The Aspen Times Weekly: Feb. 23 edition

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WINEINK EXPLORING WINES IN PORTUGAL 19

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VOYAGES CAPTURING LAVA FLOW IN YOSEMITE 36

FEBRUARY 23-29, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 16

TED DAVENPORT GETS DOWN TO EARTH SEE PAGE 29


BELLY UP ASPEN WHERE ASPEN GOES FOR LIVE MUSIC.

STAFF PLAYLIST

WED 2/22

BRIAN LIPSITZ

SHOW 10 PM

TALENT BUYER

21+

t %0.*/0 5)&03: 6.1)3&: 4 .$(&& t t )&"35 0' 45&&- GALACTIC t t %": %3&". EDWARD SHARPE & 5)& ."(/&5*$ ;&304 t

BONOBO DJ SET W/ ILL-MANNERED

SHOW 9 PM

J. BOOG

18+

W/ HOT RAIN

Island music meets Jamaican reggae with songs about love.

DJ set with a mix of hip hop, jazz, beats, Latin, funk & soul.

SCAN THE QR CODE, OR VISIT #&--:61"41&/ $0. 50 $)&$, 065 .03& 0' #3*"/ 4 -*45

JES GREW

THU 2/23

FRI 2/24

SAT 2/25

21+

21+

SHOW 10 PM

W/ THE BROCCOLI BROS. HORNS Aspen’s local rockers, originals and classic hits with a funky twist.

SHOW 10 PM

WALLPAPER

W/ COBRACONDA AND NAKA G Beat-heavy pop ditties.

SUN 2/26

SOJA

SHOW 8 PM

W/ DUBSKIN AND ANUHEA (SOLO) This reggae, rock group has a unique sound and an inspirational message.

JUST ANNOUNCED: PAT GREEN 3.17

SEUN KUTI & EGYPT 80 3.28 SONS OF FATHERS 3.21

MON 2/27

SHOW 9 PM

ZOOGMA

18+

THU 3/1 SHOW 8 PM

ANI DIFRANCO W/ GREGORY ALAN ISAKOV

W/ SUPREME ACTION LEAGUE DJ precision meets the energy of a ďŹ ve-piece rock group.

NO COVER

She is “thirty-two avors and then someâ€?

JC BROOKS AND THE UPTOWN SOUND 4.4 BORGORE FLEX TOUR 4.12 BLACK JOE LEWIS & THE HONEYBEARS 4.23 HEAD FOR THE HILLS 4.28 GROUPLOVE 5.20 KENNY LOGGINS 6.28

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

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MASON MORSE

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Exclusive Member for Aspen and Snowmass, CO

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

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Check in on foursquare for daily deals at our retail & restaurant locations!

FOUR-MOUNTAIN SPORTS SALES & DISCOUNTS! Stop by one of Four-Mountain Sports’ eight convenient locations for discounts on rentals, merchandise and tuning! Pick up your discount card at the front desk and receive 15% off ski and snowboard rentals, 20% off of cial Aspen/Snowmass logo merchandise and 20% off all tune and repair work. Need new skis? ON SALE NOW!

970-923-8790

ASPEN/SNOWMASS OPEN PRESENTED BY SKULLCANDY FEBRUARY 23-26, BUTTERMILK

The Aspen/Snowmass Ski & Snowboard Open is one of the best open competitions in the nation! It attracts over 350 athletes to compete on the famed X Games slopestyle & superpipe courses. The Aspen/Snowmass Open Presented By Skullcandy is a 4-Star TTR event & a Gold Level AFP event. This event is not to be missed. Visit www.aspensnowmass.com/events for full details & scheduling.

SKI & SNOWBOARD SCHOOL

EVENTS

PRIVATE LESSONS

Clicquot in the Snow Ajax Tavern February 24-26 Party on the patio at Ajax Tavern! Featuring DJ Dylan with special guest Katrina Visnevska, violinist.

Daily. Create your perfect day! We have over 1,200 Pros across four mountains dedicated to giving you the most amazing experience possible.

CROSS MOUNTAIN EXPEDITION Offered weekly, February-March. Advanced & expert skiers join our top Pros for three days of exploring the most challenging in-bound terrain.

WOMEN’S EDGE

_________________________________________________________________________________ Bud Light Big Air Fridays Snowmass February 24 2 pm Athletes showcase the newest tricks off of the 40-foot jump on upper Fanny Hill. Don’t miss the Little Air competition, inviting kids to come out & compete on a mini jump just after Big Air Fridays.

_________________________________________________________________________________ Epic Night Après at Base Village Snowmass February 24 3:30 pm After Bud Light Big Air Fridays, check out live après music on the Base Village plaza presented by Sneaky’s Tavern & Base Camp Bar & Grill, followed by a Torchlight Decent down Fanny Hill.

_________________________________________________________________________________

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

The Little Nell presents: OASIS Aspen Mountain February 24-26 The Little Nell’s Champagne Bar is popping up on the mountain this weekend with umbrellas, lounge chairs & a solar-powered sound system! Follow on facebook www.facebook.com/TheLittleNellAspen or twitter @TheLittleNell for clues on the changing secret OASIS location.

_________________________________________________________________________________

TEEN STEEP CAMP March 13-15, 20-22, 27-29. Experience the best black- & double-black diamond terrain that Aspen/Snowmass has to offer with some of the most knowledgeable Pros in the industry! Learn important factors to be mindful of when skiing the steep & deep! Snowmass.

Party at the Terrace Bar at The Little Nell Aspen February 24 - 26 3-7 pm Dance with DJ Dylan on Feb. 24 & 25 from 3-7 pm & vote for Aspen’s best bartender & see whose cocktail will reign supreme during the Iron Bartender Competion at 5:30 pm on Feb. 26. This week: Erin Harris of Jimmy’s vs. Leah Stroup, JBar. Drink & food specials daily.

_________________________________________________________________________________

TEEN PARK & PIPE CAMP March 13-15, 20-22, 27-29. Take advantage of the biggest & coolest park in the nation, home to the ESPN Winter X Games! Teens who want to perfect their moves on the mountain & in the park join our expert Pros for three days of specialized coaching. Buttermilk.

KIDS’ MOVIE NIGHT AT THE TREEHOUSE February 29, 6-9 pm. Kids ages 4-12 are invited to the Treehouse Kids’ Adventure Center for Movie Night! $35 per child includes dinner & games. Sign up by calling 970-923-1227. Snowmass.

970-923-1227

www.aspensnowmass.com/schools

Live Music & Après at The Limelight Aspen February 24-27 4-7 pm Food & drink specials begin at 3 pm daily. Thursday: Damian Smith. Friday: De ance Stringband. Saturday: Derek Brown Band. Sunday: Michael Jude. Monday: Brazilian Jazz.

_________________________________________________________________________________ FREE Live Music at Bumps Buttermilk Featuring Axis & Patty Heard. Food & drink specials available.

February 25

2:30-5:30 pm

_________________________________________________________________________________ Jas Café Downstairs at The Little Nell Aspen February 27 & 28 7:30 & 9:15 pm Featuring Jon Cleary & The Philthy Phew. $30 in advance, $45 at the door. Special pre-show menus available at Montagna & Ajax Tavern. The Little Nell bar menu is also. 970.920.4996.

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

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ASPEN MOUNTAIN VIEWS AT OBERMEYER PLACE ASPEN This contemporary 3 bedroom Obermeyer townhome offers both luxury and comfort, all on one level, within walking distance of Aspen’s central core. As you’d expect, every detail of this dramatic townhouse reflects the most impeccable design influences and exquisite craftsmanship; reclaimed wood floors, custom lighting and surround sound throughout. The living room features a large limestone fireplace, floor to ceiling windows and opens to the over-sized gourmet kitchen complete with large Marble Island, stainless steel cabinets and professional grade appliances for today’s chef. Direct views of Aspen Mountain from

the kitchen, dining and living areas. The expansive terrace offers the perfect outdoor location for lounging and entertaining with the built-in grill.

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Carrie Wells 970.920.7375

carrie@carriewells.com 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

Exclusive Member for Aspen and Snowmass, CO

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 14 LEGENDS & LEGACIES 16 FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE 19

WINE INK

22 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 36 VOYAGES 40 LOCAL CALENDAR 50 CROSSWORD

WINEINK EXPLORING WINES IN PORTUGAL 19

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VOYAGES CAPTURING LAVA FLOW IN YOSEMITE 36

FEBRUARY 23-29, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

22 A&E

37 AROUND ASPEN

Arts Editor Stewart Oksenhorn cleans off his desk, and shares observations of the arts scene.

Contributing editor Mary Eshbaugh Hayes found a literary following when author Ann Patchett spoke recently.

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 16

TED DAVENPORT GETS DOWN TO EARTH SEE PAGE 29

ON THE COVER

Photo by Matt Power

EDITOR’S NOTE

a tourist’s reminder | The conversation was brief, but

changed the rest of my day. It started when a European couple walked into our lobby. Like many newcomers to town, they looked a little bit confused, or at least, very shy. Moments earlier, they had pressed their noses against the lobby windows and peered inside. Gathering a bit of nerve, they opened the door and found me standing there sorting through some mail. “Excuse me,” the national forest service, husband said. He was and how they police in his 50s, and his the usage of helicopters wife stood silently with permits and pretty behind him, smiling strict guidelines. And reassuringly. I had then I explained about confidence she had our avalanche danger, little interest in her and the tradition RYAN SLABAUGH husband’s question. “Is of a weak Colorado this a tourism office?” snowpack, and how he asked. that also discourages helicopter I laughed. “Close,” I said. “It’s a access. newspaper.” “Oh, I see,” he said, nodding his “A newspaper!” he exclaimed. head. “Perhaps you can answer my Now I took the curious stance. question.” I asked him why he cared. “You Sounding ultra-American, I told have to go down to Telluride for him I would give it the college try. the nearest opportunity,” I said, “Why do I not hear the sound of thinking I was on to why he asked. helicopters?” he asked. He patted me on the shoulder I laughed. Most of the time in and laughed. “That is not what I these circumstances, the questions want. Those guys are crazy who do are about where to eat, which way the heli-skiing thing.” to the gondola or how do I find the My expression must have reright bus. I had never received this asked the question. So why does question before. Gathering myself, this guy care? I explained to him about our “It’s just so quiet here,” he said.

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“At home in the mountains, all you hear is whap-whap-whap-whapwhap. I just wondered where all the noise was.” Not sure how to answer that, I just said, “That’s how we like it here. Pretty quiet.” He nodded his head and said, “Me too.” Satisfied, his wife led him out the door and back onto Main Street. After I finished sorting the mail, I followed the European couple out the door. It was late in the afternoon, and it was Presidents Day, so I chose to not make any more work for myself. With the conversation ringing in my ears, I took the long way home, through the alleys and down a winter trail, as snow just started to fall. For a moment, there was not a car, nor a helicopter, in sight. For a change, I was reminded to take it in, and not take it for granted. rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

VOLUME 1 ✦ ISSUE NUMBER 14

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 Christian Henrichon Su Lum Louise Walker Classified Advertising (970) 925-9937


BRIAN HAZEN PRESENTS...

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

VOX POP What’s the best movie you have ever seen?

with JOHN COLSON

A word on religion, politics and the mixing of the two WITH ALL THE TALK about religion in the current U.S. presidential race, you’d think the Founding Fathers never established the entirely sensible and cautionary principle of the separation of church and state. Former Sen. Rick Santorum, for example, went from nowhere in the polls to being tied with Mitt Romney in the Republican primary race, based largely on his bombastic condemnation of President Obama’s religious credentials as opposed to Santorum’s supposed adherence to his own faith-based ideas. And empty-headed bishops have played right into Santorum’s game plan by bashing Obama’s directive to require such institutions as hospitals, even if they are nominally attached to a religious hierarchy, to provide birth control to women in their employ. What should have been a tempest in a teapot swiftly became a national finger-pointing exercise that did none of us any good. The American application of the “separation” principle, I should note, is credited to two mighty luminaries of our political pantheon, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson. It was Madison who pointed out in 1821 that 16th-century theologian Martin Luther’s “doctrine of the two kingdoms” — the earthly kingdom and the heavenly one, which Luther saw as two distinct influences in the affairs of men — shaped the earliest thinking about the separation of church and state. Earlier, in 1802, in a letter to the Danbury Baptist Association, Jefferson came up with a phrase, the “wall of separation between church and state,” as a logical extension of the First Amendment declaration that Congress “shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” The way Jefferson saw it, “no law” meant that government should not be involved in religious matters, and that religion should stay out of governmental matters. Because once either entity starts throwing its weight around with regard to the other entity, we’re all in big trouble. I wholeheartedly agree. In fact, I subscribe to Mark Twain’s views on the matter — organized

HIT&RUN

JOHN ZRNO S N O W M A SS V I L L AG E

“Sting. It’s with Robert Redford and Paul Newman, a great movie about a sting.”

JOHN GROSHOLZ GLENWOOD SPRINGS

“Open Range. It’s a Western movie with Robert Duvall and Kevin Costner. They are both cowboys who are like the last cowboys to graze their cattle.”

JANET HOMESTEAD N E W YO R K

“Prince of Tides. It’s a love story with Barbara Streisand. She’s a psychologist who falls in love with someone who has a family and has to make a decision.”

