You will see such a blending of colors as were never put on canvas, the dream of the artist, the inspiration of poets. Look and your soul will grow larger and better and your life will be sweeter and happier. Look and learn to appreciate the beauties of your hometown.”

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

NEED TO KNOW

145

• Weight: 9.6-11 oz • Climashield design • Anti-debris mesh • Water-resistant • Contragrip sole

SALOMON MEN’S/WOMEN’S SPEEDCROSS 3 CS TRAIL RUNNING SHOE With the Salomon Golden Leaf Half Marathon on Saturday, Sept. 22, the timing is right to double-check you have the right shoes for this tweener season, when mud, wet rocks and even snow can get in the way of solid footing. These trail running shoes by Salomon were designed for such terrain challenges. They are lightweight, yet have an aggressive tread to keep you trusting your stride, and that’s exactly what you will need this Saturday.

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— Ute Mountaineer Staff

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO


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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

NEED TO KNOW

990

• Vintage, handcrafted and recycled • No two the same • Zero emissions • Carries goodies, adds smiles

ASPEN’S ESSENTIAL TOWNIE BIKE Cycle artist Billy Taylor has more than 100 completely restored, ready to ride vintage bikes at his Re-Cycle Art Aspen shop at the Aspen Business Center. These bikes, which are painted using a vacuum-pack process that allows for a little wearand-tear, are just some of the options Billy has in store. “There are endless possibilities,” he said. “It’s like fashion — you just have to know what people want.”

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— Re-Cycle Art Aspen staff

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO


WINEINK

WORDS to DRINK BY

by KELLY J. HAYES

HOW A WINERY CAN ROCK A CITY NOT LONG AGO, the neighborhood around Varick and Spring streets in New York’s Greenwich Village was a fairly gritty place. Today it is a thriving part of the lower downtown scene and much of the credit for that transformation must go to the advent of City Winery and its founder Michael Dorf. A music impresario with a passion for wine, Dorf had a vision half a decade ago that culminated in a winery, restaurant and music venue that has KELLY J. helped transform a HAYES neighborhood. City Winery is many things to many people. “If you knew Michael, you’d know how he thinks and all this would all make sense,” says Stephanie Johnson, City Winery’s wine director. “He’s the kind of guy who can come up with a bunch of ideas and keep them all at the front of his mind at the same time.” There are indeed a “bunch of ideas” at work in City Winery, a low-slung, single-story cabernet colored building hiding under an awning that fronts Varick Street for half a block. I came for the winery. That is, City Winery is first and foremost a place where people can come and use the facilities to make wine with grapes imported from all over the world. But the night I was there “The Yardbirds,” or a many times removed version of such, was headlining the main stage of the very attractive music venue. At the same time diners were perusing a world-class wine list in the upscale restaurant that sits between the music venue and the barrel room. And, in the fermentation room, or what is actually the winemaking part of City Winery, a group of young hipsters from a dotcom startup were enjoying a wine-tasting event. Like I said, a bunch of ideas. But they seem to work together. In fact, the

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

concept has proved so successful that a second City Winery has just opened in Chicago on Randolph Street. I would recommend a stop at either venue for anyone who is interested in good wine and good music. At the heart of City Winery is the idea of bringing grapes to the people and giving them the tools to make their own wines. Since the people live in cities, that is where Dorf thought it best to build his winery. This could be called a custom crush facility for the masses. The basics are that City Winery sells consumers “Barrel Ownership.” A client buys a “barrel” of wine and makes decisions on what kinds of wines they want to make. City Winery supplies the grapes, helps the client through the sorting, crush and maceration. They supply the oak barrels for the aging, guide them through blending decisions and provide bottles with custom labels. Soup to nuts or, rather, grapes to glass. First comes the selection of grapes. Each fall harvest the winery buys an allotment of fruit from the premium grape growing regions in the country. Pinot Noir from the Hyland Vineyard in Oregon’s Willamette Valley, Cabernet Sauvignon from Larry Bettinelli in Yountville in Napa and Riesling from the Finger Lakes of New York. The grapes are flown in cold and delivered to the back door of the winery, just like they would be in their home region. Led by City Winery’s resident winemaker Frenchman David Lecomte, clients can feel the fruit as they hand sort the grapes if they wish. They are taught about the maceration and fermentation process and allowed to select, based on their investment, the specific kinds of oak that they wish to age their wines in. They can visit the winery and taste as their wines mature and can design labels for each of their 252 bottles or 21 cases that will result form the effort. The cost of the program is

dependent upon the grapes, materials and customer involvement but range from about 5,000 to 12,000 a barrel, or 20 to 45 a bottle. There is also a “Barrel Share” program where one can play for 1,800 and receive three cases of wine. But it should be noted that while one is getting wine for their investment, what they are really buying is an education and an experience. There are some clients who come to City Winery with a solid understanding of the process who simply want to avail themselves of the facilities and the chance to make their wine vision a reality. But others are there, starting from scratch, just getting a feel for the alchemy that is the wine winemaking process. Either way, those who become part of the City Winery scene have a chance to soak up the sounds of acts like John Hiatt, Joan Osborne and Allen Toussaint, sip world wines from Leeuwin Estate, Bodega Catena and JL Chave, and enjoy a crispy flatbread with it all. An eclectic mix to be sure. Perhaps my bartender, Jimmy D., summed it up best when he yelled at me over a lead guitar solo during the Yardbird’s classic Shapes of Things, “No winery rocks harder!” Well said. 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@wineink.com.

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

FOOD MATTERS

THE PROOF IS IN THE FOOD COCKTAILS AND COMMUNITY AT JUSTICE SNOW’S

IT WAS A QUIET Thursday afternoon in the Aspen offseason. The streets were quiet, but the dining room at Justice Snow’s space was packed with people and energy. “My quip of the moment is we are working our plan, and our plan seems to be working,” owner Michele Kiley said. It’s been eight months AMIEE WHITE since Kiley and her BEAZLEY business partner Marco Chingolani opened Justice Snow’s at the Wheeler Opera House after being awarded the lease after a lengthy review process by its owner, the city of Aspen. “Since then, I’ve had a very genuine and sincere wish,” she said. “We wanted to be a very, very good partner for community.” The way they wanted to do that, she said, is to extend themselves to the Aspen community by preparing great libations, offering great attention to preparing the food and offering great affordability. “Our menu is not a crazy, esoteric menu,” Kiley said. “It is very accessible, and there is really something for everyone. That is not an easy thing to do. We have a vegetarian option; we have a steak, a fish option.” When it initially opened, Justice Snow’s quickly made a name for itself as a brilliant craft-cocktail bar. The knowledge and passion of bartender manager and “cocktail mechanic” Joshua-Peter Smith elevated the local cocktail scene. But the food, led by talented chef Jonathan Leichliter, struggled to find its rhythm. But after several staff changes in the kitchen, Kiley says, Jonathan’s team has

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found its equilibrium and is turning out incredible, consistent dishes. Everything is made in-house, and sourcing the best-quality ingredients close to home is a priority. “Jonathan never ceases to amaze me,” Kiley said. “He exceeded my wildest hopes for the food.” For example, Kiley referred to the menu created for Mother’s Day Brunch. Everything was scratch, including buttermilk waffles with fried chicken breast, bourbon butter and syrup; huevos rancheros; and a hash with generous chunks of Cap K Ranch sirloin. “He’s always exceeding what I think they are going to do. The most solid thing that’s been in the past eight months is the kitchen,” she says.

To highlight the quality of food and service at Justice Snow’s, the team has hosted several special paring dinners, including the popular Wine vs. Beermaker Dinner. These types of events, including the Salon series that brings musicians, dancers and spoken word back into the heart of Aspen, not only offers a chance for avant-garde arts to find a home again in Aspen — it also allows people to experience the food and drink of the restaurant on a larger stage. Specialty dinners, live music and more is slated for Justice Snow’s, which is one of the few Aspen restaurants that will remain open the entire offseason. “It has been the kitchen that has been completely rock solid from day

A sample dessert from the first Wine vs. Beermaker Dinner at Justice Snow’s.

one,” Kiley said. “Diego Aquino, our sous chef, or Jonathan is here every minute of every day inspecting every dish that goes out of the kitchen. These guys care about their craft and care to the extent that one of them is always present.” She knows that the consistency of Justice Snow’s food will keep the restaurant viable, and the innovation from the kitchen will keep interest high. “When we started this restaurant, I said, ‘It doesn’t matter what season it is or what the time of the day — (the food) better always be the quality that they will associate us with. The offseason is when we step up our game. You cannot limit the attention to detail in anything you produce in a restaurant. In Aspen that’s the thing that often goes. Consistency in a highly seasonal town is key. If you can do great food in the least productive time of the year, you’ll have a reputation that will be (great).” Coming up at Justice Snow’s is altcountry music by Seth Sherman on Oct. 3 and a Halloween soiree that is promised to be memorable. “This is just our starting point. This is just us getting started,” Kiley said. “We are in a completely unique position in the community in that we occupy such a (historic) space. This is such a tremendous asset for the community. I feel like a temporary caretaker, one that cares sincerely about doing the best that I can.” 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.

P H OTO B Y RYA N S L A BA U G H


by AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

SPOOKY TREATS COMING UP at Justice Snow’s is alt-country music by Seth Sherman on Oct. 3 and a Halloween soiree that owner Michele Kiley promises to be memorable. “This is just our starting point. This is just us getting started,” Kiley said. “We are in a completely unique position in the community in that we occupy such a (historic) space. This is such a tremendous asset for the community. I feel like a temporary caretaker, one that cares sincerely about doing the best that I can.”

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

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VOYAGES

DESTINATION | TEXAS

by JILL BEATHARD

WASTING AWAY ON THE TEXAS GULF COAST

NEED TO KNOW Above: Kristi Mellerski and Owen Lindsley play in the surf at Port Aransas Beach. Below: A sign hanging in Kody’s Restaurant & Bar on Highway 361, which keeps its kitchen open late.

Where: Port Aransas, Texas Miles from Aspen: 1,201 miles • Closest airport: Corpus Christi International • Nearby: Mustang Island State Park, Padre Island National Seashore, and the USS Lexington Museum and Texas State Aquarium in Corpus Christi

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“THIS PLACE IS like South Padre, but I like it ’cause it’s more chill,” said my friend, a Rio Grande Valley native, as we rolled up to the grocery store in Port Aransas, Texas, for some condiments and fresh ingredients to make guacamole. I’m paraphrasing, but I remember it because he hit the nail on the head: There’s no pretense in Port A, not about the clothes you’re wearing, how drunk you are or how you look when you go out to eat; and you’re also not fighting throngs of college kids and Girls Gone Wild vans to get around. This Texas Gulf Coast town is pure, laid-back fun. I was pleasantly surprised on our short trip the last weekend in August to see that most of the seaweed had cleared — or someone had picked it up — from Port Aransas Beach. This was the second time my college friends and I trekked out there; the first we camped on the beach for a night— something everyone should do once — while knowing that you will never escape the sand. This year, we met good people on the beach and shared a bonfire and beers until some rain forced us in finally about 3:30 a.m. That little bit of rain was the only bad weather we had all weekend. In past years, when we’ve had more time, we’ve also gone on paragliding trips overlooking the bay and done a lot of fishing. We’ve taken a boat out on the bay and found ourselves swimming with dolphins and enjoyed oysters at a hole-in-the-wall right on the beach. It doesn’t take a lot of planning or money to find fun here, so it’s the perfect place to kick back and relax with family or friends.

