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YOUR BLACK TIE EXPERIENCE! • Personalized rental fittings in the comfort of your vacation accommodations • You choose the time, you choose the place • Slopeside service and storage • Men’s & Women’s PREMIUM level boots • Magnatraction Snowboard packages • Junior performance twin-tip and all-mountain packages • TELLURIDE’S NEWEST RENTAL FLEET - GUARANTEED At Black Tie Ski Rentals we take great care to perfect all the details. So sit back, relax and re-discover your Telluride ski vacation! Open from 7:30am to 9pm everyday
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ARTFULLYDESIGNED DESIGNEDMOUNTAIN MOUNTAINMODERN MODERNRESIDENCES, RESIDENCES, ARTFULLY IN TELLURIDE’S TELLURIDE’SNEW NEWPREMIER PREMIERLOCATION. LOCATION.TOUR TOUR TODAY. IN TODAY.
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UMBIA AVE LUMBIA AVE UMBIA AVE .. . . LUMBIA AVE
HIGHLIGHTS HIGHLIGHTS
FIRFIR HOUSE FIRFIR HOUSE HOUSE HOUSE
SPRUCE ST. ST. SPRUCE SPRUCE ST. L SPRUCE LIFITFST. T8 8
A OLLA NDDO GOON G
FIR ST. FIR ST.
SAN SAN JUAN HOUSE STRONGHOUSE HOUSE STRONGHOUSE SAN SAN JUANJUAN HOUSE STRONGHOUSE JUAN HOUSE STRONGHOUSE
PINE ST. PINE ST.
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• •1212 new construction residences from 2,300 sqftsqft to over 4,200 sqftsqft new construction residences from 2,300 to over 4,200 • •3,3, 44 and 5+5+ bedroom options and bedroom options
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• •Premier downtown location: steps to the gondola andand Colorado Ave.Ave. Premier downtown location: steps to the gondola Colorado • •Design that maximizes valley and ski ski resort views from every residence Design that maximizes valley and resort views from every residence • •Generous outdoor living spaces Generous outdoor living spaces • •Open-concept living with large kitchen islands andand great rooms Open-concept living with large kitchen islands great rooms • •Spa-inspired bathrooms Spa-inspired bathrooms • •Enclosed parking and ample storage Enclosed parking and ample storage • •Offered from $2.95MM Offered from $2.95MM
FOR DETAILS & TO SCHEDULE TOUR: FOR DETAILS & TO SCHEDULE TOUR: BRIAN O’NEILL - 970.708.5367 BRIAN O’NEILL - 970.708.5367 brian@oneillstetina.com brian@oneillstetina.com www.TransferTelluride.com www.TransferTelluride.com
DUNTON HOT SPRINGS is an exquisitely restored historic mining town with 13 guest cabins and natural hot springs.
Located just across the mountain from Telluride, this Relais & Chateaux resort sits in a beautiful alpine valley, and was recently named in the Top 100 Hotels on CondÊ Nast Travellers’ 2014 Gold List.
DUNTON RIVER CAMP is a luxury tented camp constructed on an old cattle ranch four miles down river from Dunton Hot Springs.
The Camp has eight 640 sq. ft. tents with en-suite bathrooms, world class fly-fishing, amazing hiking, and challenging mountain biking for guests to enjoy. The philosophy of service and dining match that found at Dunton Hot Springs, making this a truly spectacular summer escape.
DUNTON TOWN HOUSE, a historic home located just steps from the Gondola and downtown Telluride.
Now Open!
Visit us at: www.duntonlife.com 877 288 4674
The residence offers an authentic and comfortable home-away-from home experience for Dunton guests in this charming mountain ski town.
SEE FOREVER VILLAGE UNIT B101
Three bedrooms with unobstructed views of the San Sophia Ridgeline. Ski-in, ski-out access and high-end finishes. MLS# 34664. $3,295,000
ALDASORO LOTS 64 & 67, JOSEFA LANE
VICTORIA DRIVE ESTATE
STONE’S THROW
20 ELK RUN ROAD
MLS# 34412, $775,000 / MLS# 33499, $975,000
MLS# 34422, 34418 & 34415. Prices start at $3,840,000.
MLS# 33420, $21,000,000
MLS# 34685, $1,300,000
KEN GRODBERG KEN GRODBERG | broker associate Broker Associate
A Telluride resident since cell 1990, Ken provides his clients with the highest level of service 970.708.5601 | Grodberg ken@grodbergrealestate.com and expertise. He represents all types of properties for both buyers and sellers.
970.708.5601 | ken@grodbergrealestate.com www.grodbergrealestate.com
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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46 14 | DISCOVER TELLURIDE
46 | TELLURIDE AIDS BENEFIT AT 25 The Work and the Celebration Continue
17 | THE PERFECT COUPLE
49 | THE ARTS SCENE Telluride Arts Turns Up the Heat
20 | LET IT SNOW The Science (and Joy) of Snow in the San Juans
51 | IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK The History and Architecture of Iconic Buildings
25 | Q&A WITH BILL JENSEN CEO on Ski Resort’s Master Development Plan
52 | FUN IS ALL IN THE FAMILY Off-Mountain Memory Makers for the Family
27 | FAMILIAR FACES ON THE MOUNTAIN
55 | CANDLELIGHT & SNOWFLAKES The Perfect Winter Wedding Celebration
15 | FLYING TO YOUR FAVORITE TOWN
31 | OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES
57 | STAY & PLAY Telluride’s Extraordinary Ski Valets
39 | COOL FINDS For When It’s Cold Outside
36 | GEAR SHOP WITH A CONSCIENCE Jagged Edge Looks Out for Community
43 | HIGH ALTITUDE HAUTE CUISINE
60 | COMMUNITY STAR Awards, IB Program, Outstanding Citizen 61 | HOME IS WHERE IS THE HEART IS Former White House Chief of Staff Jack Watson
44 | NIGHTLIFE IN TELLURIDE Laid Back Bar Scene, Aprés Ski, Starlight Express
63 | SUMMER IN TELLURIDE Secrets of the Other High Season
40 | BOARD MEETING Telluride’s Creative Charcuterie Boards
10
59 | START-UP SUCCESS STORIES Hoggle Google, Felt App, Side by Side
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Ski-in/ski-out to North America's hig restaurant Extensive wine list Ha local meats and cheeses, world-renown
Classic French country cuisine with breathtaking views of Palmyra Peak and surrounding San Juans. MADELINE HOTEL
Telluride & Mountain Village Official Visitor’s Guide is published twice per year by:
TELLURIDE TOURISM BOARD Telluride, Colorado 855.421.4360 VisitTelluride.com President & CEO
MICHAEL MARTELON Director of Marketing & Public Relations
KIERA SKINNER
Director of Social & Interactive Media
ANNIE CARLSON
Director of Communications
TOM WATKINSON Director of Operations
TWEED
BON VIVANT
HOLLIE HANNAHS Marketing Admininstrator
TABLE OF CONTENTS Custom cocktails & eclectic 64-65
Destination Concierge
PAULA BLUEHER ROB HUBER
Staff Designer TO PLAUREN OGraphic F METZGER GOLD HI LL E X PR ES
Photographer DinnerStaff Reservations Available Wedn RYAN BONNEAU Top of Polar Queen Express (Lift 5) (Adults 21+) | 970.728.7 TRANSPORTATION 68-70 ••••••
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IN EVERY ISSUE
French wine list
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
ALYSSA SERIGNESE
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ACTIVITIES 99 President PARTING SHOT TELLURIDE & MOUNTAIN VILLAGE MAPS
JOHN ARNOLD Art Director
KIM HILLEY Editor
ERIN SPILLANE Advertising Sales
HILARY TAYLOR Writers
Martinique Davis, Elizabeth Guest, Jesse James McTigue, Katie Klingsporn, Rosston 'Buster' Ritter, Emily Shoff For advertising opportunities contact: JOHN ARNOLD 970.596.1291 • john@visittelluride.com 307 Society Drive, Suite D, Telluride, CO 81435 ••••••
Copyright ©2017 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Cover and contents must not be reproduced in any manner without written permission from the publisher. COVER RYAN BONNEAU is an avid angler, outdoorsman, and traveler who shoots Telluride and exotic places around the world. RyanBonneauPhoto.com and chasingscale.com
Find Your “Happy Place” SearchTellurideRealEstate.com
Our website is a great place to start your Telluride Area property search. When you are ready, one of our local real estate professionals are standing by to answer all the questions your computer can’t.
COME SEE US IN PERSON! Across from the gondola in Telluride. 970.728.0808 I 237 South Oak Street
WOW WEEKENDOFWELLNESS
tellurideyogacenter Be sure to visit the
BINDU • BOUTIQUE located in the studio
11th Annual
July 19 - 22, 2018
JUNE 7 - 10, 2018
TELLURIDEWOW.COM
201 W. Colorado Ave. Ste. 200 Upstairs in the Nugget Bldg schedule at: tellurideyoga.com (970) 729-1673 DROP-INS WELCOME WE OFFER MANY STYLES AND LEVELS
PURCHASE TICKETS AT TellurideYogaFestival.com
EXPLORE THE VISITORS CENTER Want to make your Telluride experience an unforgettable one? Try the welcoming, informative Visitors Center. Alongside Elks Park and just across Colorado Avenue from the historic New Sheridan Hotel, this interactive space and its knowledgeable and friendly staff are ready to steer you toward a winter wonderland adventure, memorable meal or the perfect boutique.
>>
RYAN BONNEAU ©
DISCOVER TELLURIDE
Creativity + Community Welcome to Telluride and to the winter 2017-2018 issue of The Official Guide to Telluride and Mountain Village. We hope you enjoy this 30th anniversary issue of the magazine of the Telluride Tourism Board. Like Telluride itself, this publication has evolved a little over the years, and yet it has stayed true to the task of chronicling the people, ideas, establishments and events that make this tiny mountain town so exceptional. Flipping through issues of The Guide from the past 30 years has brought home to me what a very special community we have: wildly creative, dynamic and unique, but also big hearted, warm and generous. You need only read a handful of the stories in this issue to see what I mean. Take, for instance, the article on the Telluride AIDS Benefit, an event that sits at the intersection of art and activism. Celebrating its silver anniversary this year, 87 ITOR GUIDE 19 >> FIRST VIS riotous, creative TAB sprang 25 years ago from the love that a group of locals had for their ailing friend and has since raised millions for those affected by HIV and AIDS on the Western Slope and beyond. Or consider Telluride Arts, an inventive entity that promotes all things artistic in our community and that spearheaded Telluride’s designation as one of the state’s first certified Creative Districts. It has nurtured artists of all ages and genres for nearly 50 years, serving as a literal and figurative home for many. 14
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And finally, there are articles that examine the uniqueness – and abundance – of snow in the San Juans and new developments on the Telluride Ski Resort, once again Condé Nast Travelers’ No. 1 Ski Resort in North America. Wherever I look, I see fresh ideas, inventiveness and creativity that somehow never forget to give back, that never forget to help keep this town’s big heart beating strong. After all, that’s really the thing about Telluride. It can inspire and entertain, challenge and invigorate, but this community can also wrap visitors and locals alike in a warm, friendly mountain town embrace – and whether you have been in Telluride for 30 years or 30 seconds, once you’re here, you’ll know you are home. a
MICHAEL MARTELON PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER TELLURIDE TOURISM BOARD
GETTING HERE
Flying to Your Favorite Mountain Town
RYAN BONNEAU ©
Non-stop flights that make it easy to hit the slopes
Year-Round Flights Dallas DFW to Montrose MTJ American 1-3x daily Denver DEN to Montrose MTJ United 4-6x daily Denver DEN to Telluride TEX United-Great Lakes 1-2x daily Winter 2017-2018 Flights Atlanta ATL to Montrose MTJ Delta 1-3x weekly 12/21 - 4/1 Charlotte CLT to Montrose MTJ American Saturdays 12/16 - 3/31 Chicago ORD to Montrose MTJ American Weekly 12/15 - 3/31 United Daily 12/20 – 4/2 Houston IAH to Montrose MTJ United Daily 12/20 - 4/2 Los Angeles LAX to Montrose MTJ Allegiant 2x weekly 12/20 - 3/31 American Weekly 12/15 - 3/31 United 1-3x weekly 12/23 - 4/1 NY-La Guardia LGA to Montrose MTJ United Weekly 12/23 - 3/31 NY-Newark EWR to Montrose MTJ United 2x weekly 12/23 - 4/1 Phoenix PHX to Montrose MTJ American Daily 12/15 - 4/2 Salt Lake City SLC to Montrose MTJ Delta Daily 12/21 - 1/7 San Francisco SFO to Montrose MTJ United 3x weekly 12/23 - 4/1
RYAN BONNEAU ©
LAST WINTER was the Telluride Ski Resort’s second snowiest on record and also set a record for flights and air passengers. Winter 2017-2018 promises a flurry of new flights, with another jump in air service and new options, ranking Telluride among the best in mountain resorts for access. Telluride is adding yet again to its list of direct flights, with American running service on Saturdays this winter from its second largest hub, Charlotte, to Montrose Regional Airport. As American continues to expand service to the Telluride region, Dallas will see an added second daily flight over Thanksgiving and third daily flight over the holiday season, complementing daily mainline jet service and twice-daily flights through the bulk of the season. American flights from Phoenix-Sky Harbor will continue to run daily through the winter, along with service from Chicago and Los Angeles. Delta Airlines will operate new flights this winter from Salt Lake City over the holidays, as well as continue to fly three times a week from Atlanta. Core-carrier United Airlines will run an additional daily Denver to Montrose flight, bringing that total to 4-6 per day through the season. United will also continue to operate daily flights from Houston and Chicago, along with two to three flights weekly from New York area airports La Guardia and Newark, along with Los Angeles and San Francisco. Low-cost carrier Allegiant will continue its twice-a-week service into MTJ from Los Angeles. Telluride Regional Airport, just 10 minutes from town and the ski area, is still reveling in the return of commercial flights. TEX will continue to see daily service throughout the year from Denver on United partner Great Lakes Airlines, averaging 10 flights per week. “Telluride continues to lead the charge for air accessibility in the ski industry,” Colorado Flights COO Matt Skinner says. “We rank with the best in mountain airports for direct flight options, and are one of the few to have major network connectivity, a low-cost carrier and flights that land just 10 minutes from the slopes. Both our guests and locals alike will enjoy the multiple options with easy access to and from domestic and international destinations.” For the two airports serving the destination, the added service brings the total to 15 non-stop flights (16 over the holiday season) from 12 major hubs. a UP-TO-DATE AIR SCHEDULE >> VisitTelluride.com/getting-here
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Aspen 970.925.8579
Crested Butte 970.349.5023
Denver 303.399.4564
Steamboat Springs 970.879.9222
Telluride 970.728.3359
Vail 970.949.5500
Fotoimagery.com
interior landscapes that delight the senses
thurstonkitchenandbath.com
THE PERFECT COUPLE
The Unique Connection Between Mountain Village & Telluride
RYAN BONNEAU ©
The twin communities of Telluride and Mountain Village are a match made in heaven. Each offers its own distinct vibe while together the pair share in the stunning natural beauty that makes for the world’s coolest winter playground.
A
TELLURIDE A National Historic Landmark District,
offers gourmet restaurants, chic boutiques and fine-art galleries, all the while proudly displaying its mining-town heritage with a wealth of colorful Victorian houses and a charming, carefully preserved Main Street lined with clapboard and brick storefronts. Don’t let the town’s charms deceive you, however. Telluride’s heritage is equal parts refinement and Wild West, complete with tales of bank robbers – Butch Cassidy robbed his first bank here – and hardscrabble miners. MOUNTAIN VILLAGE Perched above Telluride at 9,545
feet, offers visitors and residents alike a more modern feel in a European-style alpine setting. Incorporated in 1995, Mountain Village boasts luxury accommodation, stateof-the-art spas, stylish shops and sophisticated dining options, with the towering peaks and stunning vistas of the San Juan Mountains as a memorable backdrop.
4.5
min
utes
7.5
mi
nu
tes
B
THE GONDOLA
Linking these two communities is the Gondola, which celebrated 20 years in operation in December 2016. The only transportation system of its kind in North America, the “G” is free, pet friendly and handicap accessible, connecting Telluride and Mountain Village via a 13-minute ride. With breathtaking views and the uniqueness of the experience, we can promise the Gondola is one journey you will never forget.
A
B
C
C
Telluride to Mtn. Village 13 minutes
Station Telluride South Oak Street, Telluride 8,750 feet Station St. Sophia Mid-mountain Access the resort’s trails and Allred’s Restaurant & Bar 10, 500 feet Station Mountain Village Mountain Village Center 9,545 feet
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COVER STORY
let it
SNOW 20
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PHOTO: RYAN BONNEAU ©
The Science (and Joy) of Snow in the San Juans By Erin Spillane
First, they came for gold, but later it was for something else, something equally as precious. The earliest Europeans to clamber, lungs bursting, over the San Juans and into Telluride’s box canyon were here to mine the gold and silver that lay in streams or veined in rock deep underground. More recent arrivals, however, trace a similar route in search of a different type of wealth. Their treasure lies feet-deep in sunny bowls, on steep-angled slopes latticed with cliff bands and in quiet glades. For the last few decades, it hasn’t been gold that has drawn the dreamers, adventurers and thrill-seekers to Telluride. It has been white gold. It has been snow. CONTINUED ON PAGE 22 >>
COVER STORY
MELISSA PLANTZ ©
let it
SNOW CONTINUED FROM PAGE 21
The science behind how that snow falls in Telluride has few absolutes, but it seems that our powder days generally start life far out in the Pacific where warm air hooks up with cooler air to form a depression. If we are lucky, that depression hitches a ride on an Atmospheric River, streams of moisture – like the Pineapple Express – that transport water vapor out of the tropics to conveniently located places like the coasts of California and Baja. When this happens, Telluride skiers and boarders can start looking forward to a powder day, and potentially a big powder day. As Joel Gratz from opensnow.com explains, while more storms come in off the northern Pacific, they have to jump the Sierra Nevada to make it to Colorado. So, the northern mountains of the Centennial State – and resorts like Steamboat or Vail, for example – may get more snow events, but rarely more than a foot at a time. Southern resorts like Telluride, on the other hand, don’t always have to take northern California’s hand-me-downs, in particular if the weather comes in from the southwest. “Having that direct 22
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line from the Pacific Ocean,” Gratz says, “means that when Telluride gets a storm, it can be multiple feet [of snow] because there are no big mountain ranges between it and the ocean.” Former Telluride Ski Resort Director of Snow Safety Craig “Sterbie” Sterbenz adds that snowfall happens thanks to something called orographics, which occur when a moist air mass moves over a mountain range. As the air rises and cools, orographic clouds form and produce snow. This works best, Sterbenz says, when the path of the air mass is perpendicular to the mountain range. Like, say, an air mass coming from the Pacific and a northsouth range like the San Juans? “Absolutely,” he says. Sterbenz notes that Telluride sometimes benefits twice from these storms if the tail end of a depression, revolving counter-clockwise, wraps back around from the northwest. “The snow comes up the San Miguel Canyon and, with the cooling temperatures from the north, we get – on top of what we already got – some really good, dry powder. That wrap-around isn’t well forecasted so sometimes it’s a nice surprise.” He also notes that Telluride’s high altitude and proximity to desert mean that what falls generally is light and dry. “In
Telluride, our average moisture density is 6.5 to 7 percent. That means snow that’s light and fluffy.” Light and fluffy white stuff falling overnight in Telluride also means serious excitement starts to build from the moment alarm clocks go off in the morning. For the early risers at the Telluride Ski Patrol and the resort’s Department of Snow Safety, however, the work of making the mountain safe for skiers and boarders is already underway with the gunners heading up the mountain at around 4:30 in the morning and the rest of ski patrol clocking in by 6:30, according to ski patrol Supervisor Tom “Socko” Sokolowski. Are they aware of the powder morning buzz below in town? “We’re really aware of it,” Sokolowski says, “but we can’t let it affect what we do. We move as quickly as we can. It all depends on wind and wind direction, and the snow and the density of the snow. There’s a lot to do. “People often have images of ski patrol skiing neck-deep powder [before the resort opens], but most of those days we’re carrying 20 to 25 pounds’ worth of bombs in a backpack and we’re traversing or slogging through snow, and that’s where the time is. But, basically, we try to get everything open as fast as possible.” For local photographer Melissa Plantz, powder days can lead to a serious conflict: Ski the powder or photograph it? “It’s so beautiful that you want to capture it, but it’s also so beautiful that you want to ski it,” she says, adding that she always brings her camera. “I take one untracked run and then look for opportunities to shoot.” Part of the appeal of a powder day in Telluride, according to Plantz, is separate from the actual skiing: the communal anticipation, the excited chatter in the line for first chair, weighing up elements like wind and the direction of the storm in deciding where the best snow might be, as well as what parts of the mountain might open and in what order. “It’s so fun.” CONTINUED ON PAGE 24 >>
COVER STORY
“In Telluride, our average moisture density is 6.5 to 7 percent. That means snow that’s light and fluffy.” CRAIG STERBENZ RYAN BONNEAU ©
HOW MUCH
BIG SNOW
DID WE GET?