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religion, at its core and from its earliest forms, was little more than mankind’s attempt to make sense out of a confusing, dangerous world. Starting at the tribal level, religious authority was seized by certain ambitious types as a way to make themselves important, powerful and

wealthy. By the time we got to the time of Jesus Christ, of course, the world’s major religions had evolved to be among the wealthiest, most powerful organizations in existence, based on claims that no one could verify as fact. Twain wrote a marvelous little book, “Letters From the Earth,” in 1887 or so, purporting to catalogue a number of letters from the Archangel Satan to his fellow archangels, Gabriel and Michael. Satan had taken a little road trip to our odd little globe to check up on how The Creator’s work was going. Satan’s assessment is not flattering to humanity at large or to the religions it has spawned. Give it a read some time. It’s worth a trip to the library, since that is probably the only place you’ll find it in these unenlightened days. Twain himself once opined that the book could never be published in America, since doing so would be a felonious breach of our nation’s peace. Anyways, as I contemplate the sad state of politics today, I am increasingly worried by the religious fervor that is invading our political dialogue. Ever since the Rev. Billy Graham anointed himself as Pastor to the Presidents, I have felt a growing unease about the direction in which we are headed. Religion has no place in government, and to rely on religious fervor as the motivating factor in a political campaign is, automatically, a slap in the face to all those who do not share the particular faith in question. There are dozens upon dozens of religions in the world, from tiny sects to the massive, bureaucratic behemoth known generally as Christianity. By that metric alone, it should be clear that permitting religions to rule nations is a bad idea, because every religion thinks it, and it alone, has god on its side. And they can’t all be right. jcolson@aspentimes.com

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

SEEN, HEARD & DONE

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

CHEERS&JEERS

FIVE THINGS A young fan enjoys some free music at Base Village on a recent weekend afternoon.

O1

Maroon Peak

O2

The Aspen

O3

Shadow

O4

Independence

O5

The White House

CHEERS | To area food

CHEERS | To free concerts in our area that help make our community a wonderful place to live. While some of us roll our eyes at tickets that cost hundreds of dollars, there are plenty of alternatives. Last weekend at Snowmass Village, The Motet played to hundreds of lucky locals and visitors, who spent the afternoon dancing and singing along.

JEERS | To the continued avalanche danger that has killed some of skiing’s best people this year. From Jamie Pierre to last week’s accident in Washington, which took three more lives, the trend is only getting worse. We are dedicating next week’s cover story to looking into why these deaths affect us so much, and why the backcountry holds such a powerful allure.

banks for all that they do. As a public service announcement, the Food Bank of the Rockies will be handing out food to anyone in need on a first-come, first-served basis at the Health and Human Services Building at 0405 Castle Creek Road in Aspen from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on March 1. There are no eligibility requirements. Bring boxes and/or bags for your food items.

JEERS | To the election-year trend of topsy-turvy gas prices. With the world’s powers playing games with Iran and its nuclear program, prices are spiking this week already, and we’re months away from voting day. As in most years, we would expect prices to keep increasing through the summer, and miraculously decrease in October. But at this point, we’ve stopped betting on it.

BUZZ WORTHY ASPEN

NONPROFIT WANTS TIPTON TO RETURN FUNDS A Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit focused on campaign finance reform is calling on Aspen’s representative in the U.S. House to return 8,100 in contributions from an oil and gas company that wants to drill in Thompson Divide. Public Campaign contends that Rep. Scott Tipton should return contributions from Houston-based SG Interests to ensure the trust of his constituents. SGI recently paid a 275,000 fine as part of a settlement of an antitrust lawsuit filed by the U.S. Department of Justice. The government claimed SGI worked with another oil and gas firm to keep bids low for leases on public lands in Gunnison County. SGI bid on the leases then allegedly split the acreage with Gunnison Energy Corp. As a result, the federal coffers didn’t

earn as much for the leases. The two oil and gas companies each paid the fine without admitting liability. The agreement was reported last week. — Scott Condon

ASPEN

NOISIER JETS TO BE PHASED OUT Legislation signed into law last week not only authorized funding for operation of the Federal Aviation Administration but also enacted a provision to phase out older, noisy private jets — something airport officials in Aspen and elsewhere have long advocated. The Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 prohibits, starting in 2016, the use of jets that were exempted from a law Congress passed more than 20 years ago. They are jets that weigh 75,000 pounds or less and do not comply with quieter

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Gondola

Mountain

Pass

POST US YOUR TOP FIVE THINGS jbeathard@aspentimes.com

STAY IN THE KNOW – CATCH UP ON RECENT NEWS & LOCAL EVENTS Stage 3 noise levels. A coalition of airport managers around the country, including Aspen’s, have championed an effort to eliminate the exemption since 2004. The airports include some of the nation’s busiest for corporate jet traffic. Noisy, Stage 2 commercial jets have been banned nationwide since 1990, but older-model jets that weigh 75,000 pounds or less fly in and out of the local airport as part of its general aviation traffic, according to Jim Elwood, aviation director at the Aspen-Pitkin County Airport. — Janet Urquhart

ASPEN

UNDERPASS RECOMMENDED FOR AIRPORT HIGHWAY CROSSING An underpass has emerged as the recommended option for a separate pedestrian crossing of Highway 82

“IT FEELS LIKE YOU’RE IN A WASHING MACHINE. ACTUALLY.” 10

5 THINGS WE’D LIKE TED TO B.A.S.E. JUMP OFF

near the busy Aspen-Pitkin County Airport and Aspen Business Center intersection. While various components of a funding package to build the crossing continue to come together — a 500,000 allocation of state transportation money was recently added to the mix — upper-valley elected officials are scheduled to review the options next month. Consultants will recommend an underpass be constructed, based on feedback collected from the public, according to Stan Clauson, of Aspenbased Stan Clauson Associates. His firm and Parsons Transportation Group were hired to do preliminary work on the alternatives. Both overpass and underpass options will be presented to the Elected Officials Transportation Committee, when it convenes March 22 in Aspen, but the underpass will have the consultants’ nod, Clauson said. — Janet Urquhart

ELYSE SAUGSTAD, PRO SKIER CAUGHT IN AN AVALANCHE LAST WEEK

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


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

GUEST OPINION COLUMN

by WILLIAM MEADOWS of WRITERS ON THE RANGE

Turning public lands into a political football AS PRESIDENTIAL candidates crisscross the country — even dropping in on a few Western states — some have been making revealing comments about the vast public lands that help to define the American West. For instance, former Gov. Mitt Romney said, “I don’t know why the government owns so much of this land.” In the same week, Rep. Ron Paul, well known for his libertarian views, was even blunter: “I want as much federal land to be turned over to the state(s) as possible.” Then Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum weighed in, telling an Idaho audience, “We need to get (federal land) back into the hands of the states and even to the private sector. And we can make money doing it.” So why do we have these millions of acres of public lands? If you think

the answer fits into a country.” This call was cookie-cutter narrative heeded throughout the of federal vs. state 20th century, as leaders interests, Republicans vs. in Congress from across Democrats, or even East the West helped create vs. West, be prepared the system of publicly for a surprise. The real owned lands that we story involves a lot of have today. WILLIAM MEADOWS Republicans, a lot of Many Westerners were Democrats, a lot of deeply involved in the Westerners and a long creation of the Federal history of congressional support Land Policy and Management Act in for protecting our nation’s last wild 1976, a landmark law that established places. Most important, it’s a story the principle that our federal public that too many have forgotten in lands should by and large remain in recent years. public ownership for the benefit of all Republican Theodore Roosevelt Americans. The bill received broad made conservation a hallmark of his bipartisan support from Republicans presidency, ensuring that spectacular and Democrats in the House and public lands such as the Grand Senate, including members from all Canyon would be preserved for the points of the compass, but especially future enjoyment of all. As Roosevelt the Western states. The law itself said, “There can be no greater issue was based on the recommendations than that of conservation in this of the bipartisan Public Land Law

Review Commission, which was comprised largely of representatives from Western states. The story of our public lands is one of bipartisan cooperation and leadership from the West. But then the story takes a turn, and things start to get tricky. After decades of strong support for public lands in Congress, we now face something very different: Public lands are under siege, particularly in the House of Representatives. No fewer than 13 bills in the House of Representatives — some already reported out of committees — would end protections that our public lands have enjoyed for decades. The Antiquities Act, which was passed in 1906 and used by 15 Republican and Democratic presidents since, is under fierce attack. It provides each president with the opportunity CONTINUED ON FOLLOWING PAGE

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

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United Jewish Appeal

Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

GUEST OPINION COLUMN

by WILLIAM MEADOWS of WRITERS ON THE RANGE

CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE

to protect important public lands. Another law threatened by legislation is the Wilderness Act, which preserves important landscapes in their natural condition for recreation ranging from camping and hunting to fishing and hiking. You could say that these congressional attacks are a response to public dislike of public lands, but the polls just don’t back that up. A recent bipartisan poll conducted by Colorado College reaffirmed the idea that Americans, especially in the West, care deeply about our shared wild places and the benefits they provide to both wildlife and people. What’s more, over 85 percent of all Westerners say that “our national parks, forests, monuments and wildlife areas are an essential part of the state’s economy.” It is clear that most Americans embrace this incredible birthright and celebrate their natural heritage.

Paying too much rent for office space in

So what inspires these determined attacks in Congress? One answer is that these lands are being used as a scapegoat in an argument over the appropriate role of the federal government. Some members of Congress may also be caving in to pressure from the many special interests that want to drill, dig and otherwise exploit our public lands for private gain. Whatever the reason, we can’t let these attacks end the story. We must ensure that these landscapes will endure. This is a teachable moment for everyone in the political arena — from both parties — about standing up for the wild places that are part of the living fabric of the West. William Meadows is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org). He has been president of The Wilderness Society in Washington, D.C., since 1996.

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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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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

CLASSIC ASPEN

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

Much of a day for dog and man could be taken up by a social visit with a visiting teamster en route to the mines.

THE LOST DIARY OF CHARLES S. ARMSTRONG a generation of bachelor miners eked out an existence

in the West. “The Lost Journals of Charles S. Armstrong: from Arkport, New York to Aspen, Colorado” by Christian Buys details an example in Armstrong’s diary from 1890 through 1894. From a later Armstrong diary (1899-1901), when he was in his early 50s, here are additional observations:

Armstrong lived in a cabin he built near the junction of Little Annie and Castle Creek roads. He owned and worked a mining claim, but it yielded only small amounts of copper. His cash came from work as a mine surveyor. His diaries detail his expenses: foodstuffs, tobacco, alcohol, and dry goods. He bought milk and eggs from a neighboring ranch. Armstrong lived off the land, seemingly enjoying the quest for food as much as the eating of it. He caught and consumed vast quantities of trout throughout much of the year. Grouse were a seasonal favorite that he acquired when he was “out gunning.” Duck, deer, rabbit, and bear provided additional meat. He baked his own bread and cakes, grew carrots and potatoes, and raised feed for his horse. He set traps near streams and checked them nearly every day.

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He pocketed cash for fox, marten, and lynx; yet he often found only mountain rats in his traps. Food gathering and work kept him busy, but he had plenty of time for socializing. His home was a stagecoach stop, and he detailed

Armstrong made frequent trips to Aspen and Ashcroft, where he spent what little cash he had on beer and whiskey in saloons, especially Dan McArthur’s in Ashcroft. When he collected wages for surveying and other work he did in mines, he paid

WOMEN WERE MENTIONED IN HIS DIARY RARELY. HE NEVER MENTIONED THE NAME OF HIS DOG, BUT HE WAS ATTACHED TO HIS HORSE, MIKE, WHICH HE USED TO GATHER FIREWOOD AND FOR OCCASIONAL WAGON TRIPS. THERE IS NO SUGGESTION, HOWEVER, THAT HE EVER SUFFERED FROM CABIN FEVER. the daily comings and goings of passengers and teamsters, gathering gossip and maintaining friendships. His cabin provided respite for travelers in bad weather.

Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

off his bar bills. One diary entry sums up his financial condition, “I must quit drinking.” Besides drinking, Armstrong’s other favorite pastime was reading

newspapers. McArthur sent him copies of the daily New York Sun and he read them from cover to cover, along with the Aspen and Denver papers. Newspaper stories he commented on during 1899 and 1900 included the death of Queen Victoria, Teddy Roosevelt’s hunting in Colorado, and the Jamestown flood. He followed the Boer War in detail, and took delight whenever England lost a battle. He served as an election clerk for Ashcroft in the 1900 William McKinley and William Jennings Bryan contest, and commented that all 17 votes cast in Ashcroft went to Democrat Bryan. We idealize subsistence existence, but scratching out a living above 9,000 feet through long, hard winters was tough. Armstrong was a tough bird who easily walked to Aspen and back in the same day, or trekked over Taylor Pass to Dorchester for a day’s work. Women were mentioned in his diary rarely. He never mentioned the name of his dog, but he was attached to his horse, Mike, which he used to gather firewood and for occasional wagon trips. There is no suggestion, however, that he ever suffered from cabin fever. Armstrong’s lifestyle differed from the thousands of 19th-century residents of Aspen who lived just a few miles away. Putting a century between his daily diary entries and our hectic routines creates an even greater divide. We have something in common, however; Armstrong read “Swiss Family Robinson” and found it “interesting.” 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

THE BIRTH OF SPORT

1936 A N DR E RO C H

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

“CONSTRUCTION work in winter resort is being rushed,” headlined an article in the Aspen Times on Dec. 10, 1936. “Mr. Andre Roch of Lausanne, Switzerland, Dr. Gunther Langes of Bolsano, Italy, accompanied by Mr. James S. Bodrero of Rome arrive in the city last Friday and will remain throughout the coming winter months making observations of the weather conditions and its depth in the high mountain regions. These men will also give instructions in the arts of winter sports while here, and will live in the lodge that is now under construction.” The birth of winter sports in Aspen began with the Highland Bavarian Lodge and Andre Roch’s exploration of our spectacular mountains. Above: Eleven people line up in front of the Highland Bavarian Lodge holding skis. Pictured in the top row are Andre Roch, Gretl Arnold Fuler, Steve Hart, Norman Barwise, and an unknown (possibly James S. Bodrero), Italian Consul. In the bottom row is William V. Hodges, Martha Wilcox, Joseph Hodges, Polly Grimes, and Frank Ashley. December 1936.