P H OTO S B Y J I L L B E AT H A R D


VOYAGES

DESTINATION | MARYLAND

by CALVIN WOODWARD/AP

BIKING PITTSBURGH TO MARYLAND ON MOUNTAIN TRAIL

NEED TO KNOW

I WARNED THEM about those Great Allegheny Passage tunnels. Make sure you get off the bikes and walk, I told my dozen cycling companions. Did they heed? Not much. Most plunged into the disorienting void, one wearing sunglasses no less, gazing through dark lenses upon what was already dark. Expressions of concern, let us say, echoed off the walls. I flashed back to a friend’s mid-tunnel wipeout a year earlier. Were they all going down? The episode proved to be a harmless hiccup in a gem of a bicycle trip. The Great Allegheny Passage between Pittsburgh and the Western Maryland town of Cumberland is a smooth-rolling romp through the mountains that pleases cyclists of varying ability and just glows on fine autumn days. It stretches for 141 miles (227 kilometers), offering sparkling river views enlivened by the screeches of whitewater rafters. It gives you a passing panorama of wind-farm turbines beating lazy arcs in the sky, and loads upon loads of peace and quiet.

AP PHOTOS

• Starting at the Cumberland end, as many do, gets all climbing out of the way the first day, though it’s a slog for nearly 25 miles. One cheat: Old-time steam and diesel trains operated by Western Maryland Scenic Railroad run 16 miles up the mountain and accept bikes. Schedule at http://www.wmsr.com/. • Some B&Bs are flexible for bicyclists who want to reschedule in bad weather, others lock you in as soon as you book or as many as 30 days ahead, so inquire. • The Big Savage Tunnel’s giant doors shut for the winter, usually December through March or April, and the road detour is not recommended.

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Рюд

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This fall, try a little bit of everything From music to poetry to dance, the offseason arts calendar is chock-full by Stewart Oksenhorn

CONTRI B UTED PHOTOS

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THIS FALL, TRY A LITTLE BIT OF EVERYTHING FROM MUSIC TO POETRY TO DANCE, THE OFFSEASON ARTS CALENDAR IS CHOCK-FULL by STEWART OKSENHORN

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS

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

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Village, Takah Sushi and Conundrum Catering, will contribute the dinner. Demonstrations will be tied to the theme: food sculpting, cake decorating, knife skills. Topping it off, the Red Brick staff has been hard at work on an original cocktail recipe: the Bricktini.

‘Ghost-Writer,’ Sept. 28 through Oct. 13, Thunder River Theatre, Carbondale Carbondale’s Thunder River Theatre Company opens its season with “Ghost-Writer,” Michael Hollinger’s award-winning play about a playwright’s secretary who continues to write a script in progress after her employer dies. The production stars Valerie Haugen and Thunder River artistic director Lon Winston and features Eileen Seeley.

Rocks on Sept. 28; somehow they will squeeze it into the confines of Belly Up the following night. Also raising the bar on the tribute thing: Denver’s MTHDS playing the music of the Beastie Boys (Oct. 19); Colorado funk band Euforquestra performing the songs of Beck (Oct. 25); rock group Kinetix playing the Red Hot Chili Peppers (Oct. 26); and another Colorado funk group, the Motet, taking on ParliamentFunkadelic (Oct. 29). And of course, on Halloween, Danger Kitty plays the Highway to Hell Party. I’ll assume plenty of AC/DC. Those sticking to the Bob Dylan ideal that singers should write their own music: Big Freedia, the queen of New Orleans bounce music, in her local debut (Sept. 20); a different face of New Orleans, with the Stooges Brass Band (Sept. 21);

ASPEN FILMFEST OCTOBER

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IN ASPEN AND CARBONDALE

DICK CARTER, SEPT. 29 AND 30, WILLITS TOWN CENTER DICK CARTER, A PROMINENT LOCAL ARTIST AND ONE OF THE FOUNDERS OF THE ASPEN ART MUSEUM, CLEANS OUT THE INVENTORY FOR A GOOD CAUSE. CARTER WILL PUT HUNDREDS OF PAINTINGS, INCLUDING HIS GEOMETRIC WORKS DATING BACK TO THE ’70S, ON SALE, WITH A PORTION OF THE PROCEEDS GOING TO THE WYLY COMMUNITY ART CENTER. THE LAST TIME HE DID THIS, FIVE YEARS AGO, SOME 600 VIEWERS SHOWED UP TO HAVE A LOOK OR MAKE A PURCHASE. Belly Up, various dates through offseason Lot of tribute is being paid at Belly Up this offseason, but for the most part, these are tribute bands at a higher level of ambition and expertise. Topping the list has got to be Brit Floyd (Sept. 29), an offshoot of the immensely popular Australian Pink Floyd Show. The Aussie Floyd was known for staging Floyd tributes in arenas and at major festivals, complete with light show and inflatables. But Damian Darlington, who served as Aussie Floyd’s guitarist and music director for 17 years, told The Aspen Times he wanted to take things up a few notches. The new show, “A Foot in the Door,” inspired by the latest Pink Floyd greatest-hits album, will feature the 23-minute “Echoes,” from the 1971 album “Meddle.” The show is at Red

COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

singer-songwriter Ben Taylor (Sept. 25); reggae scion Stephen Marley (Sept. 28); guitaro bizarro Buckethead (Oct. 1); ’80s British new-wavers the Psychedelic Furs (Oct. 9); and electronic trio Beats Antique (Oct. 28).

Live Poetry Night, Sept. 30, Victoria’s Wine and Espresso Bar Carbondale’s Karen Glenn is the featured reader at this Aspen Poets Society event; she’ll be reading from her new collection, “Night Shift.” The evening also features guitarist John Harrison and some open-mic poetry.

Aspen Filmfest, Oct. 2 through 7, in Aspen and Carbondale Thirty-four years in, Filmfest remains Aspen’s august autumn attraction. Filmfest seems right in sync with the

“Apparatus VIII,” from 1994, is among the works featured in a sale later this month of paintings by local artist Dick Carter.

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MUSICAL TRIBUTE TO JOHN DENVER, OCTOBER

12-13 WHEELER OPERA HOUSE

season: low-key, a bit serious-minded, wonderful. Highlights of Filmfest 2012 include “Quartet,” the directorial debut of 75-year-old Dustin Hoffman; “Besa: The Promise,” a documentary about Albanian Muslims rescuing Jews during World War II, by former Basalt resident Norman Gershman; the Australian musical comedy “The Sapphires”; “Una Noche,” a Cuban film that earned three major awards at the Tribeca Film Festival; and a live event, Secrets of “The Simpsons,” featuring longtime “Simpsons” writer Mike Reiss. The program even includes two genuine thrillers: “Argo,” directed by and starring Ben Affleck, centered around the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis; and “Shadow Dancer,” starring Clive Owen and set in the last days of the Irish political troubles. “I don’t remember ever having two thrillers in the festival,” said Laura Thielen, Aspen Film’s artistic director.

M. John Fayhee, Oct. 4, Explore Booksellers

WALKING WITH THE DEAD OCTOBER

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The beer-soaked editor of Mountain Gazette (and former short-term reporter for The Aspen Times) returns to town to show off two new books: “The Colorado Mountain Companion,” a well-researched potpourri specifically designed to settle barstool arguments (e.g., Aspen instituted the nation’s first smoking ban, in 1985, which applied only to restaurants; Fayhee fans probably regard this as the beginning of the end of impolite society); and “Smoke Signals,” a collection of his factually unreliable Mountain Gazette columns.

Bill Gruenberg: ‘Art is Easy,’ with an opening reception on Oct. 12, Wyly Community Art Center A solo exhibition of sculpture and paintings by Aspenite Bill Gruenberg.

Musical Tribute to John Denver, Oct. 12 and 13, Wheeler Opera House

UTE CEMETERY

For what is said to be the finale in the 15-year series, John Denver’s musical associates will gather to remember the late Aspen icon in song. Also added this year is Stories & Songs on Oct. 11, with Mack Bailey, Pete Huttlinger, Steve Weisberg, Bill Danoff and others adding personal stories to the mix.

‘Wood,’ Oct. 16 The two-CD set “Wood” documents

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Guitarist Steve Kimock, second from left, will lead his band to an October gig at PAC3 in Carbondale.

the first-ever fully acoustic tour, this past winter, by Georgia jam band Widespread Panic. You might remember that among the four cities the tour played in was Aspen, which caused a mad scramble for 350 tickets to the three Belly Up shows. “Wood” features four tracks from Aspen: “St. Louis,” “Time Waits,” “Tail Dragger” and “Sell Sell,” a tune by the Animals’ Alan Price, which Panic played for the first time in Aspen. Some other albums scheduled for release: Aimee Mann’s “Charmer,” Dwight Yoakam’s “3 Pears,” Ryan Bingham’s “Tomorrowland” and Rickie Lee Jones’ “The Devil You Know” (all on Sept. 18); Django Django’s “Django Django,” Green Day’s “Uno,” Preservation Hall Jazz Band’s “St. Peter & 57th” and Rumer’s “Boys Don’t Cry” (Sept. 25); Diana Krall’s “Glad Rag Doll” and Van Morrison’s “Born to Sing: No Plan B” (Oct. 2); Fitz & the Tantrums (title to be announced) and John Fogerty’s “Wrote a Song for Everyone” (Oct. 9); Donald Fagen, “Sunken Condos,” Trey Anastasio’s “Traveler” and Taylor Swift’s “Red” (Oct. 16); and Andrew Bird’s “Hands of Glory” and Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s “Psychedelic Pill” (Oct. 30).

‘Inaround,’ opening with a reception on Oct. 17, Aspen Chapel Gallery This group exhibition of contemporary work leans heavily toward artists who are new to the Aspen Chapel Gallery. Among the newbies is Katie Ammons, who contributes work and also curated the show.

STEVE KIMOCK, OCT. 17, PAC3, CARBONDALE Kimock might still be known best as the guitarist in some post-Grateful Dead projects, but that has hardly stopped him from pushing into other musical fields. Kimock’s current band promises to be funky, jazzy and exploratory. His mates are keyboardist Bernie Worrell, who has been a significant part of P-Funk and Talking Heads; bassist Andy Hess, formerly of Gov’t Mule; and drummer Wally Ingram, whose close association with Sheryl Crow shouldn’t obscure the fact that he’s also played with Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt, Warren Zevon and Bruce Hornsby. Other PAC3 dates to jot down: Boulder-based songwriter-actorcomedian-director Stuart Davis (Sept. 21); downbeat singer Leon Redbone (Oct. 10); a night of punk with Atlanta’s Bastard Suns, plus KnockOut and No Bueno (Oct. 12); The April Clark Show, featuring the ‘Bonedale journalist/comic (Oct. 13); and the return of Texas boogie-woogie piano queen Marcia Ball (Nov. 16).

‘Continental Drift,’ with an opening reception on Oct. 18, Aspen Art Museum (See on the cover) Colorado, as seen by its artists — but don’t expect any Maroon Bells landscapes. The Aspen Art Museum partners with MCA Denver to present works by seven Colorado-based artists (none from the Aspen area, alas; they all come from the Front Range)

PHOTO BY DAN SAVAGE


who explore a sense of place through Colorado’s history, character and landscape. The exhibition, curated by the Aspen Art Museum’s Jacob Proctor and Nora Burnett Abrams from the Denver side, features film, sculpture, installation and painting, with an emphasis on the experimental.

ABIGAIL WASHBURN, OCT. 22, STEVE’S GUITARS, CARBONDALE Banjoist-singer Abigail Washburn has sold out the Wheeler Opera House with her Sparrow Quartet and been featured on the main stage at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival and the Bonnaroo Festival and at the Beijing Olympics. Bringing her mix of American gospel, Chinese folk songs and bluegrass, and her exceptional voice, into tiny Steve’s Guitars could make for the event of the offseason. Other dates of note at Steve’s: the Saakumu Dance Troupe from Ghana settles in for a two-night stand, Sept. 27 and 28; Austin singer-songwriter Rebecca Loebe, a former contestant on “The Voice,” brings songs from her new album, “Circus Heart,” on Sept. 29; and guitarist-songwriter Kelly Joe Phelps, known for his mix of folk, jazz and acoustic blues, plays Oct. 3 on the heels of the release of his new album of spiritual songs and bottleneck guitar, “Brother Sinner and the Whale.”

of George and Ira Gerswhin: “I Got Rhythm,” “Embraceable You,” “Someone to Watch Over Me” and other contributions to the Great American Songbook. Helping to bring the Tony Award winner for best musical to life are a handful of ACT newcomers, including director and choreographer Jacqui Edelmann, a former professional dancer and a teacher at the Garden School in New Castle. Also new to the ACT stage are Lauren Koveleski, an Aspen Valley Hospital nurse who plays the spunky young Polly Baker, and Corey Simpson as the theater impresario Bela Zangler. ACT veteran John Goss, director of the Glenwood Vaudeville Revue, stars as the playboy Bobby Child, whose dream is to dance. Other familiar faces

include Nina Gabianelli, Bob Moore and Lynnette Schlepp.

