11.07.2010
Giant Ice Age Bison in Snowmass
"On Saturday afternoon, Denver Museum of Nature & Science excavation crews uncovered one of the most spectacular discoveries yet at the Ice Age fossil dig site near Snowmass Village—the skull and horns of a gigantic Ice Age bison.
"As a Gould construction bulldozer carefully moved muddy silt near the bottom of the reservoir site, Dr. Ian Miller, the Museum's curator of paleontology and chair of the Earth Science Department, spotted an extremely large bison horn core exposed by the heavy machine operator. The horn was so large Miller initially mistook it for a mammoth or mastodon tusk.
"The bulldozer made one more careful pass through the area and exposed a second horn core, which led scientists to the spot where a gigantic bison skull was discovered. When both horns were repositioned with the skull, the span of the horns was greater than six feet.
"'I'm trying to think of a cooler fossil that I've ever seen in my life,' said Dr. Kirk Johnson, the Museum's chief curator and vice president of Research and Collections. 'This is the iconic fossil recovered thus far in the excavation.'
"The size of the skull and horns indicates the Ice Age animal was twice as large as modern bison. Scientific experts on the site hotly debated the age and identification of the specimen. Similar species found elsewhere in the western United States have indicated these extremely large bison are often found in sediments as old as 30,000 to 50,000 years old. If confirmed, this suggests that the Snowmass Village site contains fossils from a range of ages, not just a single age. If this istrue, it would greatly increase the scientific significance of the site, according to Johnson.
"The bison skull was put into a plaster of Paris jacket in the field, then the 250 pound specimen was carried to a truck to be transported to the Museum for preparation and preservation. The plaster jacket will be removed and the fossil will be carefully washed to remove the silt and mud. Scientists will collect samples from the skull and attempt to radiocarbon date it, and extract ancient DNA.
"Another Ice Age bison found earlier in the week at the dig site is possibly a juvenile of the same species as this new bison. All of the Ice Age scientific experts at the site agree that making a properly identification must wait until the skull can be cleaned and compared to other specimens in museum and university collections."
11.01.2010
World Cup rally Thursday
10.31.2010
Snowmammoth Mountain
10.30.2010
The pretender
It’s Halloween Eve 2010 and there are already ski tracks up on Ajax. Here’s a picture of some figure-8s laid down this morning on some nice frozen corduroy at about 10 a.m. Took the Jeep up the backside and skied a few laps down Silver Dip, then skinned back up to the Sundeck. It’s not the real thing, but it’s close enough to pretend ... - Lo Semple.
10.29.2010
Snow varmits, we are
Nice sunny day in Aspen on this Friday before election day. Hills are still white, but it is pretty warm and pleasant out. Good day for a little poking around.
10.27.2010
10.26.2010
This just in from Lorenzo Semple: "Here’s a picture of Lift #7, aka 'The Couch' on Ajax. I decided to walk up Aspen Mountain this morning to see what the fuss was all about. As it turns out, the SkiCo is telling the truth. There’s a foot of fresh snow up there, and there are snowmaking operations going on as well. (Little brother is watching you!) The mountain has an eerie apocalyptic feeling. Lifts running without any skiers on them, deserted mountain restaurants, deer walking around, and such. I’m going back up tomorrow morning."
10.25.2010
Early snow pounds Aspen
It's pretty impressive, really, the amount of snow that has fallen since early Monday morning. Got to be three inches in town with temps now having fallen to 27 degrees. The forecast, for Aspen proper, is for another 2 to 4 inches today, another 3 to 5 possible tonight, and another 2 inches of snow on Tuesday. That's a pretty good fall storm. Many trees, still colorful, are groaning under the weight of the moist snow, which came in with temps in the 40s and is now freezing fast under a steady wind. The roads are extra slick now and likely to be in full skating rink mode by noon. Highway 82 over Independence Pass was temporarily closed just after 10 a.m. this morning. It was scheduled to be closed for the winter on Nov. 7. It may re-open before then. But the way it is dumping right now, dunno about that. In any event, we recommend hunkering down today. Good day for the hobbit hole with tea and biscuits.