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

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

NEED TO KNOW

109

Weight (pair, size M): 250 g Temperature range: -21/4 °C, -5/25 °F Woven nylon, abrasionresistant shell 100 g fleece palm-side insulation 200 g Thermolite backof-hand insulation

BLACK DIAMOND VIRAGO SKI GLOVES If you are looking for a mid-warmth glove with the ability to go full-furnace, the Black Diamond Virago might be the best option. With the Virago, when the mercury plunges, you can drop a heater pack into the back-of-hand pocket for extra heat. Add a fixed waterproof Gore-Tex with XCR Product Technology liner, stretch nylon shell and goat leather palm and back of hand, and you have a darn good glove for work or play. — Ute Mountaineer Staff

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Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

PHOTO COURTESY BLACK DIAMOND


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rying Pan River…

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

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by GUNILLA ASHER

NEED TO KNOW 2 ounces sake 1 ounce vodka Ice Shake well and strain into a martini glass Garnish with a cucumber and ginger

COCKTAIL: SAKETINI Kenichi makes a Saketini — sake and vodka, garnished with ginger and cucumber — that is fantastic. It has just enough of all the flavors to make it refreshing, while the ginger and cucumber mask the potency of the sake and vodka. I am starting to think that you can make “tini” drinks with almost anything — and sake ended up being a good choice. Kanpai. Gunilla Asher grew up in Aspen, and now is the co-manager of The Aspen Times. She writes a drink review weekly, in the spirit of “She’s not a connoisseur, but she is heavily practiced.”

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Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

PHOTO BY THINKSTOCK


WINEINK

WORDS to DRINK BY

by KELLY J. HAYES

EXPLORING THE DOURO VALLEY WINE IS ABOUT THE marriage of the old and the new. Ancient vineyards are reinvigorated by new generations of growers. Traditional winemaking practices enhance the quality of rediscovered varietals. You get the picture. The concept crystallized for me this past week when I ran into an old friend who is embarking upon a new adventure in wine. I have written about Donald Ziraldo in this space in the past. Charismatic and cultured, Ziraldo gained KELLY J. international acclaim HAYES when he and viticulturist Karl Kaiser successfully introduced an Old World wine style known as “Eiswein” to the New World. In the mid-1980s, the pair began leaving grapes on their vines on the Niagara Peninsula in Canada into the early days of winter. They harvested the frozen clusters in the middle of the darkest, coldest nights of December before releasing the sugar-filled nectar of the grapes to make Inniskillin Ice Wines. The story has become legend and the brand became Canada’s most recognizable contribution to the world of wine. Now, a quarter century removed from that first vintage of Inniskillin, Ziraldo is taking his expertise and passion for wine to one of the world’s oldest wine regions, the Douro Valley of Portugal. Ziraldo is part of a team that has acquired a property in the heart of the Douro. Called Senhora Do Covento, the estate features a 12th-century monastery with a sinister history, 300 acres, of which 60 are planted with grapes, and most importantly, a newly constructed, state-of-the-art gravity flow winery building. This new chapter presents an incredible opportunity in a region that, though potentially fraught with peril due to the European debt crises, has the potential to become the “next great place.” Portugal and the Douro Valley have long been significant players in the wine world. But that reputation stems largely from the production of the fortified wines known as Port that hail from the region. Today, however, the

PHOTO BY VICTORIA GILBERT

buzz in this ancient valley is all about the potential for table wines made from the indigenous grapes Touriga Nacional, Touriga Franca and Tinta Roriz, which is known as Tempranillo in Spain. Though I have had Port and the white Vinho Verde wines from

Portugal’s extreme northern reaches and, as a youth reveled in the cheap plonk that was bottled under the Mateus and Lancer’s labels (my wine of choice when I was hanging in front of Malibu Liquors looking for someone of age to accommodate my bad taste), I have never tasted

the newer bottling of these grapes. So, with certainty that I would find a bottle or two to inspire this writing, I headed to “Of Grape & Grain” in town. Alas, though three shelves were stocked with excellent Port, there was nary a Portuguese table wine in the

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

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WINEINK

WORDS to DRINK BY

entire shop. In their stead, however, I found proprietor Gary Plumley, who was more than willing to share his knowledge and passion for a place he had visited a decade or so ago as a guest of Taylor Fladgate, one of the premium Port producers in the region. Gary gave me the 411. The Douro River, which has its headwaters in Spain, flows west to the Atlantic through a very steep valley. The slopes, many pitched to 60 degrees (consider that Highland Bowl tops out at just under 50 degrees at the

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Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

by KELLY J. HAYES

steepest points), were originally too steep to hold vines in the stony schist and granite soils. So in the 17th century, growers painstakingly built terraces out of rock to plant the grapes. Today many of these terraces remain, hosting hardy, low-slung vines with dark, deep purple, almost black, grapes that are amongst the most resilient on earth. The Douro flows through the valley to the port city of Porto, famous for being the home of, you got it, Port. For hundreds of years the growers up river would harvest the grapes and place them on boats called “rabelos” that run down river to Porto, where they could age in the Port Lodges as a the storage facilities in Porto are called. Today the river has five significant dams and the rabelos are now employed as tourist boats

running visitors up river. This historic valley, and the vines that cling to its hillsides, are being considered seriously by many significant European winemakers as a place of enormous potential. If the economic situation can be stabilized and tourism takes hold, the Douro Valley of Portugal could become both a budding wine destination as well as a producer of hearty red wines. Think about places like the Barossa Valley of Australia, the Mendoza region of Argentina and even the Ribera del Duero in Portugal’s neighbor, Spain. All were largely regional suppliers of wine as recently as 20 to 30 years ago before they became recognized as hot spots. All that is old can be new again. While circumstances must converge to make it happen, the prescience of a man like Donald Ziraldo can only help speed the process. Kelly J. Hayes lives in the soonto-be-designated appellation of Old Snowmass with his wife, Linda, and a black Lab named Vino. He can be reached at malibukj@wineink.com.

PHOTOS BY VICTORIA GILBERT


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GARAGE/STORAGE FIREPLACE

ON SITE GAS

EXTRAS CONCIERGE AMENITIES HOT TUBS/POOL/GYM

market update

Aspen Snowmass Basalt WEEK’S HIGHEST SALE

820 E. Hyman Avenue

$2,299,500

3 bdrm Aspen townhome WEEK’S LOWEST SALE

Roaring River Condominium

$119,500

1 bdrm in Basalt

#

PROPERTIES PUT UNDER CONTRACT LAST MONTH

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1,450 3/3

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20 25 4

2012 YTD CLOSED TRANSACTIONS

Total # of Sales Sales Volume Sale Price to List Price Avg Days on Market

Week Ending February 17, 2012 CURRENT INVENTORY

2012

2011

Active Listings Pending Listings

873 63

920 44

YTD AVG SOLD PRICE PER SQ FT

Aspen Homes Aspen Condos Snowmass Homes Snowmass Condos Basalt Homes Basalt Condos

$1,051 $ 916 1,070 1,262 878 478 496 484 189 372 166 300

2011 YTD CLOSED TRANSACTIONS

35 $79,553,682 91% 315

Total # of Sales Sales Volume Sale Price to List Price Avg Days on Market

23 $46,350,400 90% 331

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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

OBSERVATIONS FROM THE ARTS DESK

Aspenite Dan Sheridan has released the album, “Liberty Street.”

• I have come to like ballet and dance, • A host of singer-songwriter types — and I have come to cherish the Aspen Santa Fe Ballet company, which routinely out-performs the more established, big-city companies that the Aspen Santa Fe Ballet brings in to perform in Aspen. Never, though, do I remember watching a dance piece and thinking, “Great — only I really wish it had gone on longer.” But that was my reaction to “Square None,” which was debuted last weekend by the ASFB company. The first commissioned piece by 23-year-old choreographer Norbert De La Cruz III built in speed and intensity over its 17 or so minutes, exploring themes of youth and naïveté. With innovative (and youthful) approaches to movement and lighting, it felt like a thrill, like a discovery of something new. As far as I was concerned, it was thrill that could have kept on going — as wonderful as it was, it felt like there was still more to explore, more building that could have been done. Which is not a bad way to leave the audience — wanting more. My instincts tell me that Aspen audiences will see more of De La Cruz, and that word of the choreographer’s talents have already started spreading beyond this valley.

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Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

Todd Snider and Ani DiFranco come to mind — have turned their backs on the idea that the label singer-songwriter could invariably include the adjective “sensitive.” But Aspenite Dan Sheridan is sensitive, embraces it, and makes sensitivity the essence of his new album “Liberty Street.” In a warm, intimate voice — it sounds like a friend telling you a story as much as it sounds like someone having recorded an album — Sheridan sings about his kids, his marriage and divorce, his take on the spiritual world. His songs come off as messages to himself — “Be the Light,” “Be Yourself ” — and it’s best to take these words from someone who has put thought and wisdom into them. Balancing the sincerity is a sense of humor and lightness, which comes through best on “Slow Learner,” a gentle poke at himself, and a prod to keep getting better.

PHOTO BY STEWART OKSENHORN


by STEWART OKSENHORN

• A reader noted that three prominent • The Aspen Writers’ Foundation’s galleries in downtown Aspen have placed their chips on local artists — over Presidents Weekend, no less. Quintenz & Company, in its Hyman Avenue space, has a magnificent show by Andrew Roberts-Gray, a Glenwood Springs painter whose examination of the conflict between nature and technology has been attracting much attention of late. The David Floria Gallery has its spotlight on Aspenite Jody Guralnick, whose current series, Prescience, is another step forward in dimensionality and uncovering little-noticed elements of the natural and scientific realms. The Nugget Gallery features series by three local photographers: flowers by Cliff Mohwinkel, horses by Summers Moore, and Aspen landscapes by gallery owner Ross Kribbs. If you think you’ve seen plenty of flowers, horses and Aspen, you’re in for a discovery. Each of these photographers takes a fresh look at his subject, and finds a new level of beauty.

winter program, already loaded (with upcoming events with Tracy Kidder, Michael Chabon and “The Help” writer Kathryn Stockett), got even better with the announcement that T.C. Boyle, author of 22 books including the new novel, “When the Killing’s Done,” will be appearing in a special event March 17 at the Woody Creek Community Center. But it’s possible that the Writers’ Foundation’s winter highlight has already come and gone. Ann Patchett, who opened the organization’s Winter Words series earlier this month, sold out the Wheeler Opera House, and left a few handfuls of people begging for tickets at the door — this for a writer! And one who hasn’t had a hit movie made of any of her books! In an interview I had with Patchett before her appearance here, she said she is a writer, and that’s all — what she does is write. But at the Wheeler, Patchett seemed to have a bit of the rock star in her, and not only because she filled a 500-seat theater. Patchett was funny enough to be a comedian, spontaneous enough to be an improv actor, and enough of a presence to be a movie star. And yes, she’s got a way of telling a story that comes through on stage as well as it does on page: She began her talk with memories of her early book tours, and the insight that the people she really was reaching out to were the bookstore cashiers. She then circled around to her recent second career, as a bookstore owner, and laid further praise on bookstore clerks — the heart of the publishing industry. It was a thing of beauty. The Winter Words series cranks up again this week with husbandand-wife Pulitzer winners, journalist Tony Horwitz and novelist Geraldine Brooks, appearing together Monday, Feb. 27 at the Wheeler.

“Aspen Autumn,” part of the Ute Cityscapes series by Aspenite Ross Kribbs, is showing at the Nugget Gallery.a

We’ve turned a quartet

into a symphony.

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by STEWART OKSENHORN

• How about that legendary jam-band absolutely ripping it up for three nights in Colorado last weekend before heading into the next phase of their career? I’m referring, not so obviously, to Phil Lesh & Friends. The former Grateful Dead bassist assembled a killer version of his rotating ensemble — led by guitarists Warren Haynes, John Scofield and Jackie Greene — for a three-night stand at Broomfield’s 1st Bank Center. On the first night (the only show I attended), the band joyfully tore into a set of core Grateful Dead material (“Shakedown Street,” “Scarlet Begonias,” “Franklin’s Tower”). The playing was outstanding; Lesh is as unique and excellent a bassist as ever, and the three guitarists managed to coordinate their individual talents effortlessly. Just as impressive was the spirit of the show, as Lesh and his mates took every opportunity to hug one another and smile across the stage. Now Lesh heads off into the next realm. Terrapin Crossroads, his performance venue/restaurant in San Rafael, Calif., opens in earnest next month with a series of Phil & Friends shows that feature the likes of Haynes and Greene, Black Crowes singer Chris Robinson, Lesh’s Grateful Dead mate Bob Weir, and Jimmy Herring, who plays guitar in a Southern rock band Aspenites might recall: Widespread Panic.

• Don’t expect an endless parade of

Phil & Friends, led by bassist Phil Lesh, played a three-night stand last week in Broomfield.

acoustic guitar strummers at the Wheeler Opera House’s 7908 Aspen Songwriters Festival. The festival, set for March 21-25, features pop-rock singer Matt Nathanson, who dazzled the audience at last year’s festival — and returns this year with a full band and a hit album, “Modern Love”; Louisiana soulman Marc Broussard, also with a band; Texas singer Carrie Rodriguez, whose main instrument is a fiddle; and Adam Aijala and Ben Kauffman, the guitarist and bassist from Colorado’s amped-up bluegrass group Yonder Mountain String Band. Also on the bill are Kenny Loggins, playing in his new trio, Blue Sky Riders; rocker Bob Schneider; and yes, a few notable folkie-type singer-songwriters, including Darrell Scott and James McMurtry. Plus festival regulars John Oates, who co-produced the event, and picker Sam Bush, who will be in attendance all week to sit in as needed.

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PHOTO BY PHOTO BY STEWART OKSENHORN


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Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012


SPREADSHEETS, LOVE, FRIENDS AND HUMILITY TED DAVENPORT BALANCES LIFE ON THE RED CARPET WITH THE HUMILITY OF BEING HOME

by RYAN SLABAUGH

it’s a tuesday, and Ted sits across the

table from me at Saxy’s in Basalt. Immediately, he throws it down: “Just don’t sensationalize,” he says. He pauses. I think he means to ask it as a favor, but after he says it, his eyes narrow, his lips tighten. They emphasize.