341”
317”
293”
THE TOP 3 WINTERS
2007-08
2016-17
2008-09
The all-important job of measuring snowfall relies on sonar devices that sit at the top of Lift 6, near Ski Patrol Headquarters, and at the bottom of Lift 14 in Prospect Bowl. Hourly readings from the devices are uploaded to Telluride Ski Resort computers and also transmitted to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center’s web site.
The Prospect Pow Cam
A MOUNTAIN TOWN GLOSSARY Bluebird
A sunny cloudless day with fresh pow
Freshies
Skiing in fresh, untouched powder
Gaper
Someone not yet embraced by the local ski culture, whether because of style or skill or both
Pow
Fresh powder snow
Schralp
To aggressively ski or snowboard
Face Shot
Getting hit in the face with snow when skiing in deep powder
Send it!
Shouted to a skier or snowboarder who is hesitating at the top of a run that they should proceed without any further delay
films the snow stake in Prospect Bowl. According to Snow Safety Supervisor Jon Tukman: “The cam is a visual reference for the public and catnip for the powder hungry … If the image of the stake is obscured, it means the camera is buried [in snow] and it’s time to turn off the computer and go skiing.”
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COVER STORY
let it
SNOW
Annie Savath’s favorite powder day, 1975. Photo by Norm Clasen CONTINUED FROM PAGE 22
All of that builds to the moment when, Plantz says, she finds herself skiing an untouched line, chest-deep in powder. “It’s magic, it’s stunning. It involves all of your senses – visual, physical, the sound of the snow. Your body is on autopilot. The powder goes over your head, it hits your face. That whole multisensory thing, that’s what you want. That’s the feeling.” A ski instructor and former director of the Telluride Ski and Snowboard School, long-time local Annie Savath has been skiing here for 45 years now, and has seen her share of powder mornings. Her most memorable? One that stands out, she says, dates back to 1975. “I remember going up with ski patrol early one morning with the photographer Norm Clasen. Patrol let me ski under what is now Lift 9 – but 9 wasn’t there then – and the snow quality was amazing; it was so consistent. That was very special.” Savath is known as an elegant skier, as well a one of the first female ski school directors in North
America. She’s also a closet snow scientist, echoing Sterbenz that the moisture content of snow in the San Juans is low – which makes for good, light powder. “Being a powder skier, you want to know about it,” she says simply. Freestyle skier Gus Kenworthy grew up in Telluride and recalls a favorite powder morning with
his dad, Peter, who then lived at the top of Oak Street. “The streets hadn’t been plowed yet and we clicked our skis on outside the house and skied [in] the middle of the road all the way down to the bottom of Chair 8. It was early enough that we were some of the first people queuing up for the lift. We took 8 up to 9 and got first tracks down Kant-MakM. We skied all morning and then got chili in a bread bowl and hot chocolates for lunch.” It’s a special memory – powder days in Telluride are like that – for Kenworthy, who has skied all over the world but who still makes it home come wintertime to enjoy his hometown resort. Says the Olympic silver medallist, “Telluride offers unparalleled beauty that no other mountain I’ve skied at can compare to. The terrain is great, of course. It’s one of the best resorts in the world because of the variety of … runs and the crisp dry snow that only that region gets, but for me the thing that stands out the most is the panoramic views. Even after all these years, skiing in Telluride takes my breath away.” a
&
ON THE MOUNTAIN
Q A BILL JENSEN
RYAN BONNEAU ©
New Development Plan on the Horizon for Ski Resort By Katie Klingsporn In his first two winters as CEO of the Telluride Ski Resort, Bill Jensen has overseen improvements to the ski resortowned Peaks Resort and Spa, the completion of a new practice facility on the golf course, a 15-acre ski school beginner terrain-based teaching area, and the refurbishment of 55 bedrooms of affordable housing in Mountain Village. And that’s on top of running a ski resort. What Jensen says he is most excited about, however, has been updating the ski resort’s master development plan, a process that was last undertaken in 1999. The plan, a 10-year vision for improvements, upgrades and developments on the ski resort, was approved by the U.S. Forest Service in autumn 2017 and, as of October, was in a final public comment period. Once implemented, it will change the face of the mountain in significant ways — including replacing the beloved threeperson Lift 9 with a high-speed quad, renovating Giuseppe’s restaurant and building more summer amenities — that Jensen believes will benefit the ski area and the Telluride region. The CEO sat down with The Official Guide to Telluride and Mountain Village to chat about the plan, long-term goals and his thoughts on sustainability.
TELLURIDE SKI RESORT CEO
Tell us about the master development plan. It’s a plan that outlines what we hope to implement on the mountain over the next five to 10 years. In the first five years of the plan, we asked for replacements of Chairs 4, 9, 10 and 7. We’ve asked for approval to do a rebuild/renovation of Giuseppe’s. And we’ve asked to build a new restaurant at the top of Chair 10. In terms of the Chair 7 piece, we need feedback from the Telluride community on the future of the Coonskin area. If the Lift 7 base evolves into a hospitality base, TSG would look at moving the top terminal of Lift 7 further up the mountain to provide improved access to Chair 9 and Mountain Village terrain. We are looking at snowmaking improvements on the town side of the mountain. Then there is our summer platform, the plan for which includes mountain bike flow trails and a zip line canopy tour with an environmentally guided approach. The whole master development plan is a $70 million plan. The plan for next five years is probably in the $45 million range. What will these changes look like specifically on Chairs 4 and 9? We would remove Chair 4 and relocate it to the Chair 9 line. We plan to do some glading to increase Chair 9’s skiable terrain. We have stated we would commit to a capacity of 1,800 people per hour on Chair 9, which balances the terrain and the uphill lift capacity. We’re going to stay with that
commitment. Then on Chair 4, we would replace it with a high-speed, six-person chair with features such as heated seats. How about the mountain biking flow trails? If the timing works out, we can build the trails in the summer of 2018, and would be operational with lift-served mountain biking in summer of 2019. The ultimate plan is to develop six to eight flow trails all in the Chair 4 lift pod. Last year, we built a pilot section. The bikers absolutely loved it. Vail made waves when it unveiled ambitious sustainability goals. What is the Telluride Ski Resort’s stance on sustainability? We’re very focused on reducing our carbon footprint. Since 2011, we’ve reduced it by 15 percent. After Trump withdrew, we were one of five or six ski areas to sign a petition that we support the Paris Climate Accord’s goal [of achieving a carbon footprint reduction of 25 to 30 percent by 2030]. What’s the ski resort’s overarching goal? Our primary focus is the experience. Our measure of success is consistent high-level experiences for our guests. How are you feeling looking ahead? We are excited and optimistic about the upcoming winter season and the future of both the mountain and the community. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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�BURTON Get all of your winter gear and Test Ride our hardgoods at Burton Telluride. BURTON TELLURIDE LOCATED IN MOUNTAIN VILLAGE’S HERITAGE PLAZA (970) 728-6138
Reserve your snowboard rental quickly and easily at www.rentskis.com/BurtonVG
ON THE MOUNTAIN
FAMILIAR FACES By Jesse James McTigue & Marti Davis
Lots of places have a niche industry with specialized jobs dedicated to local tradition. Think of Italy’s winemakers, Silicon Valley’s technology innovators and New York City’s bankers. In Telluride that industry is skiing and the traditional work is on the mountain. Those in it commute by chairlift or the Gondola, wear down instead of suits and work for lifestyle instead of money. Here are a few of the friendly, familiar faces at the Telluride Ski Resort who embrace this culture.
In Telluride, the nerve center of the intricate system that is lift operations, Lift Headquarters – or LHQ – sits perched atop San Sophia Ridge, and that’s where Lift Operations Manager John Young can be found nearly every morning during the ski season. It’s at the daily morning meeting at LHQ that Young (or JY, as he’s called) helps orchestrate the magic that keeps skiers circulating throughout the Telluride Ski Resort. His duties entail assigning JOHN YOUNG the department’s 85 workers to their Lift Operations duty stations (if you hear talk of places FAVORITE RUN like the Swamp or the Dark Side, that’s MILK RUN lift ops-speak for certain lift pods,) but mostly, JY is the guy responsible for keeping the stoke high on the chairlifts. “If you can maintain a positive attitude,” he says, “it’s contagious.” Young started his career at the ski resort in 2009, “bumping chairs” for a ski season, shortly after graduating from the University of Vermont with a horticulture degree. He later worked as guest services assistant manager until taking on his current role in 2013, which he juggles with volunteering for One to One Mentoring, the Ecology Commission and the Telluride AIDS Benefit.
Like many longtime locals, Michigan native Kristen Hughes came to Telluride just for a vacation – while on spring break from Arizona State University in 1991 – and never left. “I called my parents from a payphone at the bottom of Lift 8 – at the time, [it] was just a single-wide trailer selling lift tickets – and told them I wanted to take a year off KRISTEN HUGHES school.” Guest Services
FAVORITE RUN More than a quarter century later, BUSHWACKER it’s Hughes’ enduring love of the town and its mountain that makes her one of the ski resort’s most ebullient, loved and recognizable members of the guest services team.
Working as a mountain host, Hughes’ appreciation for local history and lore shines through. “I really geek out on reinforcing people’s love of Telluride.” For example, she can tell you how trails like Humboldt Draw, Smuggler and Lookout got their names (from old mining claims). When Hughes isn’t helping guests with their skis, recommending a lunch spot or advising on the best runs for all abilities, she is running her company, TREE Realty, snapping photographs or enjoying Telluride’s stellar music scene. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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ON THE MOUNTAIN
FAMILIAR FACES
Few places on the ski resort emanate the rustically emblematic “old Telluride” ambiance quite like the timberframed, wood stove-heated saloon at Gorrono Ranch. And, few faces are as familiar there as that of bartender Rowena Andrew. Andrew has been in Telluride since she moved here from Chamonix, France, in 1987, and has been mixing drinks and servROWENA ANDREW ing beers in the cozy shack for Gorrono Saloon Bartender two decades. In fact, says Andrew, FAVORITE RUN her favorite run is Misty Maiden MISTY MAIDEN partly because the name makes her laugh, but also because it’s part of her daily commute to the saloon. A native of England, Andrew’s love of skiing is what brought her to the box canyon originally – she was the ski resort’s first hostess – but it is the people who have kept her here. “Telluride guests and visitors are a step above,” she says, noting that she’s met a slew of friends and interesting people from behind the bar, some of whom have flown her places to bartend for events or parties, or have tipped her trips to places like Disneyland, where she went with her three kids, ages 15, 14, and 12. An avid backcountry skier who lives in Ophir, Andrew’s interests are fascinatingly eclectic. She is currently learning to weld and is creating her own line of cocktail mixers. 28
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Becoming a ski patroller wasn’t Johnny Gowdy’s plan, but it just might have been his destiny. In the ‘60s, Gowdy’s dad was a patroller in Aspen and had heard there was going to be a new ski area in Telluride, so he came. “He bought a house on North Townsend in 1969,” Gowdy says, “I think he paid $7,000.” Gowdy recalls growing up here JOHNNY GOWDY and going up early on powder Ski Patrol mornings with his father, then FAVORITE RUN skiing with the race and mogul ANDY’S GOLD teams. After high school, he attended the University of Colorado, but “I wanted to get back to Telluride. The traffic in Boulder was driving me crazy.” So, he called Jason Rogers, the assistant director of ski patrol. That was 16 years ago. Now a veteran, Gowdy expresses his gratitude toward the old-timers. “It was people like Gus [ Jim Guest], Socko [Tom Sokolowski], the Wilcoxes [Mona and Jerry] and Nick Kyle who encouraged the youngsters to make being a patroller a lifestyle in a town where it didn’t seem feasible.” “The old-timers told us, ‘If you want to make it work, figure it out,’” recalls Shannon, Gowdy’s wife – who in summer runs a landscaping business with her husband. Adds Gowdy, “They’re the ones who created such a wonderful ski patrol. It’s a family, we take care of each other.”
ON THE MOUNTAIN
FAMILIAR FACES
If you believe in reincarnation, you might want to be on your best behavior, because maybe – just maybe – you will get to live your next life as a ski patrol dog. It’s a pretty sweet one – just consider Wiley, veteran patroller Erik Aura’s 9-year-old golden Labrador. Wiley’s day begins riding Lift 7 to Middle Earth, the ski patrol shack at the top, where, according to Aura, he gets treats and pets before attending morning meeting. WILEY Next, the pair snowmobile to the Ski Patrol Avalanche Dog Top of the World, the ski patrol FAVORITE RUN shack between Lifts Nine and UPPER SEE FOREVER Six, where Wiley hikes and sleeps by the fire. Wiley does have to work, but for a dog it’s still play. To keep the dogs sharp, they run drills – essentially games of hide and seek in the snow. When Wiley makes a find, Aura explains, “You basically go nuts with love and praise, which is his motivation.” Wiley’s favorite aspect of patrolling? It’s face shots, just like the rest of us. “His favorite thing is running downhill on the slopes at the end, especially in fresh snow,” Aura says. “It’s coming home.”
This winter will be Kuntz’s 41st season teaching skiing in Telluride. Although her long, thick ponytail is speckled with gray, one can still see the 20-year-old who arrived here in 1976 in the depth of her green eyes – especially when the conversation shifts to skiing. “When I moved here, I paid $75 a month in rent on North Oak Street,” Kuntz recalls. “I taught skiing, bartended at the Sheridan and waited tables. We all had so many jobs.” MARTI MARTIN KUNZ In the late 70s and early 80s, Ski & Snowboard School Kuntz raced on the women’s pro FAVORITE RUN tour and became a champion DIEHEDRAL speed skier. Kuntz was clocked at 110 and 129 miles per hour, fast enough for two world records. “All that stuff is in the Telluride [Historical] Museum,” Kuntz says when pressed for details about her competitive career. “It was a long time ago and I don’t relate to it anymore. Now finesse is my game.”
While much has changed since 1976, it’s clear Kuntz’s love for instructing and the mountain haven’t. “Whether it’s stormy or sunny, there is something about being out there that is so delightful.” And retiring? No, Kuntz, says. “The passion comes from seeing people grow and learn to love skiing. I’ve had students for a long time. They grow, they change, they get older too. Their kids grow up and want me to ski with their children. It’s really fun.” visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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M O U N TA I N T O P L I V I N G Exquisite Penthouse new r esidence listed at $5,495,000
DANIEL E. DOCKRAY dan.dockray@sothebyssealty.com 970-708-0666
E L K S T O N E 21.C O M
Ski Biomechanics Camp TAKE YOUR SKIING TO THE NEXT LEVEL THROUGH BODY AWARENESS
January 12 - 15, 2018 Camp with Lift $1,200 Camp without Lift $1,050 Open to intermediate — advanced skiers, participants ski in small ability-matched groups with a maximum of four students per instructor.
Nature has designed our body to move efficiently. Learn how to apply that concept to your skiing. The camp uses Dr. Hewson’s innovative approach, including video analysis, in-classroom learning, and on-snow application all focused on efficient skiing using our natural functional alignment. Developed by DR. KIM HEWSON Orthopedic Surgeon, former Director of Sports Medicine at University of Arizona, Ski School Instructor (18 years) and Staff Trainer
CHECK OUT OUR OTHER SPECIALTY CAMPS Development Squad | Heli-Ski Camp | Making Friends with Moguls Camp Silver Skiers | Women’s Week | SheRide Women’s Snowboard Camp
TellurideSkiResort.com/ski-school/specialty-camps
OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES
BEYOND THE SLOPES
TONY DEMIN ©
Telluride’s backyard is the ultimate winter playground and for those who love action, the prospects are limitless. Test your skiing and snowboarding prowess by helicopter, snowcat, kite or backcountry skiing. For a slower pace, access the serene beauty of the outdoors on Nordic skis or snowshoes. You can kick back and let a team of horses pull you across a mountain meadow, or straddle a snowmobile and explore old mining ruins. And then there’s ice: for climbing, skating or fishing. And if comfort is your pleasure, hop the Gondola and catch the scenery on a free ride between Telluride and Mountain Village. For a complete listing of adventure guides, turn to page 99 or go to VisitTelluride.com.
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RYAN BONNEAU ©
OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES
ICE CLIMBING
Strap on your crampons and grab your ice axe, the alpine setting of the San Juan Mountains offers world-renowned ice climbing. Regional waterfalls turn to cathedrals of ice once the temperatures hold below freezing. Hiring a local guide is recommended to fully explore winter climbing routes. Lessons are available through regional outfitters.
RYAN BONNEAU ©
SNOWMOBILING
Get your motor running on an extensive network of trails that has created a snowmobiler’s paradise. Explore stunning landscapes, as well as ghost towns and relics from Telluride’s mining days. Local outfitters offer half-day or full-day tours for all ages and abilities.
KITE SKIING
Snow sport enthusiasts wanting an extra challenge can soar across the snow and up or down slopes with the pull of a kite. Known to its practitioners as “snow-kiting,” the sport is done with downhill ski or snowboard equipment and a colorful kite. Kite skiers fly through the meadows at Lizard Head Pass, full of wide-open spaces and gorgeous views. Lessons are available locally. 32
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TELLURIDE HELITRAX©
HELICOPTER SKIING
Ski and snowboard enthusiasts seeking powder turns outside the ski area boundaries – as well as an unforgettable experience – need look no further than Helitrax, the premiere helicopter ski company in the state of Colorado. In operation since 1982, Helitrax flies in the San Juan Mountains at some of the highest elevations of any helicopter skiing operation in North America. Skiers and boarders using Helitrax will enjoy panoramic scenery and untouched powder. There are a variety of heli-ski options including day trips, multi-day outings and custom tours on offer.
OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES
FAT TIRE BIKING
Winter recreation stretches beyond alpine skiing and snowboarding in Telluride. You’ve probably noticed the Nordic skiing, ice skating, snowshoeing and snowmobiling, but it just might be the hottest, newest winter toy – the fat bike – that will tempt you most. These bikes, mountain bikes with chubby snow tires, aren’t just for cruising main street on a snowy morning, but are your ticket to a memorable winter adventure. Rent a bike from a local outfitter and head to one of these spots:
TONY DEMIN ©
In Telluride, you can enjoy the quintessential winter activity of ice skating at any of the three rinks available in the area. In Telluride Town Park, you’ll find a professional-grade indoor hockey rink as well as an outdoor rink, and in Mountain Village you can skate at the Madeline Hotel and Residences’ delightful outdoor rink. Ice skate rentals are available at both locations.
THE VALLEY FLOOR >> The 3-mile stretch of open space welcoming visitors to town contains the only trails with a groomed track set just for fat bikers. The social rider can exit the trails at the far west end for a tasty microbrew at Telluride Brewing Company (156 Society Drive, Lawson Hill) before the mellow pedal back to town.
TELLURIDE GOLF CLUB >> The undulating groomed trails that ribbon over the golf course in Mountain Village are multi-use trails open to dogs, bikes, hikers, snow-shoes and Nordic skiers. Enjoy the views of the San Sophia ridge to the north and Wilson range to the south as you catch your breath between the dips and climbs.
TONY DEMIN ©
BEAR CREEK >> Located at the end of South Pine Street, this easy summer hiking trail turns into an advanced/intermediate fat bike ride in the winter. Riders are rewarded with the same beautiful waterfall at the top, only this time of year it’s frozen. Although the trail is not groomed, skiers taking advantage of Telluride Ski Resort’s backcountry gate exit via Bear Creek and pack down a nice path.
RYAN BONNEAU ©
ICE SKATING
BACKCOUNTRY HUTS
Skiing in the San Juan backcountry is a true outdoor adventure. Explore and marvel at some of the country’s most spectacular mountain terrain while skiing to a hut or lodge, stocked with all the amenities necessary for a comfortable winter’s night stay. Travel to a single hut or tour hut to hut in the European tradition. Add hike-to alpine skiing or snowboarding to your hut trip. Local outfitters can help you plan the adventure of a lifetime. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES
NORDIC SKIING
Need a break from downhill skiing and boarding? Nordic skiing in the area offers a change of scenery and a great workout. Groomed tracks can be found in Telluride Town Park, on the Valley Floor, on the golf course in Mountain Village, at Trout and Priest Lakes and on the ski resort. Each area offers various lengths of groomed trail, different terrain and excellent scenery. The Telluride Nordic Center in Telluride Town Park is a superb resource for trail conditions, lessons and gear rentals. TONY DEMIN ©
HORSEBACK & SLEIGH RIDES
RYAN BONNEAU ©
RYAN BONNEAU ©
Slip on your cowboy boots and Stetson and enjoy a sleigh or horseback ride in the winter wonderland of the San Juans. Ride under a cobalt blue sky or bundle up and star gaze during a dinner sleigh ride, all while embracing the spirit of the Wild West.
SNOW BIKING
Visiting Telluride in winter doesn’t mean you have to leave your rod and reel behind. Many streams and rivers in the region are prime for fishing year-round. Late February to April, the San Miguel River provides excellent fishing opportunities, while farther afield the Uncompahgre River fishes well all winter. Or try ice fishing on the area’s lakes and reservoirs. Local outfitters can guide you. 34
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SNOWSHOEING
TONY DEMIN ©
FISHING
Want to discover the ski resort in a new and unique way? Try snow biking. A knowledgeable snow bike instructor will teach all aspects of riding a snow bike, which has skis instead of wheels. Rentals and certification courses are available through Eco Adventures.
