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A&E MOUNTAINFILM ON MY MIND

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LIBATIONS SHAKE IT UP

AUGUST 24-30, 2017 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

Catch, Release, Repeat

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FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 8


WELCOME MAT

INSIDE this EDITION VOLUME 5 F ISSUE NUMBER 28

DEPARTMENTS 04 THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION 06 LEGENDS & LEGACIES 08 GEAR 09 ASPEN UNTUCKED 10 WINE INK 13

FOOD MATTERS

16 GUNNER’S LIBATIONS 19

VOYAGES

20 MOUNTAIN MAYHEM 30 ART & ENTERTAINMENT 31

LOCAL CALENDAR

38 CROSSWORD

25 COVER STORY Times Weekly editor Jeanne McGovern and Times photographer Anna Stonehouse — who both landed a fish! — know why the sport is so appealing. They share their story this week.

"Take Every Wave" AUG 26 | 8:30 PM

TICKETS ARE ONLY $25!

See the full festival schedule at wheeloperahouse.com

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Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott Circulation Maria Wimmer Art Director Afton Pospíšilová Publication Designer Jordan Lugibihl Arts Editor Andrew Travers Contributing Writers Amiee White Beazley Amanda Rae Busch Kelly J. Hayes Barbara Platts Stephen Regenold High Country News Aspen Historical Society Sales Hank Carter Ashton Hewitt Amy Laha David Laughren Max Vadnais Tim Kurnos

Classified Advertising (970) 925-9937

many must-do lists. After spending a day on the Roaring Fork River with a local guide, Aspen

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

Editor Jeanne McGovern

Read the eEdition http://issuu.com/theaspentimes

The waters surrounding Aspen are ground zero for summertime fun; fly fishing is at the top of

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Publisher Samantha Johnston

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#mfilmaspen

ON THE COVER

Cover photo by Anna Stonehouse


ASPEN

Red Mountain Masterpiece Beds 6 | Baths 7 | $13,900,000 Re-envisioned by David Easton and remodeled down to the studs in 2003, this classically modern residence has been stunningly recast as a work of art. The expression of architecture-as-art captures the senses, as manifested through the mindful application of the finest materials, lighting and sound. Set directly above a flowing stream, the home basks in its Southern exposure and awe-inspiring views of Aspen Mountain, Highlands, Buttermilk, Pyramid Peak and Mt. Sopris. Custom furnishings, carpets and fabrics, wall coverings, cabinetry and hardware blend into one sophisticated palette, inspired by the Aspen landscape. Multiple private terraces reveal majestic panoramic mountain views. Web Id#:AN150249

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ASPEN

The Ultimate Aspen Residence or Rental Machine Beds 2 | Baths 2 | $2,295,000 This newly remodeled, fully furnished, contemporary corner unit in the heart of Aspen is fantastic! Just a short stroll to everything downtown has to offer, 3 blocks to the gondola and ski-in to the back door, you can’t beat this location. Fabulous views of Red Mountain from the master suite and Aspen Mountain views from the deck. With Bosch appliances throughout, wine fridge, gas fireplace, in-unit washer dryer, tankless water heater. Stunning interior and exterior renovation completed in 2016. Garage parking, ski locker, lobby area security system, landscaping and super low HOA. Web Id#:149835

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CARBONDALE

Stunning Contemporary Home

Beds 4 | Baths 3.5 | $2,250,000 You’ll be amazed by the absolutely breathtaking views, stunning architecture and advanced sustainability of this home! Created by Hagman Architects, and featured in Aspen Magazine, this home is the definition of “no detail was overlooked”. From the contemporary design to the solar energy and SIP Panel construction to the intelligent fencing for the horses – there are just too many unique features of this home to list. A definite must-see property! Web Id#: AN149733

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

by ANDREW TRAVERS

THEATER THE NONPROFIT Theater Masters is challenging locals to write a play in just a few days. The organization, behind the acclaimed annual Take 10 festival in Aspen and New York, is hosting its second annual Meeting on the Page workshop. Theater professionals and playwrights are working with 10 local students and their parents or guardians from Aug. 25 to 27 in an intensive workshop that will guide young writers through the process of penning a 10-minute play. The class, funded by the Francis Foundation, is free. “We hope that it will encourage collaboration between parent and child, communication as well as allow an opportunity for parents to have a better understanding of what their child is interested in,” says playwright and director Melisa Annis. “The goal is to not only nurture the young playwright, but to introduce a new element of support to that playwright’s life by having their parent involved.” Their work will culminate in an evening of performance on Sunday, Aug. 27, at the Mountain Chalet. There, Roaring Fork Valley actors will perform the new works in their premiere stagings. Sunday’s performance is free and open to the public. It is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. More information at www.theatermasters.org.

Theate Masters is hosting its second annual Meeting on the Page workshop this week. Pictured here is a rehearsal of the nonprofit’s Take Ten production in February.

CURRENTEVENTS POPULAR MUSIC

Chef Eduardo Garcia will host a community dinner at the Aspen Cooking School on Aug. 27 during Mountainfilm in Aspen.

The Brooklyn-based Budos Band will play Belly Up on Saturday, Aug. 26.

THE BUDOS BAND became a must-see live act with its wild instrumental shows blending funk, soul, afrobeat and Ethiopian jazz. But in the past few years, the Brooklyn-based band has taken a turn and — since its 2014 album “Burnt Offering” — has branched into an exciting new direction, layering rock and psychedelic sounds over its horns. They’re bringing the new sound to Belly Up Aspen on Saturday, Aug. 26. Tickets are $18 to $30, available at the Belly Up box office and www.bellyupaspen.com.

FOOD CHEF EDUARDO GARCIA is cooking up something special for Mountainfilm in Aspen. The celebrated chef and subject of the new documentary, “Charged: The Eduardo Garcia Story” is taking over the Cooking School of Aspen on Sunday, Aug. 27, at 5:30 p.m. for a community dinner that will include oysters and barbecued pork tenderloin. Tickets are $55, available at the Wheeler Opera House box office and www.aspenshowtix.com. For details on the rest of the Mountainfilm in Aspen lineup, see our story on page 30.

COMPLETE LOCAL LISTINGS ON PAGE 31 4

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This “off the grid� and environmentally efficient home (5,748 SF) sits in a spectacular secluded yet accessible setting with stands of Aspen Trees and stunning 360 mountain views. It has every luxury convenience with finishes of the finest craftsmanship. It is fully selfcontained with straw bale construction for perfect insulation and low utilities. $3,975,000

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This fantastic ski/summer home sits serenely on the quiet Maple Ridge Lane cul-de-sac nestled between Aspen groves & ski area. Airy & spacious, this 5 BR/5 Bath home is beautifully decorated in a Mountain Contemporary style with a thoughtfully planned layout all above grade. Perfectly designed for both entertaining & family enjoyment. See the film at SnowmassChalet.com. $2,950,000

PREMIER LOCATION AT Owl Creek Townhomes with excellent ski in ski out access. Most private location in complex with front row, up-mountain views. Enjoy benefits of maintenance free townhome living while enjoying a SINGLE FAMILY home with a rare 5th bedroom/den with full bath. Old World style furnishings by Slifer. Co-listed with Terry Griggs $3,995,000 OwlCreekSanctuary.com

Erik Berg License Partner & Private Office Advisor | Erik.Berg@evusa.com 616 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen | erikberg.evusa.com | 970.379.6353 A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

FISH TALES

1940 ASPEN

ON MAY 23, 1940, The Aspen Times announced the imminent start of the fishing season, noting that “Saturday, May 25, will be a national holiday so far as a good share of the population of Aspen is concerned as that is the opening day of the shortened 1940 fishing season and most anglers are determined to waste no time in getting started at their favorite sport. Considerable interest has been aroused in this community by the big fish contest that is being staged by Mike Magnifico and it is believed some very nice specimens will be brought in to be measured. One man has already wagered he will land a two and one-half pound trout the first day. Get your share of the fish, but abide by the law and there will be plenty of fish for everyone.� The photograph above shows Mike Magnifico (left) comparing fish stories with another man, circa 1950. (Ferenc Berko photo) This photo and more can be found in the Aspen Historical Society archives at aspenhistory.org.

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PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY


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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

by STEPHEN REGENOLD

WEAR IT: PATAGONIA LAUNCHES WORKWEAR CLOTHING THAT LASTS a lifetime of manual labor and has “no break-in time” before you wear it: That is the big claim Patagonia makes with its just-released line of workwear. The company uses new materials but a known look for the shirts and pants in the line. The brand touts the workwear made with “iron forge hemp” canvas is more durable, abrasion resistant and more comfortable off the rack than conventional canvas clothing. Patagonia’s blend is made of 55 percent industrial hemp. Beyond that, 27 percent of the fabric is recycled polyester, and 18 percent is organic cotton. The line comprises 17 products built for hard work at a price that goes toe-to-toe with stalwart brands like Carhartt. At the core of any workwear line is the pant. Patagonia offers the Iron Forge Hemp Canvas Double Knee Pants for men and women. For anyone who has worn Carhartt doubleknee dungarees, these should look pretty familiar, although the fabric is different. They retail for $80 from Patagonia, which is about $30 more than a comparable, USA-made Carhartt. At the high end of the price range for the line sits the men’s and women’s

Iron Forge Hemp Canvas Barn Coat. Both cost $200. Made from the same burly material, these coats have 92 percent recycled polyester insulation, YKK zippers, and doubled fabric panels on the shoulders to increase durability and add comfort while carrying loads. Not everything gets the hemp treatment. The men’s Fog Cutter Sweater, for example, is 70 percent recycled wool, 25 percent recycled nylon, and 5 percent other fiber. It costs $100.

The women’s Tin Shed Jacket, $150, is made of polyester with a fleece lining and DWR-treated face fabric. This is an interesting direction for Patagonia. Workwear is a large market, but it remains to be seen if America’s craftsmen and women will open their wallets a little more for an established player in a new game. Stephen Regenold writes about outdoors gear at www.gearjunkie.com.

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

ASPEN UNTUCKED

by BARBARA PLATTS

The columnist’s parents watching the start of the eclipse through solar eclipse glasses.

TOTALLY IN TOTALITY

A JOURNEY TO WYOMING FOR THE SOLAR ECLIPSE IN THE WEEKS LEADING up to Monday’s solar eclipse, I must admit, I was not buying into the hype. I was tired of hearing and reading news stories about it. People were driving thousands of miles to “get into the totality zone.” Hotels in towns in rural parts of America were being rented out for 15 times the normal price. And traffic was forecasted BARBARA PLATTS to be absolutely horrendous anywhere near the totality zone. The buildup just seemed overwhelmingly unnecessary, and I didn’t think the journey was worth the effort. For those who still may not know, the totality zone during an eclipse is the area where the moon goes fully in front of the disk of the sun. At this point, the atmosphere on Earth goes mostly dark, and humans can stare at the sun without harming their eyes. For this eclipse, the zone of totality went from Oregon to South Carolina. It was a 70-milewide area in 14 states. All 50 states would get to view some of the eclipse, but only in the zone of totality would the moon fully cover the sun. For us Coloradans, the closest states for the best viewing were Nebraska and Wyoming. Still, I didn’t see the point in going. It

P H OTO B Y M AT T F E R R O

seemed like a lot of work for not very much reward. However, two days before the eclipse, I received a call from my mother. She had just read an article in the New York Times that talked about being in the totality zone during the eclipse. Apparently, in the zone, all goes quiet. Cows run away, birds stop singing, crickets start chirping, pigs begin to fly … OK, maybe not the last one, but you get the idea. After reading more about it, my mom and stepdad were determined to get to totality for the eclipse. She wanted my boyfriend, our two dogs and me to join. My mother has never been one to get excited about natural phenomenons, so, in slight shock, I told her we would go with her. I figured if she was so determined, there must be something to all of this. So, at 4 a.m. on Monday morning, two parents, a boyfriend, two puppies and myself headed north to Wyoming to reach totality. Once we hit Interstate 25, it became very obvious that we weren’t alone on this venture. Many experts are predicting this was the most watched eclipse in history, with 2 million to 7 million Americans driving to the totality zone. Needless to say, the roads were crowded. Despite the bumper-to-bumper traffic, we made it within the zone

by about 7:30 a.m. We went to the first town in Wyoming within the viewing area: Wheatland. From the looks of it, the town of Wheatland doesn’t see a whole lot of tourism on a typical Monday morning. But, on eclipse day, it was bustling. porta potties were set up on every other block, there were even some on the exit and entrance ramps to the highway. The longest lines were at the gas stations, where cars waited to fill up for the long journey back. A gas truck even had to refuel at one location. Arby’s was also an extremely popular place, with hungry customers coming in to order breakfast and use the facilities. Some were even wearing solar eclipse T-shirts. One woman said she had driven overnight from Houston. Once we unloaded our bladders and satiated our appetites with Arby’s breakfast, we found a picnic table next to a dog park, the perfect viewing spot for our motley crew. Many others had chosen the park, as well. It was obvious that some of them had gotten there very early because they had set up their sleeping bags and were napping as they awaited eclipse time. The full eclipse was scheduled to happen at 11:49, however, right before 11, the moon started to cover the sun. As it continued, the light around us got dimmer, the blue sky lost some of its vitality,

and shadows became much more detailed. At 11:49, when the eclipse was full, cheers erupted from the people all around us. Then, we all went quiet, staring up at a dark sun with only the thinnest outline of light around it. There were no cows running, and I didn’t notice if any birds grew quiet or crickets got louder. Our puppies seemed confused, a bit anxious even, but not overwhelmingly so. The darkness lasted for less than two minutes before the sun started peeking out again, but that short period of time was worth every bit of hype I had rolled my eyes at in the weeks leading up to it. Seeing that natural phenomenon was well worth the journey. As for my mom, she was a bit disappointed she didn’t see cows frantically running away from the sun, but she seemed to think the experience was, overall, an adequate one. Another eclipse will grace us with its presence in 2024. The next one where the Roaring Fork Valley will be in the totality zone is in 2045. Make sure to plan accordingly. It’s well worth all of the hassle. Barbara Platts is now a solar eclipse chaser. She’s hooked. Reach her at bplatts.000@gmail.com or on Twitter @BarbaraPlatts.

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

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

WINEINK

BY KELLY J. HAYES

HARMONIC CONVERGENCE DUCKHORN BUYS CALERA

EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE things just go the way they are supposed to. Such was the case last week when a marriage between the Duckhorn Wine Co. (DWC) and Calera Wine Co. was announced. OK, so it was a purchase, a business transaction, rather than a marriage. But still, the simpatico that has long existed between these two KELLY J. entities ensures good HAYES things in the future for both sides as well as for those who love great wines. That sounds like the basis for a good marriage. For Josh Jensen, who founded Calera in 1975, it delivers a considerable and well-deserved chunk of change at the end of a long, well-trod road. Though a price was not disclosed, it can be assumed that a brand as respected as Calera and the hard assets that come with it drew top dollar in what is currently a white-hot market for premium wine brands. But more significantly for those who know Jensen, it provides the opportunity for him to pass on his legacy to people who understand his devotion to, and obsession with, quality. DWC can offer both the necessary resources and the stewardship to continue the dream that became a reality for one of California’s most driven wine makers. “Calera is my life’s work,” Jensen said about the sale. “In this era of industry consolidation, it was vital to me that I choose a partner that not only shares the values that have always defined Calera, but that also has the market presence to provide our wines a continued strong and secure route to market.” For DWC and its owners, TSG Consumer Partners, the purchase is outside the aviary of Duckhorn’s growing flock of what is now seven brands. To date, the company has internally hatched all of its associated “birds” (Duckhorn/Golden Eye/Paraduxx/ Migration/Decoy/Canvasback/ Calera) and this is the first time they have flown beyond their own nest to feather someone else’s. Sorry. I couldn’t help it.

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And what an acquisition it is. In addition to Calera’s winery, stock, staff (including Calera winemaker Mike Waller, who will be staying on) and tasting room, the DWC gets Calera’s exceptional vineyards that have long been the source of single vineyard pinot noirs that wine lovers have come to relish. The Selleck, Jensen, Reed, Mills, Ryan and de Villiers estate vineyards are some of the world’s most renowned pinot noir sites. Totaling 85 planted acres, these rugged vineyards in the Mt. Harlan AVA rise between 2,200 and 2,500 feet in the sky, and are loaded with limestone. But perhaps most significantly, this marriage unites two of the great success stories of the California wine revolution of the last century. In the mid-1970s, American wine was dominated by massproduced brands like Gallo and Paul Masson. But among a new generation of winemakers, the idea that California could make quality wines that would rival those of the French was just starting to germinate. In 1975, Jensen, who had developed a passion for pinot noir while working a pair of harvests at Domaine de la RomanéeConti in Burgundy fresh out of college at Oxford, planted his first vines. He had found a parcel of land rich in the limestone soils he believed would be the key to his wines in the Gavilan Mountains, 100 miles or so south of San Francisco. Jensen staked a claim and set about making his single vineyard pinot noir. This was a hard and forsaken place, but Jensen knew its potential. The next year, right around the time of the famed 1976 “Judgment of Paris,” which deemed a pair of California wines as worthy of global respect, Dan and Margaret Duckhorn began their quest for wine excellence, giving birth to their eponymous brand. Duckhorn would set a standard for merlot, especially from the Three Palms Vineyard. In 1978, Calera released its first vintage of pinot noir and Duckhorn released its first 800 cases of Merlot.

Aug u st 2 4 - Aug u st 30, 20 17

Over the next four decades, Jensen and the Duckhorns would become both friends and admirers of each other’s wines. Jensen’s road would be more singularly focused and solitary, while the Duckhorns would branch into other regions and varieties including pinot noir, which was always Dan Duckhorn’s first love. DWC’s production is now approaching a million cases from its myriad wine entities, while Calera weighs in at 35,000 cases annually. Now both Dan Duckhorn and Josh Jensen will sit on the board of the DWC and, no doubt, toast to their mutual success. Sometimes things just turn out the way they are supposed to. Kelly J. Hayes lives in the soon-to-be-designated appellation of Old Snowmass. He can be reached at malibukj@aol.com.