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“NOT FEARLESS. I DID NOT WANT TO SAY FEARLESS. WHEN I’M AT THE EXIT, I’M SHITTING MY PANTS.” — TED DAVENPORT

“I’ll try not to,” I promise. He’s not convinced. “It doesn’t need it,” he says. He writes the sentence for me. “You can say something simple like, ‘Ted Davenport is recovering from an injury where he broke his leg during his attempt to win his third World Heli-skiing Championship …’” He does this several times — giving me leads on sentence ideas. I actually like it. He always apologizes shortly after, but he doesn’t need to. “I know you’re the writer,” he says. None of what the Aspen-bred professional athlete was telling me needed sensationalizing. For Ted’s whole career, writers and videographers have fallen for this

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trap, using words like “gnarly” and “freakish” to describe his life and ruining the story. They only call back when he crashes. They print pictures of him in hospital gowns. They call him “Chris’s brother.” He’s been burned so often I can still smell it. We both fear: I might be one of them. But he has a point. His story deserves a better spin. Google “Ted Davenport,” and the first three headlines that show up are: “Bad crash landing for Ted Davenport.” “Ted Davenport breaks leg.” And “Ted Davenport explains incident at Anvil Points.” He can’t escape it, hence the limp when he walks. Even when he watches

Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

television, there is a chance he’ll see his endorsement in a commercial for Aspen Valley Hospital, which includes a line saying he is “back doing what he loves.” Due to the injury he described above at the Championship in New Zealand in August, that means working at Performance Ski in Aspen and going to physical therapy a few days a week. I get it. The irony is not lost on Ted.

FOR A MOMENT, let’s go back to 2010, when Ted was healthy and spending a month in one of the most remote regions of the planet, Baffin Island, a rare geographic landmark in the barren Arctic Circle. To

get to camp, it took nine hours of snowmobile riding from the nearest village, the expedition’s nearest hope of a rescue should something go wrong. Others have skied Baffin — the first in 1977 — but truly, nothing had ever gone down like this. At one point, Ted climbed up a mountain and skied off a waterfall, engaged his wingsuit and flew over a mighty white glacier below him, and then landed and later blogged about it. Later, after another successful jump, he turned around to see two dozen other expedition members fly around a band of nearby cliffs. During the 30 days, the crew completed more than 300 wingsuit

C O N T R I B U T E D P H OTO S / M AT T P OW E R


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jumps — all of them down to the chalky white floor of the Arctic. “We had a massive base camp,” Ted said. “But we all got along. It’s hit or miss usually on a big expedition, but everybody worked hard together to help each other, to jump as often as possible.” I wish that ended the story. I should mention that one of the members of the expedition died, and I should tell you it was a guy named Jim Mitchell, a father, a close friend of everyone there, and I should probably let you know how they all rallied and continued, like they always do. It also seems prudent to tell you that when asked about it, Ted said, “Shit happens. Anything can happen. We all get the risks, and so did Jim, and he was a great guy, but we all understand it is part of this, that one little mistake and you can die.” Should I mention all that? Perhaps I should not.

TED’S BASE LOG

53

JUMPS IN

12

DAYS

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That’s what people end up always writing about Ted.

SO LET’S GO TO A NEW SUBJECT — Ted Davenport is also a movie star. The dramatics in Baffin Island landed Ted, who has a business degree from Denver University, in the Ski Channel’s recent cinematic release, “Winter,” a feature-length film that primarily shows skiers in plain clothes talking about what they do and why they do it. Steve Bellamy, the film’s director, debuted it in Los Angeles to 1,400 fans and gave Ted the red carpet treatment. Bellamy even surprised himself by putting Ted in the closing segment — the action sports film equivalent of the starring role. At first, he thought Davenport — who has two Warren Miller credits and was in Teton Gravity Research’s classic “Tangerine Dream” — was a

F E D , its soooo close to LOCKING IN!!!! C B A 1st jump of fall trip…super nice track Stowed 260 BJ nose igh leg. LB-h left 265 9.22.09 nice one, still bit wobbly with ng on powerline..:) Stowed BJ 260 fixed heading right away! Then landi LB-high nose 266 9.22.09 cracker opening, line twist 90 left, Stowed 260 BJ ct! nose Perfe igh rd. LB-h inwa 267 9.23.09 best track yet, pointed toes , f--kn rad though! Stowed BJ 260 n, lineswist and almost land talus LB-high nose 268 ction! 9.23.09 Sickest Jump EVER! 2way w. Fabia Stowed Getting real good with heading corre 260 mit! MTV Dam ! twist er anoth Eiger but , 269 9.24.09 2way w. fabian, great track Stowed 260 MTV se there st amou almo , LB-L track 270 9.24.09 cool upper fog jump, nice Stowed BJ 260 over the tree ledge. LB-high nose 271 9.25.09 tracked kinda right, almost right Stowed 260 BJ out! Top 5 jump for sure! hump amel LB-C 272 jump ever! 9seconds of full white 9.25.09 Fog st Sicke ed Stow 260 BJ hump amel LB-C 273 9.25.09 nice track, simple, better. Stowed BJ 260 LB-high nose 274 9.26.09 1st solo of trip, very cool. Stowed 260 MTV nose igh jump, coolest exit ever I think! LB-h 275 9.26.09 1st time off upper exit, HUGE gap Stowed 260 BJ Ulti n! Tracked right over trees, cool. igh 28mi LB-H in 276 9.26.09 rally jump, Solo, did full lap Stowed 260 MTV Ulti f--k cool! igh so LB-H exit, 277 9.26.09 another SICK jump off high Stowed BJ 260 d, heading to via ferrata!!! LB-High Ulti 278 K IN MY WHOLE LIFE! So f--kn stoke 9.26.09 TRAC BEST ed Stow 260 anywhere. BJ best se the of amou one LB-L inly certa 279 9.27.09 this exit is so frickn rad, Stowed BJ 260 f--kin sick!!!!! LB-High Ulti 280 rocked the track over the ledge so 9.27.09 f--kin Yeah ed Stow BJ 260 stupid! LB-ViaFerrata 281 9.27.09 solo, forgot chinstrap, 1.5 broken, Stowed MTV 260 LB-Lamouse 282 i, so-so track, land @redbullset 9.28.09 Rom with 2way ed Stow MTV 260 LB-high nose 283 9.28.09 awesome solo, good track. to ledge. Stowed MTV 260 ng but stuck it. Very very very close LB-High Ulti 284 9.28.09 SICK LEDGE TRACK!!! Tree landi ed Stow ss. 260 thele MTV none 2 cool rata, iaFer track shit LB-V but 285 9.28.09 2way with Romi, rally hike Stowed BJ 260 wohh! Super fun. Eiger 286 9.29.09 2way with Romi, barrel roll off exit… Stowed 260 MTV actually Ulti igh LB-H 287 9.29.09 miles! Shitass track, kinda funny with 2way ed Stow BJ 260 LB-high nose 288 me. Decent 2way, fun jump. , 9.30.09 romi , miles ed Stow MTV 260 , more focused. LB-high nose 289 9.30.09 awesome solo, got my track back Stowed MTV 260 LB-High Ulti 290 solo, pulling high though! :) 9.30.09 great er anoth ed Stow MTV 260 in the valley. LB-High Ulti 291 9.30.09 I love this exit! Best tracking exit Stowed BJ 260 the hike, 1:28. LB-High Ulti 292 9.30.09 off eiger, super fun, f--kn rallied track best ed Stow BJ 260 Eiger 293 n, nice. 10.1.09 fabia with 2way ed Stow MTV 260 LB-High Ulti 294 10.1.09 2way with Geo, sick! Stowed MTV 260 LB-High Ulti 295 10.1.09 2way with Geo, sick! Stowed 260 MTV Ulti igh LB-H 296 10.1.09 2way with Geo, sick! Stowed 260 MTV Ulti though igh LB-H 297 10.1.09 solo, decent track kinda sorta. Fun Stowed 260 MTV 300 is next!!! nose igh LB-h 298 Neil, barely beat me, super fun!! 10.2.09 with race 2way ed Stow 2nd, all good. MTV 260 LB-high nose 299 Couple barrel rolls, bit unstable afetr best jump ! 10.2.09 jump 300th ed Stow 260 the wall, to turn and track, not the g MTV facin to Ulti flip, igh front r LB-H nuthe o 300 10.2.09 2way w. Geo, front flip..t Stowed river, super sick! 260 the MTV over ever, Ulti ate igh Ultim LB-H High off 301 10.2.09 2way w. geo, best track Stowed MTV 260 LB-High Ulti 302 10.2.09 solo, nice track, super smooth. Stowed 260 MTV Ulti igh LB-H 303 10.2.09 bandit jump, sick track. ed Stow BJ 260 the ledge! LB-High Ulti 304 10.3.09 f--kin rocked the track! So high over Stowed 260 BJ exit rata iaFer LB-V 305 ome track, f--kin so dialed off this 10.3.09 awes er anoth ed Stow BJ 260 LB-ViaFerrata 306 er awesome jump! 10.3.09 anoth yet and ed Stow BJ 260 r the tram lines tomoro! LB-ViaFerrata 307 10.3.09 tried to go more right, def going unde Stowed BJ 260 LB-ViaFerrata 308 jump 10.3.09 ing morn nice ed Stow BJ 260 LB-High Ulti 309 10.4.09 2way WS jump with Geo Stowed BJ 260 LB-high nose 310 10.4.09 nice track, so dialed in. Stowed 260 MTV rata iaFer LB-V 311 10.4.09 called amber, fun track! Stowed 260 MTV Ulti igh LB-H 312 10.4.09 2way WS with jimmy, flyby crossover. ed Stow MTV 260 jump. 49… LB-ViaFerrata 313 10.4.09 f--kin rad track to the river! Rally ed Stow MTV 260 !! LB-High Ulti 314 ION!!! SO SICK 50 jumps in 12 days! 10.4.09 MISS SOLO ed Stow BJ 260 Eiger 315 on f--kn lockdown! 10.5.09 exit this got ed Stow MTV 260 ! LB-ViaFerrata 316 10.5.09 another one, this is getting rediculous Stowed MTV 260 f--kin yeah this trip rocked!!!!!!!!!!! LB-High Ulti 317 1more….53 jumps in 12 days hells 10.5.09 just do to had ed Stow 260 MTV Ulti igh LB-H 318 10.5.09

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C O N T R I B U T E D P H OTO S / M AT T P OW E R


WINTER W OR D S

dud. In fact, some of Bellamy’s first words to me were, “I didn’t know Ted.” “I didn’t know if I could get Ted

series of literary performances

“WE HAD A GUY EATEN BY A CROCODILE IN THIS YEAR’S FILM. THIS YEAR THESE PEOPLE ARE PLAYING FOR KEEPS. … YOU SEE ALL THESE PEOPLE ON THE ABSOLUTE RAZOR’S EDGE FOR 90 MINUTES, AND THEN THE LAST THREE MINUTES, YOU SEE THE CLOSING, AND YOU GET THE PUNCH LINE. IT MAKES YOU LEAVE INSPIRED TO GET EVERY BREATH THE REST OF YOUR LIFE.” — STEVE BELLAMY, DIRECTOR OF “WINTER”

off the page | season no. 15 National Book Award winner Pulitzer Prize winner Nonfiction powerhouse

TRACY KIDDER

in the film in the beginning,” he elaborated. Bellamy soon learned. “In the end, Ted ended up coming out the top athlete,” he added. I asked Bellamy what stood out to him in this film. “Ted, of course,” he replied perfectly. Other than Ted. “We had a guy eaten by a crocodile in this year’s film,” Bellamy said. “This year these people are playing for keeps. … You see all these people on the absolute razor’s edge for 90 minutes, and then the last three minutes, you see the closing, and you get the punch line. It makes you leave inspired to get every breath the rest of your life.”

TED’S LIFE IS GETTING MORE COMPLICATED. With more than 600 base jumps notched in his belt, Ted is turning into a veteran in the sport, but it goes beyond his day job. The 31-year-old bought a house in Basalt in 2010, is engaged to his fiancé, Amber, and is rightfully protective of all of it. (He’s pretty sweet about Amber. In every interview I read with Ted in the last two years, he mentioned how much he loves her. He mentioned her several times in our interview.) That’s another thing the movie “Winter” is about — love. Love of sport. Love of person. A now famous segment shows Rory Bushfield and his wife, Sarah Burke, cuddling on the couch and talking about why they ski professionally. Rory rubs her wedding ring, and she looks him in the eye and smiles. Sarah fell in a halfpipe practice in January and died nine days later. Ted knew Sarah well, and had just met Rory. “Absolutely crushed,” Ted said.

C O N T R I B U T E D P H OTO S / M AT T P OW E R

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TICKETS + PA ES ON SALE NOW! $20 Standard [includes a ticket to public event with book signing] $50 Author Salon* [includes one ticket to pubic event with book signing and one ticket to members-only reception with the author] GROUP and STUDENT/EDUCATOR discounts available!

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Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

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Ted gets emotional. “Anyone on the mountain could have died the way Sarah died. She caught an edge and fell on her head wrong,” Ted said. “That’s why I have to stay humble. This is the inherent risk. Fatalities. Injuries. The way it makes me feel when I do it is why I do it. … It’s not an easy thing to put into words.”

TED PUTS EVERY JUMP INTO WORDS. When you hear Ted Davenport tell stories about his friends who clip mountain peaks while doing 140 miles per hour in a wingsuit and live, and believe the guy when he says he feels fearless standing two inches from a 300-foot cliff, and then also see him correct himself and say, “Not fearless. I did not want to say fearless. When I’m at the exit, I’m shitting my pants. I’m scared …,” you would not imagine him also sitting at a computer — ever — and entering data into an Excel spreadsheet. “Base jumpers are a bunch of dorks,” he says. Ted’s spreadsheet is a complete record of his base jumps. For each one, he enters data for location, weather, day and time, and adds a quick summary of the overall experience. The first two entries in his 2009 worksheet, a year where he completed a prolific 150 jumps, read like this: “1st SkiB.A.S.E, huge front, so sick, top5jumps”; and the next: “Ground strike, should be dead, PC hesitation, fckn gnarley!!” Then he did 148 more. Ted wishes everyone had a comprehensive spreadsheet. It would be a lot safer that way, he says. The base-jumping community, fueled by exposure on YouTube and nationally distributed films, inspired a lot of athletes like Ted to learn the relatively new sport. But, as they say, it also planted a few ideas who grew up into idiots. “You’re not going to get a lot of respect if you order a pack online and show up and start jumping,” Ted said. “You could stay alive, for awhile. But then at some point, your chute is going to malfunction or something is going to happen and then you’re going

C O N T R I B U T E D P H OTO S / M AT T P OW E R

to get hurt. Or die.” You might “PLF,” as they say in his sport. “Parachute Landing Fall.” It’s when the chute opens late and you tuck and roll and hope you get out of it. Like in the war movies. Those are big mistakes, the spreadsheet’s bad data cells. Each line is just a few words, but tells a story. Entry no. 43 in 2009: “CRAZY landing for me!” Entry no. 61 in 2009: “rally jump, cool gainer, still need to SLOW it down!“ They reach a climax after an unimaginable streak of jumps, including number 94, when he flew through a foggy whiteout for nine seconds. “Top 5 jump for sure!” he exclaims after his more pecific notations. “We’re very critical about

WHAT I FORGOT TO ASK TED

everything,” Ted tells me. “You want the jump to go perfect from start to finish.”