When the whole family wants to go for a walk in the woods, don’t let the snow stop you. Snowshoes offer the freedom to explore many snow-covered places. Easy to learn and fun to master, snowshoeing is an activity for all ages. Choose between a leisurely sightseeing outing or an uphill trek for the perfect cardio workout. Guided snowshoe adventures are available with a number of local outfitters.
Telluride Sports Delivers! With 7 ski & snowboard rental locations in Telluride & Mountain Village – and our in-home ski rental delivery service – you’re never too far away from Telluride Sports. Reserve now! It’s easy to book in advance and jump to the front of the line. Choose the pickup or delivery option most convenient for you, and spend more time on the slopes. Visit www.rentskis.com/VisitTelluride Visit www.telluridesports.com for more information about our 7 rental locations in Telluride: Camel’s Garden Hotel at the base of Lift 8/Free Gondola (970)728-4138 | Gondola Plaza at the base of Lift 4/Free Gondola (970)728-8944 Franz Klammer Lodge in Heritage Plaza (970)728-0364 | The Peaks Resort (970)239-0339 Coonskin at the base of Lift 7 (970)728-4228 | Neve Sports in the Madeline Hotel (970)728-5722 Burton Telluride in Heritage Plaza (970)728-6138
RETAIL THERAPY
A GEAR SHOP WITH A CONSCIENCE
“My goal for Jagged Edge is to be a healthy, sustainable and community-run business in the long run.” ERIK DALTON, OWNER PHOTOS BY RYAN BONNEAU ©
Jagged Edge Looks Out for Community, Environment and Quality By Katie Klingsporn
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Go to any mountain town worth its salt and you’ll find a gear shop that peddles the accoutrements needed for a buffet of outdoor activities. What’s not guaranteed is that said gear shop comes with a conscience — a sincere interest in what’s best for customers, community and the environment — and a business plan to back it up. Jagged Edge, the independent outdoor retailer on the corner of Willow Street and Colorado Avenue, has been owned and operated by the Dalton family since 2003. The two-storied shop is filled with the kind of equipment any gear junkie would take a shine to: drybags, camp stoves, climbing ropes, sleeping bags, backpacks, ski boots, merino wool under-layers and high-tech outerwear. But look beyond the inventory and you’ll find substance; Jagged Edge employs sustainable practices like rooftop solar, has its own Made-in-America clothing line and walks the talk of mountain town lifestyle with employee benefits like ski trips to Silverton. Erik Dalton, who runs the shop, says he’s motivated by doing what’s best for his customers, but also what’s best for his employees and the Earth. “Our ethos is to be good to our community members. We want to be friendly to everyone who walks in our door. But we also want to be involved with the community, to be a venue in town where people do presentations. And we want to be known as a local shop.”
JAGGED EDGE STAFF’S
TOP PICKS
FIND IT JAGGED EDGE 223 EAST COLORADO DOWNTOWN TELLURIDE
Jagged Edge was launched more than 20 years ago as a gear brand by Margaret and Paula Quenemoen, sisters who started out selling handmade headbands from a cart on the streets of Telluride. With durable fabrics and stylish designs, the company blossomed into a bustling operation with manufacturing in Asia, stores across Colorado and a distribution business. But operational issues became too much to overcome, and Jagged Edge was eventually sold to the Daltons. Erik Dalton began working at the shop as a kid fresh out of college who knew admittedly little about retail. Under early managers, he says, he became educated, eventually carving out a niche by carrying high-quality performance brands like Ibex and Osprey and carefully balancing his inventory with the town’s other gear shops. “We don’t play the volume game. If you are really looking for something specialized, that’s the niche we fill.” Dalton also revived the Jagged Edge brand, a task that entailed doggedly re-obtaining the trademark and setting up a production facility in Broomfield that manufactures jackets, hoodies and other garments using American-sourced products. It’s evidence of Dalton’s approach to Jagged Edge: he’s playing the long game. “My goal is for Jagged Edge to be a healthy, sustainable and community-run business in the long run,” he says. “Thirty years from now I want there to be a Jagged Edge on Main Street in Telluride.” a
Erik Dalton
Jon Miller
The Gear: Fisher Traverse AT Boot
The Gear: DMM Apex Ice Axe
Why I Love It > It’s a light-weight touring boot that performs great on the downhill and is really comfortable on the ascent.
Why I Love It > It’s a super versatile ice tool. I’ve taken mine everywhere from Bridal Veil to Alaska. It makes me happy.
Dave Hallowell
Sean Kearns
The Gear: Jagged Edge Journey Hoodie
The Gear: Helinox Camping Cot
Why I Love It > It’s a solid go-to everyday piece for up here. It’s great for a winter layer and commuting by bike in summer; it also ages well and is made in Colorado with materials sourced in the U.S.
Why I Love It > It is more comfortable than my couch and is so easy to travel with because the cot folds down to a very compact size. It’s ideal for car camping, river trips or even a guest bed.
Dave McMilan
Kally Williamson
The Gear: Osprey Atmos 50 Backpack
The Gear: Katadyn Hiker Microfilter
Why I Love It > Unlike packs I’ve had in the past, it doesn’t hurt my body. I took it on a 15-mile trip, and it’s extremely light with a great suspension system.
Why I Love It > I don’t have to pack in water; I can drink water anywhere and it tastes amazing.
many cultures... one source picaya.com
JEWELRY • BEADS • FURNITURE HOME DECOR • TEXTILES WEDDING REGISTRY & INTERIOR DESIGN ASSISTANCE
101 W. Colo. Ave. Telluride • 970 728 0954
Need a place to store your skis and boots overnight?
Slopeside Lockers is conveniently located just steps from the snow and Village Express (Lift 4), underneath Tomboy Tavern. Lockers hold up to two pairs of skis and boots, while offering a warm and friendly atmosphere to begin and end your ski day. LOCKER AREA EQUIPPED WITH
• • • • •
Bathrooms Free Coffee Television Lounge Area Personal Boot Dryers
For more information and reservations please contact Slopeside Lockers at (970) 728-2719.
RETAIL THERAPY
COOL FINDS for when it’s cold outside
With snow falling and temperatures dipping, Telluride and Mountain Village’s funky and independent shops and boutiques have you covered. From slopeside to fireside, you’ll stay cozy with these perfect winter wonderland finds. CASHMERE SWEATER / TWO SKIRTS / $275 FUR-TRIM MITTENS / BOOTDOCTORS / $225 WILD WEST FLANNEL PAJAMAS / TELLURIDE TRAPPINGS & TOGGERY / $89 CHILDREN’S SHEEPSKIN BOOTIES / OVERLAND / $29 DOWN BIVY REVERSIBLE VEST / PATAGONIA / $189 SKIERS’ MUGS / HOOK ON A WALL / $20 SCOTTISH CASHMERE CREAMOLA SCARVES / CASHMERE RED / $135 TELLURIDE THROW / SLATE GRAY GALLERY / $185 WOOL BASE LAYER / TELLURIDE SPORTS / $110 visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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THE SCENE | DINING & SPIRITS
DO IT YOURSELF
Stop by Over the Moon, a mother-daughter-owned speciality food shop and choose from their selection of gourmet cheeses, charcuterie and other nibbles. You can pick up a stylish board on which to arrange everything, or they can do it for you. FIND IT
200 West Colorado, Telluride OVER THE MOON ALPINO VINO
TELLURIDE SKI RESORT
BY MARTINQUE DAVIS
BOARD MEETING Telluride’s eateries know how to serve up creative charcuterie boards. Here’s a selection of what’s on offer, paired with sumptuous wines. SIDEWORK
ALPINO VINO
Sidework’s menu has up to 20 different meat, cheese and condiment options for creating your own perfect board. Favorites include the house-cured duck pastrami and homemade burrata cheese, served with a house-made lavash flatbread. Starts at $22
The antipasto platter has Chef Nico Peccedi sourcing unique, small-batch meats and cheeses like Bresaola, a smoked beef delicacy from Northern Italy; Finocchiona, a fennel-cured salami from Tuscany; and Ubriaco, a red wine-infused Italian cow’s milk cheese. $28
PAIR WITH Munich-style lager from Smuggler’s Brewpub, Sidework’s sister establishment next door.
PAIR WITH A crisp, dry Arneis from
Piedmont or a bold classic Brunello di Montalcino from Tuscany.
PAIR WITH Red Sangria, the Village Table’s signature
FIND IT 225 South Pine, Telluride
FIND IT On the Ski Resort
FIND IT Mountain Village Center
NEW SHERIDAN CHOP HOUSE
The popular Cheese & Charcuterie Plate features 5 cheeses, including such delicacies as First Snow, a soft, ripened goat cheese dusted with Poplar ash, alongside meats, Foie Gras mousse, house-pickled vegetables, whole grain mustard, dried fruit compote and crostini. $36
THE VILLAGE TABLE
Owner/chef John Gerona makes ordering easy with the Around the World board featuring one of each of the menu’s 18 tapas, including a heady Valdeon blue cheese and a smoky Spanish paprika chorizo. $165 for all 18 tapas
LA MARMOTTE
PAIR WITH The Domaine de Villaine, Les Montots, Mercurey,
Nestle into a cozy seat and enjoy the Chef’s Choice Charcuterie Plate, which boasts a house-made chicken truffle mousse; or the Artisanal Cheese Board, which highlights three quintessential French cheeses, Morbier, Camembert and Gruyere. $18
Burgundy France 2014
PAIR WITH Alsatian white from the extensive wine list
FIND IT 231 West Colorado, Telluride
FIND IT 150 West San Juan, Telluride
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AMERICA’S 100 BEST WINE RESTAURANTS Wine Enthusiast
“BEST OF” AWARD OF EXCELLENCE Wine Spectator
Allred’s offers Contemporary American Cuisine and features one of the best wine selections in the country. Take it all in while admiring the breathtaking view of the town of Telluride from the main dining room.
located at the top of the gondola A T T H E B E A U T I F U L S T. S O P H I A S T A T I O N
allredsrestaurant.com
•
855.762.5759
MAKE A TOAST.
Reach grand heights.
A C L U B F O R AL L S E A S O N S
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Membership goes beyond exclusivity – it is about family and creating lifelong friendships. Platinum Members enjoy a rich social calendar that includes early morning ski privileges and passes, private morning tee times and golf, private fine dining, and unlimited use of The Spa at The Peaks. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
970.728.7302 | TellurideSkiandGolfClub.com
SKI RESORT DINING
HIGH ALTITUDE HAUTE CUISINE BON VIVANT Classic Country French Cuisine In a setting like nowhere else, Bon Vivant throws a deck party every day. Think sunshine, expansive views and good music together with stunning cuisine and carefully chosen French wines. A signature dish is the Alpine Wild Mushroom soup – an alpine mushroom soup with a brie base infused with Courvoisier and served under a puff pastry. Another fave is the cassoulet of French white beans cooked in duck stock and finished with wild boar sausage and a duck leg. It’s fine dining that satisfies. Where Top of Polar Queen Express (Lift 5)
BON VIVANT
GIUSEPPE’S New Orleans-themed fare Giuseppe’s has long been a locals’ favorite whose much-loved potato and black bean sauté has been drawing famished skiers and boarders to the spot for years. Nowadays, the tiny mountain-top kitchen also serves up delicious po’ boys, muffalettas, gumbo and a selection of kids’ favorites. It’s all best enjoyed lounging at the sunny picnic area where the jaw-dropping views extend into neighboring Utah and compete with the food to make for a memorable lunchtime experience. Where Top of the Plunge Lift (Lift 9)
TONY DEMIN ©
GORRONO RANCH Casual Fare & Smokehouse Go old-school at Gorrono and enjoy classic ski-lodge favorites like burgers and fries, Chuck’s famous chili, pulled pork, rotisserie chicken and the best salad bar on the mountain. The casual menu is matched by the laidback atmosphere enjoyed on the big deck or legendary beach, where live music, a fire pit and cocktails keep the party going. Where On Misty Maiden and accessed by the Village Express (Lift 4) ALPINO VINO Traditional Northern Italian At 12,000 feet above sea level, Alpino Vino is the highest restaurant in North America and lives up to this uniqueness by offering simple, elegant food in a warm and inviting atmosphere. Skiers’ favorites include the antipasto plate and the house speciality, an organic tomato and gorgonzola bisque served with a very special grilled cheese sandwich: locally baked parmesan bread, a Colorado camembert cheese, homemade pesto and arugula leaves. In the evening, diners are whisked to the restaurant in a luxurious snowcat to enjoy a five-course, Italian-themed meal paired with exceptional wines. Where Below Lift 14 on upper See Forever
ALTEZZA Italian with an International Twist Altezza takes advantage of its lofty perch at the Peaks Resort and Spa to offer breathtaking views of the ski resort as well as the Wilson and the San Sophia ranges. The menu is Italian inspired but driven by local and global ingredients. Favorites include a house-made burrata and Goji berry and cocoa nib-encrusted elk tenderloin. Where Beside the Meadows Ski Run ALTEZZA
BIG BILLIES Southwestern and American Family Friendly Favorites This kid-centric restaurant is a magnet for families looking for a menu – think chicken fingers, burgers and tots – that will please hungry youngsters and their grown-ups before the slopes beckon again. An added bonus: non-skiers can take the Chondola down from Mountain Village to join in on the lunchtime fun. Where Bottom of Lifts 1 and 10 visittelluride.com || 855.421.4360 visittelluride.com 855.421.4360
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NIGHTLIFE
TONY DEMIN ©
THE BAR SCENE LAID BACK, JUST LIKE TELLURIDE LIKE TELLURIDE itself, the local bar scene is laid back, casual and centered around substance – music, conversation, cold beers, craft cocktails, pool and Foosball. No glitter, no glam. In fact, when celebrities come to town, they tend to frequent the local establishments because, frankly, no one cares. The who’s who of other ski towns gets lost here because folks are busier reflecting on the day’s adventures and planning tomorrow’s. The bar scene? It’s simple. It’s Telluride. Stepping into the Sheridan Bar is like stepping into the Old West. The establishment opened in 1895 and still sports the same mahogany bar and stamped metal ceilings. It’s rarely empty or quiet and patrons can belly up to the bar, sit on Victorian couches in the front windows, find a quiet spot in the various nooks or play pool or Foosball in the back. Some say most deals in Telluride are made there. Endearingly known as the “the Buck”, the Last Dollar Saloon sits smack-dab in the middle of town. The Buck has been around since 1978 and boasts over 60 beers and a legendary margarita. It’s gritty, friendly and local, with a jukebox in the corner. If the Sheridan has a white-collar 44
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feel, then the Buck’s collar is distinctly flannel, or fleece. Two visitors recently – and nostalgically – noted upon entering, “There is nothing like this left in Aspen.” The Liberty, just off Main Street on South Fir, is Telluride’s newest nightlife hot spot. Formerly O’Bannon’s, the space was completely renovated and opened early in 2017. Its modern vibe, chic but comfy couches, open layout, 30-foot long copper-topped bar and 35-bottle wine and champagne list make it popular among those looking for a fashionable but fun experience. Eclectic There bar on West Pacific feels a little like a neighborhood bar in a big city. Its owner uses words like innovative and inventive to describe the food, drink and overall experience. There specializes in shaking signature drinks with flare and cooking up creative shareables. The bartenders are hip, talented and in charge, giving There a reputation for having a “rad-itude”. The original ski town dive bar, O’Bannon’s, got booted from its digs on South Fir Street over a year ago and now occupies the subterranean space on Main Street that once hosted venerable music venue, the Fly Me to the Moon Saloon. OBs straddles those worlds nicely, still pouring pints of Rolling Rock to the town’s worker bees while hosting a lively music scene including live acts and DJs. a – Jesse James McTigue
REAL LIFE PHOTOGRAPHS ©
NIGHTLIFE
EVENTS
New Year’s Eve Gala
STARLIGHT EXPRESS In Telluride, even the journey to exquisite dining can be unforgettable. First, there’s Telluride Sleighs and Wagons. Fifth-generation Tellurider Ashley Story regales visitors with local lore during a snow cat- or horse-drawn sleigh ride on lands at her family’s historic Aldasoro Ranch. This very special starlit journey – which can be family friendly or just the grown-ups – is followed by fine dining in a charming, heated tent where the menu includes Colorado lamb stew, Basque-style tapas and homemade desserts like the Aldasoro family’s flan. Or take the Ski Resort’s luxuriously outfitted snow cat to Alpino Vino. At 12,000 feet above sea level, the restaurant serves evening diners a simple yet elegant five-course, Italian-themed meal prepared by chef Nicola Peccedi and paired with exceptional wines selected by ski resort sommelier Andrew Shaffner. Try the gently fried goat cheesestuffed artichoke heart or the handmade veal ravioli with marsala cream and shaved black truffles or ten-hour braised osso bucco Milanese over polenta. a
Fine art, elegant cuisine, a new year Ah Haa School for the Arts December 31
Brett Dennen Magical singersongwriter returns Club Red January 11
Chocolate Lovers’ Fling A masquerade dance and creative desserts from local chefs Conference Center February 10
19th Annual Comedy Fest High-altitude hilarity with stand-up, improv and sketch routines Sheridan Opera House February 15-18
RYAN BONNEAU ©
We Can’t Wait For ...
RYAN BONNEAU ©
APRÉS SKI THE BEST WAY TO END THE DAY Finish an epic day on the mountain with a cold beer and nachos, or a Moscow Mule and truffle fries. Or maybe a glass of Pinot and a flatbread. Whatever you fancy, there are many ways to après in Telluride. At Allred’s, enjoy a hand-crafted cocktail or carefully selected bottle of wine paired with exquisite appetizers that match the absurdly stunning views of town and the surrounding peaks that light up as the sun sets. Get off the Gondola in Telluride and head to Oak, a locals’ favorite with happy kids outside, still in their ski boots, and happy adults inside, sipping a brew, a margarita or Oak’s signature whisky-bacon shots. Mountain Village après spots include Tomboy Tavern, where you can sit outside under heated lamps or inside at the convivial bar or on a couch by the fire, choose from a plethora of beers on tap or signature cocktails, and order up some nachos, truffle fries or wings. Black Iron Kitchen & Bar at the Hotel Madeline offers a sophisticated menu of cocktails, beers and wines along with modern mountain cuisine enjoyed inside, or outside at fireside tables. For views and live music, there’s the Great Room at the Peaks, where you can sip a craft cocktail or local beer and nibble from delectable small plates, all while watching the sun go down behind the Wilsons through floor-to-ceiling windows. Then there’s Poachers. This unpretentious, welcoming bar attracts lifties, locals and visitors alike, all looking to nosh on favorites like waffle fries and hot wings while choosing from a wide range of microbrews. Or follow the Telluride Ski Resort’s ski and snowboard instructors to Tracks where enjoying PBR tallboys and shot skis, rehashing the day’s adventures on the hill and kicking back and relaxing are the top priorities. a – Jesse James McTigue and Erin Spillane
THE HOLIDAYS | TIDINGS OF JOY Telluride and Mountain Village celebrate the holiday season with a number of joyful, family-friendly events during December’s Holiday Prelude. The celebrations begin on December 6 with Telluride’s Noel Night, as locals and visitors scour downtown shops looking for those perfect holiday gifts. Telluride retailers offer prizes and discounts, and there are appearances by Santa and carollers. Another highlight: the lighting of Telluride’s unique Christmas tree made of recycled skis and a ceremonial ski burn. In Mountain Village, the Holiday Prelude fun takes place on December 16 and 17 and includes a North Pole Express train ride through the Village’s exquisite holiday decorations and lights, Santa’s Village at the Telluride Conference Center, shopping fun, live music, skaters at the Mountain Village Ice Rink at the Madeline and more. a RYAN BONNEAU ©
TAB at
25 1994
A STREET DANCE The idea for the first Telluride AIDS Benefit was born over beers at the Sheridan. Robert Presley, a local costumer battling AIDS, was explaining to his good friend and fellow Tellurider Kandee DeGraw the expenses involved in his treatment. DeGraw suggested a benefit for him. Presley liked the idea but insisted the proceeds go to the Western Colorado AIDS Project (WestCAP) instead. The inaugural event – which took place in the summer and raised $12,000 – included a comedy show, a dance-a-thon on Main Street and a fashion show of Free Box finds and trash-bag dresses designed by Presley. Ron Gilmer, Robert’s partner, cooked dinner for the attendees that night, a commitment he continues to this day as a TAB board member and AIDS activist.
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Winter 2018 brings the 25th annual Telluride AIDS Benefit with art exhibitions, 20xTelluride HIV Edition, the Student Fashion Show and health initiatives, all culminating in the Gala Fashion Show with its live auction and direct-to-beneficiary paddle raise, as well as after-show sample sale. Since its inception, TAB has raised over $2.5 million for beneficiaries who stretch from the Western Slope of Colorado to Africa. Its journey from street dance to juggernaut is remarkable. By Erin Spillane
1997 TAB, made a winter event in 1995 by co-executive directors Greg Craig and Ellen Geldbaugh, now had the Fashion Show as its focus. The show came from a conversation between Presley and Daiva Chesonis, who would serve as artistic director for five years and who shaped it into the gala we know and love today. The art exhibition, led by Bärbel Hacke, was added, local restaurants donated and TAB’s education initiatives had been established by Sandy McLaughlin. Sadly, it was Presley’s last TAB. The much-loved local passed away on August 7, exactly a year before another well-known Tellurider, Michael Palm would succumb to the disease.