‘Urinetown: The Musical,’ Nov. 9 through 11 and 16 through 18, Glenwood Springs High School The Glenwood Springs-based Defiance Community Players perform “Urinetown: The Musical,” the 2001 Tony winner that satirizes the legal system, capitalism, bureaucracy and the Broadway musical itself. The production is designed and directed by Tom Cochran, former head of CMC Theatre; music direction is by Brad Vierheller, who handles music for the Glenwood Vaudeville Revue; and choreographing is Jennetta Howell.

‘The Dust Bowl,’ Nov. 18 and 19

Ken Burns’ two-part, four-hour documentary, which had its secondever public screening in Aspen, at the Wheeler Opera House’s MountainSummit, gets a wide public screening on PBS. “The Dust Bowl” has familiar Ken Burns touches — a focus on the personal, magnificently researched — but this one also has a surprise element. If you think the title refers to simply an uncommonly dry, difficult stretch on the Great Plains, you’re overlooking the manmade nature of the disaster and the horrific dust storms that were almost daily events. People didn’t think of it as “catastrophic and apocalyptic. But that’s what it is,” Burns told The Aspen Times. “It’s like a chapter out of the Bible. Could you really have locusts and dust storms like that, that actually kill children?”

Walking With the Dead, Oct. 27, 28 and 31, Ute Cemetery A Halloween celebration centered around the genuine dead. Dean Weiler leads a walking, talking tour that is meant to educate more than spook. But the nearly abandoned Ute Cemetery is guaranteed to add a slight chill to the proceedings as Weiler tells the true tales of the Aspen pioneers buried there.

‘Crazy for You,’ Nov. 8 through 11 and 15 through 18, Aspen District Theatre Aspen Community Theatre does its annual feat of significantly raising the bar on the concept of community theater. In its 37th year, ACT takes on Gershwin — or, more specifically, “Crazy for You,” the 1992 musical comedy built around the songs

Singer-banjoist Abigail Washburn will play in October at Steve’s Guitars in Carbondale.

PHOTO BY STEWART OKSENHORN

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AROUNDASPEN

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

RITA BLITT HONORED ARTIST AND SCULPTOR Rita Blitt was honored at the 2012 Artist Tribute and benefit dinner given at the end of July by the Red Brick Center for the Arts. Hosts for the evening were Bunni and Paul Copaken, Sistie Fischer, Karen and Marc Friedberg, Melva Bucksbaum MARY and Raymond Learsy, ESHBAUGH HAYES Joanne and Lee Lyon, Kathryn and Richard Robinow, Norma and Don Stone and Betty Weiss. The tribute is awarded each year to an individual in the Roaring Fork Valley who promotes art to an exciting level of excellence. Greatly influenced by dance and music, Rita’s drawings, paintings and sculptures echo these arts. Her work is included in museums and collections throughout the world, and one of her sculptures is on the grounds of the Aspen Institute and the Aspen Music Tent. Undercurrent ... So many changes. Now Lennie (Boogie) Weinglass has his Merry-Go-Round Ranch for sale. For years the Boogie’s Bash for the Buddies was held at the ranch.

RITA Jackie Anderson on the left with Jill Sabella.

RITA Chela Blitt, left, is Rita’s daughter, and Darianna Blitt is her granddaughter.

RITA Michael Miracle is editor of Aspen Sojourner, and Debra Muzikar is director of the Red Brick Center for the Arts.

RITA From left are Irwin Blitt, Rita’s husband, and June and Hovik Abramian.

RITA

From left are Pat and Mike Otte and Lynda MacCarthy.

RITA

Artist Rita Blitt, left, receives a congratulary hug from Ginni Galicinao.

RITA

From left are Ray Cheney, Megan and Austin Sirkin and Lee Mulachy.

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


by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES

RITA Elilia Anthony and Andrew Todd.

RITA From left at the Red Brick Center for the Arts are Eric Chase, Dorianna Blitt (Rita’s granddaughter), Rita Blitt, Shannon Chase and Betty Gates.

RITA From left are Toney Thomas, Gabriella Greene and Alicia Sirkin.

RITA From left are Sandy Johnson, Dorianna Blitt and Donna and Tom Ward.

RITA

From left are Lee Lyon, Sistie Fischer, Doug Allen and Kay Bucksbaum.

RITA From left are Sara Beckerman, Joan Lebach, Dorothy Lebach and Laurie and Jonathan Ewys.

RITA RITA

From left are Merry, Ed and Laura Prostic.

Justin Banks and Caitlin Vance.

RITA

RITA

Julie and Doug Britt in front of one of Rita’s sculptures.

From left are Anne Foster, Margaret Lundquist, Jean Marie Hamel and Margie McNamara.

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CURRENTEVENTS

SEPTEMBER 20 - 26, 2012

Boo Coo 7 p.m. - 11 p.m., St. Regis ResortAspen, Shadow Mountain Lounge. Live local music on Friday and Saturday nights, featuring local duo Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Call 970-920-3300. Damian Smith and Terry Bannon 9 p.m., The Brick Pony, 202 Midland Ave., Basalt. Live music on Saturdays. Call 970-279-5021. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 Matthew Moon and The Deadly Bells featuring Jai Vatuk 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S Galena St, Aspen. No cover charge for this show, featuring Aspen resident Matthew Moon. The Denver Post on Moon: “Tight songwriting and lush delivery prompt Colorado rock fans to tout this performer as the state’s next breakout.” Call 970-544-9800. NorthYSur 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., Basalt Farmer’s Market. Blending sounds of North and South American jazz and bossa nova. Call 970-2227752. Tom Ressel 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., Peach’s Cafe, 121 S. Galena St., Aspen. Acoustic music on the patio. Call 970-544-9866. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 An Evening with Craig Childs 7:30 p.m. - 10 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. KDNK and the Colorado River District present “Watercourse: Conversations With a Moving Element,” an evening with literary adventurer and nature writer Craig Childs. $15 admission at the door. Childs will share his experience of the planet’s rivers, taking the audience on a journey around the world and back to Colorado in a multi-media presentation. There will be an introduction by author and Colorado Supreme Court Justice Greg Hobbs. This is a Water 2012 Book Club event and benefit for KDNK Community Radio. Call 303-929-6524. Local Author Reading 6 p.m., Pitkin County Library, Aspen. Local author Steve Nemerovski will read from his novel, “E-Party” and discuss the real and provocative question: Why doesn’t the United States have an effective and competitive political third party? What would it take to get one off the ground? Book signing follows. Call 970-429-1900. 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.

HEAR New Orleans bounce singer Big Freedia will play Sept. 20 at Belly Up.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Trivia Night 7 p.m. - 10:05 p.m., Carbondale Beer Works, 647 Main St., Carbondale. This month, CBW’s Trivia Night benefits the Aspen Hope Center, a referral center designed to meet the Roaring Fork Valley’s needs for quick and easy access to mental-health services. Bring your team or join one as a free agent to show off your command of useless details, win big prizes and support valley nonprofits in their good works. $5 per person donation to play. Call 970-544-1377. Big Freedia 9:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St, Aspen. Big Freedia (pronounced “Free-da”) is the undisputed “queen diva” of bounce music and performs six or more times a week in various venues throughout her hometown of New Orleans. Call 970-544-9800. Jeffrey Foucault 8:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m., Steve’s Guitars, 19 N. Fourth St., Carbondale. Americana singer-songwriter-guitarist is touring from Cambridge, Mass., and singing original folk, country, blues and rock songs from his latest album, “Horse Latitudes.” Call 970-963-3304. Karaoke 10 p.m., The Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Live karaoke with Hugh. Call 970925-9955. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Boo Coo 7 p.m. - 11 p.m., St. Regis ResortAspen, Shadow Mountain Lounge. Live local music on Friday and Saturday nights, featuring local duo Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Call 970-920-3300.

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Borgore 10 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. “My music sounds like commercial American hip-hop and death metal being played through various farm animals,” Borgore said in an interview with Spinner.com. Call 970-544-9800. Haden Gregg and Tom Hills 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., The Riverside Grill, Basalt. Acoustic favorites. Call 970-927-9301. Live Music Fridays 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., Riverside Grill. Live music by popular local bands. Latenight happy-hour specials also available. Call 970-927-9301. New Orleans Funk Stooges Brass Band 7:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. The Stooges Brass Band has been one of the elite brass bands in New Orleans, engaging audiences with its innovative blend of traditional New Orleans brass sounds and contemporary hip-hop beats. In April 2011, the band was awarded the title of best contemporary brass band at the Big Easy Music Awards. Call 970544-9800. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 Laugh in Lions 4 p.m. - 8 p.m., Lions Park, downtown Basalt. Local comedians will start off the night with side-splitting content. This comedy show is not just for spectating — attendees will be asked to participate by voting for their favorite comedian. Local restaurants will have food available, and the Basalt Chamber will host the beer tent. Poser will close out the night. Growing Years will provide child care. Admission is free. Call 970927-4031.

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 Ben Taylor with Amy Lennard and Wes Kirkpatrick 9 p.m. - 11 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. “Listening,” Taylor’s first album in four years, fuses the sounds and styles of folk, pop, soul, urban, reggae and country. Call 970-544-9800. 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.

THE ARTS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Sign-up: Demystifying Encaustic — Collage & Paint 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Registration in progress for course led by K. Cesark for adults (all skill levels), to be offered Nov. 3 and 4 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Registration is required. Tuition is $170 plus $30 studio fee; members receive 10 percent off. For more information and to register, visit www.wylyarts.org. Call 970-927-4123. Adult intermediate ballet class 9 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., Aspen Santa Fe Ballet, basement of Colorado Mountain College, 0245 Sage Way, Aspen. $16 per class for drop-ins. A punch card good for 10 classes is $140. Call 970-925-7175. West African Drum and Dance Workshop 6 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Carbondale Community School, 1505 Satank Road. Join Fara Tolno, of Guinea, to learn traditional rhythms and dances. Drum from 6 to 7 p.m., dance from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Fee is $15 per class. All ages and abilities are welcome. Call Angela at 970-404-0305.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 Sign-up: Boys Art Club II, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Led by Nicole Nagel-Gogolak, for ages 6 to 11, on Tuesdays, Oct. 16 through Nov. 20, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. (drop-off and open studio from 3:30 to 4 p.m.). Free preview on Oct. 16. Registration is required. Tuition is $110 plus $25 studio fee, members receive 10 percent off. Visit www. wylyarts.org for more information or to register. Call 970-927-4123. Sign-up: Girls Art Club II, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Led by Nicole Nagel-Gogolak, for ages 6 to 11, on Wednesdays, Oct. 17 through Nov. 21 from 4 to 5:30 p.m. (drop-off and open studio frokm 3:30 to 4 p.m.). Free preview on Oct. 17. Registration is required. Focusing on learning basic drawing, painting and sculpture, participants will learn concepts of space, line, proportion, and scale. Tuition is $110 and $25 studio fee, members receive 10 percent off. Visit www.wylyarts.org for more information and to register. Call 970-927-4123. Sign-up: Pre-School Art Romp 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Registration in progress for Pre-School Art Romp: Imagination Station, Choo Choo with Langford Barksdale, for ages 3 to 5 (parents must be present with 3- and 4-year-olds). Class is on Tuesdays, Oct. 16 through Nov. 20, from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Free preview on Oct. 16. Registration is required. Participants will develop their imaginations as they create paper cutouts, collage them together and create masks of train faces. For more information and to register, visit www.wylyarts.org. Call 970-927-4123. Beginning/intermediate ballet 10 a.m. - 11:30 a.m., Third Street Center, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Beginning to intermediate ballet class taught by faculty of Aspen Santa Fe Ballet. Call 970-925-7175. Sign-up: Printmaking: Stencil Silkscreen 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Registration in progress for Printmaking: Stencil Silkscreen with Jennifer Ghormley for high schoolers and adults (all skill levels) on Saturday, Oct. 3 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Registration is required. Tuition is $75 plus $30 studio fee; members receive 10 percent off. Call 970-927-4123. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 Sign-up: Pre-School Art Romp 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Registration in progress for Pre-School Art Romp: Imagination Station, Choo Choo with Langford Barksdale, for ages 3 to 5 (parents must be present with 3- and 4-year-olds). Class is on Tuesdays, Oct. 16 through Nov. 20, from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Free preview on Oct. 16. Registration is required. Participants will develop their imaginations as they create paper cutouts, collage them together and create masks of train faces. For more information and to register, visit www.wylyarts.org. Call 970-927-4123.