10.24.2010
Think: Ski Swap = Killer Closing Day
“Fashion, turn to the left
Fashion, turn to the right” David Bowie
Is it too early to start getting ready for the Highlands Closing Day extravaganza? Never. This years’ 56th annual Ski Swap benefitting the Aspen School District’s Outdoor Education program is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 30th from 9:30 am till 1:00 pm at the Aspen High School. It's a great place to start looking for your retro outfit, as well as anything else you may need for your quiver. Have something to sell? Pick up your tags at Alpine Bank immediately, it’s going to be a busy week….There may well be some jaw-dropping retro outfits for those lucky enough to get there early and take advantage. Look for the neon colors, which always stand out in the Bowl. - Lo Semple
It's official: people are sliding on snow in Colo.
More snow on the way...
10.23.2010
Loveland to open Sunday, Oct. 24 at 9 a.m.
Loveland's communication guru Dustin Schaefer just sent out some pics he took and says Loveland is good to go on Sunday. You do know where your boots are, don't you? And the snowtires are on, right?
WE LOVE THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
10.22.2010
Four to six in the forecast
Well, this is sweet. The National Weather Service is calling for 4 to 6 inches tonight and Saturday at higher elevations. And the Service is suggesting that "travelers should take extra precautions as this is the first appreciable snow of the season." And they are warning that "hunters camping in the backcountry should plan on cold and wet conditions and dress appropriately." Temps are going to be in the upper 20s through the 30s. Cool. Here comes winter. It is always nice when it dumps before Halloween. Gets the whole ski town machinery lubed up. - BGS
What do the cranberries tell you?
10.21.2010
Copper opens Sat for race training
10.13.2010
9.24.2010
Bow unbent until mid-Oct
"The bow cannot always stand bent, nor can human frailty subsist without some lawful recreation." Cervantes
9.15.2010
Fall Splenda
9.07.2010
September clarity
Labor Day was crystal-clear and crisp in the valley, and Tuesday is proving to be just as clear but with warmer temperatures. Very nice weather in which to explore the local rivers and mountains.
9.02.2010
9.01.2010
Rivers of stone
A lovely start to September, with evidence of human activity somewhere on the middle Fork, flowing gently at 40 cfs.
8.30.2010
A compromising location
On the one hand, it's just a building on a hillside. On the other hand, it's the entrance to the Compromise Mine, one of the most important mines in Aspen's history. And the hillside, well, that too has had a relatively important role to play in Aspen's history. Above the building is Silver Queen and Silver Rush. Below the building, Little Nell. View from the gondy this afternoon. Hopefully, the scene will look much different (whiter) in three months time
8.25.2010
County moves ahead on Droste purchase
Droste on BOCC agenda today
8.19.2010
Tree down, blocking both lanes of Original Curve.
8.18.2010
8.13.2010
8.12.2010
8.11.2010
8.10.2010
8.09.2010
8.08.2010
8.06.2010
8.05.2010
5.14.2010
5.12.2010
Groovin' in the high country
"The Conundrum Hot Springs near Aspen is among Colorado’s most magnificent natural wonders — warm pools near timberline, surrounded by the jagged peaks of the spectacular Elk Mountains, reached only by a nine-mile hike into the wilderness.
"But the springs are also nine miles from the nearest bathroom and, until last summer, most of the 2,000 backpackers who visited the springs each year were relieving themselves anywhere.
"'Our biggest issue in there is pretty much human waste. Unburied human waste and toilet paper were evident at 71 percent of (camp) sites,' said Martha Moran, a recreation manager with the White River National Forest.
"The waste was washing into the very springs people were swimming in, resulting in high fecal coliform levels in the water."
Yes, it seems that it is well past time for backpackers to adopt the same standards as river-runners and to acknowledge that if too many well-meaning people camp in the same places, then they are going to have to use a portable waste system. On the river, those systems are called "groovers." In the backcountry it seems that campers are going to have to be prepared to use the many available lightweight products - bags with gel, mostly - for packing out their own waste.