NOTHING GOES PERFECT FROM START TO FINISH. That is, unless you fly off cliffs in a wingsuit. Then it can go perfect. Ted leaves the interview and says, “This went better than I thought.” I feel like I ignored him and went to my car. I was buried, trying to figure out how to write a story about a base jumper who crashes and a big-mountain skier who breaks his leg and not make it sensational. Then it came to me, as plain as the notes in my notebook. Moments before, when we were still at the coffee shop and I had a chocolate donut sitting in front of me, he gave me context. He gave me my chance.

Ted told me what he thought was sensational. To Ted, sensational is three scenes represented in the Ski Channel’s movie. The first is when Mike Wilson does a quad-flip off a rope swing — a spontaneous, dangerous trick that showed style, ingenuity and a little bit of athletic freakishness. The second is one you have to see, when Kris Holm rides his unicycle against a forest seemingly sliding downhill toward him, all while inches off a cliff edge, the bottom of which is hundreds of feet below. Hell, the unicycler even scared Ted. And there was one more. That scene with Rory and Sarah, in love. They are on a couch, and in the backseat of a moving vehicle, and skiing, and telling stories about their engagement. “We get through it because we have a close community,” Ted said. “That’s what the people saw at our movie premiere in L.A., and people who do not know about us will learn from this movie.” Ted’s serious. He believes in this film. Its mission — to bring these athletes down to the level of normal to a mass audience — is not so different than where he is in life, in protecting a home while progressing a career. “The film does a good job at showing we are not really crazy,” he said. “… that we can help each other, love each other and console each other. That we are not these freaks, that we are real people.”

I forgot to ask him when he’d return on downhill skis. Through an email, he told me this spring. He is nordic skiing for now. He told me on the phone last Friday that he was planning to traverse back to the Maroon Bells — “I feel pretty good on my nordics right now, way better than I was a couple weeks ago.”

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

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VOYAGES

DESTINATION | YOSEMITE

by TRACIE CONE/AP

THE FIRE FLOWS IN FEBRUARY A WINDOW OF TIME just opened in Yosemite National Park when nature photographers wait, as if for an eclipse, until the moment when the sun and earth align to create a fleeting phenomenon. This marvel of celestial configuration happens in a flash at sunset in midFebruary — if the winter weather cooperates. On those days the setting sun illuminates one of the park’s lesser-known waterfalls so precisely that it resembles molten lava as it flows over the sheer granite face of the imposing El Capitan. Every year growing numbers of photographers converge on the park, their necks craned toward the ephemeral Horsetail Fall, hoping the sky will be clear so they can duplicate the spectacle first recorded in color in 1973 by the late renowned outdoors photographer Galen Rowell. But photographing Horsetail is a lesson in astronomy, physics and geometry as hopefuls consider the azimuth degrees and minutes of the earth’s orbit relative to the sun to determine the optimal day to experience it. They are looking for the lowest angle of light that will paint Horsetail the colors of an iridescent sunset as rays reflect off granite behind the water. It materializes in varying degrees of intensity for the same two weeks every year. To be successful in photographing the watery firefall, it takes luck and timing, and the cooperation of nature. Horsetail Fall drains a small area on the eastern summit of El Capitan and flows only in the winter and spring in years with

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adequate rain and snow, which is scarce this year. Experts say it doesn’t take a lot of water for the fall to light up. When conditions

Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

come together, the scrawny Horsetail Fall is the shining star of a park famed for its other waterfalls — raging Yosemite Fall and Bridalveil

Fall. But Horsetail is the longest free-falling one, with a drop of 1,500 feet before it hits granite and spills another 500.

P H OTO B Y S C OT T G E D I M A N / Y O S E M I T E N AT I O N A L PA R K S E R V I C E


AROUNDASPEN

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES

ANN PATCHETT AND THE ASPEN WRITERS’ FOUNDATION AFTER HER SOLDOUT talk at the Wheeler Opera House, author Ann Patchett was guest of honor at a reception given at the Baldwin Gallery by Alex Halperin, publisher of Aspen Peak magazine. The magazine will be hosting receptions after each of the author presentations during the Aspen Writers’ Foundation’s Winter MARY Words series. ESHBAUGH HAYES The March 2012 issue of Town & Country magazine includes some beautiful photographs of the wedding last summer of Devon McCloskey and Michael Karpowicz at the McCloskey Ranch on Hunter Creek in Aspen. The magazine noted that although the couple fell in love while students at Notre Dame, Michael proposed while he and Devon were hiking on the McCloskey Ranch. One of the photos shows Devon and Michael riding horseback to their wedding, with Devon in her wedding gown. Providing the music for the affair was The McCloskey Brothers Band, a bluegrass combo formed by Devon’s brothers more than a decade ago. Devon is the daughter of Bonnie and Tom McCloskey. Undercurrent ... Several families sent us Valentine’s cards with photos of their families ... instead of Christmas cards which often get unappreciated during the rush of the holidays. I think it is a nice idea.

WRITERS

Left to right at the Aspen Writers’ Foundation reception are Anne Porath, Gerri Karetsky, Linda Vaughn and author Ann Patchett.

WRITERS

Deborah Madsen, left, with Alex Halperin, publisher of Peak magazine, which hosted the event.

WRITERS

Left to right are Alan Fletcher, David Houggy, and Richard Edwards, owner of the Baldwin Gallery where the reception was held.

WRITERS

Left to right are Amy Beidleman, Peggy Carlson, Dana Laughren, and Gordon Bronson.

WRITERS

Left to right are Tess Weaver, Damien Williamson and Cindy Hirschfeld.

WRITERS

Erin Lentz on the left with Izzi Wagner.

WRITERS Elaine Finesilver, left, with Tanai Starrs.

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

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

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AROUND ASPEN WRITERS Gordon Bronson, left, with Dan Sadowsky.

WRITERS Alison Margo, left, with Kiki Raj.

WRITERS

Left to right are Maureen Poschman, Billy Stolz, Lisa Consiglio, director of the Aspen Writers’ Foundation, and Gwyn Sterling Gosney.

WRITERS Sue Hopkinson, left, with Leslie Derosa.

WRITERS Left to right are Dan Sadowsky, Alex Halperin, Gwyn Sterling Gosney and Reuben Sadowsky.

WRITERS

Left to right are Helen Klanderud and Arny and Anne Porath.

WRITERS WRITERS

Kathryn Penn and Maddie Overton.

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Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

Left to right are Dennis Vaughn, president of the Aspen Writers’ Foundation, Lisa Consiglio, director of the Foundation, author Ann Patchett, and Alex Halperin, publisher of Peak magazine.

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


P

eaceful & serene…

McCabe Ranch in Old Snowmass Beautifully designed, this Colorado country home is warm, inviting and comfortable for all. It includes a separate 1-bedroom guest/caretaker’s house and artist studio. Situated within the 800+ acre McCabe Ranch, you will enjoy privacy and spectacular views. Equestrian facilities, ranch manager and polo operations. Extensive trails throughout the property for horseback, hiking or cross-country skiing. A must-see to appreciate the wonderful character of the property. $9,500,000 Terry Rogers 970.379.2443

Aspen Elegant living inside and out. Five bedrooms, office, exercise room, family/entertaining area with bar and movie theater. Gold LEED certified. $6,800,000 Penney Evans Carruth 970.379.9133

Brush Creek Village Very well-built 4-bedroom home with high ceilings, separate ADU, great yard, wonderful patio and deck space. $3,595,000 Mike Gerbaz 970.948.5523

Woody Creek Two 5-acre parcels, each with a new home and an existing home. Construction began July 2011. You must be ON the property to believe it! $7,900,000 Kim Coates 970.948.5310

Silverglo Second-floor condo just 4 blocks from the

Silver Bell Exquisitely remodeled 2-bedroom condo.

Silver Queen Gondola and Aspen’s core. Features a wood-burning fireplace and many amenities. $611,600 Robert “Chet” Winchester 970.948.7710

Ideal location with assigned, off-street parking space. Only 2 blocks to the gondola and shopping. $795,000 Charley Podolak 970.948.0100

Starwood Two adjoining homesites, each with breathtaking views. Can combine into a private estate compound, second to none. $1,975,000 for each lot Garrett Reuss 970.379.3458 Geni King 970.923.4010

Aspen 970.925.2811

Snowmass 970.923.2006

Basalt 970.927.8080

www.AspenSnowmassSIR.com Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated.

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

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CURRENTEVENTS

FEBRUARY 23-29, 2012

SEE The Aspen Dance Connection presents the Ghanaian troupe Bao Bao on Wednesday, Feb. 29, at Roaring Fork High School in Carbondale.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23 Magic with Doc Eason 6 p.m. - 10 p.m., Artisan Restaurant, 300 Carriage Way, Snowmass Village. Doc Eason returns for his 35th year of magic and comedy. Call 970-923-2427. Base Camp Aprés 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Base Camp Bar & Grill, Snowmass Village. Free live music daily. Cameron Williams performs on Thursdays. Call 970-618-8975. Boo Coo 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., St. Regis-Aspen’s Shadow Mountain Lounge Live music from local duo Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Sets from 4-6 and 7-11 p.m. Call 970-927-6758. Damian Smith and Terry Bannon 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Limelight Lodge 355 S. Monarch St., Aspen. Live music for aprés ski. Call 970-925-3025. J Boog 9 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Authentic island music and genuine Jamaican reggae with a message of love. His new album, “Back Yard Boogie,” was No. 1 on the iTunes and Billboard reggae charts. Call 970-544-9800. Karaoke Night 10 p.m., The Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Take a turn at the mic. Call 970-925-9955. Mark Nussmeier 9 p.m. - 11 p.m., BB’s Lounge, Aspen. Loop-based, acoustic and electric rock. No cover charge. Call 970-429-8284. Tesla String Quartet 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Basalt Regional Library, community room. The graduate string quartet-in-residence at the University of Colorado performs pieces from the Classical and Romantic periods of music. Call 970-927-4311 (Ext. 7-1006).

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The Cherry Orchard 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre Company, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. TRTC presents “The Cherry Orchard” by Russian playwright Anton Chekhov. The cast includes Jeff Carlson, Valerie Haugen, Richard Lyon, Alta Millard, Kait Mushet, Patrick Bondy, Gerald DeLisser, Kristin Carlson, Nyle Kenning, Owen O’Farrell, Courtney Thompson, Bob Willey and Tim Rafelson. Performance dates are Feb. 23 (preview) and Feb. 24 (opening), plus Feb. 25, March 2-4 and March 8-10. For more information and tickets, go to www. thunderrivertheatre.com or call 970-963-8200. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 Boo Coo 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., St. Regis-Aspen’s Shadow Mountain Lounge. Live music from local duo Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Sets from 4-6 and 7-11 p.m. Call 970-927-6758. Brad Manosevitz 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Elk Horn Bar & Grill, Inn at Aspen, base of Buttermilk. Local musician plays Americana, folk rock, bluegrass and originals. Call 970-379-4676. Damian Smith and Terry Bannon 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Base Camp Bar & Grill, Snowmass Base Village. Live music for aprés ski. Call 970-923-6000. Dwight F. Ferren 5 p.m. - 8 p.m., Village Tavern, Snowmass Village Center. Solo, acoustic guitar instrumentals. Call 970-927-1076. Jes Grew 10 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Returning after two sold-out shows, local Aspen band plays originals and rock ‘n’ roll classics. With The Broccoli Bros. Horns. Call 970-544-9800.

Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

Live Acoustic Music 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Silvertree Hotel, 100 Elbert Lane, Snowmass Village. Twirp Anderson, Cash Cashman and Randall Utterback perform country, bluegrass, John Denver covers and requests. Call 970-927-9116. Live Music Friday 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., Riverside Grill, 181 Basalt Center Circle, Basalt. This week featuring the Bar Band. Call 970-927-9301. The Cherry Orchard 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Thunder River Theatre Company, 67 Promenade, Carbondale. TRTC presents “The Cherry Orchard” by Russian playwright Anton Chekhov. Performance dates are Feb. 23 (preview) and Feb. 24 (opening), plus Feb. 25, March 2-4 and March 8-10. For more information and tickets, go to www. thunderrivertheatre.com or call 970-963-8200. Movie Night at WC3 5:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. Doors open at 5:30 for nibbles. Movie begins at 6:30 p.m. On screen: “The Man who Skied Down Everest,” Academy Award winner for Best Documentary in 1975. Call 970-922-2342. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25 Live Acoustic Music 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Silvertree Hotel, 100 Elbert Lane, Snowmass Village. Twirp Anderson, Cash Cashman and Randall Utterback perform country, bluegrass, John Denver covers and requests. Call 970-927-9116. Nemo and Friends ... Just Keep Skating 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center, 861 Maroon Creek Road, Aspen. A celebration of young, local, talented skaters performing in character to “Finding Nemo.” Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children and teens, ages 5-17. Those under age 5 admitted free. Call 970-618-6140.