UNDER THE INFLUENCE CALERA 2015 PINOT NOIR CENTRAL COAST Though it is the single vineyard wines from Josh Jensen that draw the attention of pinot-philes, his Central Coast blends have always represented incredible value. Here, for less than $30, you have a wine that not only represents the style of this deft winemaker but delivers the fruits of the limestone-based vineyards as well. There may be no better bottle of wine to price ratio on the market today.


by KELLY J. HAYES

OPPOSITE PAGE: What is a calera? It is a limestone kiln. Here Josh Jensen stands under a calera on the site of the Calera Winery. THIS PAGE, ABOVE: An aerial view of the vineyards that make up Calera. THIS PAGE, LEFT TO RIGHT: Josh Jensen sold his interests in Calera to the Duckhorn Wine Co.; Dan Duckhorn, founder of the Duckhorn Wine Co., is a pioneer in the production of California wines, especially merlot from the Napa Valley.

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I really mean it when I say that none of us directors would be able to maintain any level of sanity without the help provided by Jazz Aspen Snowmass. More importantly, our students would suffer without JAS’s help.

—Nick Lenio, Basalt Band Instructor

Help JAS Keep the Music Playing!

ARTISTS’ GALLERY IN CARBONDALE

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Snowmass Sophistication Meets Mountain Elegance OPEN HOUSE Thursday, August 24th • 4 pm – 6 pm

Handsomely remodeled with luxury furnishings and refined details, this 3,485 sq ft, 4-bedroom, 4.5-bath Horse Ranch home is tucked toward the end of a culdu-sac and rests on a hillside with sumptuous perennial gardens, water features, deck, patios, hot tub, and only-in-Colorado mountain panoramas. The main level bubbles over with a worldly and warm personality, soaring ceilings, wood floors, a sun-soaked open floor plan, Top Chef-worthy kitchen, an elegant powder room, main level master suite with fireplace and A/C, as well as beautifully appointed bath with steam shower, jetted tub and walk in closet. The lower level includes two ensuite guest bedrooms, a bunkroom, office, bonus space/storage, and built-ins with a big screen TV in the family room. $3,495,000

Sally Shiekman-Miller, CRS 970.948.7530 Sally.Shiekman-Miller@sir.com

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

FOOD MATTERS FOOD MATTERS

by KATIE WORKMAN for THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COOKING ON DEADLINE PORK SCHNITZEL WITH CUCUMBER SALAD

SCHNITZELS ARE OFTEN MADE with veal or chicken, but pork is a great alternative. Pounding out the cutlets makes them even thinner and more tender, so they cook up quickly, perfect for a weeknight meal. And there’s that irresistible crunch from the Panko bread-crumb coating. This is one of those heartening dishes that’s

popular with both kids and adults. The tangy, quickly pickled cucumbers and onions make a great counterpoint to the lightly fried pork cutlets. You could definitely use dried dill instead of fresh if it’s easier. Also, yes, they’re called seedless cucumbers, but of course there are still a nominal amount of seeds in them. Removing the seeds

gives the salad a nicer texture, without the slightly slimy consistency of the seeds, and helps reduce any wateriness in the salad. A little tip: Double the cucumber salad next time you are serving a bagel and smoked salmon spread — it’s a great side for a brunch of any sort, especially as a foil to smoked fish.

MAKE IT PORK SCHNITZEL WITH QUICK, PICKLEY CUCUMBER SALAD Serves 2 to 4 Start to finish: 30 minutes Quick Pickley Cucumber Salad: 1 seedless cucumber, peeled if desired 1/2 red onion, very thinly sliced 2 teaspoons Kosher salt 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar 1/2 teaspoon sugar 1 tablespoon minced fresh dill (preferable) or 1 teaspoon dried dill Freshly ground black pepper to taste Pork Schnitzel: 4 1/2-inch (4 ounce) thick boneless pork chops 2 ⁄3 cup all-purpose flour 2 ⁄3 cup whole milk 1 cup Panko bread crumbs Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper to taste 2 teaspoons finely minced fresh thyme 2 to 4 tablespoons olive oil Slice the cucumber in half lengthwise, use a teaspoon to scoop out the seeds, and slice the cucumbers into thin half-moons. Place the sliced cucumber and the onion in a colander and toss with the salt. Let sit for 10 minutes, then rinse the cucumber and onion in very cold water and, using your hands, squeeze the vegetables to remove as much water as possible. Place the cucumber mixture in a clean dishtowel, roll up, and twist and squeeze to remove as much water as possible again. In a serving bowl, stir together the vinegar, sugar, dill and pepper. Add the cucumber and onion and toss to combine. Hold in the fridge. Place each pork chop between two pieces of plastic wrap and use a rolling pin (or bottle of wine) to gently pound the pork chops until they are of an even thickness between ¼- and 1⁄3-inch thick. Place the flour in a shallow bowl, the milk in another shallow bowl, and the Panko bread crumbs in a third shallow bowl. Season the flour and the milk lightly with salt and pepper. Stir the thyme into the Panko. Season the pork lightly with salt and pepper, then dip each piece into the flour, shaking off any excess, and then into the milk, then the Panko, pressing so that the bread crumbs adhere to the pork. Place the breaded pork on a plate or wire rack. Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a large skillet until hot. Cook the pork for about 3 minutes on each side until golden brown and just cooked through; you will probably need to do this in at least two batches, adding more oil for the second batch as needed. When the pieces of pork are cooked, place them briefly on a paper towel-lined plate to drain. Serve the pork with the Quick Pickley Cucumber Salad.

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Excellent Values in Brush Creek and Woody Creek with rental potential to help cover the mortgage

Spacious Brush Creek Home with Views

Private Riverside Fisherman’s Paradise

Conveniently located in the Aspen School District, this home sits on a private 2.66 acre lot with panoramic views. It features 3,600 sq ft, 5 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, remodeled kitchen, updated master bath and lower level 2 bedroom, 1 bath ADU with own entrance, cherry floors, fireplace and vaulted ceilings. Enjoy entertaining on the large deck with fenced yard, beautiful gardens and mature trees. There’s plenty of room in the 2 car garage, storage shed and ample outside parking. $1,850,000

This 2 acre riverside fisherman’s paradise enjoys superb river views from the large deck as well as just about every room. Features include wood floors, high ceilings, wood-burning fireplace, roomy master with soaking tub and steam shower, oversized guest bedroom and a mezzanine overlooking the living room.The lower level has 2 bedrooms and 1.5 baths, kitchen, patio and entrance. It is beautifully landscaped with 2 car garage+workshop, 2 acres, walkway to river and small island and is only 20 minutes to Aspen. $2,250,000

Sally Shiekman-Miller, CRS 970.948.7530 Sally.Shiekman-Miller@sir.com

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Great Prices

Great Cause

When you shop with us you’ll get high-quality, gently-used furniture, appliances, and building materials and help local families in need. It’s a win-win for everyone involved.

Locations and hours: HabitatRoaringFork.org 14

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by JEANNE MCGOVERN

SPIKED! With the end of summer break for the kids comes that sinking feeling that summer itself is drawing to a close. But, truly, there are plenty more warm days and outdoor adventures ahead. To celebrate this change of season, which really isn’t a change of season, our family has traditionally treated oursleves to ice cream after school in the first week — a way of proving to ourselves there’s still fun to be had. This year, to my delight,

TASTE IT

our ice cream adventure took us to CP Burger, right in downtown Aspen. The local burger joint and family-friendly hangout (complete with minigolf course) not only has an appealing menu of $5 milkshakes, it has an additional menu of “spiked shakes” for the grownups — including my absolute favorite Root Beer Float. And, of course, I am not opposed to recreating this tasty, boozy float at home. In fact, does summer really have to completely end when you can sip on something like this?

LIBATIONS WAS CREATED BY BELOVED ASPEN TIMES PUBLISHER GUNILLA ASHER, WHO DIED JUNE 2, 2014, AFTER A BRAVE BATTLE

CP Burger’s menu of spiked shakes include six options. Our favorites: • Root Beer Float: Blackmaker root beer liqueur, vanilla ice cream • Naughty Monkey: Banana, Butterscotch Schnapps, Stoli Vanil, vanilla ice cream • Pina Colorado: Malibu Rum, coconut, vanilla ice cream

WITH CANCER. CHEERS — TO GUNNER!

Weekly Sale Items! Skyy Vodka 750ml ……………………………………………$13.97 Milagro Silver Tequila 750ml ………………………………$22.47 Josh Cellars Cabernet Sauvignon ………………………$13.97 Louis Jadot Macon Villages ………………………………$11.97 Taittinger Champagne ……………………………………$36.97 Ca Del Sarto Prosecco ………………………………………$8.97 Dry Dock 6pk cans ……………………………………………$7.97 Tecate 12pk cans ……………………………………………$12.97

970.927.2002 | Willits Town Center | Next to Whole Foods | FREE Delivery

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SPONSORED CONTENT

Not to Miss Outdoor patio — perfect for summer sipping, dining and people-watching Ever changing specials, which are always fresh and cutting edge

BO SQ

312 S. MILL ST. • ASPEN • 970-710-7299 BOSQASPEN.COM

by JEANNE MCGOVERN AND AMANDA RAE

N

ew World food takes on a wholly new meaning in the lexicon of renowned Aspen chef C. Barlclay Dodge and his Bosq restaurant. “We all travel a lot here,” says the Aspen native, who opened Bosq to accolades last summer, which have only grown over time. “So what I’ve tried to do is take my own travels and gently weave them into our cuisines. We are not one type of food; we are world food.” The current lunch and dinner menus — not to mention the everchanging specials and seasonally fresh offerings — tell the tale. At lunch, try the farro salad with asparagus, morels, hazelnut-Parmesan crostini or a more hearty brie.l.t. sandwich (ciabatta, bacon, brie, fig jam). At dinner, the Alaskan halibut with molé amarillo, chayote squash, green olive, and cashew is creative summer success (the halibut also appears, as a ceviche, on the lunch menu). Sharable plates have changed ever-so-slightly to meet changing palates: the burrata (“always burrata, because this town loves burrata”) is now being served in a clear tomato gazpacho with heirloom tomatoes and basil; the seafood crudo is now a refreshing salmon crudo with sesame, tostada and cucumber ceviche. Still, some traditions hold true.

AS SEEN IN

EAT

A Bosq signature dish since its opening, Peking duck (with cucumbers, leeks, pancakes, hoisin sauce) remains a staple of the dinner menu. The reasons for such an eclectic feel? Dodge himself. Dining at Bosq is to peek into the mind of a chef, one “not bound by tradition” Dodge says, but drawn to using rich ingredients in sauces and proteins (beef, chicken, fish, game) and simple techniques and carefully arrayed ingredients, calling to mind the very name of the restaurant, abbreviated Spanish for “woodlands.” Lightness carries over to the bar, where libations are served up via an expanded list of American and Old World wine, handcrafted cocktails and more. All of this is perfectly complemented by the unparalleled outdoor patio. “In summer, I can’t think of a better location to enjoy Aspen,” says Dodge, pointing to the hustling confluence of Wagner Park, the

PRICES Snacks, $6 to $12; appetizers, $12 to $18; entrées, $28 and up; dessert, $11; bar menu, under $20. AMBIENCE Intimate, Scandinavian-woodland cool. SIGNATURE DISHES Peking duck, Crispy Eggplant, Octopus, Tempura Shiitakes

Mill Street Mall and the Dancing Fountains just beyond the seating area. “The menu, the ambience…it all adds up to a great experience.” We would have to agree. top to bottom: Kale Chicharones, with Smoked Chili Salt; Chimichurri Grilled Steak with Salsa Macha, Piquillo Peppers, Grilled Onions; Salmon Crudo Sesame Tostada, Cucumber Ceviche.

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TICKETS ARE ONLY $25!

See the full festival schedule at wheeloperahouse.com 18

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#mfilmaspen


VOYAGES

DESTINATION | CANADA

by ADAM KEALOHA CAUSEY for THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A TASTE OF IT ALL

FROM RUGGED HIKES TO UPSCALE RESORTS IN CANADIAN ROCKIES CANADA’S STRETCH of the Rocky Mountains is an outdoor paradise with something for everyone: upscale resorts surrounded by jagged mountains, isolated hikes offering an escape from urban life and crystal-blue water that dares you to feel the chill. The mountains straddle the border of British Columbia and Alberta, with two of its best-known destinations, Banff National Park and Lake Louise, in Alberta. My family and I flew into Calgary, rented cars and spent a week exploring the wonders around Banff, setting up base camp in Canmore, about 60 miles west of Calgary. Our accommodations were at the midway point between luxury and roughing it. Cabins at Banff Gate Mountain Resort have a full kitchen and electricity, but no air conditioning. That worked fine on summer nights when temperatures dipped into the 50s. Late afternoon sun beating in got the cabins toasty. That’s not a problem, though, in a place where there’s plenty to do besides sit indoors.

Here are some highlights: JOIN THE THRONGS AT LAKE LOUISE

Banff is the most popular of the area’s cluster of national parks — which also includes Jasper, Yoho and Kootenay — and Banff ’s crown jewel is the glacial-fed Lake Louise. The lake is exquisite, as evidenced by selfies snapped along its shoreline walking paths, capturing smiling families with snow-covered mountains in the background. If being on the water is your preferred way to experience the lake, canoe rentals are available through Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise, a decidedly more chic hotel than where we stayed. If crowds aren’t your thing, plan to get to Lake Louise as early as possible. We didn’t venture that way until noon, and parking lots were packed. Crowds are likely to be bigger than usual this year, because admission to Canada’s national parks is free in observance of the nation’s 150th birthday.

HEAR THE ROAR OF TAKAKKAW FALLS

For a more rugged experience, we left the masses of Banff behind, bound for Takakkaw Falls in Yoho. Heading west into British Columbia (and the Pacific time zone) you pick up an hour, so that may have helped us beat the crowd a bit, too. Even before we got out of the parking lot — about a half-mile from the falls — we could hear their mighty roar. Tumbling from 1,246 feet, the 60-degree air took on a chill as mist filled the air. A refreshing start to the day preceded what eventually became a 12-mile round-trip hike. From Takakkaw we took the Iceline Trail, which included views of the Yoho and Little Yoho rivers and Laughing Falls. TAKE IN THE SIGHTS FROM THE BOW RIVER

Not everyone in our crew enjoys a hike, but we do all like the water. Sections of the Canadian Rockies include whitewater, but we decided to go for a smoother ride with Canmore River Adventures. The six

of us joined another family of three on a wide raft paddled by a guide. At one point we stopped and were told to touch a finger or toe to the water if we dared. I did, but I didn’t stay keep my hand in for long — the guide said the river’s temperature was about 40 degrees and wouldn’t get any warmer. Our one-hour float down the beautiful Bow River included sightings of an elk that had swum to an island to munch on grass and — just before we exited the boat— a bald eagle that dove into the water and came up clasping a fish. It was a fitting end to a spectacular trip. SEASONS

If you can’t get there this summer, the weather remains relatively mild into September, when larch and aspen trees turn gold as fall arrives. And there’s always winter skiing: The slopes typically open in November.

IF YOU GO... CANADIAN ROCKIES: http:// www.canadianrockies.net/ CANADA’S NATIONAL PARKS: https://www.pc.gc. ca/en/pn-np. Areas of British Columbia and Alberta are experiencing hot and dry weather conditions with wildfire risks in some national parks. Check for warnings and conditions before planning your trip.

CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: The Yoho River flows through Yoho National Park in Canada’s stretch of the Rocky Mountains, straddling the border of British Columbia and Alberta; a bridge crosses a stream along the Iceline Trail in Yoho National Park; water tumbles 1,246 feet at Takakkaw Falls in Yoho National Park.

PHOTOS BY ADAM KEALOHA CAUSEY

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MOUNTAINMAYHEM

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

SCENES FROM THE SUMMER

MAY SELBY

THIS MONTH’S BEEN A BLUR with activities, anniversaries, adventures and special occasions. A few events of note celebrated over the past week include birthday celebrations for Kimberly Levin and several friends at a campout dubbed Leo Fest on Aug. 11, a white party for local Lynn Chaffier on Aug. 15 and a trip to D-Town for David Cook on Aug 15. Kimberly’s birthday drew scores of friends to a scenic spot to camp, cook and sleep under the stars. For Lynn’s birthday, the guest of honor was

Joey Giampaolo with his lady, birthday girl Kimberly Levin, at the Leo Fest camping trip.

Billy Zuehlke lends advice to birthday boy Ted Mahon at the Caribou.

Be bear aware. Snowmass Village-based sharpshooter Steve Goff snapped this pic of a cub in his yard last week. Courtesy photo.

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feted with a few dozen friends gathered at a spectacular home overlooking Aspen and Aspen Mountain. David rang in his 40th with 30 tickets to a Rockies game on Aug. 18, surrounded by his wife and favorite peeps. On Aug. 17, The Little Nell celebrated 20 years of winning Wine Spectator’s Grand Award by bringing in Chef Francis Mallmann of Patagonia to prepare a feast by open fire at the base of Aspen Mountain, followed by dinner that night presented by past and current sommeliers on staff.

Contact May with insights, invites or info: allthewaymaymay@hotmail.com

David Cook, front and center, rings in his big 4-0 with 29 friends at a Rockies game Aug. 18. Christine Benedetti photo.

Kristin Pride, Roy Saba and Lynn Chaffier. Courtesy photo.

Jo Ann and Stuart Nathan, birthday girl Lynn Chaffier, Mark Friedland and Evan Blondin. Courtesy photo.

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Epic adventures this month include the Aspen Backcountry Marathon that took place Aug. 12, as well as the Leadville 100 Mountain Bike Race that day. Yoga with a View continues atop Aspen Mountain through Labor Day, led by Shakti Shala. Enjoy the rest of summer in the mountains — it always goes by far too quickly.

Hikers Bethany Smith and Andra Zeppelin of Denver tackle Aspen Mountain.

Birthday party hostess Muriel Angot with birthday girl Lynn Chaffier. Courtesy photo.

British editor Angelica Malin of About Time Magazine with her mum, Suzi Malin, after Yoga with a View atop Aspen Mountain.


by MAY SELBY

Chace Dillon and Jill Carnevale scout out peaks on a trail run.

Ben Brennan at the start to the Aspen Backcountry Marathon, which he raced quickly, placing first in his age group.