Most backpackers go into the backcountry with high standards and ethics. Now, if they are going to popular destinations like Conundrum Hot Springs, they need to go in with groover bags too.
It's kind of weird, but many otherwise sophisticated people, who are now even used to picking up after their dogs, won't be able to handle the thought of managing their own waste in a way that is considerate of other campers. On long river trips, as people began to break things down to their elementary level, the state of the groover generally becomes a humorous source of fireside obsession and conversation.
With time, people might gradually grow up and deal with their own waste in the backcountry in an enlightened fashion. In the meantime, it sure is something to think about while soaking in the less-than-pristine hot springs.
5.07.2010
Gathering for Ideas
A partial list of those planning to attend this summer was released this week and it's possible to group the speakers into several categories.
While we're glad everyone on the list is coming to Aspen, the first group might be called by some “Surely You Have More Important Things To Do Than Come to Aspen, Even If It Is Fourth-of-July Week.”
In this group, you'll find Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the chief of staff of the United States Army, Eric Holder, the attorney general of the United States, Peter Orszag, the director of White House Office of Management and Budget, and James Steinberg, a US Deputy Secretary of State.
Another group this year kind of sticks out. The Aspen Institute, which puts on the event, seems to have to invited more red-blooded Republicans than in years past.
This category of attendees could be called “Least Likely to Normally Be Found Relaxing In The Democratic Outpost That is Aspen.”
The group includes Grover Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform, Haley Barbour, the governor of Mississippi, Fred Barnes, the executive editor of The Weekly Standard and host of Fox News’s “Beltway Boys,” Thomas Donohue, the president and CEO of the US Chamber of Commerce, and Michael Steele, the chairman of the Republican National Committee.
The third group includes "Media Heavyweights on Vacation." It's a long list, and includes Bob Schieffer, the moderator of “Face The Nation” and chief Washington correspondent for CBS News, Martha Raddatz, a senior foreign affairs correspondent for ABC News, Tavis Smiley, the host of PRI’s “The Tavis Smiley Show,” David Sanger, the chief Washington correspondent for The New York Times, Kai Ryssdal, the host of American Public Media’s “Marketplace,” and Charlayne Hunter-Gault, a foreign correspondent with National Public Radio.
It also includes Tom Friedman, a columnist for The New York Times, E.J. Dionne Jr., a columnist for The Washington Post, Elisabeth Bumiller, the pentagon correspondent for The New York Times, Maria Bartiromo, the anchor of CNBC’s “Closing Bell with Maria Bartiromo,” Peggy Noonan, a columnist for The Wall Street Journal, Tom Gjelten, the national security and intelligence correspondent for NPR, and Andrea Mitchell, the chief foreign affairs correspondent for NBC News and the host of MSNBC’s “Andrea Mitchell Reports."
And the media list includes Nicholas Kristof, a columnist for The New York Times, Pattie Sellers, an editor at Fortune, Michael Gerson, a columnist at The Washington Post, Jeffrey Brown, a senior correspondent for “PBS NewsHour, ” Vijay Vaitheeswaran, a global correspondent for The Economist, and Vivian Schiller, the president and CEO of National Public Radio.
If news breaks that week in Aspen, we'll be covered.
There are also some new media types coming, including Evan Williams and Biz Stone, the co-founders of Twitter. Also coming is Craig Newmark, the founder of Craigslist.org, who newspaper executives love to blame, in part, for the loss of classified ad revenue from newspapers. Put them in the category of "Most Likely To Be Doing Some Aspen House-Hunting On The Side."
Rounding out the affair are some big names from the category of "General Wealth, Power and Influence," including Jeffrey Katzenberg, the CEO of DreamWorks Animation, Bill Gates, attorneys David Boies and Ted Olson, Bill Clinton, Sandra Day O'Connor, Henry Louis Gates, Jr, and Alan Greenspan. Stay tuned for "General Wealth, Power and Influence: Audience Division."
Get the idea?