KDNK Women’s Arm Wrestling 10 p.m. - 11:30 p.m., Phat Thai, Carbondale. Costumes, alter egos and super heroes are encouraged to participate and spectate. Registration starts at 9 p.m. $10 admission benefits KDNK Community Access Radio. For more information, contact kat@kdnk.org. This is a Spring Membership Drive event. Call 970-963-0139. Boo Coo 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., St. Regis-Aspen’s Shadow Mountain Lounge. Live music from local duo Chris Bank and Smokin’ Joe Kelly. Sets from 4-6 and 7-11 p.m. Call 970-927-6758. Greg Masse 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., Fine Line Bar & Grill, 60 El Jebel Road, El Jebel. Live music with a local musician. Call 970-673-6061. Roaring Dub Stars with DJ RasGis 3 p.m. - 7 p.m., Burger Bar & Fish, Snowmass Base Village. Free, live aprés ski music on Saturday afternoons. Call 970-274-2267. Wallpaper 10 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Producer, multi-instrumentalist, songwriter and viral media hustler Ricky Reed mixes beat-heavy pop ditties. Call 970-544-9800. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26 Live Poetry Night 6:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Victoria’s Espresso & Wine Bar, 510 E. Durant Ave., Aspen. Featuring live music with singer/songwriter Pat Fagan, an open mic for poets and featured poet Heidi Owen. Open to all poets and listeners. No charge. Hosted by the Aspen Poet Society. Call 970-379-2136. SOJA 8 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. With the release of their new album, “Strength to Survive” less than a month before their Belly Up debut, this reggae, rock group has a unique sound and an inspirational message. With Dubskin and Anuhea (solo). Call 970-544-9800.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO


edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Open Mic at the Onion 10 p.m., The Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. Come share your talents with a live audience. Call 970-925-9955. Winter Words: Geraldine Brooks and Tony Horwitz 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. The Aspen Writers’ Foundation presents its seasonal series, bringing authors of all genres to Aspen throughout the winter to share their words, wit and wisdom. Single tickets are $15; $10 for students and educators. Tickets, season subscriptions, and Author Salon packages are available through Aspen Show Tickets, which can be accessed directly at 970-920-5770 and at aspenwriters.org. Call 970-925-3122. Base Camp Aprés 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Base Camp Bar & Grill, Snowmass Village. Free live music daily. Tom Ressel performs Mondays. Call 970-618-8975. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28 KDNK Trivia Night 8 p.m. - 10 p.m., The Brick Pony, Basalt. Teams of 2-5 invited to compete for prizes. Help support community radio and show off your smarts. $5 per player. Bring a team or join one at the Brick Pony. All proceeds benefit KDNK Community Access Radio. For more information, contact kat@ kdnk.org. This is a Spring Membership Drive event. Call 970-963-0139. Base Camp Aprés 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Base Camp Bar & Grill, Snowmass Village. Free live music daily. Dan Sheridan performs Tuesdays. Call 970-618-8975. Free Live Music 10 p.m., Red Onion, 420 E Cooper Ave., Aspen. Featuring local musicians. Call 925-9955.

Sign up: Weekend Watercolor I, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Offered March 24-25 for adults of all skill levels. Sarah Peterson returns to teach her technique of using wet on wet watercolor. Cost is $155 or $139.50 for members. Preregistration required. Tuition assistance available. Call 970-927-4123. Sign up: Weekend Watercolor II, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Offered March 31 and April 1; for adults of all skill levels. Offered March 24-25 for adults of all skill levels. Sarah Peterson returns to teach her technique of using wet on wet watercolor. Cost is $155 or $139.50 for members. Preregistration required. Tuition assistance available. Call 970-927-4123. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26 Family Workshop: Paintings 3:30 p.m. - 5 p.m., Aspen Art Museum, 590 N. Mill St., Aspen. Encouraging children and adult teams to look, share and create together. Offered on select Sundays, families with children of all ages are welcome to drop in and explore the museum’s current exhibitions and participate in hands-on art projects. Each month families explore a different theme. Admission is free. Call 970-925-8050. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Call to Artists for Biennial, Red Brick Center for the Arts, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Red Brick Biennial 2012 is a juried art exhibition running May 3-30. Submitting artists must reside in the Roaring Fork Valley, Aspen to Glenwood (including Marble and Redstone). Deadline is Monday, April 23. Judges this year include artist Jody Guralnick, art consultant Carolyn Landis and gallery owner Ann Korologos. Call 970-429-2777.

North Y Sur 4 p.m. - 7 p.m., Library Room at the Hotel Jerome. Weekly live music — American and Brazilian jazz and bossa nova with Josefina and Jeremy. Call 970-379-4676.

Sign up: Boys Art Club Part III, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Ave., Basalt. Offered April 16-May 14. Through basic drawing, painting and sculpture, boys will learn concepts of space, line, proportion and scale. Cost is $135; $121.50 for members. Call 970-927-4123.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29 David Wilcox 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, 320 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. A singer-songwriter whose finger-picking guitar style evokes Nick Drake and Joni Mitchell, and whose voice one critic described as “a mellow fluency that suggests a hybrid of James Taylor and Kenny Rankin.” Presented with Steve’s Guitars. Call 970920-5770.

Sign up: Watercolor Intensive, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Offered Monday-Friday, March 26-30. For adults of all skill levels. Sarah Peterson returns to teach her technique of using wet on wet watercolor. Cost is $375, or $337.50 for members. Preregistration required. Tuition assistance available. Call 970-9274123.

Mark Nussmeier 9 p.m. - 11 p.m., 39 Degrees at the Sky Hotel, Aspen. Loop-based, acoustic and electric rock. No cover charge. Call 970-925-6760. Smokin’ Joe and Zoe 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., BB’s Kitchen, Aspen. Live music from a local duo. Call 970-927-6758.

THE ARTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 Nature Photography for Kids 3:30 p.m. - 5 p.m., CCAH Center for the Arts, Carbondale. The Carbondale Council on Arts & Humanities offers a class taught by Karen Lanier. Cost for each session is $90. For ages 9-11. A second session to be offered April 6May 25. For more information or to register, visit www.carbondalearts.com or call 9631680. Call 970-963-1680. Ballet Technique noon - 1 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Classical ballet technique for adults and teens — beginning level. Call 970-379-2187. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25 Journaling Workshop 9 a.m. - 4 p.m., CCAH Center for the Arts, Carbondale. The Carbondale Council on Arts & Humanities offers a workshop with Shari Gaynor on February 25-26. Visual Journaling — Beyond the Basics, meets at the CCAH Center for the Arts, 520 S. Third St., Suite 9. Cost is $75; for adults only. For more information or to register, visit www.carbondalearts.com or call 970-963-1680.

PHOTO BY RHYS ALBRECHT

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28 Sign up: Beginning Drawing, Wyly Community Art Center 99 Midland Spur, Basalt. Offered Tuesdays from 6-8 p.m. from March 6-April 10. For ages high school and up. Artist Jill Sabella teaches beginning drawing to students of all abilities with simple exercises and subjects. Cost is $130 or $117 for members (supply list available). Preregistration required. Call 970-927-4123. Sip, Shop and See 3 p.m. - 4 p.m., Anderson Ranch Arts Center, 5263 Owl Creek Road, Snowmass Village. Tour artists’ studios, visit the gallery and shop in the ArtWorks Gift store while enjoying a winter beverage. Free and open to the public. Call 970-923-3181. Workshop sign-up: Introduction to Printmaking, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Ave., Basalt. Workshop takes place Saturday, Feb. 18 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Open to high schoolers through adults of all skill levels. $99 (member price is $71.10 plus $20 supply fee. In the workshop, students will learn all the ins and outs of traditional and contemporary linocut printing techniques. Participants will print and carve the block multiple times in order to create multi-color prints using one linoleum block and precise registration techniques. Call 970-927-4123.

Weekly Writers Group 7 p.m., Red Brick Center for the Arts, Aspen. The Tuesday writers group is a read-and-critique forum for writers to share and polish work that they have written prior to the meeting. Participants are asked to bring five copies of a writing sample to receive constructive criticism from their peers. This group is free and open to writers of all genres and levels. Drop-ins are welcome. Call 925-3122.

YOGA & EXERCISE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23 Zumbatonics 4 p.m. - 5 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center. High-energy fitness parties with specially choreographed, kidfriendly routines, for 6- to 12-year-olds. Drop-ins welcome; $10 per class. Call 970-920-5140. Chicks Rock the Red Brick 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Red Brick climbing gym, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Aspen Recreation offers ladies climbing classes. Intermediate/advanced training offered Thursdays. Shoes are provided with daily admission fee. Call 970-920-5140. Cuong Nhu Martial Arts Class 6 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., Yellow Brick school gym. Adult karate and self-defense class incorporating hard and soft styles, sparring, kata and weapons training. Call 970-319-5898.

org/events. Call 970-927-1290 for more information. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 Ski History Tour on Aspen Mountain 11 a.m., Meet at guest services hut on top of mountain. On-mountain ski history tour with an emphasis on the mining era and the early days of skiing in Aspen. Presented by the Aspen Historical Society and Aspen Skiing Co. Free. Offered at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Call 970-925-3721. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25 Restorative Yoga 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Health and Harmony, El Jebel. An afternoon of deep release using techniques developed by Judith Hanson Lasater and others. All levels are welcome. Led by Faith Lipori. Call 704-9642. Yoga: Moving Towards Steadiness 2 p.m. - 3 p.m., Aspen Health and Harmony. Join Faith Lipori in this beginning yoga practice for people with Parkinson’s disease. Also open to friends and caregivers. Call 704-9642. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Aikido at CMC 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.

SEE Singer-songwriter David Wilcox performs Wednesday, Feb. 29, at the Wheeler Opera House. Standing Firm Class 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Target the lower body with a class that incorporates isometric strength from yoga, core-centered exercises from Pilates and body awareness from dance. Call 970-544-4100. Vinyasa Flow Yoga 10 a.m. - 11:15 a.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Class for all levels. Call 970 379-8108. Riverside Cross-Country Ski 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., Rio Grande Trail, meet at Stein Park, Aspen. Take a guided, twilight cross-country ski along the banks of the Roaring Fork River. Accompanied by Roaring Fork Conservancy and Aspen Parks staff, discover the importance of the riparian ecosystem along the trail and enjoy a wintry evening ski. The tour begins and ends at Stein Park, at the bottom of Cemetery Lane, and covers approximately 2.5 miles of gently sloping terrain. Crosscountry skis are required; no lesson is included. Appropriate for ages 12 years and older. Event is free, but registration is required; go to www.roaringfork.

Karate for Tots 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Helps develop motor skills, hand-eye coordination, focus, respect and self-confidence in a fun way. Drop-in fee is $15 For ages 4-6. Call 970-920-5140. Tot Zumbatomics 10:15 a.m. - 11 a.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Designed for kids, the sessions are high-energy fitness parties packed with specially choreographed, kidfriendly routines to music they’ll like. Call 970-544-4100. Adult and Tots Learn to Skate 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m., Aspen Recreation Center Parents, come learn to skate with your preschoolers. Professional instruction and ice skates included. Call 970-544-4100 to register. Shape it Up on Ice 9:30 a.m. - 10 a.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Offered by Aspen Skating School. All abilities welcome — hockey and figure skates. For registration and additional information, contact Teri Hooper at 970-3795900 or hoopertk@comcast.net.

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

41


How to act around a

Perfect 10 Follow these three simple steps…

1. Call her or send her an email. 2. It’s okay to ask for a date. Ask for help with the

A Perfect 10! Lorrie Winnerman was #10 in sales out of 615 Realtors in the Roaring Fork Valley last year! Perfect, because Lorrie B. Aspen is small enough for personal service, big enough to get the job done right.

local markets, using her 33 years of experience as a broker in Aspen and Snowmass.

3. Hang out with her. Shop around with Lorrie and chances are you will fall in love—with your dream home or building site. (Later, it’s okay to tell your friends all the details.) (970) 920-0020 office (970) 618-7772 cell lorrie@lbaspen.com www.lbaspen.com

Slackline 7 p.m. - 8:45 p.m., Red Brick Arts and Recreation Center, Aspen Slacklining is a way to improve balance and strengthen the body core. Lines are set low to the ground for safer, easier walking and learning. No experience needed; multiple lines set up per night, for beginners and experts. Call 970-920-5140. Ski History Tour on Aspen Highlands 11 a.m., Meet at guest services hut near the Merry-Go-Round. With an emphasis on Highlands’ “maverick” reputation — the ‘70s ski culture and the birth of freestyle skiing. Presented by the Aspen Historical Society and Aspen Skiing Co. Free. Offered at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Call 970-925-3721. Deepen and Explore Your Yoga Practice 6 p.m. - 7:15 p.m., Aspen Health and Harmony, El Jebel. This four-week series, Mondays through March 19, will touch on many aspects of a balanced practice, including alignment, active poses that flow together, deep stretches, restorative poses appropriate for each student, pranayama and meditation. Open to all levels. Space is limited; sign up early. Call 704-9642.

THE COMMUNITY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23 Naturalist Nights: War on the West: How the Oil Industry is Carving up Our Last Best Places 7:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Aspen Center for Environmental Studies, 100 Puppy Smith St. Oil and gas development has become the largest single impact on wildlife habitat in Wyoming and several other western states. Learn why an industrial use that typically disturbs only five percent of the landscape directly has had such a major impact on wildlife. Call 970-963-3977.

Starting in Japan, Sudoku has quickly spread to become a worldwide phenomenon. A grid-based logic game, this innovative puzzle gives new meaning to the phrase “number-crunching.” Look for it Monday–Saturday on the puzzle page of The Aspen Times.

sudoku

Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!

PUMPKIN

Beautiful, friendly, calm 9-year-old Husky mix female. A retired sled dog looking for a loving home. Pumpkin has an adorable expression with ears that reach to the sky.

BELLINA

1.5-year-old happy, friendly, pretty Cattle Dog mix. Gets along well with people + other pets. Slightly deformed front leg from a disease she had as a pup in Mexico, but her limp doesn’t slow her down at all.

DERMA

Gorgeous Siberian Husky female, approximately 4 years old. Athletic and affectionate. Gets along great with other dogs.

STILL overflowing with animals. Help!