Robert Bohr and Jordan Salicito of New York at The Little Nell’s 20th Anniversary Dinner.

Certified sommelier Amanda Severin popping bottles at an outdoor dinner party this summer.

Caspian Whiting camping with his parents, Aly and Amos, for Leo Fest.

Somms unite: Carlton McCoy, Sabato Sagaria, Dustin Wilson, Bobby Stuckey, Chubby Oveges and Jonathan Pullis.

Aspen Magazine editor-in-chief Christine Benedetti, Wine Spectator editor-at-large Harvey Steiman and Aspen Peak editor-in-chief Etta Meyer.

Little Nell senior event manager Melina Glavas, Argentine celebrity chef Francis Mallmann and Stefanie Cove of Stefanie Cove and Company, a global event design and production business.

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54ShadyLane.com Hunter Creek Masterpiece

Located by Hunter Creek, this 6,601 sq ft, 4 bedroom home features a game room and wonderful spaces for entertaining. Walk to town and enjoy the Rio Grande and Hunter Creek trails. Construction completion in 2019. $24,950,000 Furnished Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125; Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

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Magnificent White Horse Springs Estate

Move in Today and Enjoy this View Forever!

New Contemporary Half-Duplex

Thoughtfully designed to capture expansive views. Impeccably maintained on 8.36 acres on McLain Flats just 10 minutes to Aspen. Main floor master, 4 en suite guest rooms, separate caretaker apartment, elevator. Beautiful grounds and patio. $8,950,000 Furnished AnneAdare Wood – 970.274.8989

Just completed mountain contemporary home with 5 ensuite bedrooms plus media room and office. Topof-the-line quality finishes throughout, elevator, A/C and golf course and Nordic ski access. $6,750,000 Furnished Sally Shiekman-Miller, CRS – 970.948.7530

Amazing views! Completion summer of 2017. Very cool 4 bedroom contemporary with open living areas and great outdoor spaces including a rooftop deck. $6,750,000 HomestakeViews.com Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125 Craig Morris – 970.379.9795

Brand New Snowmass Residence

Beautiful Aspen Highlands Townhome

Direct Ski-in/Ski-out to Gondola

To be completed late summer 2017, this 4,455 sq ft contemporary home offers panoramic views of Snowmass and includes 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, 3 car garage and high end finishes throughout. $4,995,000 353Terrace.com Chris Klug – 970.948.7055

Enjoy dramatic views from this 4 bedroom, 5.5 bath, 4 level townhome with a beautiful outdoor entertaining area. Ritz Carlton Club amenities are included. Just steps away from the Aspen Highlands Ski Area. $4,750,000 Zach Lentz – 970.309.5781

Open floor plan home with 5 bedrooms and an excellent location. Ski, bike, and hike right out your door. Enjoy access to the Woodrun V Townhomes’ pool, jacuzzis and meeting rooms. Fantastic opportunity! $4,250,000 Furnished Terry Rogers – 970.379.2443

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The Sales Volume Leader in Aspen/Snowmass and and The Global Real Estate Leader Aspen

Snowmass Village

Basalt

Carbondale

Glenwood Springs

AspenSnowmassSIR.com

North Star Lodge

Brilliant stars, moonlight reflected on the snow, coyote and elk calls — experience this and more within 2 miles from Aspen’s core. This 7 bedroom enchanting estate has been painstakingly built with fine, hand-selected materials and impressive large rooms with soaring windows. $12,950,000 Tory Thomas – 970.948.1341

Diamond J Ranch

In the Core of Historic Basalt

Aspen Duplex Development Opportunity

32 private acres with 3 ponds, 1,700+ ft of Frying Pan River frontage, 15 cabins, a main lodge with 8 guest rooms, 6 baths, a commercial kitchen and dining room. Very popular for weddings or retreats. $3,150,000 Furnished Charley Podolak | 970.948.0100

Two Rivers Bar & Cafe, Midland Shoe, residence in rear with 2 private parking spots, large storage building and 2nd story office. Approved easement from Homestead Drive. Historic designation. $2,895,000 Bennett Bramson – 970.274.0479

Rent this current duplex for $6000 while you plan your project. Build approximately 4160 sq ft per side plus 500 ft garage allowed. Ample sunshine, views up the Pass and toward town, easy access to trails $2,795,000 Al Fiorello – 970.379.1870

Riverfront with Spectacular Views

Viceroy Luxury Condominium

Hayden Penthouse

4 bedroom, 5 bath, 4,869 sq ft Aspen Glen home with amazing Mt Sopris, 18th fairway and river views. Exterior maintenance amenity, Gold Medal fishing just steps away, Jack Nicklaus golf course, tennis, pool, gym and dining.

PREMIER 4 bedroom residence with open kitchen, generous living area and 4 bedroom suites with direct ski-in/ski-out access. Finest services and amenities. $2,500,000 Completely Furnished Garrett Reuss – 970.379.3458 Stephanie Lewis – 970.948.7219

Spectacular views directly up the base of Snowmass Ski Area. Top floor 3-bedroom with vaulted ceilings, underground parking and large owner storage. Contemporary design with many upgrades. $2,375,000 $2,349,000 Furnished Kathy DeWolfe – 970.948.8142

$2,750,000 Furnished Sue Hess – 970.309.5455

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Take Advantage of These Summer Incentives and More!

As if you needed another reason…

Brand new mountain contemporary…

A sweet deal just became a SWEET DEAL…

Now you’ve got a million and one. A brand new, furnished 4,500 sq ft, 5 bedroom + office, 6 bath luxury duplex that’s kissing distance from the golf course and features postcard-worthy views of Pyramid Peak, Aspen Highlands and Tiehack. Contract to buy by Labor Day and receive one million airline miles to fly in friends and family for a move-in, memory-making celebration. $6,750,000

Nestled at the 4th hole of the Aspen Golf Course and connected only by the 2 car garage, this mountain contemporary half duplex lives and feels like a single family home. Featuring over 4000 sq ft with 4 en-suite bedrooms plus media room, wine cellar, top-of-the-line quality finishes, 2 car garage and outstanding golf course and mountain views. $6,995,000

If you need another reason to make this furnished 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath, 3,584 sq ft golf course duplex yours, here are a few more: Contract to buy by Labor Day and the pot will be sweetened with up to $10,000 worth of backyard toys, including a platinum golf club membership, new golf clubs and private lessons with a pro, plus new cross-country ski equipment and instruction. $3,995,000

Sally Shiekman-Miller, CRS 970.948.7530 Sally.Shiekman-Miller@sir.com

SallyShiekman.com

Aspen Youth Center BUILDS CHARACTER KEEPS YOUTH SAFE SUPPORTS FAMILIES & COMMUNITY

IS GRATEFUL FOR YOUR SUPPORT! www.aspenyouthcenter.org ~ (970) 544-4130 AYC is located upstairs in the Aspen Recreation Center at 0861 Maroon Creek Rd. 24

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River Ninjas

Fly Fishing: Where Art, Science & Serenity Become One

by JEANNE MCGOVERN photos by ANNA STONEHOUSE

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IN MID-JULY, ON ONE OF the busiest days of the summer season in Aspen, this is what I heard: the rippling waters of the Roaring Fork River, birds and insects buzzing about, the light rustling of trees, and the amazingly serene swoosh of the fly rod in my hand as I cast — over and over and over again — on my first-ever attempt at fly fishing. I have heard, from several seasoned fishermen, there is nothing quite like a day spent on the river with a fly rod in hand. In that moment of hushed peacefulness, I understood. It seemed to me to be the perfect blending of art, science and serenity. And then, WHAM! I felt a gentle tug, which turned into a rather ungraceful “setting” of the hook and an even more chaotic attempt to reel the fish in to shore. To my inexperienced self, it felt like I had caught a shark. It swam (hard) away, as I reeled — “a little slower” ... “give it some line,” the guide reminded me. This game of cat-and-mouse continued for what seemed like hours before a mid-sized rainbow trout was dangling before me. The calm of cast had been replaced by the rush of the catch. I was hooked. “That’s our job, to show you a good time,” says Tom Menas, a guide with Aspen Outfitting Co., who took myself and photographer Anna Stonehouse out on a section of private water the company manages near Woody Creek. Catching that fish was fun, but as we spent the morning with Menas talking about all things fly fishing — he hits the river every day, whether he’s working or not, and sometimes both when he’s working and when he get off work — it became as clear

as the river we were fishing that the sport is about far more than throwing a line in the water. “There is nothing else quite like it,” Menas says, clearly enthused and genuinely passionate about his job and his life spent fly fishing. “You get to be outside, you have to know your environment, nothing’s every guaranteed. ... Every day is different on the water.” For example, the day we spent with Menas, caddis were beginning to hatch. This, in the fly fishing world, is big. But while it’s easy — even to the novice fisherman — to take note of the flies swirling around your head, there is more to the story. Menas grabs a rock from just below the water’s surface and turns it over; various types of mayfly nymphs, which would soon finish the growth cycle to become actual flies, prompt Menas to put the rod down, dig into his pack and find his box of flies. He then changes out the bait. The golden ticket, he explains, is finding the exact replica of what the fish are eating and using that to lure them in. In Menas’ box of flies, many are hand-tied; they can also be purchased at fly fishing shops like Aspen Outfitters (which has storefronts in the St. Regis Aspen and a newly opened one next to the Woody Creek Tavern). It is in this regard, the art of fly fishing — the gentle arc of the cast, mending the line so it travels downstream just so, setting the hook when a fish bites and then patiently reeling it in — becomes the science of fishing. “There is nothing wrong with just heading out to the river and giving it a go ... I mean, how can a day spent like this ever be bad?” Menas says.

“Catch and release: A practice within fly fishing intended as a technique of conservation. Fish should be fought quickly and never allowed to tire to the point of exhaustion to prevent injury or death. After capture, the fish is unhooked using wet hands ‘or no touching if possible’ and forceps and returned to the water as quickly as possible. If necessary, resuscitate by pointing the fish’s head upstream into the current and waiting until it swims off under its own power.” – Fly Fishing Lingo, www.redington.com

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“But when you bring with you a bit of knowledge, it can make the experience that much greater.” For many, that knowledge is gained by fishing with a guide; Aspen Outfitters is just one of many in the Roaring Fork Valley (Frying Pan Anglers, Taylor Creek and countless others come to mind) that offer guide services of all types. Trips run on the Roaring Fork River, Frying Pan River, with both private stretches and public access offered by most companies. Lake, pond and reservoir fishing is also out there. And you can fly fish year-round. It is, at least in Menas’ eyes, the perfect Rocky Mountain sport. “When the hatches are big, it’s exciting,” he says. “But when it’s a bit slower, you can really think about the sport, spend time in the wilderness, regroup.” And to myself and Anna, the idea of winter fly fishing

— though cold — was especially appealing. Why? Menas understood. “It is so silent out here in winter. The banks are covered in white, the water is just a trickle, but there are still fish,” he says. “And, I guess, at the end of the day, that’s what it’s about — trying to catch that fish.” When Jon Hollinger started his outfitting company nearly 40 years ago (they also offer guided target shooting and hunting trips), he says his goal was to offer others the chance to “traditional outdoor pursuits” at the very highest level. For us, the introduction to one of these formerly foreign outdoor pursuits was benefit enough. One day spent on the river was worth a million spent at the office.

“Matching the hatch: An attempt by a fly angler to select an artificial fly that imitates the color, size, shape and behavior of natural insects that fish are feeding at a particular time.” – Fly Fishing Lingo, www.redington.com

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By WAY OF THE WATER WHILE FLY FISHING may be a way of life for many who live in or visit the Roaring Fork Valley, it is by no means the only way to enjoy the waters that surround Aspen. In fact, there are countless ways to explore this Rocky Mountain paradise by way of the water. Here is the story of one of our favorites ...

SAIL AWAY If you have a boat, the best — and really one of the only — way to enjoy cruising around is a trip to Ruedi Reservoir. Located just above Basalt along the Frying Pan River, this expansive body of water is ground zero for local water skiing, wind surfing, sailing and more (think ice fishing in winter). And while you can find plenty of information online about activities at Ruedi, for the first summer in nearly 50 years, Aspen’s lone sailing program is navigating the waters without its leader at the helm. We thought it worth reflecting on here, and share this article by Erica Robbie from a recent edition of The Aspen Times: Don Sheeley, a longtime Aspen local who died in January, started

a children’s sailing school on the shores of Ruedi Reservoir in 1971. In honor of Sheeley and his contributions to the community, which extend well beyond his aquatic endeavors, the city of Aspen on July 10 passed a proclamation to rename its sailing program the Don Sheeley Sailing School. In a full-circle series of events, two of Sheeley’s former students — his daughter, Courtney Wyckoff, and Taylor Hale — now direct the sailing program, which the city Parks and Recreation Department has managed since the school’s inception.Hale, who first joined the program as a child in the early 1990s, said leading the school after Sheeley is “one of the highest honors of my life.” “Don Sheeley was just a really special, unique, stand-out guy. He made all the difference for so many kids in this valley, myself included,” Hale said. “He was really a pillar of the community.” Without Sheeley at the reservoir, Hale seeks to emulate his predecessor’s teaching style, among other traits. “Don’s whole philosophy, which I completely agree with, is you’ll learn it by doing it,”

he said. “He always made us (students) feel that he trusted us.” Wyckoff echoed Hale’s sentiment and said, “We (as students) all really appreciated it.” “It wasn’t like a coach yelling at you. It was trial and error. We learned by doing,” Wyckoff said. “Through that, I think it was a lot more rewarding than someone holding your hand throughout.” Hale said Sheeley’s style of teaching conveyed self-reliance. “And with sailing, in particular, you have to have that,” Hale said. The thought of returning to Ruedi without Sheeley — no less teaching a group of 10- to 14-yearsolds on the open water — was daunting at first, Hale said. “Honestly, I was pretty terrified,” Hale said. “Just the mental aspect of knowing Don was there (in the past). ... He was the epitome of calmness and such genuine, deep confidence.” Despite his initial trepidation, Hale said this summer at the school has been smooth sailing. “It turned out that this summer’s class has been, honest to God, some of the best kids that I recall in the past five or 10 years. They’re fearless,” he said, and are thriving in spite of

some “radically” unpredictable weather on the water. Hale explained how unlike ocean sailing, which typically offers more predictable, less extreme conditions, “anything can happen” sailing on a lake, and even more so at high altitudes. “It’s either dead calm or it is whipping, whipping, whipping, where we are the only ones out here,” he said. Perhaps this is why one of Sheeley’s most remembered mottos at the school remains: “If you can sail at Ruedi, you can sail anywhere.” ...

ON A ROLL

And while Sheeley’s contributions to life on the water locally cannot be underestimated, there are a few other activities worth noting (and not missing). Kayaking and rafting are big on stretches of the Roaring Fork and Colorado rivers. The ideal way to get prepped: kayak rolling classes at the Aspen Recreation. Also high on the summer t0-do list: SUPing or tubing Stillwater, a leap off the dam at Chapman Reservoir or Devil’s Punchbowl, and Sunday Fundays at any outdoor pool.

TOP ROW: Sean Connolly (far right) and members of the newly dedicated Don Sheeley Sailing School spend a day on Ruedi Reservoir. BOTTOM ROW: Rolf Fraser (far left) and other kayakers spend an evening in the Aspen Recreation Centerer pool working on their skills.

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PHOTOS BY ANNA STONEHOUSE


Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!

I really mean it when I say that none of us directors would be able to maintain any level of sanity without the help provided by Jazz Aspen Snowmass. More importantly, our students would suffer without JAS’s help.

—Nick Lenio, Basalt Band Instructor

PIXIE

Pixie is an adorable 4-year-old Chihuahua mix female. She is so sweet and friendly with everyone—kids, aduilts and other dogs.

LUCY

Lucy, a 1.5-year-old Chihuahua Terrier mix, arrived with the cutest 4-weekold pups. They will all be available for adoption in late September when the pups are 8 weeks old. Lucy is a great mom and very loving to all.

...AND MORE CHIHUAHUA MIX PUPS

The shelter is overflowing with 5-week-old, tiny Chihuahua mix puppies who will be available for adoption when they are 8 weeks old. You are welcome to visit with them at the shelter.

JINX

Help JAS Keep the Music Playing! jazzaspensnowmass.org/jas-education

Jinx is a little wild man. At just 4 months old, he loves to race around the cat room and entertain himself. He is a black and white domestic short-hair. An active, very cool kitty.

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR 970.544.0206

LUCY’S PUPS Lucy’s pups are just 4 weeks old. They will be available for adoption in late September when they will be 8 weeks old. They are Chihuahua/Terrier mixes and sooooo cute!

CALLIE

Beautiful, 7-year-old Pit Bull mix who can not be trusted in all situations with other dogs. She is a loyal, loving, athletic, affectionate companion who will require a knowledgeable, responsible home.

GUS

Gus is a shy but gentle, 4-month-old black and tancolored Australian Shepherd/Cattle Dog mix who needs to be adopted by a patient, loving home in order for him to come out of his shell.

It’s time to sign up to sponsor pages in our 2018 award-winning pet calendar! A great way to showcase your pet while supporting our spay/neuter and rescue programs. Please call Kathryn at 970.305.1165 for further information.

OSCAR AND SADIE

Ten-year-old German Shorthaired Pointer siblings. They are happy, friendly dogs searching for a comfortable, yet active home.

MILES

Handsome, friendly, two-year-old male cat who gets along well with everyone.

Thanks to all of our supporters, our shelter and its non-profit Friends (F.A.A.S.) have neutered over 16,000 dogs + cats with our spay/neuter program!

ARJUNA

IDA

Three-year-old black and white domestic short-haired male. Great hunter. Nice, loving cat.

Sweet, gentle, 5-month-old tan and white-colored Cattle Dog mix who gets along well with everyone.