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GALA
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REACHING OUT TAB’s size and influence had increased and its reach extended beyond the box canyon. The event was now an organization with its first paid executive director, Amy Kimberly, and a formal board. The Fashion Show was held for the first time in the Telluride Conference Center. That year, Gilmer presented Presley’s quilt panel at the show before it went to Washington, D.C., to join the Names Project AIDS Memorial Quilt. A delegation from Telluride travelled to Swaziland to find new ways to support people with HIV/AIDS.
The 10th Telluride AIDS Benefit added Thursday evening and a designer trunk show. Telluride High School students launched their own effort to raise awareness among young people with the Student Fashion Show directed and choreographed by THS students. Manzini Youth Care in Swaziland had been added as a beneficiary and, the year before, Alora Gale, a young, well-known AIDS activitst, spoke to students about living as a young person with the disease.
TAB at
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TAB continues to have steely-eyed determination in combatting HIV/AIDS and supporting those living with this life-altering, potentially fatal disease for which there is no cure. For the friends of Presley who danced on Main Street all those years ago, and all who have supported TAB over the years, the work, and celebration, continue.
2006
2010
2015
2018
SOPHISTICATED TAB’s sophistication was growing too. The event was now collaborating with Telluride Gay Ski Week, and had a beneficiary reception and a patron party. It also continued to leverage local connections in the worlds of fashion, politics and entertainment, with participation by people like Bobbi Brown and Richard Holbrook. All the while, TAB remained a truly Telluride gig, with a cadre of locals who volunteered – and still volunteer – time, energy and ideas. Stalwarts over the years have included Sue Hobby, Kathleen Morgan, Luci Reeve, John Rosenberg, “Glider” Bob Sanders and Aaron Smith, as well as the volunteer lighting crew from Theatrical Media Services, and many, many others.
NOW GIVING Beneficiaries now included WestCAP, the Children’s Hospital Immunodeficiency Program (CHIP), Manzini Youth Care, the Ethiopian Family Fund and Brother Jeff’s Community Health Initiative in Denver. By 2017, that list would grow to include Generation Ubuntu in South Africa, the University Hospital Foundation Collaborative Care Clinic in Grand Junction, the Moab Free Health Clinic and the Red Ribbon Project in Eagle County. Each year, the Fashion Show features a different beneficiary on stage to talk about their organization’s work.
A memorable event, this year the Fashion Show kicked off with a live performance by Telluride homeowner and singer Jewel, and continued to build on the remarkable fundraising of the previous year when the benefit netted a new high of $182,000. Tributes to Presley, such as Kathleen Morgan’s condom dress, Sasha’s creations and Wearable Art, were now embedded in the fabric of TAB.
With Shawn Rozsa directing the Fashion Show, the 25th Telluride AIDS Benefit will continue to celebrate Robert Presley’s love of art, fashion and beauty, humanity and humor in the face of adversity. Says founder DeGraw: “The beauty was the coming together of people from completely different walks of life, social classes and ideologies to work together raising money. From the first year, hundreds of people have given hundreds of hours to help people that they will never meet.”
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I C A L L T H E R E S I D E N C E S AT T H E FA I R M O N T M Y H O M E
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ARTS SCENE
VISIBLE VIBRANT Telluride Arts Turns Up the Heat rt has always had a place on Telluride’s multi-burner stove. But in recent years, the temperature has gone from simmer to full boil. Telluride Arts has established the Telluride Arts District and a gallery headquarters, acquired and started renovating the Transfer Warehouse, developed more studio space, created more funding for artists in residence and unified the art and gallery scene in Telluride. All of this is, in part, thanks to executive director Kate Jones, who moved to town seven years ago to take the position. “When I joined, our goal was to make the whole culture of the arts more visible in town, to make it a part of the fabric of daily life,” Jones says, explaining how the organization’s board spent months planning with community members and creating a cultural master plan. That planning paid off in 2011 when Telluride was listed as a Colorado Creative District, one of seven towns in the state to be recognized. Formalized by Governor John Hickenlooper that same year, the award celebrates the arts and offers continued support. “It was great to receive the recognition early on, a sign that we were on the right path,” says Jones. Telluride has a long history of supporting the arts. In 1971, before the town even had a ski mountain, Telluride Council for Arts and Humanities (TCAH) was founded, providing small artists’ grants and other support for decades before becoming Telluride Arts about six years ago. One of the organization’s most significant acts recently was the purchase of the Transfer Warehouse on Pacific Avenue
TELLURIDE ARTS DISTRICT GALLERY HEADQUARTERS RYAN BONNEAU ©
ENJOY
Art Walk First Thursday Evening of the Month
EXPERIENCE Telluride is
“
A Colorado Creative District ANTICIPATE
Transfer Warehouse Renovation
RYAN BONNEAU ©
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By Emily Shoff
and Fir Street. In the first half of the 20th century, the structure served as a livery barn and warehouse, but the stone building had deteriorated. The architectural plans place a new glass and steel structure within the perimeter of the old walls and strike the right balance between providing a much-needed space for artists and preserving the historic flavor of Telluride. The new space will double the exhibition and performance space in town. “We’ll be able to expand our network of artists both regionally and outside of the community.” Jones says. As renovations get underway, Telluride Arts looks to tap local talent and
Telluride has an incredible amount of skill and connections with the art world, and we would love to be able to produce content-driven exhibitions from a Telluride sensibility ... KATE JONES
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produce museum-quality exhibitions. “Telluride has an incredible amount of skill and connections with the art world, and we would love to be able to produce content-driven exhibitions from a Telluride sensibility at some point.” More than anything, the goal of all of this work has been to elevate the profile of Telluride as an arts community. Central to Telluride Arts’ mission is to unite and engage artists across the region and internationally. “The arts in Telluride have always been strong,” Jones says. “Developing the Arts District shines a light on that.” a visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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HISTORIC LORE
IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK Certain to fascinate history buffs as well as architecture aficionados, Telluride, a National Historic Landmark District, has a treasure trove of beautiful, historical buildings rich with tales from the town’s unique past. By Elizabeth Guest
TELLURIDE HISTORICAL MUSEUM 201 WEST GREGORY AVENUE THE HISTORY Before it was a museum, the building was Hall’s Hospital, caring for the Telluride community from its opening in 1896 until, as the town’s population dwindled, it was shuttered in 1964. In the Don’t-Try-This-At-Home category is this story from the hospital’s colorful history: In 1949, a hospital physician, George Balderston, performed an appendectomy on himself. Accounts conflict on whether or not he used a mirror to help him, but apparently the operation took just 45 minutes and a colleague observed the procedure. THE ARCHITECTURE The striking stone building is three-storied with a fenced parapet on the roof. There are two dormers on the third floor beside a triangular pediment centered above the front entrance.
TELLURIDE SCHOOL 447 WEST COLUMBIA AVENUE
THE HISTORY In 1895, the expanding town of Telluride was fast outgrowing the original school building built a decade earlier and a new, larger school was constructed. Back then, many of the town’s children travelled to school in a horse-drawn school bus (pictured) and the school’s six teachers were paid $80 a month. THE ARCHITECTURE Now home to the Telluride Elementary School, the brick building has triangular pediments at roof height and Romanesque semi-circle arch details above the windows and main entrance typical of many buildings of the period. The belfry and bell were added in 1902.
NEW SHERIDAN HOTEL 231 WEST COLORADO AVENUE THE HISTORY The “New” Sheridan isn’t so new, dating back to 1891 when the Segerberg brothers, down-on-their luck miners, built the Sheridan Hotel. In 1895, they added the New Sheridan Hotel and Bar. The original burned down, but the New Sheridan still stands today. In 1902, famed orator William Jennings Bryan, who ran for president three times unsuccessfully, drew a rousing crowd when he delivered a speech that covered monetary matters, but was not, contrary to local lore, his renowned Cross of Gold speech. THE ARCHITECTURE Stop by the saloon at the New Sheridan to see the original mahogany bar. Constructed by Austrian artisans, it was then disassembled, shipped by boat to the East Coast and then transported by train and mules to Telluride where it was reassembled in time for the establishment’s grand opening in 1895. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360 Photos: Telluride Historical Museum ©
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FAMILY ACTIVITIES
FUN
IS ALL IN THE
FAMILY
TOUR THROUGH TIME
For families, the Telluride Ski
Want to experience Telluride’s colorful past? Interactive exhibits and exciting programming make it come alive at the Telluride Historical Museum. Wintertime hours of operation are Tuesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
NORDIC ADVENTURES Nordic skiing opens up new outdoor options for the whole family with trails at Town Park, the Valley Floor and more. Guided tours and lessons are available through the Nordic center in Town Park.
Resort undoubtedly offers a
TAKE THE SCENIC ROUTE
SKATEBOARDING
world-class mountain experience
Hop aboard the free Gondola that connects Telluride and Mountain Village for breathtaking views and the coolest journey ever. This very unique, 13-minute-long trip is one that you and the kiddos won’t soon forget.
Even in winter, skateboarders can ride the Gridline-designed skate park located on the west side of Town Park. The skate park is free and timer-lit at night. There is also a mini-skate park on East Pacific Street that is perfect for beginners.
ICE, ICE, BABY
KIDS’ SNOW CAMP
Skaters wanting to practice their triple axels and slapshots can make their way to ice rinks in Telluride Town Park, which has indoor and outdoor rinks, or at the Madeline Hotel and Residences in the Mountain Village Core.
Join Eco Adventures for an engaging alternative to a day of ski school, connecting children ages 5-12 to the environment around them through various activities including animal tracking, snowshoeing, ice skating and – our favorite – snow cave building.
for skiers and boarders of all ages and abilities. But, away from the mountain, magical experiences await. Be sure to save a little time away from the terrain parks, groomers and mogul runs for these offmountain memory makers.
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WE LOVE OUR LIBRARY The award-winning Wilkinson Public Library not only houses an impressive collection of books, DVDs, music and magazines, but also loans a lot of cool non-traditional items like snowshoes, a karaoke machine, iPads, costume play bags and more. There are also fun kids’ programs like cooking classes and story time.
SLED TIME Firecracker Hill, at the southern edge of Telluride Town Park, offers sledding to suit any adrenaline level. Sleds are available for rent at the nearby Nordic center.
AND MORE ... Need more excitement? Try fat tire biking or go for a family tour by snowmobile or sleigh. And, of course, sometimes the best activity is none at all. Telluride’s winter wonderland is the perfect place to snuggle up and watch the snow fall.
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WINTER WEDDINGS
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A
CANDLELIGHT
SNOWFLAKES
The Perfect Telluride Wedding Celebration
N INTIMATE, candlelit wedding held high on the Telluride Ski Resort surrounded by towering peaks, with snowflakes falling from a velvet night sky and the people they love most in attendance. Sound like the perfect winter wedding? It was. On a snowy January evening, with close family and friends looking on, Daniel and Nancy Munzer of California tied the knot in what has to be one of the most romantic, dramatic of settings: 12,000 feet above sea level beside rustic restaurant Alpino Vino along the See Forever ski run. The ceremony was the highlight of a week of winter wedding revelry that included skiing, a pre-wedding day of leisure at Dunton Hot Springs and a rehearsal dinner at the ski-in, ski-out vacation home rented for the bridal party in Mountain Village. For the couple’s special day itself, they rented the Tempter House which sits on the ridgeline between the snowclad steeps of the ski resort and the stunning expanse of Bear Creek Canyon. It was a snowy day and nothing held back the bridal party who hit the slopes at 9 in the morning, using Tempter between runs to warm up and have a snack. At day’s end, the groomsmen took over Tempter while the bride and her party prepared for the ceremony at Alpino Vino. “We went from skiing to glam squad, which was pretty hilarious,” recounts Nancy, the owner of an edgy boutique in San Francisco and who, true to her fashionista self, wore a couture ivory dress with a dramatic train and plunging neck line. Guests arrived from town via snow cat and were greeted with hot toddies. As night fell, the ceremony took place, followed by cocktails and a five-course meal at Alpino Vino. Afterwards, the couple led the wedding party outdoors for a toast to both of their deceased fathers. It was a special way, Nancy says, to incorporate family members joining the celebra-
REAL LIFE PHOTOGRAPHS ©
THE MUNZERS JANUARY 2017 Accommodations Mountain Village Slopeside Home Pre-Wedding Day Treat Dunton Hot Springs Wedding Day Hub Tempter House Wedding Ceremony See Forever Ski Run Wedding Reception Alpino Vino Transportation Snow Cat
tion in spirit, and a fun way to ramp up the party with shot skis reading “till death do we party” getting hoisted back. The revelry then resumed indoors as the three-piece band began to jam. It was time to party and everyone from wedding planner Meehan Fee to photographer Kaycee Joubert was welcomed. Says Nancy, “Everyone who was part of the wedding was like a guest.” The cake was key lime. The bridesmaids wore blue velvet. The floral arrangements included quail feathers so loved by the bride that she had them flown to her boutique and put in the window display. When it was time to call it a night, the guests and wedding party got one more blast of excitement – the snow cat ride back down the mountain. The following morning, Nancy and Dan did one final thing: Despite the blackened hemline of her danced-in wedding dress, Nancy got all dolled up again and, together with her new husband, walked Main Street – Nancy’s favorite part of Telluride – joined by their guests and captured in priceless photographs. a — Elizabeth Guest visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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EXTRAORDINARY
SKI VALETS By Erin Spillane From warm boots to hot cider to the latest snow report, the ski valets at Telluride’s ski-in/ski-out establishments know how to get their clientele on and off the slopes effortlessly. LUMIÈRE HOTEL Lost Creek Lane, Mountain Village
Lumière partners with Black Tie Ski Rental to provide services like private fittings, pre-warmed boots, daily updates on conditions and help getting equipment on and off. The friendly ski valets will bring your skis or board to the nearby slopes each morning and, after an action-packed day on the hill, back to the ski lounge where there are hot drinks for tired powder hounds. PEAKS RESORT & SPA Slopeside on Meadows Ski Run Mountain Village
Hot chocolate and hot cider, as well as boot warmers and the latest snow reports, await at the Peaks, which boasts the area’s longest-serving ski valet, Tamas Paluska. The friendly Hungarian and his team have been easing boots on and off guests for 17 years and pride themselves on a “no touch service”. From arrival to ski locker to slopeside, they handle everything so you don’t have to. FAIRMONT FRANZ KLAMMER Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village
The team at the Klammer has this ski valet thing figured out. Each morning, before you even step into your prewarmed boots and get an up-to-date report on conditions and grooming, you can stock up on sunscreen and Hot Hands glove heaters. Finish the day by refuelling with hot tea and hot chocolate and reminiscing about the day’s adventures.
MADELINE HOTEL & RESIDENCES ©
MADELINE HOTEL & RESIDENCES Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village
The ski valet menu at the Madeline includes complimentary hot chocolate, boot dryers and warmers, as well as waxing and tuning services. A nice bonus: the Madeline’s ski ambassadors tell tales of Telluride’s characterful history while they whisk you up the mountain in search of freshies, pow stashes and memorable runs.
BLACK TIE ©
INN AT LOST CREEK Top of Lift 1, Mountain Village
With the ski valet located directly above Christy Sports, fittings are done without even leaving the building. And guests are encouraged to come down from their rooms in their slippers before stepping into their warm boots and heading out. Return at the end of the day’s S turns and bump runs to find those comfy slippers and a mug of hot mocha waiting. HOTEL COLUMBIA Across from the Oak Street Gondola Plaza, Telluride
At the Hotel Columbia, guests come down off the mountain and hand their gear over to the attentive ski valet staff – Black Tie does it all including in-room fittings and ensuring boots are warm and dry for the next day. Next stop is the lobby where the hotel’s restaurant, the Cosmopolitan, hosts one of Telluride’s most popular happy hours complete with the eatery’s legendary cosmos and sushi. CAMEL’S GARDEN HOTEL Oak Street Gondola Plaza, Telluride
Convenience brushes shoulders with camembert and cabernet. The ski valet service at the Camel’s Garden will have you on the slopes in a jiffy given the hotel’s location on the Gondola Plaza. At the end of the day, hand off your gear. The ever-helpful valets will make sure your boots are dried and warmed and equipment stored overnight while you head to the lobby for après wine and cheese. ELEMENT 52 Beside Telluride Trail Ski Run, Telluride
Going from trail-side to fireside is a piece of cake at Element 52. Pull up alongside Telluride Trail to catch a private funicular to the courtyard below where ski valets take care of your gear while you enjoy a post-ski massage or hot water bottles to ease tired muscles, or hot chocolate, warm cookies and s’mores around the outdoor fire pit. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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Entertaining Telluride since 1913 December 1-3 Seussical the Musical 7 “Rogue Elements” Teton Gravity Research Ski Film 14 Jay and Silent Bob Get Old live comedy 16 Concert TBA 21 “Drop Everything” Matchstick Productions Ski Film 22 Shawn Colvin Grammy winning singer/songwriter 23 “Line of Descent” Warren Miller Ski Film Holiday Concert Series 27 John McEuen of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band 28 Purely Patsy, a Patsy Cline Tribute show 29-30 Elephant Revival indie bluegrass 31 New Year’s Eve with Robert Randolph & The Family Band January 4 Lez Zeppelin all-female Led Zeppelin Tribute Band 6 Concert TBA 11-12 The Floozies electronic funk 19 Trout Steak Revival bluegrass 24-25 Leftover Salmon Colorado jamgrass February 2-5 Mary Poppins the Musical 10-11 Chris Robinson Brotherhood 15-18 19th annual Telluride Comedy Festival 27-28 Infamous Stringdusters high energy bluegrass March 8 Shovels & Rope Americana/rock 9 Martin Sexton & Keller Williams rock 10, 13, Concert TBA 14 & 17 19 Galactic funk/jam Tickets on sale now at Sheridanoperahouse.com! Visit our website for a full schedule!
Also available for private weddings and party rentals
SHOW Bar open one hour before show time
Join us for a cocktail before a show!
SheridanOperaHouse.com • 110 N. Oak St. • 970.728.6363
Telluride’s Innovative Leader Pre K–12 Education Experiential Education International Baccalaureate Diploma Program Rock & Roll Academy Montessori Curriculum for Ages 3–8 Fully Accredited Independent IB World School Consider a Telluride Mountain School Education for your Child To set up a visit please call 970-728-1969 telluridemtnschool.org
TELLURIDE VENTURE ACCELERATOR
START-UP SUCCESS STORIES By Rosston ‘Buster’ Ritter
When you think of Telluride, what comes to mind? Skiing and other winter activities, the natural beauty and fascinating history. But thanks to the Telluride Venture Accelerator, Telluride is also home to a host of start-ups – bright business ideas nurtured in the box canyon. Here are a few TVA-supported ventures that took root in Telluride and are flourishing beyond.
Daily trips. Lifetime memories.
Visionaries Lara Young, owner and founder; product tester Candice Good; and consultant Michele Kustes The Idea Integrated, protective goggle covers with microfiber cleaning cloth on the inside and colorful, customizable fabric exteriors TVA Support Hoggle Goggle was one of the first incubees, going through TVA’s incubator in 2013 where it received financial support and mentoring. Young, who had a background in non-profit development and strategic planning, remarked that it is a huge effort to bring a new product idea to market; TVA’s support was vital. Lara Young HOGGLE GOGGLE
SNOWMOBILE TOURS
The Latest Clients include the Telluride Ski School, which ordered Hoggle Goggle covers for instructors, and the International Freeskiers Association. While much of Hoggle Goggle’s business is web-based, this year Paragon Outdoors will carry the goggle covers in store.
FAMILY- FRIENDLY
The Alperts > FELT
Marney Zafian > SIDE BY SIDE
Visionaries Owners and founders, Tomer and Gracie Alpert
Visionaries Marney Zafian, founder, and Carol Bramsen, CEO
The Idea An app that allows you to design, write and send cards
The Idea Nutritious pet food made from whole and fresh ingredients that can be customized
TVA Support Although not originally in the incubation program at TVA, Felt caught the attention of the ABC reality TV show Shark Tank and, in the run up to their appearance on the program in 2016, received support from the Venture Accelerator, including fundraising and the co-sponsoring of a Shark Tank event. Since then, Felt has run workshops and mentored for TVA.
TVA Support Side by Side was a graduate of the TVA’s class of 2016 where, according to Zafian, they were introduced to pivotal, influential people. TVA also supported the company in a fiscal and advisory capacity. Zafian adds that the local Small Business Development Center and “the entire Telluride community has given me a great amount of support … without which my dream would have never been realized.”
The Latest Felt has reached over half a million downloads on just the iPhone App platform and currently has eight employees. Since airing on Shark Tank last year, Felt has grown about 20 times over, from providing 1,000 cards per month to about 20,000 per month.
The Latest With help from First SouthWest Bank of Colorado, Side by Side was recently awarded a USDA grant. The company is also expanding its product lines, including supplements and toppers, along with the launch of Tail Mix (think trail mix for dogs).