FRANKIE

is a strong, goodlooking, athletic, white-colored, blue-eyed, 5-year-old Alaska Husky who gets along well with people and other dogs.

BEAR

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.

CHRISSY

1.5-year-old Lab mix female. Loves to cuddle, super affectionate. Gets along with other dogs, but is also possessive around people and is a bit food/toy aggressive with other dogs. Best as a single pet.

HARRIET

42

SOPRIS

Adorable, handsome, athletic, affectionate 1-year-old, Australian Cattle Dog/Corgi mix male. Found on East Sopris Creek Road in early January and never claimed. Gets along well with people + other pets.

CURLY

is a gentle, affectionate, 5-yearold, tan-colored, Alaskan Husky who gets along well with people and other dogs. He was bred to be a sled dog and has even competed in a 100-mile race!!!

GENEVIEVE

3-year-old adorable Beagle. Would do best as a single pet in a knowledgeable home. Also has separation anxiety. Great with adults and kids. Loving and playful.

ROCCO

Harriet is a 6-yearold black and white domestic short-hair. She is a loving, gentle cat who has lived with other cats in the past, and enjoys the company of both adults and children.

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206

SARGE

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

SAM

Strong, energetic, black/white 5-yearold female Boston Terrier mix with a splash of Pit bull. Sam is a bit wary of strangers, but she warms up easily once she knows you.

ALLIE

2.5-year-old Cattle Dog mix female. Fun-loving, highenergy. Loves people. Can be dominant with other dogs. Best as single pet in home without toddlers because of her energy. Knows some commands.

MAYA

Older neutered male Boxer/Pitbull/Lab. Roughly 11 years old. Found in Emma on 12/9 and never claimed. Super sweet old man.

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

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter 101 Animal Shelter Road

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

Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

www.dogsaspen.com

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24 Backcountry Awareness Discussion 6 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., Rio Grande meeting room, Aspen. Powder to the People presents a backcountry awareness evening with Brian McCall from CAIC discussing current snowpack conditions and mountaineer/ skier Mike Marolt presenting his studies of how the brain works in survival decision-making situations. Locale is above Taster’s Pizza and can be accessed off the library plaza. Call 970-ERA-2SKI. Booksigning and Program: Fred Blackburn and Chuck Haspels 6:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Third Street Center, Round Room, Carbondale The Wetherills; Friends of Mesa Verde from 6:30-7:30 p.m. Fred Blackburn presents research on the Wetherill siblings and their involvement in early southwest archaeology. From 7:30-9:30 p.m., Blackburn and Chuck Haspels (and students) present research and slide show on their field work, including Navajo Monument; Hollywood filmmaking; Navajo, Ute, Puebloan peoples; Rainbow Bridge expeditions; traders, miners and more. New research on the Wetherill expeditions. Blackburn will also be signing four of his books. Call 970-963-3221.

Snowmass Chapel Labyrinth 7 a.m. - 9 p.m., Anderson Ranch, Schermer Hall, Snowmass Village. The labyrinth is open daily. Advises the chapel: Join the long list of pilgrims who, through the ages, have found the peace that comes from a calming prayerful time in the center of the labyrinth. For more information, call 970-9233706. Energy Code Workshop 9 a.m. - 3 p.m., Carbondale Town Hall, 511 Colorado Ave., Carbondale. Code officials, contractors, and design professionals are invited to this free energy-code workshop, which brings field inspection to the classroom through pictures and examples of common installations seen in the field while performing energy-code compliance inspections and plan reviews. For more information, contact Shaunna Mozingo at Colorado Code Consulting, LLC, 303-598-3465 or smozingo@coloradocode.net. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25 First-Time Home Buyer Education 10 a.m. - noon, 0290 Hwy 133, Carbondale. Coldwell Banker Mason Morse Real Estate and Cornerstone Mortgage Company join together to offer this free class. The focus will be on learning and understanding the steps involved in the homebuying process. Class takes place in the Coldwell Banker Mason Morse building. Call 970-274-1765 to reserve a spot. Free Wellness Clinic 2 p.m. - 3 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. Free presentation on “Nutrition Basics: Better Food Leading to Better Health” with featured speakers Patricia Farrell and Wendy Elkin. (Individual, 10-minute consultations to follow.) Call 970-922-2342. Willits Winter Market 10 a.m. - 3 p.m., Willits Town Center, Basalt. An indoor weekly farmers’ market, featuring produce, fresh eggs, baked goods and more. Call 970-277-1100. WSRF Parent/Child “Peas and Carrots” Program 9:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m., Waldorf School on the Roaring Fork, 16543 Highway 82, Carbondale. Sessions are Saturdays, 3 consecutive weeks per month. The morning includes: Creative free play, handcrafts, morning circle, snack, puppet show, outdoor play. Call 970-216-9936. Cooking with Knowledge 10 a.m. - noon, Aspen Business Center, 305 F AABC. This week’s event: “Winter Stews: Curry, Beef and Vegetarian.” The Kitchen Hotline offers one in a series of two-hour classes that includes instruction, a meal and an eBook with step-by-step instructions so that guests can recreate the meal when the chef is no longer by their side. Call 877-773-8485. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Linx Networking Group 7 a.m., Chaffin and Light building, downtown Basalt. Weekly meeting of a business networking organization whose members work together to grow and promote their businesses. New members welcome. Call 970-390-8401.

The New War and Peace 5 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Aspen Meadows Restaurant, Aspen Institute, 845 Meadows Road. Through a groundbreaking partnership with Spirit of America, the U.S. military has pioneered a new “soft power” approach to help the United States prevent conflict, counter extremism and improve America’s position in the world. Spirit of America founder and CEO Jim Hake and Ken Adelman discuss U.S. humanitarian and stability efforts, Spirit of America’s experiences with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the challenges of introducing new approaches to large bureaucracies in this presentation, “The New War and Peace: Innovation, Security and American Leadership.” Call 970-544-7914.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28 LINX Networking Group 7 a.m. - 8:30 a.m., Chaffin and Light building, downtown Basalt. Weekly meeting of a business networking organization whose members work together to grow and promote their businesses. New members welcome. Call 970-309-8108.

Wash for a Cause, 400 East Valley Road, next to City Market in El Jebel. RJ Paddywacks Pet Outfitter donates all of the proceeds from its selfservice dog wash to KDNK Community Radio in Carbondale, Feb. 24 through March 1. The groom room is available on a first-come, first-serve basis in one-hour blocks for $15 per dog. Call ahead to schedule a time. Call 963-1700.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29 Maroon Bel Canto Children’s Chorus Audition 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Basalt. The chorus is about to start rehearsals for its winter season, offering young students in third grade and up an opportunity to collaborate, learn and make music with other students from around the valley. Call 970-205-5053.

Level 1 Avalanche Course 5 p.m., Aspen Expeditions, base of Aspen Highlands. AIAREcertified course provides a complete introduction to the avalanche phenomenon, avalanche terrain, decision making and rescue. Two evening sessions and two field days. Go to www.aspenexpeditions. com for more information. Call 970-925-7625.

Teen Wii Mario Kart Tournament 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., Pitkin County Library meeting room, Aspen. All teens welcome. Snacks and soda provided. Prizes for the winner. Call 970-429-1948.

Love and Logic Parenting Series 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Roaring Fork Family Resource Center, The Bridges Center, Fourth and Sopris, Carbondale. Simple and practical techniques to help parents experience less stress and have more fun while raising responsible kids. Offered in English or Spanish. Go to www.loveandlogic.com for more information. Call 970-384-5689.


V

Two Creeks

Starwood

iews and location – when only the finest will do‌

Extremely unique opportunity to own the most sought after ski-in, ski-out home in Two Creeks. Five-bedrooms, 7 baths, 7,732 sq. ft. home. $9,500,000 furnished Visit www.ElkCampEstateAtTwoCreeks.com

Located high up in the exclusive gated community of Starwood lies 2 adjoining homesites, each with breathtaking views. These two parcels can be transformed into a private estate compound, second to none. Build up to 8,250 on each parcel with TDRs. $1,975,000 for Lot 92, 4.18 acres $1,975,000 for Lot 95 4.37 acres. Co-listed with Geni King 970.309.2097 geniking@comcast.net

Garrett Reuss 970.379.3458 garrett.reuss@AspenSnowmassSIR.com

www.AspenSnowmassSIR.com Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated.

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

43


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Ford Expedition XLT Sports 2004

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GMC Yukon Denali SLE 2000

GMC Yukon XL 2005

Honda CRF 450x 2008

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JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE Ltd 2000

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Volkswagen Touareg 2004

Volvo XC - 70 2001

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BANK OWNED FORECLOSURES ASPEN.NET REAL ESTATE

ASPEN

ASPEN

ASPEN

BASALT

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Woody Creek

Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

HUNTER CREEK CONDO 1FBDFGVM HSPVOE GMPPS DPSOFS )VOUFS $SFFL #% #" DPOEP GBDJOH UIF XPPET BOE DSFFL 8FMM NBJOUBJOFE XJUI VQEBUFE CBUI TUPSBHF DMPTFU $MPTF UP MBVOESZ QPPM IPU UVCT UFOOJT DPVSUT JO B CFBVUJGVMMZ NBJOUBJOFE DPNQMFY "TQFO .PVOUBJO WJFX GSPN CFESPPN Offered for $435,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

5PQ GMPPS POF CFE POF CBUI JO B RVJFU SJWFSGSPOU CVJMEJOH PO UIF 3JP (SBOEF CJLF QBUI 6OJU IBT B HBT MPH GJSFQMBDF DPNCP XBTIFS ESZFS HSFBU MJHIU BOE BQQSPY TR GU PG TUPSBHF 0XOFST NBZ IBWF B EPH $169,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

VILLAS AT ELK RUN #FBVUJGVMMZ SFOPWBUFE #% #" TG HSPVOE GMPPS VOJU TUBJOMFTT BQQMJBODFT IBSEXPPE UJMFE GMPPST QBUJPT HBT '1 BUUBDIFE HBSBHF JO VOJU 8 % EPHT BMMPXFE 8BML UP #BTBMU (PPE SFOUBM IJTUPSZ PS QFSGFDU GJSTU IPNF Offered for $295,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

CARBONDALE

COMMERCIAL - ASPEN

COMMERCIAL - ASPEN

COMMERCIAL-BASALT

COMMERCIAL - GYPSUM

3FOPWBUFE SBODI TUZMF #% #" IPNF X PQFO GMPPS QMBO XPPE GMPPST HSBOJUF DPVOUFST TUBJOMFTT BQQMJBODFT DVTUPN DBCJOFUT VQHSBEFE CBUIT XPPE CVSOJOH '1 DBS HBSBHF QMVT FYUSB QBSLJOH EFDL GFODFE ZBSE "DSPTT GSPN QBSL XBML JOH EJTUBODF UP EPXOUPXO $BSCPOEBMF Offered for $279,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

ASPEN PRIME LOCATIONS!

TAKAH SUSHI -POHFWJUZ MPDBUJPO BOE MFBTF "TQFOhT PSJHJOBM +BQBOFTF SFTUBVSBOU BOE TVTIJ CBS 'VMMZ FRVJQQFE XJUI FYDFMMFOU MFBTF OP /// DPOUJOVPVT ZFBST JO CVTJOFTT XJUI UIF PSJHJOBM PXOFS NBOBHFS 3FHJT UFSFE 5SBEF /BNF PG 5",") 464)* JODMVEFE JO TBMFT QSJDF /P SFBM FTUBUF $1,400,000 Judy Sullivan 970-379-6622 Mason Morse Real Estate XXX NBTPONPSTF DPN

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Commercial Development

46

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

Offered for $399,000

0''*$& 3&5"*- 4QBDFT GPS -FBTF */7&45.&/5 #6*-%*/(4 GPS 4BMF *O UIF %PXOUPXO "TQFO $FOUSBM $PSF 4FF "-- "TQFO .-4 -JTUJOHT BU www.aspenreal.com

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Karen Setterfield, .#" $$*. $/& ,BSFO!BTQFOSFBM DPN 970-920-1833 тЬж

Febr u ar y 23-29, 2012

Offered for $199,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

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$1,399,000

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


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

DENVER

SNOWMASS VILLAGE

SNOWMASS

SNOWMASS

ART LOVER’S PARADISE! $POUFNQPSBSZ DPOEP CZ %BOJFM -JCFTLJOE 48 WJFXT PG UIF 3PDLZ .UOT "SU .VTFVN /FBS "SUT %JTUSJDU TQPSUJOH FWFOUT BMM EPXOUPXO PGGFST #% #5) 4' 1FSGFDU 1JFE B UFSSF $925,000 Brian Harris Kentwood City Properties 303-870-2489 IBSSJT!LFOUXPPEDJUZ DPN

SEASONS FOUR #FBVUJGVMMZ SFOPWBUFE #% #" TG WBVMUFE DFJMJOHT TLZ MJHIUT TMBUF CBNCPP XPPE GMPPST VQHSBEFE OE CBUI XPPE CVSOJOH '1 8 % TLJ TUPSBHF )0" JODM IPU UVC QPPM DMVCIPVTF

SEASONS 4 7JFXT QSJWBDZ #% #" DPOEP 8PPE GMPPST '1 CBMDPOZ XJUI *OEFQFOEFODF 1BTT WJFXT 8 % 0XOFS NBZ IBWF EPH BDDFTT UP TIVUUMF QPPM IPU UVC (PPE SFOUBM PS GJSTU IPNF Offered for $379,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

WOODBRIDGE #FBVUJGVMMZ SFOPWBUFE #% #" TG DPOEP X LJUDIFO VQHSBEFT JODM HSBOJUF DPVOUFST TUBJOMFTT BQQMJBODFT UJMF GMPPST OFX CBUIT GVSOJTIFE HBT '1 WJFX PG TLJ BSFB $PNQMFY JODM QPPM IPU UVC MBVOESZ QBSLJOH Offered for $475,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

Offered for $399,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, Morris & Fyrwald SIR 970-948-7530 Sally@SallyShiekman.com