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter

101 Animal Shelter Road

www.dogsaspen.com

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

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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

by ANDREW TRAVERS

ONES TO WATCH AT MOUNTAINFILM FILM FESTIVAL RUNS THROUGH SUNDAY

AS OUR ALL-TOO SHORT summer wanes, it’s hard to keep mountainfolk indoors. But if there’s any worthy excuse to come in from the sunshine and fresh air or to skip a night under the stars, it’s Mountainfilm in Aspen. The annual co-presentation of Telluride Mountainfilm and the Wheeler Opera House — renamed Mountainfilm in Aspen after years as MountainSummit — opened Wednesday and runs through Sunday, Aug. 27. It showcases the newest and best in adventure film storytelling, straight from the renowned Telluride Mountainfilm festival, with some surprises and extraordinary special guests in store. “We have curated an impressive film lineup for fans of adventure, exploration and inspiration,” Wheeler executive director Gena Buhler said last month when the lineup was announced. Along with five days of screenings in the Wheeler, events include panel discussions at the Little Nell on a range from topics from climate change to streaming media’s effect on documentary filmmaking and a new “lunch film series” at the Cooking School of Aspen. Those screenings include “Fishpeople” (Thursday, 12:30 p.m.) about six diverse people — a diver, a spear fisher, a surfer and others — who virtually live in the ocean. The festival’s special guests include “Chasing Coral” director Jeff Orlowski, who will be on hand for Friday night’s screening of his film. If you missed this eye-opening documentary about the underwater crisis of climate change at Aspen Ideas Fest and AREDAY, don’t skip Friday’s presentation. This year’s lineup spans from earnest environmental documentaries like “The End of Snow” to celebrations of outdoor awesomeness like the Laird Hamilton documentary “Take Every Wave.” Here are some of the anticipated summits of Mountainfilm in Aspen: CHARGED: THE EDUARDO GARCIA STORY

Thursday, Aug. 24, 7 p.m. Garcia is known as “the bionic

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chef.” He suffered life-threatening injuries six years ago when he was electrocuted in a backcountry accident, and now cooks — to great acclaim — with a prosthetic arm. This film recounts his inspiring recovery and culinary career. (Garcia will be at Thursday’s screening and will host a community dinner on Sunday, see related story, page 4). THE LAST HONEY HUNTER

Friday, Aug. 25, 12:30 p.m. Mauli Dhan Rai is a spiritual honey hunter who scales cliffs high in the mountains of Nepal, harvesting poisonous honey made by the world’s largest honeybee for the Kulung people. The Kulung believe the honey comes directly from the gods. But this remote spiritual tradition is under threat by the modernization creeping steadily through Nepal. Director Ben Knight, who embedded with Mauli Dhan Rai and the Kulung, will be on hand for Friday’s screening.

KIDS KINO

Sunday, Aug. 27, Noon Mountainfilm in Aspen’s kids’ presentation has expanded widely in recent years, adding hands-on, interactive activities to this alwayspopular afternoon of kid-friendly short films. atravers@aspentimes.com

IF YOU GO WHAT: Mountainfilm in Aspen, presented by the Wheeler Opera House and Telluride Mountainfilm WHERE: Wheeler Opera House WHEN: Through Sunday, Aug. 27 HOW MUCH: $25/single tickets; $60/Pick 3 Pass; $140/Festival Pass. TICKETS: Wheeler box office; www.aspenshowtix.com

DIRTBAG: THE LEGEND OF FRED BECKEY

Friday, Aug. 25, 5:30 p.m. The elusive climbing god Fred Beckey was too busy racking up first ascents throughout most of his legendary climbing career to slow down and let somebody make a movie about him. But 12 years ago, at age 83, the original “dirtbag” gave Colorado filmmaker Dave O’Leske intimate access to his life and archives. O’Leske, who will be in Aspen this weekend, spent the following decade at Beckey’s side making an extraordinary film about adventure, sacrifice and a truly one-of-a-kind mountain character. BLOOD ROAD

Saturday, Aug. 26, 5:30 p.m. Ultra-endurance athlete Rebecca Rusch took her mountain bike to Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia to ride some 1,200 miles of the Ho Chi Minh Trail in search of the site where her father’s plane crashed 45 years ago during the height of the Vietnam War. The film follows her on her personal journey through the jungle and into history. Rusch will appear via Skype after Saturday’s screening.

Aug u st 2 4 - Aug u st 30, 20 17

From top: “Charged: The Eduardo Garcia Story,” “Blood Road,” “The Last Honey Hunter,” “Dirtbag: The Legend of Fred Beckley.”


THELISTINGS

AUG. 24-30, 2017

420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. LIVE POETRY NIGHT — 6:30 p.m., The Mountain Chalet, 333 E. Durant Ave., Aspen. Poets and listeners of all ages are welcome. 970-379-2136 ELDREN — 10 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. 970-544-9800

MONDAY, AUG. 28 ASTRONOMY NIGHT: ZODIAC CONSTELLATIONS — 8:30 p.m., ACES at Hallam Lake, 100 Puppy Smith St., Aspen. Basic astronomy concepts such as lifecycle of a star, reasons for meteor showers, Zodiac constellations, or how phases of the moon work.

TUESDAY, AUG. 29

Charles Bradley & His Extraordinaires will headline Belly Up on Aug. 30.

THURSDAY, AUG. 24 ASPEN SUMMER HOLIDAY: TEA, DANCE AND POOL PARTY — 4 p.m., The Limelight Hotel, 355 S. Monarch St., Aspen. MOUNTAINFILM IN ASPEN AND EXPLORE BOOKSELLERS PRESENT SWIMMER LYNNE COX — 4 p.m., Explore Booksellers, 221 E. Main St., Aspen. Lynne Cox, best known for her 1987 crossing of the Bering Strait, discusses her new memoir, “Swimming in the Sink.” LIVE MUSIC — 6:30 p.m., The Limelight Hotel, 355 S. Monarch St., Aspen. Smokin’ Joe and Zoe. ASPEN SUMMER HOLIDAY: THE SINGLES AND COUPLES MIXER — 6:30 p.m., Aspen Kitchen, 515 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen. Benefiting The Generations Project.

p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. 970-544-9800

FRIDAY, AUG. 25 RAGNAR RELAY COLORADO — 7 a.m., Snowmass Village. Reaching 10,000 feet at its highest point, it has been dubbed as one of the hardest Ragnar Relays in the series. ASPEN SUMMER HOLIDAY: TEA, DANCE AND POOL PARTY — 4 p.m., The Limelight Hotel, 355 S. Monarch St., Aspen. LOCAL VIBES MUSIC SERIES — 4:30 p.m., Artisan Restaurant-Stonebridge, 300 Carriage Way, Snowmass Village. Damian Smith. UPTOWN STRUTTERS — 7 p.m., Heather’s Savory Pies and Tapas Bar, 166 Midland Ave., Basalt.

HADEN GREGG, HAP HARRIMAN AND DANA UNDERWOOD — 7 p.m., Heather’s Savory Pies and Tapas Bar, 166 Midland Ave., Basalt.

FIRST FOOTBALL GAME OF THE SEASON — 7 p.m., Aspen Middle School Turf, 235 High School Road, Aspen.

JIMMY’S HIGH SEAS PARRRHHTY! — 9 p.m., Jimmy’s Restaurant, 205 S. Mill St., Aspen. Join Captain Jimmy and crew for a pirate-themed costume party filled with rumpacked cocktails and music by DJ Naka G.

MEN’S VOWS: MARRY THE MAN — 8:30 p.m., St. Regis, 315 E. Dean St., Aspen. An exciting evening of glamour, cocktails and late-night dancing benefiting the LGBTQ National Task Force.

ASPEN SUMMER HOLIDAY: WELCOME TO COLORADO PARTY — 10

SATURDAY, AUG. 26 OPEN DAYS PROGRAM GARDEN TOUR — 10 a.m., The Aspen Institute, 1000 N. Third St., Aspen. Explore five private and public gardens in Aspen and Old Snowmass open for self-guided tours to benefit the Garden Conservancy. 888-842-2442 LIVE MUSIC WITH DAMIAN SMITH AND DENNIS JUNG — 4 p.m., Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen. ASPEN SUMMER HOLIDAY: TEA, DANCE AND POOL PARTY — 4 p.m., The Limelight Hotel, 355 S. Monarch St, Aspen. . ROBIN LORE — 7 p.m., Heather’s Savory Pies and Tapas Bar, 166 Midland Ave., Basalt. SMOKIN’ JOE AND ZOE — 9 p.m., Saint Regis Hotel, 315 E. Dean St., Aspen. THE BUDOS BAND WITH SPECIAL GUEST HANNI EL KHATIB — 9 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. 970-544-9800

SUZZANNE PARIS AND FRIENDS — 7 p.m., Heather’s Savory Pies and Tapas Bar, 166 Midland Ave., Basalt. Acoustic: folk/rock/soul. ASPEN WEEKLY WRITERS’ GROUP — 7 p.m., The Red Brick, 110 E. Hallam St., Aspen. Aspen Weekly Writers’ Group. Get feedback from other writers about content, eventual publication, recital or display of your work. Bring five copies, double-spaced. Free.

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 30 SMOKIN’ JOE AND ZOE — 6 p.m., Sage Bar, Snowmass Village, 0239 Snowmass Club Circle, Snowmass Village. CHARLES BRADLEY & HIS EXTRAORDINAIRES — 8:30 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. 970-544-9800 LIVE MUSIC WITH DAMIAN SMITH AND DENNIS JUNG — 9 p.m., Red Onion, 420 E. Cooper Ave., Aspen.

MEN’S VOWS: FINALE DANCE PARTY — 10 p.m., Bootsy Bellows, 308 E. Hopkins Ave., Aspen.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 27 LIVE MUSIC WITH THE DAN FORDE EXPERIENCE — 4 p.m., Red Onion,

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

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SPONSORED CONTENT

AS SEEN IN

FAT BE LLY BU RGE R S

EAT

220 MAIN ST. CARBONDALE 970-963-1569 FATBELLYBURGERS.COM by JEANNE MCGOVERN

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ometimes, the recipe for success is to keep things simple — and Carbondale’s Fatbelly Burgers is a prime example of this mantra. “Our menu is pretty straightforward, though we’ve added a few extras over the years,” says Francie Jacober, manager of the familyowned and operated burger joint. “Honestly, it’s about real, good food — served fast and always done right.” That “real” food statement is more than true. In fact, it was the impetus for Fatbelly. Opened by the Tai and Molly Jacober, owners of Crystal River Beef (whose motto is “Local Beef.

Not to Miss An ice cream cone to stroll the streets of Carbondale A fried egg on your burger The local characters

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Aug u st 2 4 - Aug u st 30, 20 17

PRICES Nothing over $10 AMBIENCE Super casual, grab-and-go, family-friendly. SIGNATURE DISHES The Standard burger, The Tree Hugger, lemon-mint cabbage salad and milkshakes made with Glacier of Boulder ice cream.

Down the street, literally. Cows Fear us.”) Fatbelly was created to give people a place to enjoy the fruits of their labor at the ranch. It has grown into one Carbondale’s busiest restaurants and one of the best places to get a burger in the Roaring Fork Valley. “People tell us all the time we have the best burger around,” Francie says. “And I’d agree. There’s nothing fancy about it, but it’s made with the best beef and that makes all the difference.” The menu is simple: The Standard is one grass-fed beef patty, cheese, lettuce, tomato, grilled onion, pickles and house spread. It’s what you envision a burger to be. Fancy it up as a Crystal River Burger (The Standard with a fried egg) or Pepper Burger (The Standard with bacon, jalepno, swiss and a cracked-pepper enrusted patty). Lighten it up as a Lettuce Wrap (The Standard Paleo-style, tightly wrapped in a lettuce, no bun) or as a burger made with lamb, chicken, black beans or, a local fave, the Tree Hugger (house-made

falafel patty with all the trimmings.) “We learned after the first few years that it was good to have a wider selection than just The Standard burger,” says Francie. “But we’ve only expanded when we know what we’re offering is right.” Other non-burger options, which are just as juicy and downhome as the bugers include hot dogs (grass-fed of course), grilled cheese, and chili. On the greener side, Fatbelly’s salads — a Kale Quinoa Salad and a Lemon-Mint Cabbage Salad — provide the perfect complements to the burger-and-fries combo (yes, the fries are hand-cut and crisped to perfection). They are both Francie’s recipes, and they rival the taste of salads in Aspen’s finer restaurants. Of course, no burger joint could call itself that without serving up a milkshake. At Fatbelly, all shakes are made-to-order with Boulder’s Glacier ice cream. Or, get some in a cone or cup. Ordered through the small take-out window at the front of Fatbelly, it’s like a blast from the past. And this, says Francie, is what Fatbelly is really all about. “We’re just trying to offer our customers what they want — locally made slow fast food,” she says. Yes, Fatbelly offers all of this. Done right. top to bottom: The Standard burger and fries; a rich chocolate ice cream cone; the kale quinoa salad.


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Servers/Bartenders White House Tavern is Hiring FT & PT Servers & Bartenders, Benefits Available, Inquire Within, 302 E Hopkins Ave Aspen, CO 970-925-1007

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Rentals Aspen 1BD in 4BD Home, 10 min from town. Sleeps One, must have car. NP/NS. $650/mo + util. 1st/last/ $500 dep. 970-688-0175

2 BD 2 BA Condo. Recently remodeled kitch3 blocks from Asen. pen Mtn. Unfurnished. $4,000 includes cable, internet, utilities. Minimum 1 year lease (1st./last/security). No Pets. No Smoking. Email sagaria@mac.com Call/Text 970-948-4460

Trades/ Construction

Maintenance Agents Destination Residences - Maintenance Agents for our properties in Snowmass Vlg. Some exp. pref. . Competitive pay. Apply at www.destinationhotel s.com/careers

Painters Needed! Swedish Painting Company is hiring painters. Very competitive wage. Stop by our office at 221 E. Fiou Lane, Basalt or call 970.920.2422

Building for Lease on So. Grand in Glenwood Springs. Office, Shop/ Warehouse, Storage spaces. 3,500 sf. Roland 970-927-4038 ext. 4

EXCEPTIONAL LOCATION IN ASPEN 768 sq.ft. Next to the Gondola in the North of Nell Building Indoor Parking. Long or Short Term. 970-429-1558

This is Colorado’s finest Ski-In Ski Out Project ever built with 7+ years of inventory to sell.

Call our VP of Sales, John Liner @ 928-300-0503 or email jliner@breckgv.com

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Condo 2 BD 1 BA Condo ON HYMAN MALL, available beginning October seasonal or up to 1 year long term. $4,500/month. Washer and dryer in unit. 9709258088

Basalt Area Rentals 5 bd/3.5 ba, big home, open livingrm, diningrm & kitchen, den, office, family room, woodstove, porch, deck, solar heat, gardens, yard, quiet, no smoking, pet ok. $3800/mo plus uts. Sally, ASSIR, 970-948-7530

Furnished 1,400 squarefoot office space available September 15, 2017 to March 31, 2018. 5 private and 2 semi-private offices with kitchen and bathroom, located in the heart of Aspen. Views of Aspen Mt. and Independence Pass. Amazing opportunity at $10,000 per month!. Call 970-379-2299.

Newspapers get good grades. 85 percent of adults who have done post-graduate work or who have advanced degrees read a print newspaper or visited a newspaper Web site in an average week. Rentals Office Space 715 West Main Street, 600 sq ft Office Condo for lease, $2,500/mo. 1 year lease, for more information Call 970-925-5625

Office’s in Beautiful Aspen Victorian from $700/mo. 970-379-3715

Rentals Snowmass Town House Furnished 2 BD 3 BA Town House Pet. NS. $3300/mo. some utilities. One year lease only. (970) 2740669 akashakf@gmail.c om

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ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY.COM/WEEKLY

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Commercial - Aspen - $3,195,000

Glenwood Springs - $1,475,000

Opportunity to own Aspen’s #1 complete automobile service center. Good cap rate for an investor. One of only a few lots in the AABC where the ground underneath the building is included, no land lease. Booming business in Aspen for more than 30 years with a list of clientele that keeps every bay full every day. 5 full service bays all with lifts, 2 more outdoor lifts. High tech and thriving tire and auto service

Mountain Home in Faranhyll Ranch μForever Sopris Views μMinutes from Glenwood Springs μMinutes to Ski Sunlight on 4- mile road μ35 A. in gated community μHorses allowed/wildlife abounds μ4577 sq ft. 4 bed 4/5 bath μOffice and 3-car garage μMLS#150435

Marianne Ackerman

Rothberg Rosin Team

(970) 306-3319 primwrld@sopris.net

970.379.8303

Basalt - $359,500

Basalt - $370,000

Basalt - $379,500

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath - MidValley Condo Top-floor condo. Over 1,300 sq. ft. Best location with south/east exposure. Quality finishes. Upgraded appliances. Large closet spaces, A/C unit & radiant heat. Great location in Willits area. Tom Carr 970.379.9935 tom@BHHSAspenSnowmass.com ValleyPinesCondo.com

WHITE BOX - YOU BUILD KITCHEN Unique, creative, cutting edge project. May be used for Residential and/or Commercial. 16’ to 19’ ceiling with fabulous light. Seller financing possible. 970-618-1231 swift@sopris.net www.willitsbend.com

3.99 acres - Castle View / Frying Pan Four sunny acres in the scenic Frying Pan River Valley for a single-family home and two out buildings. Enjoy hiking, biking, and fishing out your door with downtown Basalt 4.5 miles away. Tom Carr 970.379.9935 tom@BHHSAspenSnowmass.com www.castleviewland.com

Carbondale - $998,000

New Castle - $845,000

Rifle - $299,900

Robert Tobias

Mountain Elegance! Every aspect of this 4,431 sq, ft, home is custom. Chefs kitchen, covered deck with spectacular views. Main floor master. Walkout basement features 2 large en-suite bedrooms. Lots of storage. Marianne Ackerman 970.379.3546 Kathy Westley 970.379.8303

Karen Peirson (970) 309-0038 kpeirson@destinationholdings.com www.karenpeirson.com

Snowmass Village - $1,125,000

Snowmass - $395,000

Build your dream home on this gorgeous 2.4 acre lot. Beautiful & peaceful mountain setting. Spectacular views to the Snowmass ski area. +/-35 minutes to Aspen. Tom Carr 970.379.9935 tom@BHHSAspenSnowmass.com snowmassmountainview.com

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Aspen - $997,000

Ranch style home. 3 bedroom 2 bath, 3 car garage, fenced yard with mature landscaping. Dont’ miss this one! Marianne Ackerman 970-379-3546 Kathy Westley 970-379-8303

Basalt - $625,000

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GARDENER & YOGA LOVERS RETREAT!!! Wonderful 3+ acres on Cattle Creek. Custom two bed, contemporary home built 2016, detached garage. Complete with charming cabin converted to studio yoga space. Tipi, gardens, chicken coop! Marianne Ackerman 970.379.3546 Haddie Lopez 970.456.6559

Silt - $217,000

Silt - $235,000

3 bed S/F home with Caretaker unit in Holland Hills. Garage with workshop, great yard, great location! A must see home! Detailed info on our web site.