Family-Friendly 1/2 Day | Advanced Powder Tours Full Day Dunton Hot Springs
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Telluride’s Tourism STARs SBG Productions is the winner of the Telluride Tourism Board’s 2017 Destination SuperSTAR award. The honor recognizes the event- and festival-production company’s positive impact on Telluride as a destination. Founded by Steve Gumble in 1994, SBG Productions started the Telluride Blues & Brews Festival and still produces it these days, as well as the Telluride Jazz Festival and the Durango Blues Train. Lead concierge at the Fairmont Franz Klammer Lodge Sandy Roth is the ServiceSTAR for 2017, while the Telluride Cars and Colors Festival scooped the PromoSTAR award. SBG PRODUCTIONS’ ANNUAL BLUES & BREWS FESTIVAL
SNOWMOBILE TOURS 1 98 8 -201 8
Come see why we’re the #1 Tour Operator in Telluride! • Alta Lakes Ghost Town • Dunton Hot Springs • Barlow Creek • Half & Full Day Tours
International Baccalaureate Program Telluride Mountain School is adding a new component to its program: the International Baccalaureate curriculum for 11th and 12th grades. Says Head of School Karen Walker, “We are excited to implement the IB program because it matches our school’s college-ready writing and research skills. It is a comprehensive, world-class curriculum.” Developed in 1968 and adopted by over 4,000 schools worldwide. Students who have undertaken the IB say they feel well prepared for college and higher education, as well as the careers they pursue later in life.
2017 Outstanding Citizen: Wendy Brooks
“The Skier’s Day Off”
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Visit our base location at Mountain Village Town Hall Plaza next to the Gondola
The Telluride Foundation has named long-time Telluride resident Wendy Brooks as the 2017 Outstanding Citizen of the Year. Brooks is widely known in the community for founding the Telluride Academy in her back yard in 1981 with six young campers. Today, the awardwinning organization serves over 850 children annually. Perhaps less well known are Brooks’ roles in establishing the Telluride Ski and Snowboard Club, the medical center and the airport, and her involvement in the Board of Education and Just For Kids Foundation.
Sustainable Employee Housing Telluride’s latest employee housing development is set to come online in spring 2018. When it is complete, the Virginia Placer project, located on three town-owned parcels in Telluride’s West End, will add an 18-unit apartment building, a 46-bed boarding house and three tiny homes to the list of for-rent options for local employees. The project conforms to the town’s green building code with a focus on smaller, efficient living spaces. – Emily Shoff and Erin Spillane
HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS
A Colorado Cowboy
in telluride
Former White House Chief of Staff Jack Watson BY EMILY SHOFF
WHEN I MET with President Jimmy Carter’s former White House Chief of Staff, Jack Watson, two things become quickly apparent. First, I have not budgeted nearly enough time and second, amidst Watson’s many accomplishments (Vanderbilt University Phi Beta Kappa, Harvard Law, Marine Corps captain, all before his tenure in Washington), he is at heart a cowboy. It’s the cowboy boots that give him away. Their warm color and the soft, broken-in leather are identical to Jack’s demeanor as we drift from his passion for history, art and politics to his career as a political advisor and trial lawyer to his take on the current state of affairs in Washington. When I ask him how he ended up in Telluride, that’s where the true cowboy comes out: “I’ve always loved the West. As a boy, I dreamed about JACK WATSON being a cowboy and living on a ranch surrounded Favorite restaurant by mountains,” he tells me in his charming SouthNew Sheridan Chop House ern accent, a boyish grin on his face. “I’ve loved and ridden horses most of my life.” Guilty pleasure country is headed. “The Q&A following my reIt was this interest in horses that drew him Donuts at Baked in Telluride, marks is always my favorite part of these events. especially after 2 p.m. to Telluride. Originally, he and his wife, Beth, That’s when I get to listen and talk with people thought they’d buy land on Wilson Mesa. They Favorite hangouts about what they’re thinking and what most conwere about to close on the property when they Between the Covers, Floradora, cerns them.” had second thoughts. They realized that ultimatethe historic New Sheridan Bar It is this love for people and understanding ly what they loved best about Telluride was TelA Telluride summer means new perspectives that ultimately motivates Watluride. “We love the town and its people and the Afternoon showers and rainbows son. When he’s not in Telluride or Atlanta, he diversity of interests here. People are passionate When I grow up, I want to be tours on his motorbike. (These days, until he finds about art, history, poetry, politics, the environWillie Nelson more people to ride with in Telluride, he’s traded ment, the outdoors.” They settled on a condo in horses for their motorized counterparts.) “One of town instead and haven’t looked back. the things I like most about traveling around on a Since purchasing a home here four years ago, motorcycle are the people I meet in cafes, truck stops and bars, many of whom voted Jack has spoken at numerous events in and around Telluride. for President Trump. Although I disagree with their choice of Trump as president, People are interested to hear his take on things, both as an I understand a lot of the frustrations and motivations behind their vote,” he says. American history buff (especially on American presidents and We trade book titles, his nonfiction for my fiction, and far too soon our time is the presidency), and as someone with years of experience in up, coffee cups drained. He’s not wearing a hat, but I imagine if he were, he’d tip it to Washington. But, increasingly, since the new administration me as we say goodbye. “Until we meet again.” a in January, they want to know about his opinion on where the visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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SECRETS OF TELLURIDE’S OTHER HIGH SEASON
TONY DEMIN ©
CAME TO SKI. STAYED FOR THE SUMMER. Anyone nodding ‘yes’ to this sentiment knows that June through September is just as glorious as winter. Gushing waterfalls, festivals, wildflower hikes, main street parades, outdoor dining, mountain biking and sunsets that throw buckets of gold against the mountains. Yep. Summer here is hard to beat, and these lesserknown gems will make it all the sweeter. By Katie Klingsporn
Cornet Falls With its box-canyon backdrop, sweeping height and historic power plant, Bridal Veil gets all the glory. But Cornet Falls, which is tucked into a grotto on the north edge of town, is a stunning cascade well worth a visit of its own. There, Cornet Creek tumbles over a ledge, plummeting 80 feet into a tumble of red rocks below and creating billowing curtains of mist. The short, steep hike starts at the northern terminus of Aspen Street. (Stay right before the footbridge.)
SECRET WATERFALL
Elks Park Whether it’s the Town Park stage or the Palm Theatre, there’s a reason that the town’s biggest-name venues have pull; they have been graced by legends of music, film and ideas. But there’s an overlooked venue right in the center of town where audiences can also catch once-in-a-lifetime entertainment, and for free. Elks Park becomes an excellent venue for several summer festivals. During Bluegrass, giants of picking perform intimate concerts on a tiny stage; during Mushroom fest, curious fungiphiles examine freshly picked mushroom samples under a tent; and during Telluride Film Festival, Elks Park turns into the Abel Gance Open Air Cinema, a dreamy place to watch movies under the stars or catch a panel discussion by Hollywood A-listers.
SECRET VENUE
San Miguel River People think of Telluride as a mountain town, and can you blame them? The town is encircled with hiking trails, climbing walls and mountain biking singletrack. But the burbling river that runs through town should not be ignored, especially during the hot days of summer. Grab a stand-up paddleboard, a kayak or inflatable tube for a fun and surprisingly lively float from Town Park to the Valley Floor. Or just take a dip in one of the river’s deep-ish pockets.
SECRET RECREATIONAL OASIS
New Sheridan Rooftop Bar For years, the rooftop of Telluride’s iconic hotel was closed to the public. Lucky for us, in 2015 the good folks at the Sheridan decided to share some of the town’s best views by opening their building-top bar. Sunset is prime time to catch up with a friend over a cocktail, and catch an eyeful of mountains.
SECRET VIEW
La Cocina de Luz It’s mainly known for its delicious Mexican fare, but word to the wise: La Cocina offers a full menu of delicious coffee drinks, including fantastic drip, fancy lattes and addictive golden turmeric teas.
SECRET CAFFEINE FIX
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Like Water for Chocolate Wilkinson Library
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KOTO Ski Swap Wilkinson Library
November 17
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November 18
Met Opera: The Exterminating Angel Palm Theatre
November 22
Donation Day Telluride Ski Resort
November 23
Opening Day Telluride Ski Resort
December 1-3
Holiday Arts Bazaar Telluride Elks Lodge
December 1-3
Seussical the Musical Young People’s Theater, SOH
December 4
Pan’s Labyrinth Wilkinson Library
December 6
Noel Night (see p. 45)
December 6-17
Holiday Prelude (see p. 45)
December 7
Rogue Elements Teton Gravity Research ski film, SOH
December 9
Olde-Fashioned Christmas Schmid Ranch
December 9
Met Opera: Hansel and Gretel Palm Theatre
December 12
Telluride Gives Telluride Foundation Fundraising
December 14
Jay and Silent Bob Get Old Comedy, SOH
December 15-23
Dinner with Dionysus A Telluride Theatre production, Palm Black Box
December 16-17
Mountain Village Holiday Prelude (see p. 45)
December 21
Drop Everything Matchstick Productions ski film, SOH
December 22
Shawn Colvin Grammy-winning singer-songwriter, SOH
December 23
Line of Descent Warren Miller ski film, SOH
December 24
Torchlight Parade Telluride Ski Resort
December 26-27
Mountainfilm Annual Film Night SOH
December 27
John McEuen & Friends Nitty Gritty Dirt Band singer-songwriter, SOH
December 28
Dinner with Purely Patsy Patsy Cline tribute show, SOH
December 28
Everly Brothers Experience Featuring the Zmed Brothers, Club Red
December 29-30
Elephant Revival, Indie folk music, SOH
December 31
Yonder Mountain String Band Progressive bluegrass tunes, Club Red
December 31
NYE Countdown Courthouse Clock, Telluride’s Main Street
December 31
Torchlight Parade Telluride Ski Resort
December 31
New Year’s Gala Robert Randolph & The Family Band, SOH
December 31
Ah Haa School New Year’s Eve Celebration Fine art, conversation and cuisine
New Year’s Eve
Christmas
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CALENDAR of events Lez Zeppelin Female tribute band, SOH
January 8
Los Olvidados Wilkinson Library
January 11
Brett Dennen Singer-songwriter, Club Red
January 11-12
The Floozies Electronic funk duo, SOH
January 13
The Motet Funk and jazz band, Club Red
January 19-21
Telluride Fire Festival
January 19
Trout Steak Revival Bluegrass band, SOH
January 19-21
Women’s Ski & Wellness Weekend
January 21
Victor Wooten Trio Jazz band, SOH
January 24-25
Leftover Salmon Jamgrass favorites, SOH
January 27
KOTO Lip Sync Contest SOH
January 27
Met Opera: Tosca Palm Theatre
Jan. 28-Feb. 2
Disabled Veterans’ Winter Adventure Week
February 2, 3, 5
Mary Poppins Young People’s Theater, SOH
February 4-8
Women’s Ski & Wellness Week
February 10
Chocolate Lovers’ Fling Conference Center
February 10
Met Opera: L’Elisir D’Amore Palm Theatre
February 10-11
Chris Robinson Brotherhood Rock band, SOH
February 15-18
Telluride Comedy Festival SOH
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Shovels & Rope Americana rock, SOH
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Martin Sexton and Keller Williams SOH
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Cardboard Sled Derby Telluride Ski Resort
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Burlesque Performance SOH
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End-of-Season Street Dance Main Street
April 8
Closing Day Telluride Ski Resort Gondola Closes for Off-Season
UP-TO-DATE CALENDAR >> VisitTelluride.com
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ONGOING EVENTS Art Walk First Thursday of the Month January 4, February 1, March 1
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Historic Walking Tour The Telluride area boasts a rich history and one of the West’s most iconic Victorian area mining towns. In the 1700s, the Ute Indians used the San Juan Mountains and the San Miguel River banks as summer camps. Explorers and survey parties passed through the area in the 1700s and 1800s, but it was the mining industry that brought the first European settlers in 1876 when the Sheridan Mine registered its operation in the Marshall Basin above Telluride. The mountains turned out to be loaded with zinc, lead, copper, iron and silver, but once gold was discovered, the boom was on. In a short, 20-year span, the town grew from a hodgepodge of cabins and shacks to rows of elegant Victorians and stately brick buildings. Today, many of the structures still exist, illustrating the rich history of the town while housing modern boutiques and restaurants. Telluride was designated a National Historic Landmark District in 1964, the highest level of historic status given by the US Secretary of the Interior. In an effort to protect the character and authenticity of the area, Telluride established the Historic and Architectural Review Commission (HARC), which reviews new building or remodeling plans before construction begins. The Historic Walking Tour is a self-guided walk through the area’s storied past. 1. SAN MIGUEL COUNTY COURTHOUSE The courthouse was originally built on the south side of West Colorado Avenue in 1886 but burned shortly after construction. The bricks were saved to build the present courthouse less than a year later on the opposite corner (Colorado Ave. and Oak St.). Recently renovated, it is still in use today. 2. NEW SHERIDAN HOTEL & OPERA HOUSE Built in 1891, Telluride’s first hotel was destroyed by fire in 1894 and rebuilt in brick in 1895. At the same time, the Sheridan Bar was built, and it is now one of the oldest bars in the West. The bar has remained unchanged since 1895, boasting its original lead glass divider panels, mahogany wood paneling and filigree light fixtures. Patrons are served beverages on the original hand-carved cherry wood bar that was imported from Austria. The New Sheridan was recently accepted as a member of the National Trust for Historic Hotels of America. In 1913, the opera house was added and named the Segerberg Opera House, after builders J.A. and Arvid Segerberg. The building was eventually named the Sheridan Opera House after its neighboring bar and hotel. 3. THE PEKKARINE BUILDING One of the oldest structures on Colorado Avenue, this building was home to the Pekkarine family. Mr. Pekkarine emigrated to the US from Finland in the late 1800s and opened a boot shop in the basement. On the second floor, he later operated a mercantile store. The Pekkarines lived on the third floor. At the settling of the Pekkarine estate in 1974, valuable artifacts were donated to the Telluride Historical Museum. 4. ROMA BAR BUILDING The Roma Building was home to one of the town’s oldest and most raucous bars. Now the Roma Bar & Grill, the downstairs still contains the original 1860 Brunswich-Balke-Collender Company bar, which is carved from walnut with 12-foot French mirrors. The building was most recently renovated in 2016.
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5. ST. PATRICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH Reverend J.J. Gibbons, pastor of St. Patrick’s Catholic Church-made his first trip to Telluride from Ouray for a baptism, traveling by horseback over the slippery mountain passes. In 1896, he helped build St. Patrick’s Catholic Church of Telluride on Catholic Hill for $4,800. By 1899, the church had 200 parishoners. The wooden figures of the Stations of the Cross were carved in the Tyrol area of Austria. In 2005, the interior of St. Patrick’s was remodeled. 6. OLD WAGGONER HOUSE Charles Delos Waggoner, president of the Bank of Telluride (yellow brick building with pillars on main street), contrived a scheme purportedly to save his bank in the Wall Street Crash of 1929. Waggoner, aka “Buck,” siphoned money from New York banks to keep his clients from losing their life savings once the Bank of Telluride could no longer pay its creditors. Waggoner testified in court, “I would rather see the New York banks lose money than the people of Telluride, most of whom have worked all their lives for the savings that were deposited in my bank.” Although rumored to be in Mexico or Canada, he was found in New Castle, Wyoming and had only $400 when he was arrested. Waggoner was sentenced to 15 years in prison but was paroled after six years. 7. TOWN HALL The building was constructed on Fir Street and Columbia Avenue in 1883 as Telluride’s first schoolhouse. The one-room structure held one teacher and 53 students and was built for $3,000. After a new school was built, the town offices occupied the building. 8. TELLURIDE HISTORICAL MUSEUM Built in 1896 and named Hall’s Hospital after its first doctor – the building served as the community hospital treating miners and townspeople until it closed in 1964 due to the diminishing population. It reopened in 1966 as the Telluride Historical Museum and was renovated in 2002. Ten rooms and outdoor exhibitions showcase Telluride’s unique and vibrant history with a vast collection of photographs, artifacts and exhibitions. 9. NORTH OAK HOUSE Built in 1900, this house was a survivor of the 1914 flood that careened down Cornet Creek, sweeping through town and depositing mud and debris from the Liberty Bell Mine down to Colorado Avenue. One woman was killed and the Sheridan Bar was filled with mud halfway to the ceiling. This house has been completely restored to its original condition and is now listed on the National Register of Historic Homes. 10. DAVIS HOUSE E.L. Davis who built this stately brick house in 1894, was a mining and real estate entrepreneur. He held an early interest in the Bullion Lode as well as numerous mining claims in the Ingram-Bridal Veil Basin and Bear Creek area. He owned all the land where the former Rio Grande Southern Train Depot now stands, as well as one-third interest in West Telluride. Davis sought to bring business to the town as vice-president of the Telluride Board of Trade. After Davis’s death, the house was sold to Dr. Oshner, who used it as a hospital, particularly during the 1918 flu epidemic. The house was renovated in 1983.
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C. Galloping Goose This curious hybrid of auto and train rode Otto Mears’ famous railroad line in the declining years of the Rio Grande Southern. On rails, the Galloping Goose made its last run in 1953. It is now the moniker for Telluride’s public buses. D. Miner’s Union Built by the Western Federation of Miners in 1901 as a result of a period of labor strikes and protests when unionized miners were denied health care at the local hospital. E. Butch Cassidy Robbery Site By most accounts, Butch Cassidy was a minor player in his first bank robbery of San Miguel Valley Bank in 1889. The old bank burned and was replaced by the Mahr Building in 1892. F. Pick & Gad Located in what was once Telluride’s red-light district, patrons were treated to music, food, wine and ladies in this brick “parlour house” if they wore a coat and tie. G. Old Town Jail This stone jail is thought to have been built in 1885 and is now occupied by the Telluride Marshal’s Department. The town’s first calaboose, a wooden structure, was built in 1878 and is now located in Telluride Town Park’s campgrounds. H. Penn Tram Towers At the turn of the century, the east end of the canyon was laced with the cables of aerial trams that lowered ore from the mines to mills. These towers were part of the Penn Tram which conveyed ore from mines above Telluride to the mills below. I. Idarado Legacy Trail Plaques along this interpretive walk recount the mining legacy of Telluride’s east end. The trail ends at the Pandora Mill site with a stunning view of Bridal Veil Falls.
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A. Lone Tree Cemetery The cemetery is located on the east end of town on Colorado Avenue and offers a glimpse into Telluride’s history and the perils of its residents during the mining-boom era when avalanches, murders, flu epidemics, mining accidents and labor strikes took many lives. B. Telluride Elementary School At the time of its construction in 1895, the building was considered to be the most modern of educational facilities. It was completely renovated in 1986, and an addition was built in 2000.
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11. L.L. NUNN HOUSE On the corner of Aspen and West Columbia, this white Victorian was bought by L.L. Nunn who financed the world’s first commercial A/C power plant, the Ames Hydroelectric Generating Plant. Nunn purchased the home for his Telluride Institute, where “pinheads” from Cornell University came to expand their knowledge of the production of power. Today, Cornell University has a “Telluride House” funded by Nunn’s estate. Next door, on the corner of Aspen Street and West Columbia, is the house in which Nunn lived, which was built in 1887 and remodeled extensively in 1980. 12. RIO GRANDE SOUTHERN RAILWAY DEPOT Prior to the arrival of the railroad in 1891, oxen and mule trains, as well as horses, carried all supplies into and out of the area. The introduction of the railroad created a bustling, noisy area surrounded by boardinghouses and warehouses, some of which still stand on San Juan Avenue. Ore was hauled out of the surrounding mines and became a major revenue generator for the Rio Grande Southern Railroad. The Depot, built of wooden siding and shingles, was restored in 1991 and today houses the Ah Haa School for the Arts. 13. FINN TOWN This area was the center of social life for Scandanavian immigrants. On the south side of Pacific Street, Finn Town Flats (originally a boardinghouse), Finn Hall and the smaller Swede-Finn Hall (pictured, and now an Elks Lodge on the corner of Pacific and Townsend) hosted many parties and gatherings where families brought food, bands played and people danced and socialized. Continuing east, detour briefly up South Oak Street to the Dahl House, a miner’s rooming house built in the 1890s, now a private home. 14. POPCORN ALLEY The Senate, Silver Bell, Cribs and madam’s stone residences make up the restored buildings of Pacific Street’s “sporting district.” The Senate was one of the many places bustling with business between the 1880s and 1930s. The saloon and gaming room closed in 1935. The Silver Bell, built in 1890, suffered a disastrous fire in 1923. It operated as one of Telluride’s many “soda parlours” during Prohibition, and its numerous entrances hint at the other services offered there. It closed in 1959, was restored in 1991 and today houses many businesses. The three small Victorian houses standing in a row on Pacific Street, known as the Cribs, are all that remain of the “female boarding houses” that lined both sides of West Pacific Street all the way to Town Park. The Telluride Housing Authority saved these last cribs by renovating them in 1983. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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T R A N S P O R TAT I O N
WINTER FLIGHT MAP
LOCAL / REGIONAL AIRPORTS Telluride TEX 970. 728. 8600 Montrose Regional MTJ 970. 249. 3203 Cortez Municipal CEZ 970. 565. 7458 Durango/La Plata Cty DRO 970. 382. 6050 Grand Junction GJT 970. 244. 9100 PRIVATE FLIGHTS Mountain Aviation/ Telluride Air Club Telluride Flights Net Jets
970. 728. 4700 970. 728. 1011 877. 356. 5823
REGIONAL MAP
Miles from Telluride Moab........................ 132 Salt Lake City......... 366
Miles from Telluride Cortez..........................75 Denver...................... 330 Durango.................... 125 Grand Junction....... 127 Montrose.....................67
AIRPORT SHUTTLES & TAXIS Alpine Luxury Limo 970. 728. 8750 Angel’s Taxi 980. 778. 8777 Mountain Limo 888. 546. 6894 Telluride Express 888. 212. 8294 RENTAL CARS Telluride and Mountain Village Hertz 970 369. 4995 Montrose Regional Airport Avis 800. 331. 1212 Budget 800. 527. 0700 Hertz 800. 654. 3131 National 800. 227. 7368
Miles from Telluride Flagstaff....................341 Scottsdale................492 Phoenix.....................475
Current Road Conditions 877.315.7623 or cotrip.org
Miles from Telluride Albuquerque................. 320 Farmington.................... 144 Santa Fe........................ 280
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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T R A N S P O R TAT I O N
TAKE TO THE SKY: THE GONDOLA The towns of Telluride and Mountain Village are linked by a spectacular 13-minute ride on a free gondola. The gondola has four primary stations where you can board and unload: • Station Telluride at Oak Street in the historic town of Telluride • Station St. Sophia, the mid-mountain stop that provides access to the resort’s trails and Allred’s Restaurant & Bar • Station Mountain Village in Mountain Village Center • Station Village Parking, with paid parking for guests This popular scenic attraction serves as public transportation and also provides access to the Telluride Ski Resort in winter and the Mountain Village Bike Park in summer. The gondola is handicap, ski, snowboard, bicycle, stroller and pet accessible. Call 970.728.3041 for information. • Nov. 17, 2017 to April 8, 2018: 6:30 a.m. to midnight, with extended hours to 2 a.m. Fridays and Saturdays, Dec. 15, 2017 to April 8, 2018. FREE RIDES • In the town of Telluride, Galloping Goose shuttle buses loop through town every 10 minutes starting at 7 a.m. Designated stops are located every few blocks, and the bus will drop off and pick up from any corner on the route. Detailed schedules are posted at bus stops and on the buses. Regional bus transportation is available to Lawson Hill, Down Valley and Norwood. Call 970.728.5700 for 24hour shuttle information.