5.04.2010
The Aspen antidote
So I didn’t learn about the non-bombing until the next morning when I read about it in the local papers. Slightly cynical Aspenite that I still am, one of my first thoughts was “This ought to be good for the price of Aspen real estate.”
After being in New York for two months, it is easy to appreciate the role Aspen plays for New Yorkers who vacation in Aspen or own property there. It is truly a place of peace to ponder amidst the daily chaos and noise and ruckus that is the city. And it easy to imagine that Sunday's close brush with explosive carnage was enough to spur those wondering if was now time to move to Aspen altogether and leave the city behind.
This week, there are more police visible in the subway stations, just as there were the first few days after the subway bombings in Moscow. New York’s finest stand, and watch, but who knows how effective they will be against a determined suicide bomber who manages to slip onto a train looking calm and collected.
And yet the city lurches forward each day, carrying on, reveling in its din. Meanwhile, I understand it is relatively quiet, and safe, in Aspen today…
4.30.2010
Old grooming technology
From a public archive of old photos. Grooming technology has changed along with everything else. This Tucker snowcat was captured in 1974.
4.29.2010
Old Loge Peak lift
This photo by Ron Hoffman in January 1974 shows the way it used to be near the top of Loge Peak. The Loge Lift always felt like the last step on the way to heaven, especially as it often would not open until the avi danger in Steeplechase was damped down and it was good to go. When Loge opened, everything was suddenly wonderful at Highlands. And few are the folks who will deny that when the lift swayed out over the western side of the ridge just below the summit, they hung on. Tight.
4.28.2010
Last run on Little Nell, Jan. 1974
Got to say, loving these old photos. Check out the bumps on Nell. Check out the lack of a gondola. Check out the chair running up skier’s right. Check out the corral and the fence. And for those of you old enough, swoon for the glory days of the old Nell deck, bar and dance floor…
Partying on the bus to Aspen
Yes, there are plenty of classic shots in these newly released photos. Getting to Aspen has never been easy, but it has always been about what you make it. And hey, 1974 was just a different time in the world. You’re either old enough to look for your wife or ex-girlfriend on this bus, or young enough to look for your mom and dad.
Walking the dogs in downtown Aspen in 1974
Remember when Afghan hounds were all the rage? How about when the malls in downtown Aspen were just blocked-off streets? This shot is from Flickr Commons, a new repository of photos in the public domain. There are a number of shots that turn up when you search for “Aspen.” Here’s the link: http://www.flickr.com/search/commons/?q=Aspen&w=commons&m=all
4.25.2010
Are the projects related?
“Four major real estate developers are vying to buy a minority stake in the $3.1 billion project and to take over the leasing and operating of the skyscraper," the Times reported. "This week, the developers submitted their final offers to the owner, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which plans to pick a winner by June.
“’The building has real international significance, and it’s important for New York,’ said Stephen M. Ross, chief executive of Related Companies, one of the four companies competing for the $100 million deal.”
No doubt there are many complexities involved in why the big private real estate development company has the ability to go after another big real estate deal in Manhattan, but it can’t find a way to finish the Base Village project.
It’s gotten to the point in Snowmass where the town council is considering classifying the Base Village project as something of a failure so it can find a way to move beyond the unfinished project in what has always been seen as the missing heart of the ski-resort/community. The Snowmass Sun reported this week that the town council was considering “urban renewal authority” status as a way to get the project completed.
“Councilmembers Arnie Mordkin and Butler weighed in on the side of taking the first step in investigating whether urban renewal is the right carrot on a stick for the Village,” the Sun reported.
“’Urban renewal has been used by many, many communities to get inaction off the dime. When you start shaking the sword of urban renewal and condemnation, they start running like rats,’ Mordkin said.”
4.23.2010
Someone's in the kitchen with...
Braudis: "'Hunter and I developed a protocol, designed to keep me from being compromised. I can't give you the details but it was effective.'"
Chalmers: "'Don't tell me that you had no idea what happened in that kitchen.'"
Braudis: "'I know very well what went on in the kitchen. But I was never compromised by him.'"