Character And Charm of Yesteryear . . . 2 bedrooms, 2 baths - newly completed family/bonus room in the basement big lot with mature landscaping tons of parking, 1-car garage, shed and greenhouse! Downtown Silt. MLS#149928 Michelle James 970.379.4997 michelle@vlgrealtors.com www.vlgrealtors.com

Basalt/El Jebel - $625,000 Updated 4 bed/3.5 bath, 2296 sq.ft. home near Crown Mtn. Park. Open floor plan, abundant light, high ceilings, gas fireplace, wood floors, silestone countertops, spacious, fenced back yard with awesome decks, patio, gardens, trees and a mother-in-law suite. 2-car garage, extra parking, storage, Basalt schools.

Meadow Ranch 3/2.5. Updated soft modern, wood fireplace, 2 decks & tons of storage. Aspen schools. FURNISHED. OPEN HOUSE: 08/19-20, 1-4 PM

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Carbondale - $779,000

Move in ready. Nice 3 bedroom townhome in downtown Silt with large fenced yard. Nicely remodeled with beautiful kitchen. No HOA! Marianne Ackerman 970-379-3546 Kathy Westley 970-379-8303

Affordably priced condo in the heart of town...

Find YOUR dream home here.

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ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY

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August 24, 2017


Aspen- $1,500,000

Aspen - $50,000

Aspen School District 3,146 sq/ft 4bd/4.5 ba stone & stucco home on 8,037 sq/ft lot boardering Open Space w/ spectacular views of McLain Flats & mountains. Solar, landscaping, gardens, deck & patio w/built in BBQ, lots of storage, 2 car garage+ for all child & adult Toys...and lots more. RO Housing.

Ritz Carlton - White River 1/12th Share at Ritz Carlton Club, Unit 2405! 28 Days of use every year. Ski View! Interest 1, 2 winter weeks, 1 summer week and 1 float week. Dues: $14,676 per year.

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Your Sellers Want to See Thi Call for Sales and Rentals.

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Buell Blast 2008

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Call today to reserve your space!

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887-9667 Furniture

Beds & Mattresses

Lawn & Garden

Sleep Number M7 adjustable mattress with fully adjustable foundation included. Split King size. Excellent Condition $200. (970) 404-5624

announcements & events

MAKE THIS SPACE WORK FOR YOU!

Make a Difference

pets, livestock & animals

Healthcare Experience is in high demand. Choose your next career in the classifieds.

merchandise

transportation

$2,000 (970) 208-6582

merchandise

Auto Photos

Call today to reserve your PLACE AN EMPLOYMENT AD TO FIND THE RIGHT PERSON TODAY.

Autos

Food & Beverage

INTERESTED in selling your 2000 & up vehicle? Body damage/ mechanical problems. 970-390-1993

ATTENTION EMPLOYERS: Reach Your Best Potential Employees! Everyday in The Classifieds.

Lawn Mower. Husquarna Husquarna HU 700 F Self-propelled Front Gear Drive Mower. Used twice! Perfect condition. See in Carbondale. $260 OBO.

Hobbies

Musical

CONCEALED CARRY CLASS. Saturday July 29th in Kremmling $85.00 This is a one day class. Pre-register 970724-3311 gunsmokebob @msn.com

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Colorado Statewide Cla��i�ed �d�erti�i�� Network To place a 25-word COSCAN Network ad in 91 Colorado newspapers for only $300, contact your local newspaper or call SYNC2 Media at 303-571-5117. EDUC����N �E�� ��N�ED �a�t to Sa�e �i�e�� �e a r�ral Do �o� k�ow a�o�t �ri�t� �e�tal �ealt� �ro�ider� ��li�e� e�ail a�d di�ital �er�i�e�� ��te�rated �e�tal �ealt� N� �ro�ra�� S�NC� �edia i� looki�� �or �S�DN���o�t�rad N�r�i�� � �o�eo�e �er�ed i� t�o�e �rod��t� CU �NSC�U�� �������������� or w�o �a� ��d �lie�t� w�o will ���SS��S�U���N��UCDEN�E�� �e�e�t �ro� t�e�� �ear� �ore at� EDU �tt����ti���rl��o����eek��� S�NC� �ED�� ��� a ���word �tatewide �la��i�ed li�e ad i� �ew��a�er� a�ro�� t�e �tate o� Colorado �or ���t ���� �er week� ��k a�o�t o�r �re��e��� di��o��t�� Co�ta�t t�i� �ew��a�er or �all S�NC� �edia� ������������

Scottish Highlander High Quality Beef ><>FOR SALE<>< - Grass Fed - Raised organically with love from our farm - $8 per lb for 10 lb package - ¼ cow $7.50 per lb (100 lbs) - ½ cow $7.25 per lb (200 lbs) - 1 whole cow $7 lb (400 lbs) Taste & Cooks Like Buffalo!! Delivery available 1 time per week Vail, Aspen or Glenwood

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RON"THE GOLD GUY"

I Buy Gold REPUTABLE GOLDSMITH paying CASH for gold, silver, platinum jewelry, gold or silver coins, nuggets, sterling silver sets. Many loyal customers thank me for BEST RETURNS, BEST SERVICE and convenient appointments. I Recycle, Remake, and Repair. For today’s spot see: ronthegoldguy.com Call Ron (970) 390-8229

1996 Steinway L Piano. Appraised in excellent condition at $33,500 by registered piano tech. Size is 5’10" compare to price of new Steinway O. Priced to sell. $30,000. Aspen owner, piano awaiting shipment from Seattle (970) 343-2022

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Want to purchase minerals and other oil/gas interests. Send details to: P.O. Box 13557, Denver, CO 80201

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Klim Scramble pack, fanny pack/tool bag, black and grey. Has Klim logo on inside of belt. Full of tools to do trail side repairs. Richmond Ridge road, top of Aspen mountain. Lost on August 11, 2017 Call 970-930-5499

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M O N DAY- F R I DAY 8 : 3 0 A M TO 5 : 0 0 P M 970 -7 7 7- 3 1 72 P S C H U LTZ @ C M N M .O R G COMBINED NOTICE - PUBLICATION CRS §38-38-103 FORECLOSURE SALE NO. 17-005 To Whom It May Concern: This Notice is given with regard to the following described Deed of Trust: On June 1, 2017, the undersigned Public Trustee caused the Notice of Election and Demand relating to the Deed of Trust described below to be recorded in the County of Pitkin records. Original Grantor(s) FARLEY LOZOWICK Original Beneficiary(ies) Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. Current Holder of Evidence of Debt The Bank of New York Mellon fka the Bank of New York, as trustee for the certificateholders of CWALT, Inc., alternative loan trust 2007-HY6 Mortgage pass-through certificates, series 2007-HY6 Date of Deed of Trust May 03, 2007 County of Recording Pitkin Recording Date of Deed of Trust May 09, 2007 Recording Information (Reception No. and/or Book/Page No.) 537474 Original Principal Amount $907,000.00 Outstanding Principal Balance $907,000.00 Pursuant to CRS §38-38-101(4)(i), you are hereby notified that the covenants of the deed of trust have been violated as follows: including, but not limited to, the failure to make timely payments required under said Deed of Trust and the Evidence of Debt secured thereby. THE LIEN FORECLOSED MAY NOT BE A FIRST LIEN. LOT 6, COUNTRY CLUB UNIT ONE, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF FILED SEPTEMBER 17, 1970, IN PLAT BOOK 4 AT PAGE 126, COUNTY OF PITKIN, STATE OF COLORADO. Also known by street and number as: 161 FAIRWAY DR, SNOWMASS VILLAGE, CO 81615. THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED HEREIN IS ALL OF THE PROPERTY CURRENTLY ENCUMBERED BY THE LIEN OF THE DEED OF TRUST. NOTICE OF SALE The current holder of the Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, described herein, has filed Notice of Election and Demand for sale as provided by law and in said Deed of Trust. THEREFORE, Notice Is Hereby Given that I will at public auction, at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, 10/04/2017, at Pitkin County Courthouse, at the south front door, 506 E Main St, Aspen, Colorado, sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, the said real property and all interest of the said Grantor(s), Grantor(s)’ heirs and assigns therein, for the purpose of paying the indebtedness provided in said Evidence of Debt secured by the Deed of Trust, plus attorneys’ fees, the expenses of sale and other items allowed by law, and will issue to the purchaser a Certificate of Purchase, all as provided by law. First Publication 8/10/2017 Last Publication 9/7/2017 Name of Publication The Aspen Times Weekly IF THE SALE DATE IS CONTINUED TO A LATER DATE, THE DEADLINE TO FILE A NOTICE OF INTENT TO CURE BY THOSE PARTIES ENTITLED TO CURE MAY ALSO BE EXTENDED; IF THE BORROWER BELIEVES THAT A LENDER OR SERVICER HAS VIOLATED THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT IN SECTION 38-38-103.1 OR THE PROHIBITION ON DUAL TRACKING IN SECTION 38-38-103.2, THE BORROWER MAY FILE A COMPLAINT WITH THE COLORADO ATTORNEY GENERAL, THE FEDERAL CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU (CFPB), OR BOTH. THE FILING OF A COMPLAINT WILL NOT STOP THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS. Colorado Attorney General 1300 Broadway, 10th Floor Denver, Colorado 80203 (800) 222-4444 www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov Federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau P.O. Box 4503 Iowa City, Iowa 52244 (855) 411-2372 www.consumerfinance.gov DATE: 06/01/2017 Thomas Carl Oken, Public Trustee in and for the County of Pitkin, State of Colorado By: Sydney Tofany, Chief Deputy Public Trustee The name, address, business telephone number and bar registration number of the attorney(s) representing the legal holder of the indebtedness is: ERIN ROBSON #46557 Jennifer Cruseturner #44452 Eve Grina #43658

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ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY

Joan Olson #28078 Holly Shilliday #24423 IMAN TEHRANI #44076 McCarthy Holthus LLP 7700 E ARAPAHOE ROAD, SUITE 230, CENTENNIAL, CO 80112 (877) 3696122 Attorney File # CO-17-768681-LL The Attorney above is acting as a debt collector and is attempting to collect a debt. Any information provided may be used for that purpose. Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on August 10, 17, 24 and 31, 2017 and September 7, 2017. (0000094859) DISTRICT COURT, PITKIN COUNTY, COLORADO 506 East Main Street, Aspen Colorado 81611 (970) 925-7635 Plaintiff: JOSEPH F. RICCHIUTI v. Defendants: PITKIN PARTNERS SPECIAL PROPERTIES I, LTD; ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS WHO CLAIM ANY INTEREST IN THE SUBJECT MATTER OF THIS ACTION ___ Anne Marie McPhee, Atty. No. 32327 Sarah M. Oates, Atty. No. 41647 Oates, Knezevich, Gardenswartz, Kelly & Morrow, P.C. 533 E. Hopkins Avenue, Suite 201 Aspen, Colorado 81611 Telephone: (970) 920-1700 Facsimile: (970) 920-1121 e-mail: amm@okglaw.com; smo@okglaw.com

NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION PURSUANT TO §15-12-801, C.R.S. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of REINER P. KLAWITER, A/K/A REINER W. KLAWITER, A/K/A REINER KLAWITER, A/K/A REINHART W. KLAWITER, Deceased Case Number 2017PR30032 All persons having claims against the abovenamed estate are required to present them to the Personal Representative or to the District Court of Pitkin County, Colorado on or before December 18, 2017, or the claims may be forever barred. Mary Beth Klawiter, Personal Representative P.O. Box 6759 Snowmass Village, CO 81615 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly August 17, 24 and 31, 2017 0000098930

Case Number: 17CV30059 Division

Courtroom SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO TO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned and required to appear and defend against the claims of the complaint filed with the court in this action, by filing with the clerk of this court an answer or other response. You are required to file your answer or other response within 35 days after the service of this Summons upon you. Service of this summons shall be completed on the day of the last publication. A copy of the complaint may be obtained from the clerk of the court. If you fail to file your answer or other response to the complaint in writing within 35 days after the date of the last publication, judgment by default may be rendered against you by the court for the relief demanded in the complaint without further notice. This is an action to quiet the title of the Plaintiff in and to the real property situate in Pitkin County Colorado, more particularly describe as: Unit 2 North, East Hopkins Condominiums, according to the Condominium Map thereof recorded January 20, 1971 in Plat Book 4 at Page 178 as Reception No. 144060, and as described and defined in the Condominium Declaration for East Hopkins Condominiums, recorded January 20, 1971 in Book 253 at Page 267 as Reception No. 114059, County of Pitkin, State of Colorado also known as 825 E. Hopkins Avenue #2N, Aspen, Colorado 81611 (the “Property”). Dated: June 19, 2017. OATES, KNEZEVICH, GARDENSWARTZ, KELLY & MORROW P.C. By: /s/ Anne Marie McPhee Anne Marie McPhee, Atty. No. 32327 Sarah M. Oates, Atty. No. 41647 Attorneys for Joseph F. Ricchiuti 533 East Hopkins Ave., Suite 201 Aspen, Colorado 81611 Telephone: (970) 920-1700 Facsimile: (970) 920-1121 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly First Publication: August 10, 2017 Last Publication: September 7, 2017 Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on August 10, 17, 24 and 31, 2017 and September 7, 2017. (0000095012)

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PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC OF THE FOLLOWING MATTERS OF INTEREST REGARDING THE PITKIN COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS: • Unless otherwise notified all regular and special meetings will be held in the Pitkin County Library William R. Dunaway Community Meeting Room, 102 North Mill Street, Aspen, CO 81611 . • All regular meeting items begin at 12:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business allows. Check agenda at: http://pitkincounty.com/Calendar.aspx or call 920-5200 for meeting times for special meetings. • Copies of the full text of any resolution(s) and ordinance(s) referred to are available during regular business hours (8:00 – 5:00 in the Clerk to the Board of County Commissioners office, 123 Emma Road Suite #106, Basalt, CO 8162 or at: http://pitkincounty.com/Calendar.aspx NOTICE OF FINAL DETERMINATIONS BY THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the general public that on July 3, 2017, the Pitkin County Community Development Director granted approval for the Gooding Activity Envelope and Site Plan Review (Case P007-17; Deter. #043-2017). The property is located at 4707 Bear Ridge Road and is legally described as Lot 13, Majestic Peaks Point Subdivision. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2465-364-00-011. This site-specific development plan grants a vested property right pursuant to Title 24, Article 68, Colorado Revised Statutes. S/Cindy Houben Community Development Director NOTICE OF APPLICATIONS TO BE CONSIDERED BY THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR: RE: Moore Activity Envelope and Site Plan Review (Case P057-17) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an application has been submitted by John and Caroline Y. Moore (12 Salvation Circle, Aspen, CO 81611) requesting Activity Envelope and Site Plan Review approval for development of a new single family residence. The property is located at 12 Salvation Circle and is legally described as Lot 24, The Ridge of Red Mountain Subdivision. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2737-072-02-014. The application is available for public inspection in the Pitkin County Community Development Department, City Hall, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, CO 81611. Comments or objections are due by September 25, 2017. For further information, contact Tami Kochen at (970) 920-5359. RE: Lowe Special Review and GMQS Exemption for Caretaker Dwelling Unit (CDU) (Case P051-17) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an application has been submitted by Walter and Dawn M Lowe (400 Medicine Bow Road, Aspen, CO 81611) requesting approval to legalize an attached Caretaker Dwelling Unit. The property is located at 400 Medicine Bow Road and is legally described as Lot 2, Block 3, Filing 1, Brush Creek Village Subdivision. The State Parcel Identification Number for the property is 2643-213-07-002. The application is available for public inspection in the Pitkin County Community Development Department, City Hall, 130 S. Galena St., Aspen, CO 81611. Comments or objections are due by September 25, 2017. For further information, contact Tami Kochen at (970) 920-5359. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS BEFORE THE BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT: RE: Major Road Setback Variance 1266 Owl Creek Road, Aspen (Case 13-2017) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, to begin at 5:30pm, or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business allows, in the Commissioner’s Meeting Room in the Courthouse, 506 East Main Street, Aspen, before the Pitkin County Board of Adjustment, to consider an application submitted by 1266 OCR LLC, c/o Structural Associates, 4185 County Road 154, Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. The Applicant is requesting a 53’ Major Road Setback variance where 100’ is required from the Owl Creek Road right-of-way to construct a shed. This parcel contains 2 acres and is located in the AR-10 zone district. The State Parcel Identification Number for this property is 264334300002. For further information contact Joanna Schaffner at the Pitkin Community Development Department, (970) 920-5105. Pitkin County Board of Adjustment RE: Height, and Front and Side Yard Setback Variances for 155 Bulkley Drive, Aspen (Case 11-2017) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, to begin at 5:30pm, or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business allows, in the Commissioner’s Meeting Room in the Courthouse, 506 East Main Street, Aspen, before the Pitkin County Board of Adjustment, to consider an application submitted by Celestial Land Co, Ltd., c/o Stan Clausen Associates, 412 N. Mill Street, Aspen, CO 81611. The Applicant is requesting variances to develop driveway retaining walls that exceed 6’ in height within the front yard setback, a retaining wall at the driveway’s entrance that exceeds 6’ in height, and grade changes that exceed 30” in height for a required debris flow basin, deposition of excavated materials, and a chiller vault, all located within the required 100’ front yard setback. This parcel contains 35 acres and is located in the AR-10 zone district. The State Parcel Identification Number for this property is 273521400004. For further information contact Joanna Schaffner at the Pitkin Community Development Department, (970) 920-5105. Pitkin County Board of Adjustment RE: Height Variance for a Fence 146 Ardmore Dr., Aspen Aka Lot 8, Ardmore Subdivision (Case 03-2017) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, to begin at 5:30pm, or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business allows, in the Commissioner’s Meeting Room in the Courthouse, 506 East Main Street, Aspen, before the Pitkin County Board of Adjustment, to consider an application submitted by Harvey and Robin Fahy, c/o Mt. Daly Enterprises, LLC, 96A North Third Street, Carbondale, CO 81623. The Applicant is requesting a 2 foot height variance where a maximum height of 6’ is allowed for fences within a yard setback. This parcel contains 6,658 sq. ft. and is located in the R-15 zone district. The State Parcel Identification Number for this property is 2737-181-05-008. For further information contact Joanna Schaffner at the Pitkin Community Development Department, (970) 920-5105. Pitkin County Board of Adjustment Published in The Aspen Times on August 24, 2017 RE: Major Road and Front Yard Setback Variances for 5342 Highway 133, Carbondale (Case 02-2017)