PARK IT In Telluride: • Find free daytime parking in the Carhenge Lot, just off West Pacific Avenue at the west end of Telluride, near the base of Lift 7 • Some side streets allow free two-hour parking (see map). • In Telluride’s historic downtown, solar-powered parking meters stand mid-block on main and side streets. One dollar per hour, with a three-hour max. The meters accept credit cards or coins. Parking limits are enforced (Telluride Marshal’s Department, 970.728.3818) 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Parking is free on Sundays and holidays. In Mountain Village: • Gondola Parking Garage: Free daytime parking 7 a.m. to 12 a.m.; overnight parking rate is $25 from 12 a.m. to 7 a.m.; payable by Parkmobile app, debit or credit card only; no cash. • Paid parking is available at Heritage Parking Garage below Madeline Hotel (west of hotel off Mountain Village Boulevard), free for the first 30 minutes and $2 per hour thereafter; $35 maximum for each 24-hour period. Payable by Parkmobile app, debit or credit card only. • Parking at the Market Plaza parking lot is free, with a one-hour limit; no overnight parking is allowed. • There is also free day parking in the Meadows Run Parking lot, located at the end of Adams Ranch Road. There is no overnight parking without a valid permit. • Parking at North and South Village Center lots is free for the first 30 minutes and $2 per hour thereafter. Payable by Parkmobile app, debit or credit card only. No overnight parking 2 a.m. to 7 a.m..
• In Mountain Village, during the ski season, the Chondola operates daily from 6:30 a.m. to midnight. In spring, summer and fall, Mountain Village offers free bus service, which also operates daily.
MOUNTAIN VILLAGE PARKING REGULATIONS
• Dial-A-Ride taxi serves riders going to and from most residential homes in Mountain Village. Call 970.728.8888 to schedule a pick-up.
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PAID RIDES • Several local taxi companies offer service in and around Telluride, Mountain Village and the surrounding neighborhoods. See “Airport Shuttles & Taxis” on page 69.
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Peaks Resort
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CORNET
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RID
Free Shuttle Route
(No Overnight)
ALDER
WILLOW
SPRUCE
PINE
FIR
OAK
ASPEN
MAPLE
Court House
DAVIS
D.
E
Town Park Parking
PACIFIC
SAN JUAN
OLA
D G OFreNe rideVtoillage ntain
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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F
North Village Center Parking metered parking
B
Short Term Parking
C
Centrum Bus Stop & Drop Off
D
South Village Center Drop Off & Short Term Parking
30-minute free parking
30-minute free parking W Y ELLO
Station Village Parking
Bus goes to Gold Run Turnaround
COLORADO
Mou
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Grocery Store
Carhenge Free All-day Parking
GE
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BR
IC K
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AD
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SAN J O
Post Office
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Market Plaza Parking
free 1-hour parking
F
ASPEN
PACIFIC
LV
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VIS CHER DRIVE
COLUMBIA
TOWNSEND
MAHONEY
Visitor Information Center
B
K LA NE
To Hwy 145 and Gas Stations
AG E
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GREGORY
GALENA
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8am-6pm Mon.-Sat. 3 hour maximum
No Parking /Permit Only
LA DO ON CH
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/ T1 LIF
No Daytime Restrictions
SUNSET PLAZA
U AI
TELLURIDE PARKING REGULATIONS 2-hour Free Parking
OL
G TENNIS COURTS
Metered Parking
ND
Station Mtn.Village
HERITAGE PLAZA
GONDOLA
Park your car—you won’t need it here. Telluride and Mountain Village are pedestrian havens. Everything you need on your vacation is within walking distance, and there is also free gondola service.
AQ
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Gondola Parking Garage
free daytime parking; paid overnight parking
N
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Heritage Parking Garage metered parking
Camel’s Garden 888.772.2635 or 970.728.9300
Meeting Area
Elks Lodge 970.728.6362
Historic Swede-Finn Hall
Ice House Lodge 800.544.3436 or 970.728.6300
Conference Room
Il Salona 970.728.4046
Event Space
BAR
AUDIO/VISUAL
SPECIAL NOTES
900
170
80
●
ADA compliant, on the river
IN-HOUSE CATERING
Gallery Room and Outdoor Deck
SEATED CAPACITY
SETTING
Ah Haa School for the Arts/Historic Train Depot 970.728.3886
STANDING CAPACITY
TOWN OF TELLURIDE
SQUARE FOOTAGE
VENUES
525
50
30
●
●
●
next to gondola
1,700
250
200
●
●
●
stage & outdoor deck
360
25
20
●
●
●
next to gondola
-
150
80
●
●
adjoins Rustico Ristorante
30,000
680
680
●
●
500
45
35
Michael D. Palm Theatre 970.369.5669
Performing Arts Center
New Sheridan American Room 800.200.1891 or 970.728.4351
Victorian-style Room
Nugget Theater 970.728.3030
Theatre
1,674
-
Sheridan Opera House 970.728.6363
Historic Theatre / Reception Space
1,400
265
Sidework 970.728.5618
Reception Room
900
100
Telluride Elementary School 970.369.1205
Cafeteria
-
-
100
small raised stage
Gym / Auditorium
3,600
500
500
no alcohol or smoking
Telluride Middle/High School 970.369.1205
Multi-purpose and Music Rooms
Gym
Telluride Town Park Core & Warming Hut 970.728.2173
Outdoors, Canopy, Picnic Tables
Town Park Pavilion 970.728.2173
Spacious Covered Pavilion
Wilkinson Public Library 970.728.4519, ext. 20
Program Room (small rooms also available)
●
alcohol with special permit
●
downtown Telluride
186
●
quaint, intimate
230
●
●
intimate setting for gatherings
●
●
liquor license, projector
50
●
-
-
125/50
on-site parking
4,000
-
300
no alcohol or smoking
-
-
-
public can’t be excluded
26,000
300
-
available for private events
959
124
72
●
downtown Telluride
150
TOWN OF MOUNTAIN VILLAGE Bear Creek Lodge 970.369.4900
Great Room
2,000
200
●
wedding packages avail.
Gorrono Ranch 970.728.7446
Mountain Ranch
6,000
-
200
●
●
no private vehicles
Inn at Lost Creek 866.475.4403 or 970.728.5678
Executive Board Room and Wedding Patio
525
35
20
●
●
●
wireless business center
Madeline Hotel & Residences 866.475.4403 or 970.369.0880
Idarado Ballroom
3,315
270
210
●
●
●
Mountain Village core
Jasper Room
676
45
35
●
●
●
Mountain Village core
Reflection Plaza
6,240
400
200+
●
●
●
outdoor venue
Hospitality Suite
1,800
50+
35+
●
●
●
plus 1,200 sq. ft. deck
Mountain Lodge at Telluride 970.369.5000
Summit Room (summer only)
574
60
40
●
●
near Tell. Conf. Center
Mt. Emma Room
500
50
35
●
●
easy gondola access
Peaks Resort and Spa 800.789.2220 or 970.728.6800
Appaloosa Lounge
1,682
100
40
●
●
●
casual cocktail room
Big Billie Ballroom
2,046
225
140
●
●
●
can divide into 2 rooms
Crystal Room
1,600
163
100
●
●
●
floor to ceiling windows
Great Room Deck
1,440
125
80
●
●
off of the Great Room
Legends Restaurant
2,790
250
160
●
●
●
rustic dining venue
Liberty Bell and Golden Slipper Rooms
50
30
●
●
can combine for 1,100 sq. ft.
each 551
Mt. Wilson Terrace
7,900
350
200
●
●
connects to Crystal/ Legends
Palmyra Deck
1,508
150
100
●
●
connects to Palmyra restaurant
Palmyra Restaurant
1,980
225
180
●
●
●
80
connects to Palmyra deck
Ridge Club’s Great Room 970.708.1515
Multi-purpose Facility and Deck
1,900
175
●
easy gondola access
Telluride Conference Center 970.369.8030
Mountain Village Ballroom
6,069
890
564
●
●
●
22,000 total sq. ft. indoors
Klammer Boardroom
732
60
40
●
●
●
55,000 sq. ft. outdoor plaza
Fallon Room
367
35
20
●
●
●
voice/data circuits
Chipeta Room
312
-
18
●
●
●
voice/data ports
Mezzanine
1,189 100 70 ●
●
●
optional reception hall
St. Sophia Ceremony Site 970.728.7446
Top of the Gondola on the Ski Resort
-
outdoor venue
remote lakeside lodge
-
-
RUSTIC MOUNTAIN RETREATS Alta Lakes Observatory 970.239.0027
Rustic Mountain Lodge
2,200
75
25
●
●
High Camp Hut 970.728.8050
High Mountain Hut
2,500
35
35
walk 2.5 miles from hwy.
Schmid Family Ranch 970.708.1108
Rustic Setting at base of Wilson Peak
-
-
-
two cabins, summer only
EVENT PLANNERS >> VisitTelluride.com/weddings or VisitTelluride.com/groups-and-meetings
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
71
YOUR NEXT GREAT ADVENTURE ACCOMMODATIONS STARTS WITH A
GREAT NIGHT’S REST
Telluride Resort Lodging, the official property management company of Telluride Ski Resort, specializes in the finest vacation rentals in Mountain Village ranging in size from economic studios to spacious luxury vacation homes. When you choose to stay with Telluride Resort Lodging, skiing, golfing, hiking and the free Telluride-Mountain Village Gondola are all within easy access.
70
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
B O O K T O D AY !
877.237.7503
|
TellurideResortLodging.com
Angler Inn Placerville
970.728.5580
14 ■
cont ●
●
RATES
WI-FI OR INTERNET
HANDICAP FACILITIES
PETS
LAUNDRY
BREAKFAST INCLUDED
KITCHEN
FIREPLACE
SWIMMING POOL
HOTELS AND CONDOS
NUMBER OF UNITS
● all units
▲ on premises ■ some units
HOT TUB / SAUNA / STEAM
ACCOMMODATIONS
●
$
●
$$$$
Auberge Residences at Element 52 Telluride 970.728.0701
20
Bear Creek Lodge Mountain Village
970.369.4900 or 888.729.0398
31
Camel’s Garden Hotel & Penthouse Condos Telluride
888.772.2635 or 970.728.9300
36 ▲ ■
Dunton Townhouse Telluride
877.288.9922
5
Fall Line Condos Telluride
970.728.4274 or 866.728.4274
9 ▲ ● ● ● $-$$
Fairmont Heritage Place, Franz Klammer Mountain Village
888.728.3318
63 yes ▲
●
● ●
■
■
● $$$$
Hotel Columbia Telluride
970.728.0660 or 800.201.9505
21 ■
■ `■ cont ▲
■
■
● $$$$
Hotel Telluride Telluride
970.369.1188 or 866.468.3501
59 ▲
■
● ▲
■
■
● $$$
Ice House Condos & Suites Telluride
970.728.6300 or 800.544.3436
17
▲
■
■
■
■
●
Inn at Lost Creek Mountain Village
970.728.5678 or 888.601.5678
32 ▲
■
● cont ●
●
■
● $$-$$$$
Lumiére Hotel Mountain Village
970.369.0400 or 866.530.9466
29 yes ▲ ■
■
■ full ■
●
■
● $$-$$$$
Madeline Hotel & Residences Mountain Village
970.369.0880 or 866.475.4403
110 yes ▲
■
■ ■
●
■
● $$-$$$$
Manitou Lodge Telluride
970.728.3388 or 888.728.1950
11
Mountain Lodge at Telluride Mountain Village
866.368.6867 or 970.369.5000
130 yes ▲
■
■ ▲ ■
■
■
● $$-$$$
Mountainside Inn Telluride
970.728.1950 or 877.376.9769
84 ▲
■
■ ■ ▲
■
■
● $
New Sheridan Hotel Telluride
800.200.1891 or 970.728.4351
26 ▲ ■
● $$
Peaks Resort & Spa Mountain Village
800.789.2220 or 970.728.6800
164 yes ▲
■
■ ▲ ■
■
■
● $-$$$
Penthouses at The Peaks Mountain Village
800.537.4781
13 yes ▲
●
●
●
■
■
●
River Club Telluride
888.601.4160 or 970.728.3986
24 ▲
●
● ●
■
■
● $$-$$$$
See Forever Village at The Peaks Mountain Village
800.789.2220 or 970.728.6800
29
▲
●
● ● ■
● $$$-$$$$
Victorian Inn Telluride
970.728.6601 or 800.611.9893
33 ▲
■
■ cont ▲ ■
● $
65
■
■
● ●
■ ● $-$$$$
yes
yes
yes
▲ ■
●
●
▲
●
● ●
■ ● $-$$$$
●
■ ■
■
▲
▲
●
■
■
■
■
● $$$-$$$$ ●
cont ●
$$$$
$$-$$$
$$
$$-$$$$
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT COMPANIES Accommodations in Telluride
866.754.8772
Invited Home (formerly Elevation Vacations)
970.728.8160 or 855.978.7627 65 ■
■
■
■ ●
■
■
● $-$$$$
Latitude 38 Vacation Rentals
970.728-8838 or 877.450.8838 80 ■
■
■
■ ■
■
■
● $-$$$$
Property Management of Telluride
970.369.1275 or 877.332.1275 9 ▲
■
■
● ■
■ ■ $-$$$$
Silver Star Luxury Properties
970.728.3001 or 800.537.4781
84
■
■
● ●
■
■
■ $-$$$$
Telluride Alpine Lodging / Sea to Ski
970.728.3388 or 877.376.9769
300 ■
■
■
■
■
■ $-$$$$
Lodging in Telluride
888.998.6471 or 970.729.2202
9
▲
■
●
Telluride Luxury Rentals
970.728.0461
15 ■
■
● ●
■
■
● $$-$$$$
Telluride Rentals
800.970.7541 50 ■ ■ ■
■ ■
■
■
■ $-$$$$
Telluride Resort Lodging
800.778.8581
55 ■
■
■ ■ ■ $-$$$$
Welcome to Telluride
970.728.7049
15 ■
■
■ ■ ■ $-$$$$
■
■
▲
■
■
▲ ■
●
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
$-$$$$
73
ACCOMMODATIONS
CAMEL’S GARDEN RESORT
Hotel & Condominiums 250 West San Juan Avenue, on Telluride’s Gondola Plaza www.camelsgarden.com 888.772.2635 or 970.728.9300 “Few places compare to Telluride. And nothing in Telluride compares to the Camel’s Garden.” Camel’s Garden is Telluride’s finest full-service resort property. Located along the river just 15 feet from the Gondola and two blocks from Main Street, Camel’s Garden is in an ideal ski-in/ski-out location. The luxurious rooms, suites and condominiums with balconies, fireplaces, customcrafted furniture, Italian marble bathrooms and oversized tubs give a feeling of ultimate indulgence and well-being. An extraordinary 25-foot hot tub offers spectacular views of the San Juan Mountains. The Camel’s Garden is also home to Atmosphere Day Spa, Oak restaurant, Telluride Sports, and a Telluride Ski Resort ticket office. “One of the world’s most romantic ski hotels.” — London Sunday Times
74
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
ACCOMMODATIONS
Telluride’s Boutique Hotel 21 beautifully furnished guest rooms & suites Personalized service from a stellar team Complimentary breakfast COSMOpolitan restaurant on site A snowball’s throw from the Gondola
888.340.8660 – ColumbiaTelluride.com 301 West San Juan Avenue, Telluride, CO 81435 visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
75
ACCOMMODATIONS
RUS TIC EL EGA NCE. W E ST ER N CHA RM .
Perched at 9,500 feet, the resort offers luxury cabins, deluxe condominiums and suites that provide a comfortable retreat from the ordinary while offering all the services and amenities of a full service hotel.
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The View Bar & Grill features traditional tavern cuisine with an upscale flare. Renown among locals for its amazing burgers and giant breakfast burritos, The View has quickly become one of Telluride’s premier hangouts.
{
A blend of rustic elegance and Western charm, Mountain Lodge Telluride is your window to the splendor of the San Juan Mountains.
MountainLodgeTelluride.com | 970.369.5000 | 457 Mountain Village Blvd, Mountain Village
76
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ACCOMMODATIONS
Condé Nast Traveler’s Best Hotels In The West
NEWSHERIDAN.COM
TELLURIDE’S FOUR DIAMOND FULL SERVICE LUXURY HOTEL Luxurious Guestrooms • One To Four Bedroom Residences Stunning Views • Yoga & Pilates Studio • Salon & Spa Black Iron Kitchen + Bar • Dylan’s Candy Bar • Starbucks Live Entertainment • Outdoor Plaza Sky Terrace Pool and Spa
RESERVATIONS 888.965.7501
MADELINETELLURIDE.COM 568 MOUNTAIN VILLAGE BOULEVARD, TELLURIDE, CO 81435
THE NEW SHERIDAN HOTEL has shared in the rich history of Telluride, Colorado since 1895. Offering modern amenities paired with historic ambiance, the New Sheridan invites you to experience a new level of old world service. The New Sheridan Hotel has served as Telluride’s social center since 1895. Located just two blocks from the gondola, the hotel’s location in the heart of downtown Telluride provides an ideal base for visitors. During a recent and expansive renovation, the hotel’s 26 guest rooms received a luxurious transformation under the guidance of internationally renowned designer Nina Campbell. Each individually designed room captures the historic charm of Telluride in an atmosphere of warmth and comfort. On-site dining options include the renowned Chop House Restaurant & Wine Bar, Rooftop Bar, The Parlor and the historic New Sheridan Bar, which was ranked among the world’s top 10 après ski bars by Forbes Traveler. The New Sheridan Hotel was also recognized by the readers of Condé Nast Traveler as one of the Top 5 “Best Places to Ski & Stay in North America” and was awarded the “2017 AAA Four Diamond Hotel” rating. The New Sheridan is proud to be on the Register of National Historic Places.
ADDRESS TELEPHONE WEB
231 West Colorado Ave., Telluride 1.800.200.1891 or 970.728.4351 newsheridan.com visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
77
ACCOMMODATIONS
PEAKS FULL
Located in Telluride’s Mountain Village, The Peaks Resort offers an array of comfortable accommodations, a convenient ski-in/ski-out, golf-in/golf-out location, a variety of onsite amenities as well as spectacular views of the surrounding San Juan Mountains.
One stay and you’ll understand why it’s all downhill from here.
84
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
Visit ThePeaksResort.com or call 877.725.6058 to speak to a vacation specialist.
ACCOMMODATIONS
THE MOST COLORADO PLACE ON EARTH.
Comfort. Convenience. Affordability.
T
he Victorian Inn has been serving our guests for almost 40 years and has earned a strong reputation for clean, comfortable, affordable accommodations in one of the best locations in town. Located just 200 steps from Main Street and the Gondola, you’ll be on the slopes in no time at all. Experience the service, amenities and value you deserve. Experience the Victorian Inn! Call or visit us online to reserve today! Be sure to ask about our ski packages & discounted ski rentals.