YOGA & EXERCISE THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Vinyasa flow yoga class 6:15 p.m. - 7:15 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Certified yoga instruction in Vinyasa flow with a synthesis of postures (asanas) designed to increase range and build core strength. Accentuate and balance fitness goals with this class. Call 970-379-8108. Cruiser Ride Around Town 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Limelight Hotel, Aspen. Free, guided bike rides around Aspen feature a different theme each week. This ride features guide Ashley Cantrell from the city of Aspen leading an eco-tour through town to highlight all the things Aspen is doing to be green. Sign up in advance with the hotel’s front desk. The Limelight has several cruiser bikes to borrow upon request, or ride your own bike. Call 970-925-3025. Tai chi/qigong 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., Aspen Historical Society, 620 W. Bleeker St., outside in the garden. Gentle flowing movements to energize, relax, refocus and restore. All levels are welcome. Call 970-925-1130. Seniors Yoga Series 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m., Aspen Health and Harmony, El Jebel. In this series, explore different aspects of the body and mind through seated postures in a chair, balance postures using the chair, and kneeling and prone postures. Students must be comfortable going from a standing position to

PHOTO BY PHIL WILLIAMS


edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

a kneeling position to lying on the back on their own. Experience improved balance, flexibility, strength and gain a sense of mental clarity and spiritual peace. The class is open to all experiencing physical limitations, who wish to begin yoga in a gentle and safe way. Call 970704-9642. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 West End walking tour 10:30 a.m. - noon, Wheeler/Stallard Museum, 620 W. Bleeker St., Aspen. A stroll through Aspen’s Victorian West End with a focus on history and architecture; learn little-known facts about the homes themselves and the people who lived in them. Fee is $15 per adult and $12 per senior; children 12 and younger free. Offered Tuesday through Saturday until Oct. 6. Presented by the Aspen Historical Society. Call 970-925-3721.

Fall Colors Celebration 5 p.m. - 8 p.m., Catto Center at Toklat, 11247 Castle Creek Road, Aspen. Celebration in honor of Tom and Jody Cardamone for their more than 40 years of unwavering commitment to the environment and community. Members’ potluck around the campfire; bring a dish and your favorite Tom and Jody story to share. A traditional Mace family main dish will be provided as well as beer and wine. This event is limited to ACES members, though everyone is encouraged to become a new member and attend. Call 970925-5756.

www.luckydayrescue.org

DICK CARTER’S

Yoga for Lunch 12:30 p.m. - 1:30 p.m., Aspen Health & Harmony, El Jebel. Community yoga class. Call 970-704-9642.

Vinyasa flow yoga class 9 a.m. - 10:15 a.m., Coredination 520 S.Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. Featuring a synthesis of dynamic postures (asanas) designed to increase range and build core strength. Accentuate and balance your fitness goals. Call 970-379-8108. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 Gong Bath 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Yellow Brick School gym, Aspen. The gong, which has all the sounds of the universe, will bathe participants with vibrations that heal, relax, and rejuvenate the body, mind and soul. All are welcome. There will be a short Kundilini yoga set prior to the gong. Bring mat, blanket and pillow. Suggested donation is $25. Enter school through side entrance. Call 970-963-2496. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 Aikido 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Colorado Mountain College, Aspen campus. Aikido is an effective self-defense as well as a fun and dynamic work out. Class offered Mondays and Wednesdays. Beginners welcome. Try the first class for free. Call 970-379-4676. Beginning pole dance 6 p.m. - 7 p.m., Honey’s Pole Fitness, Basalt. Beginning-level poledance workout. Learn basic lifts, spins, dance, floor work and safety. No experience necessary. At 7 p.m., it’s Pole Dance Workout, focusing on the strength and flexibility needed to pole dance. Call 970-274-1564. Tai chi/qigong 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., Aspen Historical Society, 620 W. Bleeker St., outside in the garden. Gentle flowing movements to energize, relax, refocus and restore. All levels are welcome. Call 970-925-1130.

THE COMMUNITY THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Celebrate Harvest with CCAH 5:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Calaway Room, Third Street Center, Carbondale. CCAH hosts its annual membership meeting, a fall equinox celebration and a Pecha Kucha kickoff. For more information, connect to www.carbondalearts.com, email mountainfair@ sopris.net or call 970-963-1680. Colorado Work Force 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., Basalt Regional Library. Get information and assistance from Colorado Work Force. Call 970-927-4311.

PHOTO COURTESY ANDERSON RANCH ARTS CENTER

Gus is up for adoption! This 2 year old Boxer is not only handsome, but full of energy and love. He needs a very active forever home that is willing to exercise him daily. He is super sweet and enjoys the company of most dogs. He has great manners in the house and walks well on the leash. Gus gets along great with kids and would love to be part of an active family. He has stunning amber eyes and that typical boxer personality...a little goofy and sweet-n-snuggly. Gus is up to date on his shots, neutered and microchipped. If you are interested in this fella, please fill out an application at www.luckydayrescue.org then call Stephanie at 303-478-0662. LUCKY DAY ANIMAL RESCUE OF COLORADO

Bike tour 10:30 a.m. - 12 p.m., Wheeler/Stallard Museum, 620 W. Bleeker St., Aspen. Enjoy a pleasant tour by bicycle that begins in Aspen’s Victorian West End, loops through the grounds of the Aspen Institute, and winds through town to the original Lift One. $15 per adult, $12 per senior and free for children 12 and younger. Offered by the Aspen Historical Society. Call 970-925-3721.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 Gong Bath 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Callaway Room, Third Street Center, Carbondale. The gong, which has all the sounds of the universe, will bathe participants with vibrations that heal, relax and rejuvenate the body, mind and soul. All are welcome; there will be a short Kundilini yoga set prior to the gong. Bring yoga mat, blanket and pillow. Suggested donation is $25. Call 970-963-2496.

G DO WEEK

Gus

THE

LOOK “Mandala Series: Raven, 2012,” engraving, gold leaf and India ink, by Joanna Mueller, is part of an Anderson Ranch Arts Center group exhibition featuring work by Anderson Ranch staff members. Plant-Based Diet Class 4:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., Health and Human Services Building, Room 3, Aspen. A seven-week class offered by Aspen Valley Hospital, “Leaning Toward a Plant-Based Diet” will help participants transition to what is recognized by the medical community as one healthy way to lose weight and prevent and treat diabetes, hypertension and heart disease. Taught by Sandy Holmes, class content includes: benefits of a plant-based diet, how to transition, tools and support, recipes, getting needed nutrients, and dining out and eating socially on a plant-based diet. Tuition is $100 for the seven-week class. Space is limited; preregister by contacting Holmes at 970-544-1145 or sholmes@aspenhospital.org. 60+ Day 9 a.m. - 3:30 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. Woody Creek Community Center and Pitkin County Senior Services present 60+ Day — a day of health and wellness, food and entertainment. Visit http://woodyc3. org/events for full health-and-wellness schedule. Call 970-922-2342. Morning Birding at ACES 6:30 a.m. - 9 a.m., Hallam Lake, 100 Puppy Smith St., Aspen. Join ACES naturalist Rebecca Weiss to discover the diverse bird fauna of Aspen. Birders of all levels are welcome as this series is designed to enhance birding knowledge, skills and fun whether you are beginning birder or an expert. Bring your own binoculars and guide book or borrow the ones at ACES. Call to register. $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers. Call 970-925-5756.

EPIC studio art sale

Saturday – Sunday September 29 – 30 10 am – 3 pm Willits Town Center, 850 East Valley Road across from Whole Foods for info 310 . 344 . 4750 rices re ect the need to clear the st dio

er e ta e o sales e e ts

Affordable Housing Roundtable 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., BB’s Kitchen, Aspen. The city has asked Aspen Democracy Initiative to host a roundtable discussion so that it can better understand the concerns and needs of the 20- to 40-year-old demographic regarding the worker housing program in Aspen. The feedback will be an integral consideration at the city’s Affordable Housing Summit. Call 970-309-3644. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Introductory course: Flower Remedies 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m., A Spiritual Center, Third Street Center, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Offered Sept. 21 and 22. Join Alicia Sirkin for a two-day, in-depth course on the Bach Flower Remedies. Learn how to effectively restore positive states of mind in everyday life situations to help yourself and others, including pets. Co-sponsored by Davi Nikent of the Center for Human Flourishing. Call 305-323-1187.

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LOCAL

MARKETPLACE

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Ford Mustang Coupe 1968

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Honda CRV EX 2008

Jaguar Convertible XJS 1989

Jeep Grand Cherokee 2007

Jeep Grand Wagoneer 1987

Jeep Rubicon 2005

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Jeep Wrangler 2005

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PHAETON MOTORHOME 2010

Polaris Trail Indy Deluxe 500 1989

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34

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Porsche 944 1985

Toyota Highlander 2001

Toyota Land Cruiser 2001

Triumph 1976

TRIUMPH TR6 - 1975

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Turbo Diesel Skid Loader

VW JETTA TDI - 2009

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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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Professional, well rounded, energetic, high performing individual who has demonstrated skills in sourcing and cooking fresh, organic healthy meals and doesnтАЩt mind light housekeeping duties. The position requires cooking daily (5 days per week) along with cleaning and shopping for meals. Managing home deliveries and occasional errands are involved as well. A background in diet and nutrition desirable. This situation relies heavily on discretion, relationship integrity and consistent performance. The Executive client lives in the Aspen area on a seasonal basis; though for the right candidate, this position could be full time. Resume and salary history to 8389904@MtnJob.com

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ASPEN

ASPEN

ASPEN

Commercial Condos for Sale

Elegant Brush Creek Retreat

Aspen Starter Home! #FTU EPXOUPXO MPDBUJPO IJHIFTU RVBMJUZ -PXFTU QSJDF $POUFNQPSBSZ SFNPEFMFE TUVEJP CBUI XJUI CJH "TQFO .PVOUBJO WJFXT FYUSB TUPSBHF JO UPXO QBSLJOH

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NJMFT GSPN $P[Z 1PJOU 3BODI TRVBSF GFFU 0O TFDMVEFE BDSFT &YQBOTJWF WJFXT GSPN 8PPEZ $SFFL UP *OEFQFOEFODF 1BTT

$349,000 Call Tim Estin 970-309-6163 State of the Aspen Market www.EstinAspen.com Coldwell Banker Mason Morse

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

970-710-1573 WildOaksAspen.com Buyer Broker Protected

ASPEN

BASALT

BASALT

Top Floor Downtown Condo -BSHF UPQ GMPPS POF CFESPPN DPOEP 0OMZ CMPDLT UP UIF (POEPMB 1MFOUZ PG OBUV SBM MJHIU 1SJWBUF EFDL GBDJOH OPSUI XJUI WJFXT UP 4NVHHMFS 3FE .PVOUBJO 8PPE CVSOJOH GJSFQMBDF HSBOJUF DPVOUFST BOE IBSEXPPE GMPPST UISPVHIPVU $649,500 TOM CARR 970-379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN

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

COMMERCIAL - GYPSUM

COMMERCIAL - VAIL

Commercial Development

3BSF 0QQPSUVOJUZ UP #VZ PS -FBTF BMM PS QBSU PG TR GU PG SFUBJM PGGJDF SFTJEFOUJBM TQBDF JO QSJNF MPDBUJPO BU UIF (BUFXBZ UP -JPOTIFBE BOE OFX CVT TUPQ EJSFDUMZ BDSPTT GSPN 1BSLJOH 4USVDUVSF 4IPSU XBML UP (POEPMB

&YDFMMFOU EFWFMPQNFOU PQQPSUVOJUZ GSPOUJOH )JHIXBZ OFBS $PTUDP JO "JSQPSU (BUFXBZ $FOUFS BDSFT PG GMBU IJHIMZ WJTJCMF MBOE

$1,399,000

Please call Chad Brasington, Prudential Colorado Properties DIBE!WBJM OFU

ASPEN

ASPEN

$7,900,000 or $59/SF+$9 CAM Peter Papangelis Coldwell Banker Distinctive Properties 970-376-3784 PeterP@Vail.net

$2,790,000

LOWEST PRICE IN BASALT &NQMPZFF )PVTJOH /0 -055&3: CE 8 % SBEJBOU GMPPS IFBU FOE VOJU MJHIU BOE BJSZ "UUBDIFE TUPSBHF VOJU QFU BMMPXFE -PX )0" EVFT BOE VUJMJUMFT (SFBU %FBM FNBJM GPS )PVTJOH &MJHJCJMJUZ QBDLBHF LBUISZOQFOO!BPM DPN

$148,000

970 379-5904 FSBO

-08&45 13*$& */ #"4"-5 &NQMPZFF )PVTJOH /0 -055&3: CE 8 % SBEJBOU GMPPS IFBU FOE VOJU MJHIU BOE BJSZ "U UBDIFE TUPSBHF VOJU QFU BMMPXFE -PX )0" EVFT BOE VUJMJUMFT (SFBU %FBM FNBJM GPS )PVTJOH &MJHJCJMJUZ QBDLBHF LBUISZO QFOO!BPM DPN $148,000 970 379-5904 FSBO

$2,595,000. Brokers protected. 970-925-6840 or 970-948-2186.

AABC 3 Bedroom Condo 5PQ GMPPS CFESPPN DPSOFS VOJU $POWF OJFOU MPDBUJPO OFBS EPXOUPXO "TQFO MFTT UIBO NJMFT BOE MPDBM TLJ BSFBT SFNPEFM JODMVEJOH OFX QBJOU BEEFE XJOEPXT 1FSHP GMPPSJOH OFX DBCJOFUT BOE DPVOUFST TUBJOMFTT TUFFM BQQMJBODFT BOE NPSF "TTJHOFE QBSLJOH $485,000 TOM CARR 970-379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN

ASPEN

ASPEN - OPEN HOUSE

LOCATION-LOCATION-LOCATION %VSBOU % #3 5PQ FOE CMEH 2VJFU "TQFO GPSFTU WJFX PVU CFESPPN XJOEPX Y GU MJWJOH SPPN Y GU XJOEPXT 1BOPSBNJD WJFX "TQFO WBMMFZ 3FE .U 'PVS GPPU IJHI CBS 4XJWFM IJHI DIBJST 8PPE CVSOJOH 'QMBDF &MFWBUFE IFBSUI GU DFJMJOHT NJSSPSFE XBMMT 5JGGBOZhT &O USBODF XBZ ##2 8BUDIJOH GJSFXPSLT 5SBJM MFBEJOH UP (POEPMB 4LJ JO TLJ PVU $MPTF UP UPXO &OPVHI BXBZ GPS QSJWBDZ %FTJHOFE CZ CBDIFMPS %FOWFS EFWFMPQFS %FDPSBUFE GVSOJTIFE *OUFSPS EFTJHOFS 5BYFT ZS -PX EVFT Brent Waldron. Chaffin Light RE. 379-7309

Saturday 2 to 4. 430 West Main Street .JYFE VTF [POFE 7JDUPSJBO DPNQMFUFMZ SFTUPSFE JO 5PUBM PG TR GU PO B TR GU MPU .VMUJQMF EFWFMPQNFOU PQQPSUVOJUJFT JODMVEJOH IJTUPSJD MPU TQMJU BOE 5%3hT )JHI WJTJCJMJUZ $3,250,000 Ruth Kruger 970-404-4000 / 970-920-4001 Kruger & Company XXX ,SVHFSBOE$PNQBOZ DPN

CARBONDALE

Commercial ASPEN - OPEN HOUSE

Beautiful Mid-Valley Home -PDBUFE JO UIF IFBSU PG UIF 3PBSJOH 'PSL 7BMMFZ UIJT TQBDJPVT TUPSZ CFESPPN IPNF TR GU JT POF PG UIF CFTU QSJDFE IPNFT JO UIF NJE WBMMFZ "EEJUJPOBM PGGJDF TQBDF )JHI DFJMJOHT /JDF GJOJTIFT #VJMU JO DBS HBSBHF $388,000* *Subject to short-sale lender approval TOM CARR 970 379-9935 Leverich & Carr Real Estate XXX BTQFOSFJOGP DPN

Saturday 2 to 4. 430 West Main Street .JYFE VTF [POFE 7JDUPSJBO DPNQMFUFMZ SFTUPSFE JO 5PUBM PG TR GU PO B TR GU MPU .VMUJQMF EFWFMPQNFOU PQQPSUVOJUJFT JODMVEJOH IJTUPSJD MPU TQMJU BOE 5%3hT )JHI WJTJCJMJUZ $3,250,000 Ruth Kruger 970-404-4000 / 970-920-4001 Kruger & Company XXX ,SVHFSBOE$PNQBOZ DPN

SOUTHERN COLORADO

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

1270 Snowbunny Lane -PWFMZ SFNPE IBMG EVQMFY PO PQFO TQBDF XJUI HPSHFPVT WJFXT 1SJWBUF RVJFU TQF DJBM TQPU .PWF JO OP EFGFSSFE NBJOU CFE CBUI BQQSPY GU

Near Colorado City On I-25 35 Acres - $35,000. Electricity and road Camp, hunt, fish, retire Financing - $263.60 mo. 719-210-9339 mdinvestors@aol.com

925-9937 www.aspentimes.com/placead

It’s a great time to buy! Call a REALTORÂŽ today to buy your next investment (or your ďŹ rst home!) If you are looking to buy or sell a home and don’t already have a REALTORÂŽ contact one of our advertisers today. A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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38

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

Рюд

S e p t e m b e r 2 0 - 26 , 2 0 1 2

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h IFJST BOE BTTJHOT UIFSFJO GPS UIF QVSQPTF PG QBZJOH UIF JOEFCUFEOFTT QSPWJEFE JO TBJE &WJEFODF PG %FCU TFDVSFE CZ UIF %FFE PG 5SVTU QMVT BUUPSOFZTh GFFT UIF FYQFOTFT PG TBMF BOE PUIFS JUFNT BMMPXFE CZ MBX BOE XJMM JTTVF UP UIF QVSDIBTFS B $FSUJGJDBUF PG 1VSDIBTF BMM BT QSP WJEFE CZ MBX 'JSTU 1VCMJDBUJPO -BTU 1VCMJDBUJPO /BNF PG 1VCMJDBUJPO 5IF "TQFO 5JNFT 8FFLMZ %"5& 5IPNBT $BSM 0LFO 1VCMJD 5SVTUFF JO BOE GPS UIF $PVOUZ PG 1JULJO 4UBUF PG $PMPSBEP #Z 5JGGBOZ 8BODVSB $IJFG %FQVUZ 1VCMJD 5SVTUFF 5IF OBNF BEESFTT CVTJOFTT UFMFQIPOF OVNCFS BOE CBS SFHJTUSBUJPO OVNCFS PG UIF BUUPSOFZ T SFQ SFTFOUJOH UIF MFHBM IPMEFS PG UIF JOEFCUFEOFTT JT 50/* . / %"-& )0--: - %&$,&3 %BMF %FDLFS --$ "5503/&:4 "5 -"8 */7&3/&44 %3*7& &"45 46*5& "UUPSOFZ 'JMF 5IF "UUPSOFZ BCPWF JT BDUJOH BT B EFCU DPMMFDUPS BOE JT BUUFNQUJOH UP DPMMFDU B EFCU "OZ JOGPSNBUJPO QSPWJEFE NBZ CF VTFE GPS UIBU QVSQPTF 1VCMJTIFE JO "TQFO 5JNFT 8FFLMZ PO 4FQUFNCFS 0DUPCFS < > 16#-*$ /05*$& $0.#*/&% /05*$& 16#-*$"5*0/ $34 f '03&$-0463& 4"-& /0 5P 8IPN *U .BZ $PODFSO 5IJT /PUJDF JT HJWFO XJUI SFHBSE UP UIF GPMMPXJOH EFTDSJCFE %FFE PG 5SVTU 0O +VOF UIF VOEFSTJHOFE 1VCMJD 5SVTUFF DBVTFE UIF /PUJDF PG &MFDUJPO BOE %FNBOE SFMBUJOH UP UIF %FFE PG 5SVTU EFTDSJCFE CFMPX UP CF SFDPSE FE JO UIF $PVOUZ PG 1JULJO SFDPSET 0SJHJOBM (SBOUPS T %&"/ , .0''"55 0SJHJOBM #FOFGJDJBSZ JFT

#"/, 0' .*%8&45 / " $VSSFOU )PMEFS PG &WJEFODF PG %FCU "3.&% '03$&4 #"/, / " %BUF PG %FFE PG 5SVTU $PVOUZ PG 3FDPSEJOH 1JULJO 3FDPSEJOH %BUF PG %FFE PG 5SVTU 3FDPSEJOH *OGPSNBUJPO 3FDFQUJPO /VNCFS BOE PS #PPL 1BHF /VNCFS 0SJHJOBM 1SJODJQBM "NPVOU 0VUTUBOEJOH 1SJODJQBM #BMBODF Year 2011 Tax $126.84 Interest $6.34 Other $10.00 Total Due: $143.18 M000717 STONG HEATHER ANN C/O MONTE D SCHROPP 5145 W 11TH ST APT 811 GREELEY, CO 80634 Subdivision: PHILLIPS MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E189987 SERIAL: 0159402G YEAR: 1973 MAKE: SKYLINE SIZE: 12X60 30 PHILLIPS HILLSIDE Year 2011 Tax $167.48 Interest $8.37 Other $10.00 Total Due: $185.85

M000577 KOOPSEN REYER WRIGHT LEIANNE F PO BOX 534 ASPEN, CO 81612 Subdivision: PHILLIPS MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E221343 SERIAL: XGA226734 YEAR: 1972 MAKE: KIRKWOOD C SIZE: 65 X 12 22 PHILLIPS HILLSIDE Year 2011 Tax $113.84 Interest $5.69 Other $10.00 Total Due: $129.53

M000751 SHELTON MARY E 40 LAZY GLEN SNOWMASS, CO 81654 Subdivision: LAZY GLEN Lot: 40, MBL HOME TITLE: 57E147201 SERIAL: NEB49A22529 MAKE: BEL SIZE: 70 X 14 40 LAZY GLEN Year 2011 Tax $215.12 Interest $10.76 Other $10.00 Total Due: $235.88