PITKIN COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE 2017 JUNE GROSS SALARIES PAID (SALARIES, OVERTIME, BONUSES ETC.) The publication of the County salaries is required by state statute. The requirement does not apply to any other local or state government. The cost of this notice is $160.00. The County wide average percentage of salary that is paid in addition to regular wages as fringe benefits is 31%. DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS 10036.11, AIRPORT FACILITIES SUPERVISOR 9182.83, AIRPORT FACILITIES MANAGER 10169.07, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 1100, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 7129.45, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 6624.75, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 900, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 500, SENIOR AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 6954.66, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 6197.46, AIRPORT FACILITIES SUPERVISOR 8732.52, SENIOR AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 9319.02, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 1300, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY SUPERVISOR 10734.3, MAINTENANCE - TECHNICIAN I - SRE LANDSIDE 3180, MAINTENANCE- TECHNICIAN I - LANDSIDE 38.75, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 1708, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 1503.5, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 900, AVIATION DIRECTOR 21669.93, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 2320, MAINTENANCE- TECHNICIAN I - LANDSIDE 700, MAINTENANCE- TECHNICIAN I - LANDSIDE 700, AIRPORT CREDENTIALING ADMINISTRATOR 11290.09, MAINTENANCE- TECHNICIAN I - LANDSIDE 700, DIRECTOR OF SECURITY 15874.2, CONTROLLER 12369.71, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY SUPERVISOR 11102.52, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 3722.5, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 2410.56, CONTRACT SPECIALIST 7970.34, AIRPORT SECURITY & BADGING ADMINISTRATOR 13031.89, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 8348.81, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 9938.06, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 7363.37, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 11141.25, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 573.5, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 4712, ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST 6466.48, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 7849.68, AIRPORT FACILITIES TECHNICIAN 3547.5, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY SUPERVISOR 9051.65, SENIOR AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 9645.5, AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY SUPERVISOR 9392.33, SENIOR AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 11468.65, SENIOR AIRPORT OPERATIONS SECURITY COORDINATOR 2861.61, ANIMAL SAFETY OFFICER 7490.71, SENIOR APPRAISER 7473.57, COUNTY - ASSESSOR 11784.36, CHIEF APPRAISER 11314.38, ASSESSMENT MANAGER 10143.27, SENIOR APPRAISER 7617.13, SENIOR APPRAISER 7867.57, SENIOR APPRAISER 7328.75, SENIOR APPRAISER 6610.68, APPRAISER 6324.32, PROPERTY TRANSFER TECHNICIAN 5706.96, PROPERTY TRANSFER TECHNICIAN 5288.76, COUNTY ATTORNEY 22141.92, HEALTHY RIVERS PROGRAM ADMINISTRATOR 9288.12, PARALEGAL 7989.39, ASSISTANT COUNTY ATTORNEY 15821.88, ASSISTANT COUNTY ATTORNEY 13299.54, SENIOR FACILITIES MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN 7093.14, FACILITIES DIRECTOR 13174.62, CUSTODIAN 4969.39, CUSTODIAL SUPERVISOR 7482.98, CUSTODIAN 4917.24, SENIOR FACILITIES MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN 6338.91, SENIOR CUSTODIAN 5608.41, SENIOR FACILITIES MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN 5671.07, FACILITIES OPERATIONS MANAGER 7364.07, FACILITIES MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN 5262.73, CUSTODIAN 4218.07, CUSTODIAN 4135.62, SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 5340.1, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DIRECTOR 15928.56, IT SUPPORT MANAGER 10033.02, INFORMATION GOVERNANCE ADMINISTRATOR 10719.84, APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT MANAGER 12715.5, BUSINESS PROCESS ANALYST 9146.97, BUSINESS PROCESS ANALYST 9463.47, BUSINESS PROCESS ANALYST 8666.04, BUSINESS PROCESS ANALYST 9140.88, BUSINESS PROCESS ANALYST 9656.81, APPLICATION DEVELOPER 3047.36, COUNTY - COMMISSIONER 8461.38, COUNTY - COMMISSIONER 8427.93, COUNTY - COMMISSIONER 9412.05, COUNTY - COMMISSIONER 9412.05, COUNTY COMMISSIONER 9273.06, BUDGET DIRECTOR 12358.47, PROCUREMENT & CONTRACTS MANAGER 0, PROCUREMENT SPECIALIST 8748.95, MOTOR VEHICLE MANAGER 8329.45, CHIEF DEPUTY CLERK 7245.24, CLERK AND RECORDING SPECIALIST 5517.12, COUNTY - CLERK & RECORDER 11598.96, CLERK AND RECORDING SPECIALIST 5827.14, ELECTIONS MANAGER 6620.67, RECORDING MANAGER 7949.01, CLERK AND RECORDING SPECIALIST 5213.7, CLERK AND RECORDING SPECIALIST 5092.31, ELECTION APPLICATION ADMINISTRATOR 6928, CLERK & RECORDING SPECIALIST 2370.96, CHIEF BUILDING OFFICIAL 11314.35, PLANS EXAMINER/INSPECTOR 8494.08, SENIOR PLANS EXAMINER/INSPECTOR 11722.75, PERMIT TECHNICIAN 5718.37, PLANS EXAMINER/INSPECTOR 8178.13, PERMIT TECHNICIAN 8686.46, PLANS EXAMINER/INSPECTOR 9678.78, CORONER - DEPUTY 3340, CORONER 6471, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT V 700, SENIOR DISPATCHER 10409.16, DISPATCH SUPERVISOR 9150.37, DISPATCH SUPERVISOR 8881.81, DISPATCHER 6233.36, SENIOR DISPATCHER 20894.02, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 4542.39, DISPATCHER 5296.05, DISPATCHER 8466.01, DISPATCHER 6698.12, DISPATCH SUPERVISOR 12838.03, DISPATCHER 7124.42, EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR 13076.21, DISPATCHER 2248.85, DISPATCHER 5342.76, DISPATCHER 5793.17, ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE SPECIALIST 6224.43, ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE MANAGER 9923.84, SENIOR ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE SPECIALIST 2433.5, ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE SPECIALIST 1040.69, EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS MANAGER 10184.19, SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 3068.5, ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST 7487.16, ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH MANAGER 9524.35, ADULT & FAMILY SERVICES MANAGER 10801.77, ADULT & FAMILY SERVICES CASE WORKER 8026.05, ADULT & FAMILY SERVICES CASE WORKER 8115.75, ADULT & FAMILY SERVICES SUPERVISOR 9049.8, ADULT & FAMILY SERVICES CASE WORKER 7187.28, ADULT & FAMILY SERVICES CASE WORKER 7608.27, FINANCIAL ANALYST 7859.87, FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATOR 11429.82, PAYROLL SPECIALIST 6724.35, ACCOUNTS PAYABLE SUPERVISOR 6759.45, CONTROLLER 11221.41, FINANCE DIRECTOR 16004.31, ACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN 5878.11, MECHANIC 9892.35, FLEET SUPERVISOR 10511.81, FLEET MANAGER 10641.21, FLEET PURCHASING WAREHOUSE SPECIALIST 8335.77, MECHANIC 7033.68, SENIOR MECHANIC 8904.96, MECHANIC 6499.59, MECHANIC 6005.31, HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR 16597.62, COMPENSATION AND BENEFITS ADMINISTRATOR 11240.76, SAFETY & RISK MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST 6702.21, HUMAN RESOURCES TECHNICIAN 6336.51, TALENT MANAGEMENT ADMINISTRATOR 9920.52, EMPLOYEE HEALTH & WELL-BEING SPECIALIST 7973.34, HUMAN SERVICES DIRECTOR 17307.72, STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP MANAGER 11812.2, SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 5824.74, FAMILY ENGAGEMENT COORDINATOR 7384.95, GRANT COORDINATOR 4177.83, VETERANS SERVICE OFFICER 1797.92, DETENTION OPERATIONS COMMANDER 12315.21, DETENTION CORPORAL 10289.61, DETENTION SERGEANT 10008.42, SENIOR DETENTION OFFICER 13261.25, DETENTION SERGEANT 11675.73, DETENTION CORPORAL 9458.31, SENIOR DETENTION OFFICER 8419.95, SENIOR DETENTION OFFICER 7167.38, SENIOR DETENTION OFFICER 7952.9, DETENTION OFFICER 8557.52, DETENTION OFFICER 7379.51, SENIOR DETENTION OFFICER 6968.94, DETENTION OFFICER 7490.37, DETENTION OFFICER 7770.18, DETENTION OFFICER 7534.75, LIBRARIAN 9134.4, LIBRARY DIRECTOR 16207.11, LIBRARIAN 8764.86, ASSISTANT LIBRARY DIRECTOR 11681.13, ASSISTANT LIBRARY DIRECTOR 3893.71, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 4885.02, LIBRARY COMPUTER SPECIALIST 6385.16, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 5346.79, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 6874.18, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 5903.25, LIBRARIAN 8231.07, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 5020.1, LIBRARIAN 7625.49, LIBRARIAN 7595.49, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 5254.44, LIBRARY COMPUTER SPECIALIST 5575.11, LIBRARIAN 7085.16, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 5164.44, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 5103.36, LIBRARIAN 7202.04, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 5163.06, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 2572.51, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 4673.67, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 2980, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 831.6, LIBRARY ASSISTANT 1493.1, ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST 6701.49, CLERK TO THE BOARD 11756.75, COMMUNITY RELATIONS ADMINISTRATOR 9813.57, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF ADMINISTRATION 18670.89, SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 7833.97, COUNTY MANAGER 20322.66, MANAGEMENT ANALYST 9981.66, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS 17726.21, ACQUISITION AND SPECIAL PROJECTS DIRECTOR 13907.31, RANGER SUPERVISOR 8724.18, OPEN SPACE AND TRAILS DIRECTOR 14872.26, ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST 7109.22, OST MAINTENANCE CREW LEADER 6275.6, PLANNING & OUTREACH MANAGER 10729.77, AGRICULTURAL AND CONSERVATION EASEMENT ADMINISTRATOR 9230.07, FIELD OPERATIONS SUPERVISOR 7414.02, PLANNING AND OUTREACH SPECIALIST 6557.01, RANGER SUPERVISOR 6550.89, RESOURCE AND TRAILS MANAGER 9843.75, RANGER 5248.4, OST MAINTENANCE CREW 4177.2, RANGER 5294.34, OST MAINTENANCE CREW 4677.2, ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNER 8467.68, RANGER 5248.4, RANGER 5248.4, OST MAINTENANCE CREW 4550, OST MAINTENANCE CREW 4550, STEWARDSHIP INTERN 2496, COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR 17293.35, LONG RANGE PLANNING ADMINISTRATOR 10987.47, PLANNER 8732.46, ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT 13000.68, HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICER 2950, SENIOR PERMIT TECHNICIAN 10135.02, SENIOR PLANNER 9560.43, PLANNER 7724.67, PLANNER 8029.53, CODE ENFORCEMENT OFFICER 1121.97, PUBLIC HEALTH DIRECTOR 14678.93, PUBLIC HEALTH ANALYST 8469.15, PUBLIC WORKS DIRECTOR 16987.5, ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN 8444.73, COUNTY ENGINEER 14096.64, LAND MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST 7865.69, PUBLIC WORKS PROJECT ENGINEER 10136.7, ENGINEERING INTERN 3420, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 7351.38, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 7063.92, SUPERFUND MANGER 1017.64, SENIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 7207.98, ROAD AND BRIDGE MANAGER 9878.82, ROAD AND BRIDGE SUPERVISOR 8552.14, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 6405.9, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 5616.27, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 6547.62, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 6581.12, RADIO SPECIALIST 11116.29, PROGRAM COORDINATOR 7369.29, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT 5580.84, SENIOR SERVICES ANALYST 8136.75, KITCHEN ASSISTANT 415, SENIOR SERVICES MANAGER 10328.58, KITCHEN SUPERVISOR 6147.42, KITCHEN ASSISTANT 430, KITCHEN ASSISTANT 725, JUVENILE INVESTIGATOR - CORPORAL 14692.13, UNDERSHERIFF 14487.75, PATROL SERGEANT 12487.53, COUNTY - SHERIFF 14415.78, SENIOR PATROL DEPUTY 7443.88, DETECTIVE SERGEANT 12895.23, ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST 8713.44, PATROL SERGEANT 13663.49, SENIOR PATROL DEPUTY 2805.4, SENIOR PATROL DEPUTY 7926.27, SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER 8319.38, PATROL SERGEANT 11735.9, SHERIFF'S OPERATIONS COMMANDER 12405.24, DEPUTY - II 480, SENIOR PATROL DEPUTY 7516.6, PATROL SERGEANT 11102.97, RECORDS MANAGER SO 6719.46, SENIOR PATROL DEPUTY 7040.96, SENIOR PATROL DEPUTY 9479.74, CIVIL ADMINISTRATION & PROCESSOR 5421.12, PATROL DEPUTY 7054.33, PATROL DEPUTY 6894.41, PATROL DEPUTY 8491.87, PATROL DEPUTY 7074.03, PATROL DEPUTY 5773.77, PATROL DEPUTY 5776.26, PATROL DEPUTY 5776.26, PATROL DEPUTY 6026.02, SENIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 7193.22, ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST 7473.15, HAZARDOUS WASTE SPECIALIST 7205.76, SOLID WASTE MANAGER 11197.2, SOLID WASTE COMPOST SPECIALIST 6871.55, SOLID WASTE ASSISTANT MANAGER 11802.58, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 7131.18, SOLID WASTE OPERATIONS SUPERVISOR 7423.64, HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR 6415.86, SOLID WASTE OPERATIONS SUPERVISOR 8286.13, GATEKEEPER 4800, GATEKEEPER 4709.3, TRANSLATOR SPECIALIST 9809.59, COMMUNICATION SITES MANAGER 15197.93, COMMUNICATIONS PROJECT ENGINEER 9387.13, TREASURER/PUBLIC TRUSTEE 15523.92, CHIEF DEPUTY TREASURER/PUBLIC TRUSTEE 8171.91, DEPUTY TREASURER/PUBLIC TRUSTEE 6128.25, DEPUTY TREASURER/PUBLIC TRUSTEE 5962.47.

rs Want to See This Sign! NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, to begin at 5:30pm, or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business allows, in the Commissioner’s Meeting Room in the Courthouse, 506 East Main Street, Aspen, before the Pitkin County Board of Adjustment, to consider an application submitted by Christopher J. Henderson, 5342 Highway 133, Carbondale, CO 81623. The Applicant is requesting a 99’ Major Road and a 29’ Front Yard Setback variances where 100’ and 30’ respectively are required. Granting these variances will allow a permit to be issued for a ranch gate constructed without a permit. This parcel contains 1.01 acres and is located in the RS-30 zone district. The State Parcel Identification Number for this property is 2463-222-00-012. For further information contact Joanna Schaffner at the Pitkin Community Development Department, (970) 920-5105 Pitkin County Board of Adjustment

RE: Height, Collector Street, and Yard Setback Variances 12 Salvation Circle, Aspen Aka Lot 24, Ridge of Red Mountain Subdivision (Case 12-2017) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, to begin at 5:30pm, or as soon thereafter as the conduct of business allows, in the Commissioner’s Meeting Room in the Courthouse, 506 East Main Street, Aspen, before the Pitkin County Board of Adjustment, to consider an application submitted by RM Development LLC, c/o Bendon Adams 300 S. Spring Street, #202, Aspen, CO 81611. The Applicant is requesting Height variances for grade changes within setbacks, a Collector Street setback variance where 50 feet is required from the Red Mountain Road right-of-Way, and Yard Setback variances for the redevelopment of this 31,044 sq. ft. lot located in the R-30 zone district. The State Parcel Identification Number for this property is 2737-072-02-014.

For further information contact Joanna Schaffner at the Pitkin Community Development Department, (970) 920-5105. Pitkin County Board of Adjustment Published in the Aspen Times Weekly on August 24, 2017

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ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY.COM/WEEKLY

|37


DIVISION 5 WATER COURT- JULY 2017 RESUME

tion set forth on Table 1 below. Table 1: Monthly Distribution of CU Credits from First Claim:

PURSUANT TO C.R.S., §37-92-302, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE NOTIFIED THAT THE FOLLOWING PAGES COM3. PRISE A RESUME OF THE APPLICATIONS AND AMENDED APPLICATIONS FILED WITH THE WATER CLERK FOR WATER DIVISION 5 DURING THE MONTH OF JULY 2017. The water right claimed by this application may affect in priority any water right claimed or heretofore adjudicated within this division and owners of affected rights must appear to object and protest within the time provided by statute, or be forever barred. 17CW3156 EAGLE, PITKIN, AND GARFIELD COUNTIES. TRIBUTARY TO THE ROARING FORK RIVER. Application for Changes of Water Rights, for Approval of Plan for Augmentation including Appropriative Rights of Exchange, and for Alternative Points of Diversion. Applicant: Mid Valley Metropolitan District, Attn.: Bill Reynolds, District Manager, 0031 Duroux Lane, Suite A, Basalt, CO 81621, c/o Nicole Garrimone-Campagna, Garfield & Hecht, P.C., 901 Grand Ave., Suite 201, Glenwood Springs, CO 81601, (970)947-1936. Introduction: The Mid Valley Metropolitan District (the “District” or “Applicant”) is a Colorado special district providing water and sanitary sewer services to areas of the Roaring Fork Valley located in and around El Jebel, in Eagle and Garfield Counties, Colorado. The District’s existing plan for augmentation, decreed in Consolidated Case Nos. 85CW591 and 90CW074 (the “Consolidated Case”), addresses annual diversions by the District of up to 847.233 acrefeet per year. The District has experienced significant development of its service area and anticipates that future growth will necessitate diversions in excess of the limit from the Consolidated Case. Accordingly, the purpose of the current Application is to supply water for future growth and to meet water demands of the District in excess of the 847.233 acre-feet allotted in the Consolidated Case. First Claim: Application for Changes of Water Rights. Name of Water Right: North Side Pioneer Ditch. Decree Information: Decree, Priority, and Amount.