1.800.611.9893 victorianinntelluride.com
Spend a night... not a fortune! • FREE high-speed Internet • Cable TV with HBO
• Kids 15 and under stay FREE • Mini-fridge in every room
Plus, complimentary breakfast Hotel Lobby
STAY & SKI FROM $151 VISITTELLURIDE.COM 844.207.8287
Classic Two Queen Room
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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POST OFFICE
LUB D
NUGGET THEATRE
COURT HOUSE
Bar
Altezza
DAKOTA AVE.
BL VD V I L L AG
IN MOU N TA
CURTIS DR.
Starbucks
G
D ON
OL
A
MOUNTAIN VILLAGE GONDOLA STATION
Siam's Talay Grille
SUNSET PLAZA
LOS
T
E CRE
DAVIS ST.
KL
bijou at lumiere
CH ER DR
CORNET ST. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
MEDICAL CENTER
Alpino Vino On ski resort
Bon Vivant
N
VIS
80
TOWNSEND ST.
The West End Bistro
DAVIS ST.
AH HAA SCHOOL
n tio Sta
at St. Sophia Gondola Station
ola
Allred’s
HERITAGE PLAZA
Crazy Elk Tomboy Pizza Tavern
a
HOTEL
D G E DR
The Market and
The View at Mountain Lodge
E
Black Iron Kitchen MADELINE & Bar
ASPEN ST.
d ’s Gon red phia AltlSt. So
FKL
Cosmopolitan
A
CONFERENCE CENTER
GUS’S PLAZA
OL
MOUNTAIN VILLAGE DINING & SPIRITS
OAK ST.
ND
VILLAGE PARK
ELKS PARK
Oak
GO
PEAKS RESORT
FIR ST.
Visitors Center
COLORADO AVE. / MAIN ST.
Coffee Shop
N RI
Over the Moon
OPERA HOUSE
Restaurant
A SPE
LIBRARY
Alpinist & the Goat
New Sheridan Chop House
R
C RY
Telluride Juice Co.
PINE ST.
SAN JUAN AVE.
MUSEUM
C OUNT
COLUMBIA AVE.
GALENA AVE.
GRE GO RY AVE .
Caravan
LARGER MAPS CAN BE FOUND IN THE BACK OF THE MAGAZINE
SPRUCE ST.
PACIFIC AVE.
TELLURIDE DINING & SPIRITS
MAIN STREET (COLORADO AVE.)
WILLOW ST.
DINING & SPIRITS 221 South Oak Modern Bistro 221 South Oak, Telluride 970.728.9507
Caravan Middle Eastern Fare, Smoothies 123 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5611
High Alpine Coffee Bar Coffee, Baked Goods 224 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4504
Aemono Fine Foods Deli, Burgers, Pizza, Take-Out, Catering 156 Society Drive, Unit A, Lawson Hill 970.728.2085
Cindybread Artisan Bakery Bakery, Deli 168 Society Drive, Lawson Hill 970.369.1116
High Camp Warming Hut Sandwiches, Soups, Snacks Top of Lift 9, Telluride Ski Resort
Allred’s Contemporary American Cuisine Gondola Station St. Sophia 970.728.7474
Clark’s Market Made to order food, full deli 700 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3124
Altezza Locally Sourced Indo-European Cuisine Peaks Resort & Spa, Mountain Village 970.728.2525
Coffee Cowboy Coffee, Baked Goods, Smoothies 123 East Colorado, Telluride
La Cocina de Luz Fresh Mexican 123 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9355
Cornerhouse Grille American Grill, Sports Bar 131 North Fir, Telluride 970.728.6207
La Marmotte Contemporary French 150 West San Juan, Telluride 970.728.6232
Cosmopolitan Contemporary Seasonal Cuisine 300 West San Juan, Telluride 970.728.1292
La Piazza del Villaggio Authentic Italian Sunset Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.8283
Crazy Elk Pizza Handmade Pizza, Salads, Sandwiches Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.7499
La Pizzeria Casual Italian, Wood-Fired Pizza Sunset Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.0737
Diggity Dogg House Hot Dogs, Hamburgers, Breakfast Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.369.0364
La Tortilla Ria Tortillas 300 South Mahoney, Telluride 970.728.8678
Esperanza’s Casual Mexican 226 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.8399
Last Dollar Saloon Cocktails 100 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4800
Floradora Saloon Burgers, Salads, Sandwiches, Steaks 103 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.8884
New Sheridan Bar Cocktails, Pool Hall 231 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4351
Bon Vivant Classic Country French Cuisine Top of Lift 5, Telluride Ski Resort
Ghost Town Coffee, Tea, Smoothies 210 West Colorado, Telluride 970.300.4334
New Sheridan Chop House & Wine Bar Upscale American, Steaks, Seafood 231 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9100
Brown Bag Deli, Take-Out 126 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5556
Gorrono Ranch Burgers, Sandwiches, Soups, BBQ Mid-Mountain Lift 4, Telluride Ski Resort 970.728.7567
New Sheridan Parlor Café, Wine Bar, Cocktails 231 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9100
Brown Dog Pizza Pizza, Pasta, Subs, Sports Bar 110 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.8046
Guiseppe’s New-Orleans-Inspired Fare Top of Lift 12, Telluride Ski Resort
Oak, The New Fat Alley BBQ, Casual American Oak Street, Gondola Plaza, Telluride 970.728.3985
Alpino Vino Fine Wines, Italian Delicacies Upper See Forever, Telluride Ski Resort 970.728.7560 Angler Inn New America-Style 22332 Highway 145, Placerville 970.728.5580 Baked in Telluride Pizza, Pasta, Bakery 127 South Fir, Telluride 970.728.4775 Bean Café at the Peaks Coffee, Smoothies, Pastries, Sandwiches Peaks Resort & Spa, Mountain Village 970.728.6800 Big Billie’s Family Dining, Ice Cream Bar Base of Lifts 1 & 10, Telluride Ski Resort 970.728.7557 Black Iron Kitchen & Bar Modern Mountain Cuisine Madeline Hotel, Mountain Village 855.389.2929
High Pie Pizzeria & Tap Room Pizza, Salads, Calzones, Ice Cream 100 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.2978
O’Bannon’s Irish Pub at Fly Me to the Moon Saloon Live Music, Cocktails 136 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4100 Over the Moon Gourmet Cheese & Wine 200 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.2079 Pescado Sushi, Japanese, Latin-Infused Dishes 115 West Colorado, Telluride 970.239.6025 Poachers Pub American Pub Sunset Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.9647 Rustico Ristorante Traditional Italian 114 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4046 Scratch Kitchen & Cocktails Organic, Sustainable International Menu 118 Lost Creek Lane, Mountain Village 970.369.0400 Shanghai Palace Chinese 126 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.0882 Show Bar at the Sheridan Opera House Cocktails, Private Events 110 North Oak, Telluride 970.728.6363 Siam Thai, Thai Fusion 200 South Davis, Telluride 970.728.6886 Siam’s Talay Grille Contemporary Asian Tapas and Seafood Sunset Plaza, Inn at Lost Creek 970.728.6293 Sidework Contemporary Comfort Food 225 South Pine, Telluride 970.728.5618 Smugglers Casual American, Brewpub 225 South Pine, Telluride 970.728.5620
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DINING & SPIRITS Starbucks Coffee, Tea, Pastries, Paninis Madeline Hotel, Mountain Village 970.369.8993
Telluride Distilling Company Locally Brewed Spirits Society Drive, Lawson Hill 970.239.6052
The Liberty Cocktails, Live Music, DJ 121 South Fir, Telluride 970.728.2942
There... Signature Cocktails, Appetizers 627 West Pacific, Telluride 970.728.1213
Steamies Burger Bar A Modern Burger Joint 300 West Colorado, Telluride 844.the.buns
Telluride Juice Co. Cold Pressed Juicery, Kombucha 129 West Colorado, Telluride 970.239.6214
The Market at Mountain Village Made to Order Food, Full Deli 455 Mtn. Village Blvd, Mountain Village 970.728.6500
Tomboy Tavern Colorado Comfort Food Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.7467
Taco del Gnar Creative Taco Shop 123 South Oak, Telluride 970.626.9715
Telluride Truffle Artisan Chocolate Chocolate, Ice Cream, Pastries 110 North Fir, Telluride 970.728.9565
The Phoenix Bean Espresso, Sandwiches, Small Plates, Wine 221 West Colorado, Telluride
Tracks Café & Bar Casual American, Cocktails Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.0677
Telluride Bistro Mediterranean, Italian Bistro 138 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5239
The Alpinist & the Goat Fondue, Dessert, Cocktails 204 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5028
Telluride Brewing Company Locally Brewed Beer 156 Society Drive, Lawson Hill 970.728.5094
The Butcher & The Baker Café Fresh Gourmet Deli, Bakery, Take-Out 201 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.2899
Telluride Coffee Company Coffee, Breakfast, Lunch, Pastries Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.369.4400
The Great Room American Bistro, Cocktails Peaks Resort & Spa, Mountain Village 970.728.6800
The View Bar & Grill Locally Sourced Comfort Food 457 Mtn. Village Blvd., Mountain Village 970.369.5000
Wolf Pig Mobile Bar for Hire 970.596.3364
The Village Table Global Soul Food, Tapas, Catering Centrum Building, Mountain Village 970.728.1117 The West End Bistro at Hotel Telluride Casual American, Cocktails Hotel Telluride, Telluride 970.369.1188
TELLURIDE’S GATHERING PLACE
BAR & GRILL WITH A VIEW
LOCATED IN THE MOUNTAIN VILLAGE CORE 970.728.7467
OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH, DINNER & DRINKS 11AM TO 11PM 82
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DINING & SPIRITS
SAVOR THE
UNPARALLELED CUISINE
WHATEVER YOUR PALATE MAY BE, our tailored menus will serve you. Select from one of our fine establishments and delight in some of the best cuisine in the West. Dine in style at our signature restaurant, the Chop House – world renowned for its dry aged USDA Black Angus. We create our delicious fare using only organic free range fowl, non-threatened fish species and local ingredients. Pair a red or white from Telluride’s only nitrogen wine bar with a scrumptious meal for an unforgettable experience. FAVORITES FROM BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER CLASSIC EGGS BENEDICT / 16 Canadian Bacon, Poached Eggs, Hollandaise Sauce, Roasted New Potatoes
CHEESE CHARCUTERIE BOARD / 36 Combination of Cured Meats & Artisanal Cheeses
FRENCH TOAST / 14 Fresh Berries, Maple Syrup
MAC & CHEESE / 12 Three Cheeses, Bacon Lardons
FRENCH ONION SOUP / 12 Carmelized Onions, Gruyére Cheese
NEW YORK STYLE DELI REUBEN / 16 Corned Beef, Housemade Coleslaw, Russian Dressing, Marble Rye
PAN SEARED PISTACHIO ENCRUSTED TROUT SALAD / 17 Warm Bacon, Sherry & Mustard Vinaigrette, Grilled Bread & Poached Egg CAESAR SALAD / 11 Parmigiano Reggiano, White Anchovies, Orange Zest & Crostini
CHOP HOUSE STEAK BURGER / 24 Toasted Fresh Baked Bun, Quick Pickles, Ancho Chili Ketchup, French Mustard, Cheese (Blue, Aged White Cheddar, Gruyère) DRY AGED BISON RIBEYE / 62 16oz Bone-In
PRIME NEW YORK STRIP / 54 15oz Bone-In EGGPLANT PARMESAN / 24 Pappardelle Pasta, Garlic, Spinach, Mushrooms, Mozzarella, Marinara STEAMED PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND MUSSELS / 18 Coconut-Ginger Broth, Lemongrass, Grilled Baguette ROCKY MOUNTAIN ELK SHORTLOIN / 41 Duck Confit. Sweet Potato Hash, Quince, Wild Mushrooms, Red Wine Reduction ALASKAN KING CRAB / 28 per half pound
THE NEW SHERIDAN HOTEL has shared in the rich history of Telluride, Colorado since 1891. Offering modern amenities paired with historic ambiance, the New Sheridan invites you to experience a new level of old world service. ADDRESS: 231 West Colorado Ave., Telluride, Colorado 81435 TELEPHONE 1.800.200.1891 or 970.728.4351 • NEW SHERIDAN.COM
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DINING & SPIRITS
BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER APRÈS SKI LOCATED AT THE PEAKS RESORT & SPA OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
STUNNING VIEWS FAMILY FRIENDLY SKI VALET WWW.OPENTABLE.COM/R/ALTEZZA-MOUNTAIN-VILLAGE ~ @ALTEZZAATTHEPEAKS ~ THEPEAKSRESORT.COM 970.728.2525 ~ 136 COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE ~ MOUNTAIN VILLAGE
Ski-in/ski-out Ski-in/ski-out to North to North America's America's highest highest elevation elevation restaurant restaurant Extensive Extensive wine wine listlist Handmade Handmade pastas, pastas, local local meats meats andand cheeses, cheeses, world-renowned world-renowned comfort comfort food food
Classic Classic French French country country cuisine cuisine with with breathtaking breathtaking views views of of Palmyra Palmyra Peak Peak and and surrounding surrounding San San Juans. Juans.
Custom Custom cocktails cocktails && eclectic eclectic French French wine wine listlist
Top Top ofof Polar Polar Queen Queen Express Express (Lift (Lift 5)5) 84
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TOP TOPOFOFGOLD GOLDHILL HILLEXPRESS EXPRESS(LIFT (LIFT14)14) Dinner Dinner Reservations Reservations Available Available Wednesday-Saturday Wednesday-Saturday | | 970.728.7560 (Adults (Adults 21+) 21+) 970.728.7560
DINING & SPIRITS
EATING DRINKING AND CARRYING ON Say hello to our amazing wine list, locally-sourced food, fresh fish, and oh… the desserts! Plus, Chad, award-winning chef, who speaks fluent Food.
Located in the Hotel Columbia, just steps away from the Gondola. Reservations: cosmotelluride.com or 970.728.1292
Cosmo ad SmrVisitorsGuide2017.indd 1
ELEVATED DINING EXPERIENCES
3/28/17 3:52 PM
Condé Nast Traveler’s Best Hotels In The West
BLACK IRON KITCHEN + BAR Signature Fire Tables • Outdoor Plaza and Lawn Games Energetic Atmosphere Featuring Live Music Lunch • Dinner • Cocktails • Campfire S’mores • Flat-Screen TVs Modern Mountain Cuisine in a Casual Environment
RESERVATIONS 855.389.2929
TELLURIDE’S ONLY STARBUCKS
Crafting Your Favorite Beverages • Open Daily from 6:30am-6:30pm
DYLAN’S CANDY BAR
Confections for Every Sweet Tooth • Open Daily from 11:00am-7:00pm
MADELINETELLURIDE.COM | MOUNTAIN VILLAGE, CO. visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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DINING & SPIRITS
Serving fondue and raclette, grilled vegetables, filet mignon and craft cocktails in an intimate wine bar from Aprés Ski until midnight
Cheese Fondue Served with salad, seasoned bread and apples. Fondue is meant to be shared.
Traditional
Imported European cheeses melted with white wine, garlic and a dash of nutmeg
Mont Blanc
Imported European Cheeses and French Brie make a silky finish to the traditional fondue. Finished with Herbs de Provence
Crepes Blintz Ricotta, creme fraiche and apple sauce side Imported Ham & Gruyere with roasted tomatoes Confit of Duck with fig and orange spread Duck Pate with French brie, candied walnuts and marmalade Fois gras with forest Mushrooms and black truffles
Extras
Cortina d’Ampezzo
European cheeses with Gorgonzola (Creamy, imported blue cheese from Italy) and garlic. Delicious by itself or try it with our Filet Mignon
Basque
Imported Emmenthal & Manchego (Sheep’s milk cheese) with authentic, chorizo sausage, garlic and spices
Grilled seasonal vegetables Filet Mignon, 6 oz. seared organic, grass fed beef Kirschwasser – Traditional, distilled cherry brandy Gluten-Free Ciabatta Organic Mixed Greens Salad with Herbs de Provence Dressing
Telluride Scrapple
Deliciously aged Irish Cheddar and Swiss Gruyere, crisp bacon and chives make this a Telluride tradition
French Truffle
Imported Gruyere, chardonnay, sauteed forest mushrooms, minced black truffles and white truffle cream
House Special — Raclette for 2
Imported Gruyere Cheese, melted onto a hot stone, with seasoned bread, potato panoply and grilled vegetables
Boards Filet Board
6 oz filet mignon,skewered and grilled with our famous mashed potato panoply, grilled vegetables and seasoned bread
Cheese Board
2 oz. each of Spanish Manchego, Italian Gorgonzola, Irish Cheddar, a delicious fig spread, Mediterranean olives and seasoned bread
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Dessert Chocolate & Carmel Fondue
All-you-can-eat warm pure Belgian chocolate & goat’s milk carmel ladled onto house made ice cream and a variety of 12 all-you-can-eat dippers
Dessert Crepes
Including crepes suzette, apples & cinnamon, banana & nutella, and lemon; all served with chantilly cream
Beverages Cocktails, Extensive Wine List, Espresso, House Made Hot Chocolate, Coke, Diet Coke
For reservations go to www.AlpinistAndTheGoat.com 204 W. Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5028
DINING & SPIRITS
Traditional Thai with a Seafood Focus JOIN US FOR APRÈS SKI
freshest ingredients + exceptional service
OPEN DAILY B RE A K FA S T & D IN N E R
Valet Parking at the Inn at Lost Creek • 970 728 6293
Reservations: 970.369.1188 199 Cornet Street - Telluride, CO 81435
www.TheHotelTelluride.com
Bring your family and friends to enjoy a delicious meal at the Hotel Telluride, in a cozy spot by our lobby fireplace. Open daily for Breakfast & Dinner.
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DINING & SPIRITS
Jump...
into our ` Apres Ski
organic middle-easternfood food middle-eastern shish kebabs · falafels hummus · spanakopita · fries baba ganouj · tabouli greek salad · baklava whole-food smoothies OPEN DAILY WEATHER PERMITTING
Best happy-hour in town with Esperanza’s famous made-to-order margaritas and appetizer specials.
728-5611 CARAVANTELLURIDE.COM
Fun and family-friendly
ON THE LA COCINA DE LUZ PATIO
lunch & dinner kids’ menu outdoor patio
open every day • 728-3985 www.oaktelluride.com
THE VIEW Bar & Grill Locally Sourced Comfort Food 457 Mountain Village Blvd Mountain Lodge, Mountain Village 970. 369. 5000 mountainlodgetelluride.com BREAKFAST OLD SCHOOL BREAKFAST - two City Farm eggs, hash browns, toast BLT BENNY - fried green tomato, bacon, arugula, hollandaise, balsamic drizzle LOADED POTATO SKINS - scrambled eggs, jack cheese, sour cream, pico de gallo, green onions, bacon or sausage BREAKFAST BURRITO - two eggs, hash browns, hatch valley chilies, black beans, pork green chili, cheddar cheese LODGE HASH BROWNS - crispy hash browns, bacon, cheddar cheese, green onions, two eggs HIPPIE HASH BROWNS - crispy hash browns, cauliflower, spinach, tomatoes, green onions, pesto THE HANGOVER - our signature burger, fried egg, cheddar cheese, lettuce, tomato, onion on a toasted english muffin with hash browns MOUNTAIN FUEL - greek yogurt, vanilla-almond granola, berries STEEL CUT OATMEAL BRÛLÉE
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Authentic, Delicious Mexican and Tex-Mex Food & Drinks
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SHAREABLE
CHARCUTERIE & CHEESE CRISPY CAULIFLOWER TREE HUGGER - garlic-hummus, roasted tomatoes, seasonal veggies and grilled naan bread CHIPS & QUESO TRUFFLE FRIES DIRTY FRIES- cheddar sauce, bacon, sour cream and green onion or pork green chile and Monterey jack cheese or lump crab aioli, parmesan cheese and truffle oil GRILLED FLATBREAD - honey-hickory smoked salmon, herb goat cheese, roasted tomatoes, onion, capers, lemon and, arugula KOREAN BBQ RIBS
SALADS
BORING GREEN SALAD - fresh mixed greens, strawberries, candied pecans and house vinaigrette CAESAR SALAD - butter croutons and shaved parmigiano-reggiano cheese BLT SALAD - crispy chicken, applewood smoked bacon, romaine lettuce, roasted tomatoes, avocado, blue cheese and ranch dressing
226 W. Colorado Avenue 970-728-8399
ON BREAD
LODGE BURGER - potato bun, cheese, lettuce, tomato, onion and lodge sauce DOUBLE DECKER BURGER - bacon, grilled onions, cheddar cheese and sweet-spicy pickles JT BURGER - roasted tomatoes, pine nut pesto, brie cheese, lettuce and tomato SURF ‘N TURF BURGER - lump crab aioli, lettuce and tomato SALMON BLT - grilled salmon, applewood smoked bacon, cholula mayo, lettuce and tomato GRILLED CHICKEN CLUB - grilled chicken, applewood smoked bacon, swiss cheese, creamy artichokes, lettuce and tomato GRILLED HAM AND CHEESE - shaved “Cure 81” ham & swiss cheese on buttered sourdough
ENTREES
nightly dinner special samples: BURGUNDY BRAISED LAMB SHANK BUFFALO MEATLOAF STEAK & FRITES ELK SHEPHEARDS PIE
ARIZONA CHOPPED - honey-hickory smoked salmon, arugula, quinoa, pepitas, dried sweet corn, dried currants, Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese, pesto dressing
DESSERT
ROASTED BEETS - sun flower sprouts, candied walnuts and blue cheese vinaigrette
DECADENT CHOCOLATE PUDDING - chantilly cream and black pepper candied pistachios
WARM TOFFEE CARROT CAKE - mascarpone ice cream, candied pecans & Caramel Sauce
Our menu evolves seasonally and reflects the simple and straightforward preparation of comfortable classics.