M000631 GUILLEN ROGER & ANA C/O FLORES A & HENRIQUEZ C 101 EMMA RD #27 BASALT, CO 81621 Subdivision: ROARING FORK MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E151322 SERIAL: C1350 YEAR: 1966 MAKE: CENTRAL D SIZE: 61 X 12 101 EMMA RD #27 Year 2011 Tax $58.60 Interest $2.93 Other $10.00 Total Due: $71.53 M000643 TORRES EUFRACIA FLORES ANA MARIA PANIQUA PO BOX 82 BASALT, CO 81621 Subdivision: ROARING FORK MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E126173 SERIAL: 1437 A & B YEAR: 1975 MAKE: CREST B SIZE: 56 X 24 101 EMMA RD #22 Year 2011 Tax $122.72 Interest $6.14 Other $10.00 Total Due: $138.86 M000680 CARCAMO DELISE MARILI PO BOX 2426 BASALT, CO 81621 Subdivision: ROARING FORK MOBILE HOME PK MBL HOME TITLE: 57E155272 SERIAL: K20401 YEAR: 1983 MAKE: MARLETTE B SIZE: 67 X 13 1/2 101 EMMA RD #3

5"9 *% /6.#&3 3 -"/% 4*56"5&% */ 5)& $06/5: 0' 1*5,*/ */ 5)& 45"5& 0' $0 " 53"$5 0' -"/% 4*56"5&% */ 5)& 4065)&"45 › /035)&"45 › 0' 4&$5*0/ 508/4)*1 4065) 3"/(& 8&45 0' 5)& 5) 1 . -:*/( 8&45&3-: 0' " '005 30"%8": "/% /035)&3-: 0' " '005 30"%8": %&4$3*#&% "4 '0--084 #&(*/ /*/( "5 " 10*/5 8)&/$& 5)& &"45 › $03 /&3 0' 4"*% 4&$5*0/ #&"34 4065) h &"45 '&&5 5)&/$& 4065) h &"45 '&&5 50 " 10*/5 0'' 5)& 8&45&3-: -*/& 0' 4"*% 30"%8": 5)&/$& 4065) h 8&45 '&&5 "-0/( 5)& 8&45&3-: -*/& 0' 4"*% 30"% 8": 5)&/$& /035) h 8&45 '&&5 "-0/( 5)& /035)&3-: -*/& 0' 4"*% 30"%8": 5)&/$& /035) h &"45 '&&5 50 5)& 10*/5 0' #&(*//*/( 40.&5*.&4 ,/08/ "4 53"$5 48*44 7*--"(& 53"$54

M000799 IRVINE DIANE ROSE 5 PHILLIPS RIVERVIEW SNOWMASS, CO 81654 Subdivision: PHILLIPS MOBILE HOME PK SERIAL: 0522933824656 YEAR: 1992 MAKE: CHAMPION/RODEO SIZE: 14 X 70 5 PHILLIPS RIVERVIEW Year 2011 Tax $338.24 Interest $16.91 Other $10.00 Total Due: $365.15 If the amount of such delinquent taxes, penalty, interest, and advertising costs are not paid by the last day of September 2012, the mobile homes upon which said taxes were levied hall be subject to distraint, seizure and sale.

Tiffany Wancura Deputy Pitkin County Treasurer Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on September 20, 2012

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

39


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Classi№гЂed Advertisers If so, please register a complaint with the National DO NOT CALL Registry immediately! It only takes a few minutes to do as long as your number is registered on the Do Not Call List. 1. Write down the # and the time you got the call (these are usually recorded calls). 2. Go to complaints.donotcall.gov or www.donotcall.gov. 3. Follow the steps on the web form. If you arenРђЎt sure if your phone number is registered you can №гЂnd out on this same site. As long as your phone number has been registered for at least a month you can №гЂle a complaint.

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Are you being solicited from an annoying Рђюtoll freeРђЮ business that wants YOU to place your ad with THEM?


Pitkin County Treasurer Delinquent 2011 Personal Property Taxes P000017 SPECIALTY FOODS OF ASPEN 601 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 601 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN 601 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $185.48 Interest $9.27 Other $37.82 Total Due: $232.57 P000021 FRAMES & FINDS C/O JENNIFER FLEETWOOD PO BOX 385 CARBONDALE, CO 81623 465 N MILL ST #14 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 465 N MILL ST #14 Year 2011 Tax $97.16 Interest $4.86 Other $24.58 Total Due: $126.60 P000131 SARGENT ELIZABETH PO BOX 25635 MIAMI, FL 33102 CHATEAU DU MONT UNIT 21 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 715 E DURANT AVE #21 Year 2011 Tax $53.16 Interest $2.66 Other $17.98 Total Due: $73.80 P000158 ISBERIAN RUG COMPANY INC STEPHEN ISBERIAN 516 E HYMAN ASPEN, CO 81611 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY: 520 E HYMAN 520 E HYMAN AVE Year 2011 Tax $90.84 Interest $4.54 Other $23.62 Total Due: $119.00 P000415 MOUNTAIN HOUSE PARTNERS LLC PO BOX 7457 BRECKENRIDGE, CO 80424 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 905 E HOPKINS AVE 905 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $201.96 Interest $10.10 Other $40.30 Total Due: $252.36 P000498 ALTER SCOTT DDS 126 W MAIN ST ASPEN, CO 81611 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 126 W MAIN ST ASPEN 126 W MAIN ST Year 2011 Tax $181.68 Interest $9.08 Other $37.26 Total Due: $228.02 P000503 OF GRAPE & GRAIN 319 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 319 E HOPKINS 319 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $60.44 Interest $3.02 Other $19.06 Total Due: $82.52 P000686 KRANS ROSEMARY 298 4TH AVE #429 SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94118 MOUNTAIN VIEW STUDIO UNIT 5 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 819 E HYMAN AVE #5 Year 2011 Tax $39.56 Interest $1.98 Other $15.94 Total Due: $57.48 P000845 KRANS ROSEMARY 298 4TH AVE #429 SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94118 MOUNTAIN VIEW STUDIOS #6 RESIDENTIAL/PERSONAL 819 E HYMAN AVE #6 Year 2011 Tax $23.72 Interest $1.19 Other $13.56 Total Due: $38.47 P000915 REED BRENT HAMPTON 50% BLANCHARD NATALIE M 50% PO BOX 8721 ASPEN, CO 81612 SKANDIA UNIT B RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 720 W HOPKINS AVE #B Year 2011 Tax $69.00 Interest $3.45 Other $20.36 Total Due: $92.81 P000977 ASPEN FUR & SHEARLING LLC C/O BURTON ALPER 555 E DURANT AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 555 E DURANT AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 555 E DURANT AVE Year 2011 Tax $417.80 Interest $20.89 Other $60.00 Total Due: $498.69 P001826 SNOPRO LLC PO BOX 8769 ASPEN, CO 81612 CRESTWOOD UNIT B 2201 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 400 WOOD RD #2201B Year 2011 Tax $12.64 Interest $0.63 Other$11.90 Total Due: $25.17 P001869 SNOWSTAR INC DBA BJ ADAMS & CO (ASPEN) PO BOX 6699 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 534 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN 534 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $650.80 Interest $32.54 Other $10.00 Total Due: $693.34

P003505 SNOPRO LLC PO BOX 8769 ASPEN, CO 81612 CRESTWOOD UNIT 107I AKA I3109 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 400 WOOD RD #3109I Year 2011 Tax $22.92 Interest $1.15 Other$13.44 Total Due: $37.51

P008054 FUEL ASPEN/SNOWMASS INC PO BOX 6145 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL SUITE 216 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL #216 Year 2011 Tax $122.44 Interest $6.12 Other$28.36 Total Due: $156.92

P003537 SNOPRO LLC PO BOX 8769 ASPEN, CO 81612 LICHENHEARTH UNIT 18 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 150 CARRIAGE WY #18 Year 2011 Tax $21.72 Interest $1.09 Other$13.26 Total Due: $36.07

P008137 ROARING FORK MORTGAGE GROUP PO BOX 8928 ASPEN, CO 81612-8928 520 E COOPER AVE #201 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 520 E COOPER AVE #201 Year 2011 Tax $131.36 Interest $6.57 Other$29.70 Total Due: $167.63

P003785 GENE TAYLORS SPORTSMAN SUPPLY 445 W GUNNISON AVE GRAND JUNCTION, CO 81501 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 54 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL 54 SNOWMASS VILLAGE MALL Year 2011 Tax $4,909.76 Interest $245.49 Other$60.00 Total Due: $5,215.25

P008171 BLU PHOENIX 520 E COOPER AVE #LL3 ASPEN, CO 81611 404 E HOPKINS AVE #B COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 404 E HOPKINS AVE #B Year 2011 Tax $98.12 Interest $4.91 Other$24.72 Total Due: $127.75

P003807 SLIKKERS LEON & DOLORES 993 WEST 32ND ST HOLLAND, MI 49423 CRESTWOOD UNIT 102H AKA H2116 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 400 WOOD RD #2116H Year 2011 Tax $973.52 Interest $48.68 Other$60.00 Total Due: $1,082.20

P008227 REGAL WATERING HOLE 220 S GALENA ASPEN, CO 81611 220 S GALENA COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 220 S GALENA ST Year 2011 Tax $229.48 Interest $11.47 Other$44.42 Total Due: $285.37

P003960 GOLDMAN LISA G & ELLIOTT H 970 CLIFTON AV NJ SPEC #2441 CLIFTON, NJ 07013 STONEBRIDGE INN UNIT 501 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 300 CARRIAGE WY #501 Year 2011 Tax $109.80 Interest $5.49 Other$26.48 Total Due: $141.77

P008268 QUINTENZ & CO 520 E HYMAN AVE # 1B ASPEN, CO 81611 525 E COOPER AVE COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 525 E COOPER AVE Year 2011 Tax $515.96 Interest $25.80 Other $10.00 Total Due: $551.76

P004076 REDSTONE GENERAL STORE 292 REDSTONE BLVD REDSTONE, CO 81623 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 292 REDSTONE BLVD 292 REDSTONE BLVD Year 2011 Tax $291.68 Interest $14.58 Other$53.76 Total Due: $360.02

P008294 DANCING BEAR REALTY LLC 70 RIVER BEND RD SNOWMASS, CO 81615 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 411 S MONARCH ST ASPEN 411 S MONARCH ST Year 2011 Tax $1,337.32 Interest $66.87 Other$60.00 Total Due: $1,464.19

P004427 BENTLEYS AT THE WHEELER C/O LMKR CORPORATION SCOTT DORSEY 2066 LORD BALTIMORE DR BALTIMORE , MD 21244 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 328 E HYMAN 328 E HYMAN AVE Year 2011 Tax $642.56 Interest $32.13 Other$60.00 Total Due: $734.69

P008513 THE SWEET LIFE PO BOX 1626 TELLURIDE, CO 81435 69 WOOD RD #1114 SNOWMASS VILLAGE COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 69 WOOD RD #1114 Year 2011 Tax $1,001.48 Interest $50.07 Other $10.00 Total Due: $1,061.55

P005267 AMERICAN ADVENTURE PRODUCTIONS PO BOX 9437 ASPEN, CO 81612-9437 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 314 S SECOND ST 314 S SECOND ST Year 2011 Tax $120.20 Interest $6.01 Other$28.04 Total Due: $154.25

P008536 ALPINE MERCHANT SERVICES INC 1280 UTE AVE #2A ASPEN, CO 81611 1280 E UTE AVE #26 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 1280 E UTE AVE #26 Year 2011 Tax $82.68 Interest $4.13 Other $10.00 Total Due: $96.81

P005418 PIERRE FAMILLE C/O JUDITH FAMILY 600 E COOPER AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 600 E COOPER AVE ASPEN 600 E COOPER AVE Year 2011 Tax $1,709.28 Interest $85.46 Other$60.00 Total Due: $1,854.74

P008537 RIEGER RESTAURANTS PO BOX 4298 ASPEN, CO 81612 508 E COOPER ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 508 E COOPER ST Year 2011 Tax $192.76 Interest $9.64 Other$38.92 Total Due: $241.32

P005562 METRO QUIP 217 S GALENA ST ASPEN, CO 81611 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 217 S GALENA ST ASPEN 217 S GALENA ST Year 2011 Tax $102.40 Interest $4.10 Other$25.36 Total Due: $131.86