925-9937 www.aspentimes.com/placead

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DIVISION 5 WATER COURT- JANUARY 2012 RESUME 9. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF JANUARY 2012. The water right claimed by this application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time provided by statute, or be forever barred. 12CW10 EAGLE COUNTY. SMITH CREEK. Challenge Aspen, c/o Patrick, Miller & Kropf, P.C., Kevin L. Patrick, Esq. and Laura C. Makar, Esq., 730 E. Durant Ave., Suite 200, Aspen, CO 81611, (970) 920-1028. APPLICATION FOR FINDING OF REASONABLE DILIGENCE AND TO MAKE CONDITIONAL WATER RIGHT ABSOLUTE. First Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence. Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 1. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998; Case No.: 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description (as changed in Case No. 04CW25): NE ¼ of the NE ¼, Section 5, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P.M. at a distance of 820 feet from the north section line and 880 feet from the east section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness Ranch. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: 15 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. Second Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence: Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 2. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998. Case No.: 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description: NE ¼ of the NE ¼, Section 5, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P.M. at a distance of 1100 feet from the north section line and 600 feet from the east section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness Ranch. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: 15 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. Third Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence: Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 3. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998. Case No.: 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description (as changed in Case No. 04CW25): NE ¼ of the NE ¼, Section 5, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P.M. at a distance of 480 feet from the north section line and 500 feet from the east section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness Ranch. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre-feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: 15 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. Fourth Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence: Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 4. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998. Case No. 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description (as changed in Case No. 04CW25): SE ¼ of the NE ¼, Section 5, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P.M. at a distance of 1540 feet from the north section line and 660 feet from the east section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness Ranch. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre-feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: 15 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial

use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. Fifth Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence and to Make a Portion Absolute: Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 5. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998. Case No.: 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description: SE ¼ of the NE ¼, Section 5, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P.M. at a distance of 1400 feet from the north section line and 350 feet from the east section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness Ranch. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre-feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: As-built, 9 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Claim to make absolute: Date water applied to beneficial use: May 29, 2001. Amount: 0.75 acre-feet. Use: Wildlife watering, fire protection, wetlands creation. Call records attached to application. Description of place of beneficial use: Challenge Aspen Wilderness Ranch. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. Sixth Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence and to Make a Portion Absolute: Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 6. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998. Case No.: 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description (as changed in Case No. 04CW25): SE ¼ of the NE ¼, Section 5, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P.M. at a distance of 1680 feet from the north section line and 570 feet from the east section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness Ranch. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre-feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: As-built, 8 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Claim to make absolute: Date water applied to beneficial use: May 29, 2001. Amount: 0.5 acre-feet. Use: Wildlife watering, fire protection, wetlands creation. Call records attached to application. Description of place of beneficial use: Challenge Aspen Wilderness Ranch. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. Seventh Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence: Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 7. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998. Case No.: 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description (as changed in Case No. 04CW25): SE ¼ of the NE ¼, Section 5, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P.M. at a distance of 2490 feet from the north section line and 80 feet from the east section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness Ranch. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre-feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: 15 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. Eighth Claim for Finding of Reasonable Diligence. Name of structure: Landmark Pond No. 8. Type: Pond. Description of conditional water right: Date of original decree: February 20, 1998. Case No.: 97CW213, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Subsequent diligence decrees: 04CW25, January 11, 2006. Decreed legal description: SW ¼ of the NW ¼, Section 4, Township 8 South, Range 84 West, of the 6th P. M. at a distance of 2250 feet from the north section line and 400 feet from the west section line. General description of place of use: Challenge Aspen’s Wilderness. Source: Smith Creek, tributary of the Frying Pan River, tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Appropriation date: September 20, 1997. Amount: 4.0 acre-feet, conditional. Pond information: Total capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Active capacity of pond: 4.0 acre-feet. Dead storage: 0.0 acre-feet. Maximum height of dam: 15 feet. Length of dam: 150 feet. Surface area of high water line: 0.50 acres. Use: Livestock and wildlife watering, fire protection, piscatorial, wetlands creation, with the right to fill and refill when in priority. Detailed outline of work toward completion of the appropriation and application of water to a beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures is on file with the Court. Applicant owns the land upon which structure is located and where water will be used. (15 pages) YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of MARCH 2012 to file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why

this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. 16. PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COMPRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF JANUARY 2012. The water right claimed by this application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time provided by statute, or be forever barred. 07CW183 PITKIN COUNTY- Amended Application to Make Absolute A Conditional Water Right. 1. Name, address and phone number of applicant: United States of America, Department of Interior, Bureau of Land Management, Colorado River Valley Field Office, c/o Kristen C. Guerriero, Special Assistant United States Attorney, Office of the Solicitor, Department of the Interior, Rocky Mountain Region, 755 Parfet St., Suite 151, Lakewood, CO 80215,Telephone (303) 231-5353, extension 551. 2.Name of structures: Mallard Reservoir #1, Mallard Reservoir #2, Mallard Reservoir #3, Mallard Reservoir #4 3. Describe conditional water right: Date of Original Decree:10/15/2001 Case Number: 00 CW 072 Court: District Court, Water Division 5, Colorado Location: Mallard Reservoir #1 – NW ¼, NE ¼, Section 16, T8S R87W, Sixth P.M., at a point 320 feet south of the north section line and 1450 feet west of the east section line. Mallard Reservoir #2 – NE¼, NE ¼, Section 16, T8S R87W, Sixth P.M., at a point 450 feet south of the north section line and 620 feet west of the east section line. Mallard Reservoir #3 – NW ¼, NW ¼, Section 15, T8S R87W, Sixth P.M., at a point 640 feet south of the north section line and 300 feet east of the west section line. Mallard Reservoir #4 – SW ¼, NW ¼, Section 15, T8S R87W, Sixth P.M., at a point 950 feet south of the north section line and 490 feet east of the west section line. Source: Savoy Gulch, tributary to Roaring Fork River/Colorado River Appropriation Date: July 15, 2000 Amount: Mallard Reservoir #1 – 9.5 acre feet, conditional; Mallard Reservoir #2 – 0.1 acre feet, conditional; Mallard Reservoir #3 – 0.5 acre feet, conditional; Mallard Reservoir #4 – 0.1 acre feet, conditional; Use: livestock watering, wildlife watering and habitat, fishery, recreation, and fire suppression. 4. Corrected legal description: The original conditional water right decree for Mallard Reservoir 4 contained an incorrect ¼ ¼ section. The original decree legal description for Mallard Reservoir #4 was NW ¼, NE ¼, Section 15, T8S R87W, Sixth P.M., at a point 950 feet south of the north section line and 490 feet east of the west section line. This application seeks to correct the legal description as follows: Mallard Reservoir #4 – SW ¼, NW ¼, Section 15, T8S R87W, Sixth P.M., at a point 950 feet south of the north section line and 490 feet east of the west section line. The original conditional water right decree for Mallard Reservoir #2 contained an incorrect distance in feet west of the east section line. The application seeks to correct the legal description as follows: Mallard Reservoir #2 - NE¼, NE ¼, Section 16, T8S R87W, Sixth P.M., at a point 450 feet south of the north section line and 620 feet west of the east section line. 5. Provide a detailed outline of what has been done toward completion or for completion of the appropriation and application of water to beneficial use as conditionally decreed, including expenditures: BLM constructed the reservoirs in October 2001. Mallard Reservoirs #2, #3, and #4 did not fill to capacity until 2003 because dry weather conditions produced limited runoff. Mallard Reservoir #1 was filled to capacity by diversions from Mallard Spring #1 (decreed in case number 00 CW 270) and Vasten Homestead Spring (decreed in case number 93 CW 260). The stored water was placed to the beneficial uses authorized by the conditional decree in 2003. The dimensions of the constructed reservoirs are as follows: Mallard Reservoir #1Surface area at high water line: 3.0 acres Maximum dam height: 9.5 feet Dam length: 50.0 feet Active capacity: 0.0 acre feet Dead capacity: 9.5 acre feet Mallard Reservoir #2 Surface area at high water line: 0.10 acres Maximum dam height: 4.0 feet Dam length: 50.0 feet Active capacity: 0.0 acre feet Dead capacity: 0.1 acre feet Mallard Reservoir #3 Surface area at high water line: 0.20 acres Maximum dam height: Not applicable – water directed into natural depression Dam length: Not applicable – water directed into natural depression Active capacity: 0.0 acre feet Dead capacity: 0.1 acre feet Mallard Reservoir #4 Surface area at high water line: 0.10 acres Maximum dam height: 4.0 feet Dam length: 50.0 feet Active capacity: 0.0 acre feet Dead capacity: 0.1 acre feet 6. Name and address of owner of land on which structures are located: United States Department of Interior, Bureau of Land Management, Colorado River Valley Field Office, 2300 River Frontage Road, Silt, CO 81652. (6 pages) YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of MARCH 2012 to file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $130.00) KATHY HALL, Water Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. Published in the Rifle Citizen Telegram on February 23, 2012.

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WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by JENNY SHANK of HIGH COUNTRY NEWS

BOOK REVIEW

A REVIEW OF THE LITTLE BRIDE

Anna Solomon’s fascinating first novel The Little Bride begins in Russia in the 1880s, when Minna Losk, a 16year-old orphan, signs up to become a mail-order bride. After the death of her father, Minna worked for a while as a maid for a once-wealthy woman. Now, however, with pogroms against Jews increasing in number and intensity and little hope for a better life in Odessa, she decides to try her luck in America as the wife of a Jewish man she’s never met. Solomon’s premise is irresistible as Minna embarks on a journey similar to those many real-life immigrant settlers made. Her sensuous writing transports the reader from Odessa’s “acacias in full bloom, her lizards asleep in the last sun, the scent of tomato plants coming up off the

by CHARLES M. DEBER

| edited by WILL SHORTZ

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Some conifers Do over, as a lawn Abbr. before a colon Prefix with -pod 119-Across near Albany? Prefix with business Basketball rim Open Housemother, e.g. Passed easily Weak Armstrong and Sedaka Pal Light touch Certain online request Not quite right Arrive at too quickly, in a way “Hakuna ___” In one’s cups Brewskis How a fool acts Spots Bird wing Knot Spring time Large-toothed whale Paraded by “Is she not down so late, ___ so early?”: “Romeo and Juliet” Number 2, e.g. Still to be sampled Shock Sub Site of a Greek tragedy Big name in jeans

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Minna replies, “I barely know him.” Ruth shoots back, “And you think you are original in this?” The bitter South Dakota winter leaves the family snowed in and on the verge of starving. At the end, the plot takes a few improbable turns involving a circus wagon that happens by and a case of love at first sight. Still, The Little Bride remains a riveting journey — an intensely imagined reconstruction of what life might have been like for many women pioneers. This book review originally appeared in the January 23, 2012 issue of High Country News (hcn.org).

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The Little Bride Anna Solomon 314 pages softcover: $15 Riverhead, 2011

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ACROSS

NOTEWORTHY

piers” to the sickness and filth of the voyage to America, the ship’s floor “slick with vomit.” Minna lands in New York, which feels “like being in the middle of a parade where everyone has been called home, all at once, in all different directions.” Minna dreams of finding a young husband and enjoying the bustle and community of city life. Instead, her spouse, Max, turns out to be an “old” man of 40, who lives in a sod hut in South Dakota, where a group of Jewish settlers who’d never farmed before are struggling to make a go of it on the harsh prairie. Minna also becomes the stepmother to two teenage sons, one of whom she’s attracted to, a complication that leads both of them into uncomfortable moral territory. Max is Orthodox to a degree that is impractical on the frontier, letting hail destroy a wheat crop because he refuses to harvest on the Sabbath. Ruth, a neighbor, counsels Minna. Try to love Max, she urges, to which

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— Last week’s puzzle answers —

96 97 100 101 105 106 107 108 110

Respectable Naval force “___ the Sheriff” Tidies up a bit Number two “Tu ___ mi amor” Cozy Drags Give up

111 Weave’s partner 112 Maternity ward workers, for short 114 Hip-hop 115 Deut.’s preceder 116 Environmental prefix 117 Perfect rating

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

A S T O C O S T

E L O P E R

S I M O N E

A C A L E M E D I A S P L S T E O D P I D A S U S H S T O T T S

A T V E E N T D A S R A S E T E S T O N C D A P R P O E I T S N T S I E O D D N E S C O N E B U N S G T

D I G I S R I I N S A E N V E I M T I E C H E R O

O D E U M

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

M A N E T

O U T L A Y S

E L O I

B A E D O L N

E A A G N S R E T O I M E L A R I S T A N A N A U T I N N A M E T A L A L Y S C T E N E E D U C D E M O

H O O P A D S L E E T E N


CAT WEEK

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51


CRAIG MORRIS 970.379.9795 Cell 970.429.1090 Office Craig.Morris@sothebysrealty.com

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Concept 600 Condominium • • • • • • • • • •

1 bedroom, 1.5 baths, 1,125 sq ft 3rd floor unit in downtown Aspen Complete contemporary remodel Wire-brushed oak cabinetry Travertine floors, cove lighting Built-in cabinets throughout Radiant heat and air conditioning 2 private decks, underground parking Walk to everything Aspen Mountain views $2,395,000 $1,495,000 Furnished

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Ultimate Mountain Treasure 5 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, 9,400 sq ft Ski-in/ski-out to Tiehack/Buttermilk Designed & built by R. Wax & Associates Located in the Maroon Creek Club $9,999,000 Unfurnished

6 bedrooms, 6 full, 2 half-baths, 9,109 sq ft Ski-in/Ski-out to Tiehack ski area Two master and guest master suites Theater, billiards, exercise & wine rooms $12,950,000 $8,750,000 Furnished

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6 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 5,026 sq ft Priced for today’s market in West Aspen Office, gym, media room, wine cellar Beautiful, mature gardens and views! $4,950,000 $2,995,000 Co-listedwithMaureenStapleton | 970.948.9331

Five Trees Sanctuary Ski-in/ski-out home on a cul-de-sac 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 5,628 sq ft Rec room, exercise room, media room Library, 3 car garage, mountain views $9,300,000 $6,950,000 Co-listed with Craig Ward | 970.379.1254

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