Northside Pioneer Ditch

Robinson & Harris Ditch

Arlian Ditch No. 2

January

0

0

0

February

0

0

0

March

0

0

0

April

0

0

0

May

2.87

5.02

3.32

June

4.42

7.55

5.04

July

4.16

7.16

4.94

August

2.25

3.91

2.63

September

1.80

3.14

1.88

October

0.82

1.73

1.00

November

0

0

0

Case Number

Adjud. Date

Approp. Date

Priority #

Decreed Amt. (cfs)

CA 132

5/11/1889

5/15/1882

30

1.0

December

0

0

0

CA 132

5/11/1889

7/20/1883

73

2.4

Total (AF)

16.32

28.51

18.81

CA 3082

8/25/1936

9/05/1916

404

0.89

Legal Description: The headgate is located on the north bank of the Roaring Fork River, near the SW corner of the NW1/4 of the SW1/4 of Section 11, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M. Source: Roaring Fork River. Use: Irrigation. Amount of water that Applicant requests to change 0.40 c.f.s. (all of Applicant’s ownership interest in the ditch). Description of Proposed Change: The water rights to be changed were historically used to irrigate 8.6 acres of land located in what is now the River Ranch Subdivision, located in Sections 2 and 3, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M. The historically irrigated land is shown on Exhibit A, attached to the Application. The subject lands were removed from irrigation upon development of the River Ranch Subdivision. Applicant proposes a change of use from irrigation to consumptive use credits to be used for augmentation through dry-up of the historically irrigated land. The resulting consumptive use credits will be used to replace Applicant’s out-of-priority depletions under the plan for augmentation described below. Historical Irrigation Use: The water rights subject to this change were historically used to irrigate 8.6 acres of pasture grass in the River Ranch Subdivision in the location depicted in Exhibit A. Historical Consumptive Use Credits: Using the modified Blaney-Criddle method, the Applicant’s engineer calculated the evapotranspiration rate for irrigated pasture grass to be 1.90 acre-feet per acre. Accordingly, the Applicant’s historical consumptive use credit for dry-up of the 8.6 acres identified on Exhibit A is 16.32 acre-feet per year. The monthly distribution of consumptive use credits is shown on Table 1, in Section 7 of the Application. Name of Water Right: Robinson and Harris Ditch. Decree Info: Decree, Priority, and Amount. Case Number

Adjud. Date

Approp. Date

Priority #

Decreed Amt. (cfs)

CA 132

5/11/1889

4/20/1887

173

0.40

Legal description: The headgate is located on the north bank of Blue Creek about two miles north of the Roaring Fork River in Eagle County. Source: Blue Creek (aka Johnson or Harris Creek), tributary to the Roaring Fork River. Use: Irrigation. Amount of water that Applicant requests to change: 0.40 c.f.s. Description of Proposed Change: The water right to be changed was historically used to irrigate 15.0 acres of land located in what is now the Blue Lake Subdivision, Filings IV and V, located in Section 34, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M. The historically irrigated land is shown on Exhibit B, attached to the application. The subject land was removed from irrigation upon development of the Blue Lake Subdivision. Applicant proposes a change of use from irrigation to consumptive use credits to be used for augmentation through dry-up of the historically irrigated land. The resulting consumptive use credits will be used to replace Applicant’s out-of-priority depletions under the plan for augmentation described below. Historical Irrigation Use: The water right subject to this change was historically used to irrigate 15.0 acres of pasture grass in what is now the Blue Lake Subdivision, Filings IV and V, in the location depicted in Exhibit B. Historical Consumptive Use Credits: Using the modified Blaney-Criddle method, the Applicant’s engineer calculated the evapotranspiration rate for irrigated pasture grass to be 1.90 acre-feet per acre. Accordingly, the Applicant’s historical consumptive use credit for dry-up of the 15.0 acres identified on Exhibit B is 28.51 acre-feet per year. The monthly distribution of consumptive use credits is shown on Table 1, in Section 7 below. Name of Structure: Arlian Ditch No. 2. Decree information: Decree, Priority, and Amount.

Excess Consumptive Use Credits from Consolidated Case Nos. 85CW591 and 90CW074 (Third Decree). The Applicant owns 72.60 acre-feet of excess consumptive use credits decreed in Consolidated Case Nos. 85CW591 and 90CW074 (Third Decree at ¶11) which are applied to this plan for augmentation. The four ditches that were quantified and changed in that case, from which the excess consumptive use credits were derived, are listed below: Ditch

Robinson Ditch

Cox-Henry Ditch

Harris & Reed Ditch Case Number

Adjud. Date

Approp. Date

Priority #

Decreed Amt. (cfs)

CA 4613

6/20/1958

6/15/1921

657

1.0 Nash & Peterson Ditch

Legal Description: The headgate is located in Eagle County at a point on the northerly bank of Blue Creek, whence the SW corner of Section 34, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M. bears S. 29º47’ W. 2,811.33 feet. Source: Blue Creek, tributary to the Roaring Fork River. Use: Irrigation. Amount of water that Applicant requests to change: 0.75 c.f.s. Description of Proposed Change: The water rights to be changed were historically used to irrigate 13.9 acres of land located in what is now the Blue Lake Subdivision, Filing V, located in Sections 33 and 34, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M. The historically irrigated land is shown on Exhibit B. The subject land was removed from irrigation upon development of the Blue Lake Subdivision. Applicant proposes a change of use from irrigation to consumptive use credits to be used for augmentation through dry-up of the historically irrigated land. The resulting consumptive use credits will be used to replace Applicant’s out-of-priority depletions under the plan for augmentation described below. Historical Irrigation Use: The water rights subject to this change were historically used to irrigate 13.9 acres of pasture grass in what is now the Blue Lake Subdivision, Filing V, in the location depicted in Exhibit B. Historical Consumptive Use Credits: Using the modified Blaney-Criddle method, the Applicant’s engineer calculated the evapotranspiration rate for irrigated pasture grass to be 1.35 acre-feet per acre. Accordingly, the Applicant’s historical consumptive use credit for dry-up of the 13.9 acres identified on Exhibit B is 18.81 acre-feet per year. The monthly distribution of consumptive use credits is shown on Table 1, in Section 7 below. Second Claim: Application for Approval of Plan for Augmentation. Names of Structures to be augmented: Mid Valley Metropolitan District Well Nos. 1 and 2. Decree Information: Decree entered on Oct. 27, 1993 in Consolidated Case Nos. 85CW591 and 90CW074 (Second Decree), District Court, Water Div. 5. Legal Description: MVMD Well No. 1: Located at a point in the SE1/4 of the SE1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., 1,000 feet from the South section line and 700 feet from the East section line. MVMD Well No. 2: Located at a point in the SE1/4 of the SE1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., 1,000 feet from the South section line and 500 feet from the East section line. Source: Groundwater tributary only to the Roaring Fork River in the non-irrigation season and tributary to the Roaring Fork River and Blue Creek during the irrigation season. Date of appropriation: October 19, 1983. Amount: MVMD Well No. 1: 400 gpm, absolute. MVMD Well No. 2: 100 gpm, absolute. Use: Municipal. Well Permits: MVMD Well No. 1 is permitted as Well Permit No. 32116-F. MVMD Well No. 2 is permitted as Well Permit No. 27004-F. Mid Valley Metropolitan District Well No. 3. Decree Information: Decree entered on January 11, 1990 in Consolidated Case Nos. 85CW591 and 90CW074 (First Decree), District Court, Water Division No. 5. Legal Description: Located at a point in the SE1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 11, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., 2,880 feet from the South section line and 2,330 feet from the West section line. Source: Groundwater tributary to the Roaring Fork River. Date of appropriation: December 10, 1985. Amount: 250 gpm, absolute. Use: Municipal. MVMD Well No. 3 is permitted as Well Permit No. 32117-F. Mid Valley Metropolitan District Well No. 4. Decree Information: Decree entered on May 31, 1999 Case No. 92CW094, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Legal Description: A point located in the SE1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 11, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., located approximately 2,830 feet from the South section line and 2,550 feet from the West section line. Source: Groundwater tributary to the Roaring Fork River. Date of appropriation: May 21, 1992. Amount: 500 gpm, conditional. Use: Municipal. Mid Valley Metropolitan District Well No. 8. Decree Information: Decree entered on November 1, 1999 Case No. 95CW303, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Legal Description: Located in the SE1/4 of the SE1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 1271 feet from the South section line and 654 feet from the East section line of said Section 33. Source: Groundwater tributary to the Roaring Fork River. Date of appropriation: December 11, 1995. Amount: 500 gpm, absolute. Use: All municipal uses. MVMD Well No. 8 is permitted as Well Permit No. 56057F. Mid Valley Metropolitan District Mount Sopris Well No. 6. Decree Information: Original Decree: Entered on November 1, 1999 Case No. 95CW303, District Court, Water Division No. 5. By decree entered in Case No. 10CW217, the MVMD Well No. 11 was changed to the location of, and its name was changed to, the Mid Valley Metropolitan District Mount Sopris Well No. 6. Legal Description: A point located in the NW1/4 of the NE1/4 of Section 3, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., located approximately 787 feet from the North section line and 1,456 feet from the East section line of said Section 3. Source: Groundwater tributary to the Roaring Fork River. Date of appropriation: December 11, 1995. Amount: 500 gpm, conditional. Use: Municipal. MVMD Mount Sopris Well No. 6 is permitted as Well Permit No. 76973-F. Mid Valley Metropolitan District Well Nos. 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, and 12. Decree Information: Decree entered on November 1, 1999 Case No. 95CW303, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Legal Descriptions: Well No. 5: Located in the NW1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 3, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 40 feet from the North section line and 480 feet from the West section line of said Section 3. Well No. 6: Located in the SW1/4 of the SW1/4 of Section 34, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 800 feet from the South section line and 100 feet from the West section line of said Section 34. Well No. 7: Located in the SE1/4 of the SE1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 1000 feet from the South section line and 600 feet from the East section line of said Section 33. Well No. 9: Located in the NW1/4 of the SE1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 1750 feet from the South section line and 1520 feet from the East section line of said Section 33. Well No. 10: Located in the SE1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 11, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 2300 feet from the North section line and 2160 feet from the West section line of said Section 11. Well No. 12: Located in the SW1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 11, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 2250 feet from the North section line and 1240 feet from the West section line of said Section 11. Source: Groundwater tributary to the Roaring Fork River. Date of appropriation: December 11, 1995. Amount: 500 gpm, conditional, for each well. Use: All municipal uses. Juniper Well, Willow Well, and Chokecherry Well. Decree Information: Decree entered on July 24, 2006 Case No. 03CW77, District Court, Water Division No. 5. Legal Descriptions: Juniper Well: Located in the SE1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 2134 feet from the North section line and 1876 feet from the West section line. Willow Well: Located in the SE1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 2327 feet from the North section line and 1821 feet from the West section line. Chokecherry Well: Located in the SE1/4 of the NW1/4 of Section 33, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., at a point 1702 feet from the North section line and 1922 feet from the West section line. Source: Groundwater tributary to the Roaring Fork River, tributary to the Colorado River. Date of appropriation: February 15, 2001. Amount: 100 gpm for each well. Juniper Well and Willow Well are absolute. Chokecherry Well is conditional. Uses: domestic, irrigation, and municipal. Well Permits: Juniper Well is permitted as Well Permit No. 57745-F. Willow Well is permitted as Well Permit No. 58987-F. Water Rights to be Used for Augmentation: Historical Consumptive Use Credits from First Claim. The Applicant owns water rights in the Northside Pioneer Ditch, the Robinson and Harris Ditch, and the Arlian Ditch No. 2, described in the First Claim above. The Applicant claims consumptive use credits from the dry-up of lands historically irrigated by those ditches, in the amounts set forth in the First Claim above. The historical consumptive use credits are applied to this plan for augmentation according to the monthly distribu-

38|

ASPEN TIMES WEEKLY

D

August 24, 2017

Case Number

Adjud. Date

Approp. Date

Priority #

CA132

5/11/1889

6/15/1882

38

CA132

5/11/1889

4/15/1886

140

CA132

5/11/1889

11/15/1886

167

CA1061

12/29/1903

4/25/1899

212C

CA1061

12/29/1903

4/25/1899

212C

W-2872

12/29/1903

4/25/1899

212C

W-3725

12/29/1903

4/25/1899

212C

CA3082

8/25/1936

4/25/1899

326

W-2673

8/25/1936

9/1/1900

332

W-2673

10/24/1952

8/4/1948

581

CA3082

8/25/1936

9/1/1885

282

CA3082

8/25/1936

9/1/1900

331

CA132

5/11/1889

11/2/1883

78

CA3082

8/25/1936

11/2/1890

315

CA3082

8/25/1936

9/1/1900

332

CA4033

10/24/1952

8/14/1948

581

The Consolidated Case Third Decree did not specify the distribution of excess consumptive use credits among the four ditches for which water rights were quantified and changed in that case. Accordingly, this plan for augmentation distributes the excess consumptive use credits to each of the four ditches in proportion to the total historical consumptive use credits quantified to each ditch in the Third Decree. The resulting percentage of excess consumptive use credits applied to each ditch is set forth in Table 2 below. The excess consumptive use credits are available during the months of May-Aug. each year, and are distributed and applied to this plan for augmentation according to the schedule in Table 2. Table 2: Distribution of Excess CU Credits from Consolidated Case: Robinson

Cox & Henry

Ditch (49%)

Ditch (37%)

Nash & Peterson Ditch (1%)

Harris & Reed Ditch (13%)

Total (AF)

January

0

0

0

0

0

February

0

0

0

0

0

March

0

0

0

0

0

April

0

0

0

0

0

May

6.17

4.61

0.09

1.61

12.48

June

7.40

5.54

0.11

1.93

14.97

July

13.38

10.01

0.19

3.50

27.08

August

8.93

6.68

0.13

2.33

18.07

September

0

0

0

0

0

October

0

0

0

0

0

November

0

0

0

0

0

December

0

0

0

0

0

Total (AF)

35.87

26.84

0.52

9.37

72.6

Excess Historical Consumptive Use Credits from Case No. 99CW308. Applicant has 7.77 acre-feet of excess consumptive use credits in the Cox & Henry Ditch that were decreed in Case No. 99CW308 (at ¶¶ 10.3.2 and 20) which are applied to this plan for augmentation. Decree information for the Cox and Henry Ditch is provided above. The excess consumptive use credits are available during the months of May-Aug. each year, and are distributed and applied to this plan for augmentation according to the schedule in Table 3. Table 3: Distribution of Excess CU Credits from Case No. 99CW308 (in acre-feet): Jan. = 0; Feb. = 0; March = 0; April = 0; May = 1.01; June = 1.65; Jul. = 2.18; Aug. = 1.76; Sept. = 0.90; Oct. = 0.27; Nov. = 0; Dec. = 0; Total (AF) = 7.77. Historical Consumptive Use Credits from Case No. 03CW77. The District acquired 9.35 acre-feet of consumptive use credits that were quantified and decreed in Case No. 03CW77. The credits were originally applied to augment irrigation season potable water requirements associated with development of the Cerise Ranch Subdivision. The Subdivision was later included into the District and receives potable water service from the District. In return, the developer dedicated 9.35 acre-feet of consumptive use credits and the associated interest in the underlying ditches to the District. The 9.35 acre-feet of consumptive use was associated with the dry-up of lands historically irrigated by the Harris and Reed Ditch, the Harris Lateral, and the Highline Ditch, described as follows: Ditch

Case Number

Adjud. Date

Approp. Date

Priority #


Harris & Reed Ditch

CA132

5/11/1889

11/2/1883

78

CA3082

8/25/1936

11/2/1890

315

CA1324

9/3/1909

9/1/1908

227

CA4613

6/20/1958

10/1/1951

684

Harris Lateral (aka Harris & Reed Ditch Blue Creek)