Visit Our New DINING & SPIRITS Telluride Location!
157 South Fir (Pacific and Fir) Open 7am - 9pm daily • (970) 728-6500
A Full-Service Conventional and Natural Foods Market
Spirits Open 11am - 9pm daily Mountain Village Town Hall Plaza
(970) 728-6500
Open 7am - 9pm daily 490 Sherman Street, Ridgway
(970) 626-5811
Open 7am - 9pm daily Mountain Village Town Hall Plaza
(970) 728-6500
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Happy Print
POST OFFICE
LARGER MAPS CAN BE FOUND IN THE BACK OF THE MAGAZINE
WILLOW ST.
TELLURIDE SHOPPING & ART GALLERIES
Scarpe Fine Navajo Weaving SPRUCE ST.
Two Skirts
COLUMBIA AVE.
GALENA AVE.
MUSEUM
NUGGET THEATRE
DAKOTA AVE.
BL VD
Dylan's Candy Bar CURTIS DR.
V I L L AG IN
MOU N TA
E
FKL
Bootdoctors
Bootdoctors
N GO
DO
LA
Burton TOWNSEND ST. MEDICAL CENTER
MOUNTAIN VILLAGE GONDOLA STATION
Christy Sports
Wine Mine at Pacific St. Liquors
D G E DR LOS
TC
REE
KL
N
DAVIS ST.
DAVIS ST.
VIS CH ER DR
visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
CORNET ST.
Telluride Sports GUS’S PLAZA
ASPEN ST.
HERITAGE PLAZA
Neve Sports
OAK ST.
PACIFIC AVE.
ELKS PARK
Telluride Telluride Resort Sports Store Christy Sports
MADELINE HOTEL
SUNSET PLAZA
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Visitors Center
A
Heritage Apparel
Telluride Naturals Telluride Sports
Mountain Market
FIR ST.
The Market at Telluride
OL
VILLAGE PARK
CONFERENCE CENTER
N RI
Green Room
ND
PEAKS RESORT
LIBRARY
GO
MOUNTAIN VILLAGE SHOPPING
A SPE
Over Elinoff the Moon Zia Sun
COLORADO AVE. / MAIN ST.
COURT HOUSE
Telluride Sports
Lustre
Telluride Sports
OPERA HOUSE
LUB D
PINE ST.
R
C OUNT
Bootdoctors Paragon C RY
Tweed
Picaya
SAN JUAN AVE.
GRE GO RY AVE .
Telluride Gallery Fine Art
AH HAA SCHOOL
SHOPPING ART GALLERIES Adam W. Carlos Fine Art Plaza Building, Ste. 102 Sunset Plaza, Mountain Village 931.636.5023 Babies of the Bush Centrum Building, Ste. 120C Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 430.322.6229 Elinoff & Co. Gallerists & Jewelers 204 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5566 Gallery 81435 230 South Fir, Telluride 970.728.3930 Gold Mountain Gallery 135 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3460 Kamruz Gallery 100 West Colorado, Telluride 303.442.7790 Lustre, an Artisan Gallery 171 South Pine, Telluride 970.728.3355 Mixx 307 East Colorado, Telluride 970.797.4040 Schilling Studio Gallery 970.728.1174 (Open by appointment) Slate Gray Gallery 209A East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3777 Stronghouse Studios 283 South Fir, Telluride 970.728.3930 Telluride Art Headquarters & Gallery 135 West Pacific, Telluride 970.728.3930 Telluride Gallery of Fine Art 130 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3300 Tony Newlin Gallery 100 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.8084
BEAUTY AromaSpa, Salon & Boutique 307 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9515 Atmosphere Spa 250 West San Juan, Telluride 970.728.0630 Bliss & Bang Bang Salon 329 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.1020 Breathe Skin & Body 221 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9772 Healthy Glow Face & Body 222 West Colorado, Telluride 970.708.7424
BEAUTY Himmel Pool and Spa Boutique Fairmont Franz Klmr., Mountain Village 970.728.7113 Ivy’s Skin Care 227 West Pacific, Ste. B, Telluride 970.403.4546 Pure Beauty Studio 221 East Colorado, Ste. J, Telluride 970.708.3787 Salon 7 300 Mahoney, Ste. 13C, Telluride 970.369.0050 Spa Boutique at the Peaks Resort 136 Country Club Dr., Mountain Village 970.728.6800 Studio G Total Skin Wellness 145 West Pacific #1E, Telluride 970.728.8700 The Spa and Salon at Madeline 568 Mtn. Village Blvd., Mountain Village 855.266.9408 The Loft Hair Studio 226 West Colorado, Telluride 704.650.3478 The Town Barber 398 West Colorado, Telluride 970.708.0974 YX Salon 135 South Spruce, Telluride 970.708.0270 or 970.708.2308
BOOKS Between the Covers Books 224 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4504
CLOTHING AromaSpa Salon & Boutique 307 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9515 Alpen Schatz Boutique 100 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4433 Black Bear Trading Company 226 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.6556 Cashmere Red 221 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.8088 Down To Earth 236 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9316 Heritage Apparel Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.7340 Kellie’s 217 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5820
CLOTHING Overland Sheepskin & Leather 100 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9700 Paradise Resort Wear 218 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.8786 Scarpe 250 East Pacific, Telluride 970.728.1513 Shirtworks of Telluride 126 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.6242 Sublime 126 West Colorado #102A, Telluride 970.728.7974 Telluride Trappings & Toggery 109 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3338 Two Skirts 127 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.6828
DISPENSARIES Alpine Wellness Center 300 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.1834 Delilah, LLC 115 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5880 Green Dragon 119 West Colorado, Telluride 970.442.1422 Telluride Bud Company 135 South Spruce, Telluride 970.239.6039 Telluride Green Room 250 South Fir, Telluride 970.728.7999 *Please visit goodtoknowcolorado.com for info on Colorado marijuana laws.
ELECTRONICS, CAMERAS & PHOTO Digitiq 220 West Colorado, Telluride 970.239.4142 Elevation Imaging The Beach, Mountain Village 970.728.8058
EYEWEAR Telluride Vision 220 East Colorado, Ste. 208, Telluride 970.708.4890
FLORISTS China Rose Florists & Greenhouse 158 Society Drive, Lawson Hill 970.728.4169 Desert Rose 300 South Mahoney, Telluride 970.239.4954
FURNISHINGS & HOME DECOR Azadi Rugs 217 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4620 Dakota Home Furnishings & Dakota Panhandler 220 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4204 Fine Navajo Weaving 220 East Colorado #1, Telluride 970.708.7368 Hook on a Wall 226 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.1087 Lustre, an Artisan Gallery 171 South Pine, Telluride 970.728.3355 Mixx 307 East Colorado, Telluride 970.797.4040 Picaya 101 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.0954 Sage House 220 East Colorado, Telluride 817.909.3959 Slate Gray Gallery 209A East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3777 Telluride Window Coverings 219 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.0022 Tweed Interiors 151 South Pine, Telluride 970.728.8186 T.Karn Imports 394 West Colorado, Telluride 918.384.2159
GIFTS Shirtworks of Telluride 126 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.6242 Telluride Naturals Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.7357 Paradise Resort Wear 218 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.8786
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Refined casual style
The BEST place
for local and regional gifts! Telluride Naturals has everything from jewelry to candles and to artwork and clothing. We are the BEST place for local and regional gifts. Come in to find your little piece of Telluride to take home with you.
Open Daily 9am–6pm • 970.728.7357 Located in the Franz Klammer
Take home a piece of Telluride A mix of casual style and trend setting designers for Men, Women and Children
O FFICIA L TE L LU RIDE A P PA RE L , SOUVENIRS & GIFTS Resort Store carries everything from apparel to drinkware and specific souvenirs to gifts all with the Telluride logo. With products constantly changing, you are bound to find your best Telluride logo gift or souvenir from Resort Store!
OPEN DAILY
•
970.728.7340
Across from the pond in Mountain Village
Open Daily 9am-6pm • 970.728.7358 Located at the Gondola Plaza
SHOPPING GIFTS Telluride Resort Store Gondola Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.7358 Zia Sun 214 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4031
GROCERY & MARKETS Clark’s Market 700 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3124 Ghost Town Coffee, Tea, Smoothies 210 West Colorado, Telluride 970.300.4334 Over the Moon 200 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.2079 The Market at Mountain Village 455 Mtn. Village Blvd, Mountain Village 970.728.6500 The Market at Telluride 157 South Fir, Telluride 970.728.4566
HARDWARE & BUILDING SUPPLIES Alpine Lumber 140 Society Dr., Lawson Hill 970.728.4388 Kitchen & Bath Designs 398 West Colorado, Telluride 970.249.7200 Telluride Window Coverings 219 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.0022 Timberline Ace Hardware 200 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.364
JEWELRY & ACCESSORIES Slate Gray Gallery 209A East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3777 Telluride Gallery of Fine Art 130 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3300 Telluride Naturals Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.7357 Wizard Entertainment 126 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4924 Zia Sun 214 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4031
Elinoff & Co. 204 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5566 Hell Bent Leather & Silver 215 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.6246 Lustre, an Artisan Gallery 171 South Pine, Telluride 970.728.3355 Mixx 307 East Colorado, Telluride 970.797.4040 Picaya 101 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.0954
Alpen Schatz Boutique 100 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4433 Animal Hospital of Telluride 700 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.1082 / 970.708.4359 (after hours) Soggy Dog Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.708.4270 Telluride Veterinary Clinic 547 1/2 West Pacific, Telluride 970.728.4461 Thrive Pet Health Granita Building, Mountain Village 970.708.7218 Tricks & Treats Pet Sitting Service 970.708.5205
LIQUOR STORES Spirits at Mountain Village 455 Mtn. Village Blvd., Mountain Village 970.728.6500 Telluride Bottleworks 129 West San Juan, Telluride 970.728.5553 Telluride Liquors 123 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3380 Wine Mine at Pacific Street Liquors 220 South Davis, Telluride 970-728-WINE
MUSIC Telluride Music Co. 333 West Colorado #2, Telluride 970.728.9592 Wizard Entertainment 126 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4924
OFFICE SUPPLIES JEWELRY & ACCESSORIES
PET SUPPLIES & SERVICES
Digitiq 220 West Colorado, Telluride 970.239.4142 Happy Print 970.728.6525 High Country Shipping 456 Mtn. Village Blvd., Mountain Village 970.728.1976 Paper Chase 206 Society Drive, Lawson Hill 970.728.0235 Ship It/Copy It 125 West Pacific #2B, Telluride 970.728.8111
PHARMACY Apotheca Integrative Pharmacy 129 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.0488 Sunshine Pharmacy 333 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3601
SPORTING GOODS Patagonia 200 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4303 Telluride Angler/Telluride Outside 121 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3895 Telluride Golf Pro Shop (summer only) The Peaks, Mountain Village 970.728.2606 Telluride Sports 150 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4477 Camels Garden, Telluride 970.728.3134 Fairmont Franz Klammer, Mountain Village 970.728.0364 Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.8944 The Peaks, Mountain Village 970.728.2606 The Drop Board Shop & Print Lab 123 South Oak, Telluride 970.708.0688 The North Face Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.369.0332
SWEETS SPORTING GOODS Bootdoctors Le Chamonix Bldg., Mountain Village 888.592.8954 236 South Oak, Telluride 970.369.4240 Box Canyon Bicycles 300 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.2946 Burton Telluride Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.6138 Christy Sports Heritage Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.1334 Mountain Lodge, Mountain Village 970.369.5267 Sunset Plaza, Mountain Village 970.369.4727 Eco Adventures Fairmont Franz Klammer, Mountain Village 970.728.7300 Jagged Edge/Journey Outdoors 223 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.9307 Neve Sports/Telluride Sports Madeline Hotel, Mountain Village 970.728.5722 Paragon Bootdoctors 215 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4525
Dylan’s Candy Bar Madeline Hotel , Mountain Village 970.369.0880 Telluride Truffle Artisan Chocolate 110 North Fir, Telluride 970.728.9565
THRIFT SHOPS Second Chance Humane Society 335 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.1100
TOYS Scarpe 250 East Pacific, Telluride 970.728.1513 Zia Sun 214 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4031
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Our experienced staff takes great pride and pleasure in helping you pick the perfect wine, mix a refreshing cocktail, or plan and supply your special event!
if we don’t have it, we will get it! Over 1,200 wines Spirits, beer, mixers, cigars n
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Free wine tasting every Thursday - in season On-site sommelier Free delivery n
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970.728.WINE 220 S. Davis Street / wine-mine.com
Store your Wine in our Mine
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DAVIS STREET
PACIFIC AVENUE SIAM
SHOPPING
Toys, Jewelry and Gifts for All Ages In all the world there is only one Zia Sun! 214 W Colorado Ave, Telluride 970.728.4031 visittelluride.com | 855.421.4360
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Traveling With Children Made Easy!
Rent full size cribs, highchairs, toys, and more
Fine Navajo Weaving
Specializing in children’s equipment rentals in Telluride since 1996.
Delivery, setup & pickup with no extra fees! 970.318.6543 www.travelinglite.biz 96
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220 E. Colorado #101 970-708-7368
ART GALLERIES
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ART GALLERIES
Telluride logo jewelry in sterling, gold and diamonds
Gallerists and Jewelers 204 W. Colorado Ave. 970.728.5566
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ACTIVITIES ADVENTURE GUIDES Adventure Tour Productions Tandem paragliding, photo/video tours 970.729.0078 Bootdoctors/Paragon Nordic ski clinics, fat tire biking, fly fishing, mountain biking, rafting, hiking, paddleboarding 800.592.6883 Dave’s Mountain Tours (summer only) Historic off-road 4x4 adventures 970.728.9749 Eco Adventures Kid’s adventure camps & activities 970.728.7300 Four Corners Whitewater (summer only) Kayaking, river rafting, paddleboarding 223 East Colorado, Telluride 888.723.8925 High Camp Hut Overnight adventure hut for hiking, nordic skiing, snowshoeing 970.728.8050 Mountain Trip Adventure guides for backcountry skiing, ice climbing, rock climbing 970.369.1153 Opus Hut Backcountry hut 970.708.0092 RIGS, Adventure Co. (summer only) Flyfishing, water sports 970.708.0092 Roudy’s Horseback Adventures Horseback riding, winter sleigh rides 970.728.9611 San Juan Balloon Advent. (summer only) Ultralight flights/paragliding 970.626.5495 San Juan Huts Backcountry hut system 970.626.3033 San Juan Outdoor Adventures/ Telluride Adventures Backcountry skiing, ice & rock climbing, snowshoeing, hut trips, hiking, Via Ferrata 866.FUN.TRIDE or 970.728.4101 Telluride Academy (summer only) Summer camps for youth ages 5-18 970.728.5311
ADVENTURE GUIDES Telluride Adaptive Sports Program Winter and summer activities for all ages and disabilities 970.728.5010 Telluride Adventure Center Snowshoeing, snowmobiling, flyfishing, 4x4 tours, mountain biking, paddleboarding, rafting 970.728.7433 Telluride Avalanche School Avalanche education 866.FUN.TRIDE or 970.728.4101 Telluride Guided Mountain Biking 970.708.7848 (summer only) Telluride Helitrax Helicopter skiing 877.500.8377 or 970.728.8377 Telluride Mountain Guides Backcountry skiing, ice climbing, hiking, climbing 14ers 888.586.8365 or 970.728.6481 Telluride Nordic Center Nordic skiing - classic and skate 970-728-1144 Telluride Offroad Advent. (summer only) Off-road/4x4 adventures 970.708.5190 Telluride Outfitters Snowmobiling, fly fishing, photo tours, ATV tours, biking Town Hall Plaza, Mountain Village 970.728.4475 Telluride Outside/Telluride Angler Fly fishing, snowmobile tours, 4-wheel drive tours, rafting 800.831.6230 Telluride Paragliding Tandem paraglide flights 970.708.4247 Telluride Snowkite Snowkite instruction 541.490.4401 Telluride Sports Fishing, hiking, horseback riding, jeeping, rafting 150 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.4477 ext 211 Wild Hare Snowshoe Tours Backcountry snowshoe tours 970.728.5465
CHILD CARE Annie’s Nannies of Telluride 970.728.2991 Telluride Sitters, LLC PO Box 2647, Telluride 970.708.0170 Traveling Lite, LLC 970.318.6543 CLASSSES & WORKSHOPS Ah Haa School for the Arts Creative classes, camps and workshops 300 South Townsend, Telluride 970.728.3886 Pinhead Institute Science-based educational experiences 300 South Mahoney, Telluride 970.708.7441 Telluride Rock and Roll Academy Lawson Hill, Telluride 970.728.1186 COMMUNITY Telluride Historical Museum 201 West Gregory, Telluride 970.728.3344 Telluride Town Park & Recreation 970.728.2173 Wilkinson Public Library 100 West Pacific, Telluride 970.728.4519 ENTERTAINMENT Club Red / Conference Center 580 Mtn Village Blvd, Mountain Village 970.369.5120 O’Bannon’s Irish Pub at Fly Me to the Moon Saloon 136 East Colorado, Telluride 970.728.6139 Michael D. Palm Theatre 721 West Colorado, Telluride 970.369.5669 Nugget Theatre 207 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.3030 Sheridan Opera House 110 North Oak, Telluride 970.728.6363
FITNESS 8750ALT 317 East Colorado, Telluride 970.387.8750 Fuel Station 205 East Colorado, Telluride 970.708.1590 Madeline Studio Madeline Hotel & Residences Mountain Village 855.266.9408 Mangala Yoga 333 West Colorado, Telluride 970.239.6200 Pedal Den 307 East Colorado #100, Telluride 970.729.0810 Pilates Balance 300 South Mahoney, Telluride 970.729.0678 Sequence Pilates and Core Align 226 West Colorado, Telluride 970.728.5003 Studio Telluride Authentic Pilates 135 South Spruce, Telluride 970.728.1747 Telluride Crossfit 137 Society Drive, Lawson Hill 970.728.4622 Telluride Yoga Center 207 West Colorado, Telluride 970.729.1673 The Peaks Resort & Spa 136 Country Club Drive, Mountain Village 970.728.6800 Zenish Yoga 700 West Colorado, Telluride TOURS Historical Tours of Telluride 970.728.6639 John Sir Jesse Herb Walks (summer only) 970.728.0639 Tasting Telluride Food Tour (summer only) 970.729.8118 Telluride Green Tours Cannabis dispensary tours 970.708.3739 Telluride Sleighs and Wagons Wagon rides, stories and dinner 970.260.2524
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Keeping your
Winter Green 250 SOUTH FIR 728-7999 OPEN 11 AM TO 7PM ONE BLOCK E AS T OF THE TELLURIDE GONDOL A S TATION
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LOCALLY OWNED
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TELLURIDE
elevated.
TELLURIDE
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elevated. .
274 BENCHMARK
Ski-In/Ski-Out, Directly Trailside on Bridges Run – 6 Bedrooms/6.5 Baths – Astounding Views – $6,590,000
ICE HOUSE 317
East-Facing, Centrally Located – Outdoor Pool – 2 Bedrooms/2 Baths – Wrap-Around Deck – $1,995,000
309 ALDASORO
4 Bedrooms/4.5 Baths – 5,519 Sq Ft on Two Lots totalling 9.8 Acres – Best Views in Aldasoro – $2,900,000
DAKOTA PLACE 7
Directly Trailside in the Village Core – Spectacular St. Sophia Views – 3 Bedrooms/3.5 Baths – $2,245,000
Rick Fusting
Personal Commitment Proven Results 970.708.5500 rickfusting.com rickf@telluridecolorado.net 137 W. Colorado Avenue, Telluride, CO 81435
PARTING SHOT | RYAN BONNEAU “Telluride offers unparalleled beauty that no other mountain I’ve skied at can compare to... Even after all these years, skiing in Telluride takes my breath away.” GUS KENWORTHY Freestyle skier and Olympic silver medallist SEE ‘LET IT SNOW’ ON PAGE 20
STEVE CATSMAN REAL ESTATE Out standing in his field for 45 years.
Put Steve, his team, and his 45 years of experience to work for your Telluride real estate needs. S T E V E C AT S M A N 970.729.0100 S T E V E @ C AT S M A N . C O M
FR ANK STR ACHAN 504.616.8410 FGARDEN7@GMAIL.COM
telluridereal estatecorp.com YOUR TELLURIDE REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCE STARTS HERE. Mountain Village 567 Mountain Village Blvd. T +1 970 728 6655
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Telluride 232 W. Colorado Ave. T +1 970 728 3111
Countries
Mountain Lodge 457 Mountain Village Blvd. T +1 970 369 6003
1,200 Offices
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