P008543 MAJA DU BRUL 325 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 325 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 325 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $105.72 Interest $5.29 Other$25.86 Total Due: $136.87

P006194 LOONEE TUNZ SKI FASTER LLC DBA SKI SERVICE CENTER/BOARD WERKS PO BOX 1811 ASPEN, CO 81612-1811 601 RIO GRANDE PL #103 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 601 RIO GRANDE PL #103 Year 2011 Tax $59.84 Interest $2.99 Other$18.98 Total Due: $81.81

P008558 VICTORIAS ESPRESSO & WINE BAR 510 E DURANT AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 312 S MILL ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 312 S MILL ST Year 2011 Tax $309.24 Interest $15.46 Other$56.38 Total Due: $381.08

P006879 TESTER & ASSOCIATES PC PO BOX 6450 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 25 LOWER WOODBRIDGE RD SNOWMASS VILLAGE 25 LOWER WOODBRIDGE RD #201 Year 2011 Tax $74.64 Interest $3.73 Other$21.20 Total Due: $99.57 P007510 MYSTIC EAGLE QUARRY 801 COLORADO AVE GLENWOOD SPRINGS, CO 81601 Section: 28 Township: 9 Range: 88 EARTH & STONE PERSONAL PROPERTY 367 AVALANCHE CREEK RD 367 AVALANCHE CREEK RD Year 2011 Tax $136.36 Interest $6.82 Other$30.46 Total Due: $173.64

P002114 PAUL MARC & RENEE M TRUSTS 9661 WENDOVER DR BEVERLY HILLS, CA 90210 GANT UNIT H 303 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 610 S WEST END ST #H303 Year 2011 Tax $448.04 Interest $22.40 Other$60.00 Total Due: $530.44

P007721 SNOWSTAR INC DBA BJ ADAMS & CO PO BOX 6699 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 17 KEARNS RD SNOWMASS VILLAGE 17 KEARNS RD Year 2011 Tax $2,337.60 Interest $116.88 Other $10.00 Total Due: $2,464.48

P002596 SNOWMASS COTTAGES C/O JULIE WYCOFF 26801 HWY 82 SNOWMASS, CO 81654 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 26801 HWY 82 26801 HWY 82 Year 2011 Tax $663.92 Interest $33.20 Other$60.00 Total Due: $757.12

P008005 FUN WORLDWIDE LLC 420 E MAIN ST #B15 ASPEN, CO 81611 420 E MAIN ST #B15 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 420 E MAIN ST #B15 Year 2011 Tax $1,860.56 Interest $93.03 Other$60.00 Total Due: $2,013.59

P003066 SNOPRO LLC PO BOX 8769 ASPEN, CO 81612 LICHENHEARTH UNIT 3 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 150 CARRIAGE WY #3 Year 2011 Tax $12.64 Interest $0.63 Other$11.90 Total Due: $25.17

P008014 SPENCERS PO BOX 7023 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 16 KEARNS RD COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 16 KEARNS RD Year 2011 Tax $81.36 Interest $4.07 Other$22.20 Total Due: $107.63

P008561 HEATED ROOF SYSTEMS INC PO BOX 12375 ASPEN, CO 81612 715 W MAIN ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 715 W MAIN ST Year 2011 Tax $71.52 Interest $3.58 Other$20.72 Total Due: $95.82 P008645 ISBERIAN RUG COMPANY OUTLET 24451 HWY 82 BASALT, CO 81621 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 24451 HWY 82 BASALT 24451 HWY 82 Year 2011 Tax $174.88 Interest $8.74 Other$36.24 Total Due: $219.86 P008674 LEAF PO BOX 8010 ASPEN, CO 81612 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 100 S SPRING ST ASPEN 100 S SPRING ST Year 2011 Tax $209.24 Interest $10.46 Other$41.38 Total Due: $261.08 P008676 TWINKLE 533 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 533 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PP 533 E HOPKINS ST Year 2011 Tax $417.80 Interest $20.89 Other$60.00 Total Due: $498.69 P008686 FOTIONS CLUBHOUSE GYM 180 FIOU LN #105 BASALT, CO 81621 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 108 FIOU LN #105 BASALT 180 FIOU LN #105 Year 2011 Tax $198.20 Interest $9.91 Other$39.74 Total Due: $247.85 P008691 MCKENZIE TRIBE & GALLERY

98 MAIN ST SOUTHHAMPTON, NY 11968-4834 516 E HYMAN AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 516 E HYMAN AVE Year 2011 Tax $167.12 Interest $8.36 Other$35.06 Total Due: $210.54

PROPERTY 305 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $4,222.52 Interest $211.13 Other$60.00 Total Due: $4,493.65

P008699 PETER LIK 402 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 402 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 402 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $167.12 Interest $8.36 Other$35.06 Total Due: $210.54 P008707 AJAX MOUNTAIN SPORTS 555 E DURANT AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 555 E DURANT AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 555 E DURANT AVE Year 2011 Tax $1,149.32 Interest $57.47 Other $10.00 Total Due: $1,216.79

P008867 WESC 461 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 461 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 461 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $2,090.04 Interest $104.50 Other$60.00 Total Due: $2,254.54 P008868 OY VEY CAFE 39-60 54TH ST. 9-T WOODSIDE, NY 11377 304 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 304 E HOPKINS AVE Year 2011 Tax $1,266.76 Interest $63.34 Other$60.00 Total Due: $1,390.10 P008877 PREMIER CARE 720 E DURANT #E7 ASPEN, CO 81601 720 E DURANT AVE #E7 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 720 E DURANT AVE #E7 Year 2011 Tax $169.04 Interest $8.45 Other$35.36 Total Due: $212.85

P008709 ENGINEERED PORTFOLIO PARTNERS 85 N 3RD ST APT 509 BROOKLYN, NY 11249-3978 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY AT 115 BOOMERANG ASPEN HIGHLANDS 0115 BOOMERANG #5101A Year 2011 Tax $172.28 Interest $8.61 Other$35.84 Total Due: $216.73

P008886 KLEIN JEFFREY L PO BOX 11959 ASPEN, CO 81612 110 CARRIAGE WY #3101 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL 110 CARRIAGE WY #3101 Year 2011 Tax $2,351.92 Interest $117.60 Other$60.00 Total Due: $2,529.52

P008713 DENIMAXX 430 E COOPER AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 520 E DURANT AVE #210 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 520 E DURANT AVE #210 Year 2011 Tax $418.14 Interest $16.73 Other$35.00 Total Due: $469.87

P090209 ASPEN TELEVISION LLC DBA CHANNEL 16 419 LAFAYETTE ST 7 FL NEW YORK, NY 10003 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 303H AABC ASPEN 303 AABC ##H Year 2011 Tax $892.64 Interest $44.63 Other$60.00 Total Due: $997.27

P008716 ROSS ANDREWS GOLD JEWELRY 430 E HYMAN #A ASPEN, CO 81611 428 E HYMAN AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 428 E HYMAN AVE Year 2011 Tax $627.04 Interest $31.35 Other$60.00 Total Due: $718.39

P090254 THE MUSTANG 300 E HYMAN AVE ASPEN, CO 81611-1972 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 415 E HYMAN AVE ASPEN 415 E HYMAN AVE Year 2011 Tax $763.80 Interest $38.19 Other$60.00 Total Due: $861.99

P008721 UTE CITY MEDICINALS 985 HWY 133 CARBONDALE, CO 81623 730 E COOPER ST ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 730 E COOPER ST Year 2011 Tax $83.56 Interest $4.18 Other$22.54 Total Due: $110.28

P090461 LASAIR LLC PO BOX 2347 BASALT, CO 81621 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 23400 TWO RIVERS RD #47B 23400 TWO RIVERS RD #47B Year 2011 Tax $524.84 Interest $26.24 Other$60.00 Total Due: $611.08

P008723 ASPEN LAUNDRY LLC PO BOX 3172 ASPEN, CO 81612 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 465 N MILL ST #17 ASPEN 465 N MILL ST #17 Year 2011 Tax $307.68 Interest $15.38 Other$56.16 Total Due: $379.22

P090616 ISBERIAN RUG COMPANY INC C/O STEPHAN ISBERIAN 300 E CODY LN BASALT, CO 81621 COMMERICAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 300 CODY LN 300 CODY LN Year 2011 Tax $178.68 Interest $8.93 Other$36.80 Total Due: $224.41

P008726 KATHRYN CASTILLO JEWLERY 3000 D1/2 RD GRAND JUNCTION, CO 81504 520 E COOPER AVE #LL4 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 520 E COOPER AVE #LL4 Year 2011 Tax $57.92 Interest $2.90 Other$18.68 Total Due: $79.50 P008730 JR AUSTIN BELT AND BUCKLE COMPANY 611 E COOPER AVE #107 ASPEN, CO 81611 611 E COOPER AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 611 E COOPER AVE #107 Year 2011 Tax $57.92 Interest $2.90 Other$18.68 Total Due: $79.50 P008733 HUNTER BAR 430 E COOPER AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 430 E COOPER AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 430 E COOPER AVE Year 2011 Tax $295.64 Interest $14.78 Other $10.00 Total Due: $320.42 P008827 UNIQUE MODERN ART P.O. BOX 1830 ASPEN, CO 81612 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 307 S GALENA ST ASPEN 307 S GALENA ST Year 2011 Tax $167.12 Interest $8.36 Other$35.06 Total Due: $210.54

P090764 ASPEN SNOW REMOVAL INC PO BOX 4578 ASPEN, CO 81612-4578 220 W MAIN ST #106 & 107 ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 300 MCFARLANE GULCH RD Year 2011 Tax $350.72 Interest $17.54 Other$60.00 Total Due: $428.26 P090854 TRILOGY TECHNOLOGIES INC PO BOX 1087 ASPEN, CO 81612 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 165 SOUTH SIDE DR BASALT 165 SOUTH SIDE DR Year 2011 Tax $446.76 Interest $22.34 Other$60.00 Total Due: $529.10 P091162 DUNCAN WILLIAM H JR & SARAH PO BOX 230850 ENCINTIAS, CA 92023 OWL CREEK HOMES PHASE VIII UNIT 23 BLDG 13 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL 202 STREAMSIDE CT #23 Year 2011 Tax $272.52 Interest $13.63 Other$70.88 Total Due: $357.03 P091216 COATZA HOLDINGS LTD 4900 WOODWAY DR #1110 HOUSTON, TX 77056 TOV/ASPEN SLOPE UNIT 405 RESIDENTIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY CONDO 855 CARRIAGE WY #405 Year 2011 Tax $147.72 Interest $7.39 Other$32.16 Total Due: $187.27

P008830 RIZZUTO ANTHONY 424 E COOPER AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 424 E COOPER AVE COMMERCIAL PERSONAL 424 E COOPER AVE Year 2011 Tax $179.80 Interest $8.99 Other $10.00 Total Due: $198.79

P091465 MAROON BELLS GUIDE & OUTFITTERS 3125 MAROON CREEK RD #21 ASPEN , CO 81611 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT T LAZY 7 RANCH ASPEN 3133 MAROON CREEK RD Year 2011 Tax $143.28 Interest $7.16 Other$31.50 Total Due: $181.94

P008846 ROMME JENNIFER PO BOX 6236 SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615 315 GATEWAY BUILDING COMMERCIAL PERSONAL 315 GATEWAY BUILDING Year 2011 Tax $261.04 Interest $13.05 Other$49.16 Total Due: $323.25

P091467 LEAF FINANCIAL CORP 2005 MARKET ST FLR 15 PHILADELPHIA, PA 19103 COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED IN SNOWMASS VILLAGE Year 2011 Tax $202.60 Interest $10.13 Other $10.00 Total Due: $222.73

P008849 CHURCH CLARK PO BOX 2411 ASPEN, CO 81615 264 SNOWMELT RD COMMERCIAL PERSONAL 690 CARRIAGE WY Year 2011 Tax $481.04 Interest $24.05 Other $10.00 Total Due: $515.09

If the amount of such delinquent taxes, penalty, interest, and advertising costs are not paid by the last day of September 2012, the personal property upon which said taxes were levied shall be subject to distraint, seizure and sale.