High Line Ditch – Blue Creek

The District will utilize the consumptive use credits to provide an additional source of replacement water for the current plan for augmentation. The 9.35 acre-feet of consumptive use credits will be applied to the plan according to the domestic depletion and replacement schedule decreed in Case No. 03CW77, as shown in Table 4. Table 4: Distribution of CU Credits from Case No. 03CW77 (in acre-feet): Jan. = 0; Feb. = 0; March = 0; April = 0.94; May = 1.11; June = 1.33; Jul. = 1.56; Aug. = 1.75; Sept. = 1.81; Oct. = 0.85; Nov. = 0; Dec. = 0; Total (AF) = 9.35. Ruedi Reservoir Contract Storage Water. Applicant holds Contract No. 9-07-60-W0847 (300 acre-feet) and Contract No. 139D6C0106 (100 acre-feet) with the United States Bureau of Reclamation for a total of 400 acre-feet of annual water supply from Ruedi Reservoir, described as follows: Legal description of place of storage: Ruedi Reservoir is located in Sections 7, 8, 9, 11 and 14 through 18, T. 8 S., R. 84 W., 6th P.M., in Eagle and Pitkin Counties. The dam axis intersects the right abutment at a point whence the SW corner of Section 7, T. 8 S., R. 84 W. of the 6th P.M. bears N. 82°10’W. a distance of 1,285 feet. Source: Fryingpan River. Previous storage decrees: Civil Action No. 4613: Decree Date: June 20, 1958. Court: Garfield County District Court. Amount: 140,697.3 acre feet, reduced to 102,369 acre feet pursuant to order of the Water Court in Case No. W-789-76. The full amount was made absolute in Case No. 88CW85. Appropriation Date: July 29, 1957. Use: Domestic, municipal, irrigation, industrial, generation of electrical energy, stock watering and piscatorial. Case No. 81CW34: Decree Date: April 8, 1985. Court: District Court, Water Div. No. 5. Amount: 101,280 acre feet (refill); of this amount, 44,509 acre feet were made absolute in Case No. 95CW95 and 25,257 acre feet were made absolute in Case No. 01CW269, for a total of 69,766 acre feet absolute. Appropriation Date: January 22, 1981. Use: Irrigation, domestic, municipal, generation of electrical energy, stock watering, industrial, piscatorial, recreation and maintenance of sufficient storage reserves to fulfill contractual obligations and provide stored water for recreation in times of drought. Of the District’s 400 acre-feet of annual storage water supply, 81.96 acre-feet are dedicated to augmentation under the District’s Consolidated Case and 14.2 acre-feet are dedicated to augmentation in Case No. 99CW308, leaving the District with 303.84 acre-feet of available storage water. Of that amount, 76.48 acre-feet are dedicated to this plan for augmentation, as detailed in the Statement of Plan for Augmentation below. Statement of Plan for Augmentation: Nature and Purpose of Plan. The District is a Colorado special district formed and functioning pursuant to Section 32-1-101, C.R.S., et seq., providing water and sanitary sewer services to areas of the Roaring Fork Valley located in and around El Jebel, in Eagle and Garfield Counties, Colorado. At this time, the District’s service area is generally located within portions of Sections 29, 32, 33, 34 and 35, Township 7 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M. and Sections 2, 3, 4, 10, 11 and 12, Township 8 South, Range 87 West of the 6th P.M., as identified on the Overview Map attached to the application as Exhibit C. Additional land may be included within the District’s boundaries pursuant to state statute and may be served by the District under this plan for augmentation. The District’s potable water supplies are diverted through a series of groundwater wells located within the District and delivered throughout the District’s service area to meet the domestic and commercial water demands of the District’s customers. The District’s existing plan for augmentation, decreed in the Consolidated Case (Case Nos. 85CW591 and 90CW074), addresses diversions by the District of up to 847.233 acre-feet per year. Since its formation, the District has experienced significant growth from both infill and expansion of its service area, and the District anticipates that continued growth will necessitate diversions in excess of the limit from the Consolidated Case. Accordingly, the purpose of the current plan is to supply water for future growth and to meet water demands of the District in excess of 847.233 acre-feet by augmenting out-of-priority depletions associated with such increased demands. Estimated Water Demands and Depletions. The District’s municipal water demands to be augmented hereunder will be supplied from any one or a combination of the District’s wells described above. A number of the District’s current and anticipated future developments utilize senior ditch rights or other untreated water supplies for irrigation, thus reducing demand on the District’s wells and potable water supply system. The wells augmented by this plan supply the District’s domestic and commercial indoor water demands, that portion of the District’s outdoor irrigation water demands that utilize treated water, and bulk water sales. A summary of the District’s monthly demands and depletions associated with the municipal uses of water is set forth on Table 5, attached to the application. Applicant’s total well water demand at build-out of this plan is approximately 1,448.81 acre-feet per year, with an associated consumptive use of 292.84 acre-feet per year. Indoor Water Demands and Depletions. The District uses equivalent residential units (EQRs) for water supply and planning purposes. Anticipated build-out of the District is estimated to be 4,500 EQRs. For purposes of this application, Applicant conservatively assigns 350 gpd per EQR to indoor water demands. Should actual average indoor water demands be less than 350 gpd per EQR, the District reserves the right to serve more EQRs within the volume of replacement water dedicated to this plan. At 350 gpd/EQR, the District’s estimated total build-out demand for indoor water uses is 1,764.23 acre-feet per year. Of that amount, the Consolidated Case augments indoor demands of up to 604.43 acre-feet per year. The remaining 1,159.80 acre-feet per year of indoor water demands will be augmented under this plan. The District owns and operates a centralized wastewater treatment facility that discharges to the Roaring Fork River near the Garfield-Eagle County line. Depletions are 5 percent of indoor water demands, for an estimated total depletion of 58.04 acre-feet per year at build-out. Ninety-five percent of the District’s indoor water demands return to the stream as wastewater return flows which accrue to the stream in the same month. The schedule of anticipated indoor municipal diversions and consumptive use at build-out of the District is provided in Table 5. Outdoor Water Demand and Depletions. The District estimates that it will add approximately 100 acres of land (primarily residential lawns and community/green spaces) that will be irrigated from the District’s potable water system (wells) above and beyond the 85.4 acres of potable water irrigation that is augmented under the Consolidated Case. Applicant’s estimated irrigation demand for 100 acres of lawn and landscaping is 271.01 acre-feet per year, diverted during the months of April through October. Applicant’s engineers calculated the irrigation consumptive use rate using the Modified Blaney-Criddle method for bluegrass, resulting in an estimated consumptive use rate of 2.168 acre-feet per acre. At build-out of 100 acres, Applicant’s total outdoor irrigation consumptive use is calculated to be 216.80 acre-feet, as set forth in Table 5. Bulk Water Sales. The District sells potable water, in bulk, for use within the Roaring Fork Valley. This plan augments for bulk water sales of up to 18.00 acre-feet per year, as set forth in Table 5. Bulk water use is considered 100 percent consumptive. Delayed Stream Depletions and Return Flows. Table 5 summarizes the District’s anticipated build-out demands and depletions associated with the District’s wells. The schedule of augmentation requirements to replace those depletions will be affected by delayed depletions from the wells, as well as the timing of wastewater return flows and potable irrigation return flows. Delayed Well Depletions. Applicant’s engineers calculated delayed well depletions using the Integrated Decision Support Group’s Alluvial Water Accounting System (IDS AWAS). Applicant’s engineers found that 99 percent of the depletions associated with pumping the District’s wells reached the Roaring Fork River within two months and normalized the remaining return flows on a pro-rata basis across the first two months. The associated schedule of well demands and delayed depletions is set forth in Table 5. Lagged well depletions reach the Roaring Fork River at or below the upstream-most well location, near MVMD Well Nos. 3 and 4. Return Flows. Wastewater return flows associated with pumping the District’s wells return to the Roaring Fork River at the treated effluent outflow from the District’s wastewater treatment facility, identified on the map attached to the application as Exhibit D. Wastewater return flows are assumed to accrue to the stream in the same month as they are pumped from the District’s wells. Applicant’s engineers completed a lawn irrigation return flow lagging analysis in IDS AWAS using the Glover Method. Three lawn irrigation return flow zones were created based on unique aquifer parameters. Based on an estimated number of acres in each zone to be irrigated from the District’s potable system, which may be subject to adjustment as actual build-out occurs, Applicant’s engineer calculated the schedule of lagged lawn irrigation return flows set forth in Table 5. Potable irrigation augmented hereunder may occur throughout the District’s current and future service area. For purposes of this plan, all lagged irrigation return flow credits are claimed to accrue at or above the downstream Exchange 2 Lower Terminus identified on Exhibit D. Augmentation Requirements. Table 5 shows the anticipated schedule of monthly municipal water demands and stream depletions associated with the remaining

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build-out of the District. The District’s anticipated build-out well demands of 1,448.81 acre-feet per year result in net stream depletions of 292.84 acre-feet per year. Historically, a call has not been placed on the Roaring Fork River below the confluence with the Fryingpan River, and no such call is expected to occur. However, the augmented water rights may be subject to a downstream senior “Cameo Call” on the Colorado River. To account for dry-year scenarios and other potential influences, a conservative potential call period of April 15-May 15 and June 15-November 7 is applied to the plan. Table 6, attached to the application, details the anticipated schedule of out-of-priority stream depletions and augmentation requirements for Applicant’s remaining build-out water uses. Potential out-of-priority depletions that may occur under a dry-year river call from downstream senior water rights on the Colorado River are estimated to be 209.76 acre-feet per year. Applicant will augment its out-of-priority depletions with (i) the bypass of water associated with historical consumptive use credits from the water rights changed in this case, (ii) the bypass of water associated with previously decreed historical consumptive use credits from other cases, and (iii) releases of water stored in Ruedi Reservoir, all according to the Augmentation Plan Summary set forth in Table 6. After applying historical consumptive use credits of 136.92 acre-feet per year to the plan, Applicant will have 16.44 acre-feet of excess consumptive use credits that it may apply to a later plan for augmentation. In order to replace remaining depletions under the plan, Applicant will dedicate 76.48 acre-feet of water stored in Ruedi Reservoir to this plan for augmentation, which amount includes 5 percent for transit losses. Volumetric Limit of Augmented Water Rights. Total District demands under the Consolidated Case equal 847.233 acrefeet per year. As a result of this plan, the Applicant has increased the volume of water it can augment and, therefore, the demands it can serve. Accordingly, Applicant requests that any volumetric limit associated with the augmented water rights described above be increased in accordance with this plan to a total volumetric demand of 2,296.043 acre-feet per year from any one or a combination of the wells. No change in the decreed pumping rate for any of the wells is requested hereby. Claim for Appropriation Rights of Exchange. Applicant claims appropriative rights of exchange associated with its wastewater return flows, lagged irrigation return flows, and bypass of historical consumptive use credits from the Arlian Ditch No. 2 and the Robinson and Harris Ditch, all of which are attributed to the Roaring Fork River below the location where Applicant’s well depletions are assumed to accrue. Description of Wastewater Return Flow Exchange: At times when a valid senior call against the Augmented Water Rights originates downstream of the point of discharge of Applicant’s wastewater treatment plant, Applicant claims an appropriative right of exchange associated with its wastewater return flow. Location: The affected stream reach of the exchange is the Roaring Fork River from the Wastewater Treatment Plant outflow discharge (“Exchange 1 Lower Terminus”) to the upstream-most location of well depletions (“Upper Terminus”), the locations of which are shown on Exhibit D and described below. NAD 83 Zone 13 (meters)

Legal Description

Easting

Northing

Qrt

Qrt

Sec

-ship

Range

Feet from E/W

Feet from N/S

Upper Terminus

321197

4359956

NW

SE

11

8S

87W

2,360 from East

2,150 from South

Exchange 1 Lower Terminus

317931

4362939

SW

SE

33

7S

87W

2,680 from East

470 from South

Exchange 2 Lower Terminus

314538

4363333

NE

SW

31

7S

87W

2,250 from West

1,500 from South

Terminus

Town

Date of Appropriation: July 31, 2017. How appropriation was initiated: Formation of intent to appropriate water for the exchange, passing of resolution authorizing the filing of the application, and completion and filing of application. Rate of Exchange: 4.35 c.f.s., conditional (associated with decreed pumping rates of wells). Volume of Exchange: 1,101.76 acre-feet per year. Use: Municipal. Description of Lagged Irrigation Return Flows and Historical Consumptive Use Credits Exchange: Future irrigation demands augmented hereunder may occur anywhere within the District’s future service area. Accordingly, irrigation return flows are assumed to accrue to the Roaring Fork River downstream of the anticipated build-out boundary, where Garfield County Road 100 (CR 100) crosses the Roaring Fork River. See Exhibit D. Further, the bypass of historical consumptive use credits associated with Applicant’s Arlian Ditch No. 2 and Robinson and Harris Ditch rights changed herein accrue to the Roaring Fork River at its confluence with Blue Creek (which is upstream of where CR 100 crosses the Roaring Fork River). At times when a valid senior call against the Augmented Water Rights originates downstream of the location where CR 100 crosses the Roaring Fork River, Applicant claims an appropriative right of exchange associated with such irrigation return flows and bypass of historical consumptive use credits. Location: The affected stream reach of the exchange is the Roaring Fork River from where CR 100 crosses the Roaring Fork River (“Exchange 2 Lower Terminus”) to the upstream-most location of well depletions (“Upper Terminus”), the locations of which are shown on Exhibit D and described above. Date of Appropriation: July 31, 2017. How appropriation was initiated: Formation of intent to appropriate water for the exchange, passing of resolution authorizing the filing of the application, and completion and filing of application. Rate of Exchange: 4.35 c.f.s., conditional (associated with decreed pumping rates of wells). Volume of Exchange: 54.21 acre-feet per year from lagged irrigation return flows. 47.32 acre-feet per year from HCU credits. Use: Municipal. Third Claim. Application for Alternative Points of Diversion. The Applicant requests to decree alternate points of diversion for some of its wells as follows: Structures for which alternate points of diversion are sought: MVMD Well No. 4, described above. MVMD Well Nos. 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, and 12, described above. Proposed alternate points of diversion: Juniper Well, Willow Well, and Chokecherry Well, the locations of which are described above. Names and addresses of owners or reputed owners of the land upon which any new diversion or storage structure, or modification to any existing diversion or storage structure is or will be constructed or upon which water is or will be stored, including any modification to the existing storage pool: Juniper Well, Willow Well, and Chokecherry Well: Brenda Broxton, P.O. Box 909, Basalt, CO 81621. Northside Pioneer Ditch headgate: 1195 Willits Lane LLC, 132 Midland Ave., Unit 4, Basalt, CO 81621. Robinson and Harris Ditch headgate: Willisha LLC, 8862 N. County Line Road, Longmont, CO 80503. Arlian Ditch No. 2 headgate: Blue Lake Owners Association, 189 JW Dr., Unit A, Carbondale, CO 81623. Ruedi Reservoir: U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Eastern Colorado Area Office, 11056 West County Road 18E, Loveland, CO 80537. Wherefore, Applicant respectfully requests this Court to issue a decree granting the changes of water rights, approving the plan for augmentation including appropriative rights of exchange, and granting the alternate points of diversion requested herein, and granting such additional relief as the Court deems appropriate. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE until the last day of SEPTEMBER 2017 to file with the Water Clerk a verified Statement of Opposition setting forth facts as to why this application should not be granted or why it should be granted in part or on certain conditions. A copy of such statement of opposition must also be served upon the applicant or the applicant’s attorney and an affidavit or certificate of such service shall be filed with the Water Clerk, as prescribed by Rule 5, CRCP. (Filing Fee: $158.00) KATHY POWERS, Water Clerk, Water Division 5; 109 8th Street, Suite 104 Glenwood Springs, CO 81601. Published in the Eagle Valley Enterprise August 24, 2017

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WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by JEFF AYERS for THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOOK REVIEW

‘SEEING RED’

NOTEWORTHY

A MAN’S HEROIC ACT in the past has ramifications in the present in “Seeing Red,” Sandra Brown’s latest collision of suspense and romance. Kerra Bailey, a television journalist, wants to interview Major Franklin Trapper. Twenty-five years earlier, he saved several people, including a little girl, after a hotel bombing. He gave many interviews, and every time there was another major incident, he became the spokesperson for heroism. A few years ago, he became a recluse and quit answering his phone. Bailey was the little girl he saved that day, and her identity has been a secret. She was going to reveal the truth during their sit-down

session in front of cameras. The Major’s son, John, has a strained relationship with his father, and it boils down to him not believing the official events of that day. His obsession for the truth has cost him his job with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, a fiancee and the Major’s respect. Now Bailey has been pushing him to get her access to his father, her rescuer. The pursuit of the interview seems innocuous as first, but there are some people who will do anything to keep quiet what really happened 25 years ago. John was a lot closer to the truth than he realizes, and it could cost everyone their lives.

“Seeing Red” Sandra Brown Grand Central Publishing, 2017

Brown’s story mixes thrills with mystery and a spicy sex scene or two. She has a talent for making the reader think that too much information has been revealed early in the story, eliminating any possibility for suspense, but the conspiracy is so multilayered, the reveal is a tiny part of the overall picture. Strong characters and an emotional narrative make this one of Brown’s best books in years.

by RUTH BLOOMFIELD MARGOLIN | edited by WILL SHORTZ

FOUND IN YOUR INBOX ACROSS 1 6 10 14 18 19 20

21 22 25 26 27

28 29 34 37 38 39 41 42 44 45

49 53 55 56 58

42

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

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87

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— Last week’s puzzle answers — 89 90 93 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 105

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R A V E

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A X I O M M S A C A A C W E S A W S A U R R D E N S O Y T RING B E E

S T A H L E D W A R D C O N I E S

L E I A L B E H I N G O L T O S O E S I N K I S T A N O R F T O R I N G A T E R I A M C Y A C H A N H A R I I S E T A F M E L A N E E S E

M R C L E A N F I L L I N G S F E L L

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R A P S O N G S I N A S N A R L T O Y

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

I E L S

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E N O S


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Four parcels totaling 800 acres! Magnificent vistas, fertile pastures, Woody Creek frontage, water rights, and easy access. Wildlife abounds! Three approved building sites. Call for FAR. $17,500,000 Penney Evans Carruth – 970.379.9133

At the base of Aspen Mountain, 14 mountainside residences are located adjacent to Lift 1A. Spacious floor plans, modern lines and open layouts. Starting at $12,195,000 TheOneAspen.com Maureen Stapleton – 970.948.9331 Andrew Ernemann – 970.379.8125

Fantastic horse property located on the back of Spring Park Reservoir. Breathtaking panoramic views and extremely private and pristine. Ability to build an 11,000 sq ft main residence and 2 additional buildings. $3,500,000 Terry Rogers – 970.379.2443

Riverfront Basalt

Riverside Fisherman’s Paradise

Located Directly on the Slopes!

Custom-built 5 bedroom, 4.5 bath home with a private location. Close to Whole Foods. Open floor plan, direct river access, outdoor deck, hot tub, fire pit and treehouse. $2,600,000 $2,350,000 Ted Borchelt – 970.309.3626 Jana Dillard – 970.948.9731

3,460 sq ft 4 bedroom home features wood floors, high ceilings, fireplace, deck. Beautifully landscaped, 2 car garage+workshop, 2 acres, walkway to river and island. $2,250,000 Sally Shiekman-Miller, CRS – 970.948.7530 Tom Melberg – 970.379.1297

This 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath Wood Run Place property has a bedroom with its own ski-in/ski-out access! Light corner unit with gourmet kitchen, large living room, dining room and master bedroom. $2,095,000 Greg Didier – 970.379.3980


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