P008862 SILVER QUEEN RESTAURANT 520 E HYMAN AVE ASPEN, CO 81611 520 E HYMAN AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL PROPERTY 520 E HYMAN AVE Year 2011 Tax $4,222.52 Interest $211.13 Other$60.00 Total Due: $4,493.65

Tiffany Wancura Deputy Pitkin County Treasurer

P008865 PITKIN COUNTY STEAKHOUSE AND TAVERN PO BOX 11424 ASPEN, CO 81612-9568 305 E HOPKINS AVE ASPEN COMMERCIAL PERSONAL

Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on September 20, 2012.

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

41


WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by JENNY SHANK/HIGH COUNTRY NEWS

BOOK REVIEW

NOTEWORTHY

‘DESCANSO FOR MY FATHER: FRAGMENTS OF A LIFE’

“Descanso for My Father: Fragments of a Life” By Harrison Candelaria Fletcher 147 pages, softcover: $14.95. University of Nebraska Press, 2012.

WHEN COLORADO writer Harrison Candelaria Fletcher was almost 2 years old, his father, a pharmacist, died, leaving behind a wife and five children. His mother, who was 29 years younger than her husband, grew up in a Hispanic farming village on the Rio Grande, “a block away from his Route 66 drug store.” “Following the advice of a child psychologist,” Candelaria Fletcher writes, his mother “gradually erased his presence from our Albuquerque home,” stowing his few remaining belongings in a closet. Ever since then, Candelaria Fletcher has been searching for the parent he barely knew, using his skills as an investigative journalist to follow his father across the country. “Descanso for My Father” is the eloquent result of his quest, a collage of essays crafted by KEVIN G. DER

| edited by WILL SHORTZ

with precision and grace. Together, they provide a full portrait of his father, Ray, and detail how his loss shaped his son’s life — a life that was marked by the boy’s own struggle to find his place as a pale-skinned biracial child. Candelaria Fletcher’s essays consist of short sections — each set apart by numbers, titles or symbols — that capture one unique, distilled image or incident, as vividly as snapshots. Like the pieces of a puzzle, they come together to create a complete and emotionally complex picture. Candelaria Fletcher sees his art as the legacy of his Mexican-American mother. (To respect her privacy, he doesn’t name her or his siblings.) She taught him to “look closely … everything tells a story.” Five years after her husband’s funeral, he writes, “my

1

CIRCLING THE JOB LISTINGS

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Elvis’s “Can’t Help Falling In Love,” e.g. Scuba tank parts Famous lawmaker? Big fairy Nazareth’s locale Cheap cigar, in slang … and 33-Across: “must wear gloves in the field” Causing a stink, maybe Mrs. ___ (“Entourage” role) Penguin’s spot, maybe Aviator’s guide Jazz’s Simone Solzhenitsyn novel setting … and 50-Across: “experienced in conducting surveys for sites” Peculiar Groucho’s real name “Hogwash!” Friends’ feud Of greatest interest to a bibliophile, maybe Space traveler? … and 62-Across: “may be tasked with generating impressions” Control Potsdam attendee Actress Myrna Viracocha worshiper “Finnegans Wake” wife Shout from a field Highballs?

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66 68 69

73 74 77 78 79 81 83 86

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… and 69-Across: “excellent filing skills required” Mythical figure represented in Vermeer’s “Art of Painting” ___ paradox Bet on … and 86-Across: “focused on improving circulation” Integral course, informally Elided preposition “Desperate Housewives” role Ring toss activity? Whoop Careful writer’s concern One down in the mouth … and 96-Across: “willing to open chests and work on vessels” Settled things Jewelry item Remain true Mendes of Hollywood Abbey Road, e.g. Wi-Fi connection spots … and 112Across: “strong, disciplined hands a must” Dance with a “casino” style “Rubáiyát” poet Walsh with three golds in beach volleyball Tenant’s contact, casually Rescuer of Mowgli in “The Jungle

110 112

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Book” Cleanup hitter, say … and 23-Across: “should be comfortable sitting on the bench” Find, as a station Herbalist’s drink 1972 Jack Lemmon comedy Sonnet part Chivalrous greeting Break up

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37 38 40 43 44

DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 21 24 29 32

Japanese bowlful Skyscraper support Cause of a product recall, perhaps ’Fore Fishing line attachment Perform a body scan on? Punishment on the knuckles Awesome, in slang Actress Vardalos Some ancient carvings “Peace!” It might say “A.T.M. Here” Antiquity, once Worth no points, say Shinto temple entrance Bids one club, say Silently greet Pride Lands queen First name in mysteries Legislative holdup Fumble follower “___ then …” (onair sign-off)

S e p t e m b e r 2 0 - 26 , 2 0 1 2

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Bygone sedan Like some investments Cherubic What the French once called “la Belle Rivière” Many pledges Utah’s ___ National Forest Mount Narodnaya’s locale “Dance at Bougival” painter What “.99” may represent School bully? Co-explorer of 1804 It can be smoothed over Cause of some teen angst Oenophile’s specification Nabisco brand Seating area Troubadour’s love song Word before and after “will be” Fannie ___ Brown shade Become part of history Peppery herb Dharma teachers Borodin’s “Prince ___” Goddess pursued by Hera Superstar Sticky situation Purplish shade Four seasons, e.g. Incomparable Where enfants learn Divides Mars atmosphere

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features Japanese bowlful Turkish leaders Player of TV’s Det. Tutuola Decorative Valentine’s Day gift Pollster’s need Arranges a blind date for Easter egg roll, say Like Shylock Divide Dessert wines Saturate Boons for farmers

74 82

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mother transformed herself. “The bookish housewife who baked peanut butter cookies after school had become an artist who protested against the Vietnam War and pinned ‘Nixon No!’ buttons to our grammar school lapels. She welcomed stray animals into the house, and encouraged her children to scour the landscape for discarded objects, which she then assembled into works of art, inspired by the roadside memorials called descansos, ‘the Spanish word for resting place.’” “Descanso for My Father” is laced with stories about people encountering ghosts. Candelaria Fletcher may not be clairvoyant, but he conjures up the spirits of his ancestors in this unusual and moving book. This book review originally appeared in the High Country News (hcn.org).

Medieval helmet Typical golf shots Golf event Pacific capital Lab order Dessert wine Causing trouble Took in “Pinocchio” keepsake 114 Letter that’s an anagram of 111Down 115 Something you might turn on 116 Tikka masala go-with

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— Last week’s puzzle answers — A F C E A S T

J O H N N I E

A X O L O T L

M O D E M

H O P E S O

E R E S T U

C R A Y O N

I O L A N I

A U G H T S

X X O S H A S E C T I A V T I C K A S N T T E M T A E T Z A R S A

A H Y E S O N E C A R

J E T L I

M A N I P E D A I L A R N O D E E I O N S

A R O M A S

R O Y

N E W S L Y A I T D E O E N D A S E C

C Y C L E S

M A H A F L A D S E I M S P A L Y E S T O O N A M A O R U B N O T R

I D O T O O

R O L L O N

Z E R O S

E T O N

Z I O N

D A Z E

T R U E T M O Y E R B S L O S C A K P S

C A S S I O H O T S A U C E A T R I A

O L B E Z A L E S W A Y S M O E E R U T E W E T E D A I S U M S S P I E A G S A L N T I E U E D P E E I D R N D O O E N U B J A N A G S M E

R A Z O R S

T S E T S E

S M O R E S

Y A T E S

S A D E Y E S

T W E E Z E S


Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!

RODNEY

Short-haired Chihuahua mix male. About 5 years old. Turned in with siblings due to death of their owner in late July. Very shy. Needs some time to feel more comfortable with strangers but very sweet.

FIONA

Black short-haired Chihuahua mix female about 2 years old. Turned in with siblings due to death of their owner in late July. Shy at first but now super friendly. Loves people.

ROCCO

Older neutered male Boxer/Pit Bull/Lab. Roughly 12 years old. Super sweet old man. Best as only pet.

ALEX

1.5-year-old Lab/ German Wirehaired Pointer mix female. Happy, friendly and quite well-behaved. Alex is a cool, goodlooking dog.

HUNTER

3-year-old Pit Bull/ Chow mix who was found wandering around Aspen. He is wary of strangers, but friendly once he knows you and trusts you.

TIMBER

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

OPEN ALL OFF-SEASON FREDDY

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.

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!

SAM

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

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206

MAYA

Sweet, pretty 2-year-old Staffy mix female. Athletic + affectionate. Needs a responsible, active knowledgeable home.

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.

ANUBIS

8-year-old purebred American Dingo female who gets along well with people and other dogs.

See dogsaspen.com for more animals. LUCY

FRESH, CREATIVE FOOD

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.

HAND-CRAFTED COCKTAILS $6 KIDS’ MEALS INCREDIBLE, AFFORDABLE WINES

BEAR

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.

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.

Serving Lunch & Dinner Daily 11am-10pm

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter 101 Animal Shelter Road

www.dogsaspen.com

Leaves are changing You can feel it in the air.. Winter is coming – and we are ready…

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

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

$2,700,000

- MLS#124629

Please contact your local advertising representative to reserve your space in Winter in Aspen today!

www.aspentimes.com 970-925-3414

Shlomo Ben-Hamoo & Peggy Scharlin - - • - -  Shlo@gmail.com |peggy@scharlin.com

620 East Hyman Ave. 9709202006 www.AspenExperts.com

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

43


New Listing

Core Convenience s #ONVENIENT CENTRAL CORE LOCATION WALK EVERYWHERE s BEDROOMS BATH SQ FT s #OMFORTABLE LIVING SPACES s BLOCKS TO THE 'ONDOLA s !SPEN -OUNTAIN VIEWS s !SSIGNED OFF STREET PARKING s ,OW (/! DUES AND YEARLY TAXES s /WNERS ALLOWED TO HAVE PETS 4URN +EY &URNISHED 3TEPHANNIE -ESSINA \

New Listing

1 Bedroom Loft - Aspen Style

Views, Light, Convenience

BEDROOM BATH SQ FT .ESTED IN THE WOODS BY THE !SPEN #LUB %NJOY TRAILS JUST OUT YOUR DOORSTEP MINUTE WALK TO DOWNTOWN !SPEN "RENT 7ALDRON \

BEDROOMS BATHS SQ FT %ND UNIT WITH DEAD ON VIEWS OF !SPEN .EW mOORS APPLIANCES VANITIES #OMPLEX POOL TENNIS COURTS HOT TUB !NNE!DARE 7OOD \

New Listing

Pioneer Studio ,IGHT BRIGHT LARGE STUDIO BATH SQ FT "UILT IN -URPHY BED )N UNIT WASHER DRYER OFF STREET PARKING 7ALK TO EVERYTHING !SPEN HAS TO OFFER #HARLEY 0ODOLAK \

New Listing

Spacious Alpine Grove Unit

Aspen Condo - Fall in Love!

BEDROOMS BATH SQ FT 3PACIOUS COMFORTABLE GROUND mOOR UNIT ,ARGE DECK OFF MASTER BEDROOM #ONVENIENT TO BOTH !SPEN AND 3NOWMASS +ATIE 'RANGE \

BEDROOM BATH TOP mOOR CORNER UNIT .EW KITCHEN BATH WOOD BURNING STOVE 6ERY PRIVATE ENDLESS VIEWS OF (UNTER #REEK (OME AWAY FROM HOME ,AURIE ,AING \

Affordable West End Condo BEDROOM BATH SQ FT .ESTLED BELOW 3HADOW -OUNTAIN %VERY INCH UTILIZED WITH STYLE 7ALKING DISTANCE TO DOWNTOWN MORE 3ALLY 3HIEKMAN -ILLER \

Aspen | 970.925.6060 Snowmass | 970.923.2006 Basalt | 970.927.8080 Carbondale | 970.963.4536

ASPENSNOWMASSSIR.COM


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