9 Nov 2008, 8:06pm
Colorado Mountain Living Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride:
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Getting Ready for Ski Season: Part One

I spotted a glimmer of an orange-y object in my path.  I stooped down to pick it up and discovered that it was a perfectly intact miniature Reese’s cup, the sort distributed at Halloween.  Jackpot!   A golden nugget wouldn’t have made me more happy.  I gobbled it so fast I almost choked on it.  I knew that this little shot of sugar would enable me to forge up the hill—the Galloping Goose ski run to be exact—the trail outside my apartment that I began to hike on a regular basis as soon as the snow melted late last spring.  That little peanut butter treat gave me enough of a burst to make it to the bridge on Sundance, always a stretch since that meant I had to power up to a blue run from a double green.

It was far from noon yet I was thinking about what I’d fix myself for lunch.  I had already had two breakfasts and a tide of tea and coffee since I dragged myself out of bed at 6:45 a.m.  My body felt completely deflated, like a balloon that had been left out days after a party.  Still I knew I would somehow reap benefits from all this fatigue.

Pre-Season Conditioning

Pre-Season Conditioning

“There’s much less of a chance of being hurt during the season if you do ski conditioning class,”  my good buddy and top ski instructor, Dave Brown, informed me.

I felt grateful I had never had an injury in my five years of ski instructing, but I figured I shouldn’t push my luck, especially now that I’m getting older.  So this year I decided to sign up for the five weeks of pre-season conditioning class offered by Telski to their employees at Peak Performance Therapy.  (Yes, most people end up here after suffering an injury on the mountain.)  Plus I really wanted to get into good shape this year.  I was tired of going from 0 to 75 mph in no time since in previous years I’d work some fourteen days in a row at Christmas without having logged many skier days on the mountain leading up to that busy period.

 

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1 Nov 2008, 5:22pm
Beauty Colorado Telluride:
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Bobbi Brown’s Beauty: As Natural as the Mountains of Telluride

Bobbi Brown

Bobbi Brown

I first heard about Bobbi Brown back in the early nineties when I stopped into Bergdorf Goodman’s in New York.  There was a big counter devoted to her line of natural looking lipsticks and the array of super-wearable shades such as yummy Raisin, Blackberry and Burnt Red was refreshing.  I was living in Paris at the time where I operated a shopping service, so I couldn’t help taking notice of this American woman that had garnered so much attention—actually buzz—at the cosmetics counter, territory predominantly overrun by the French.

Fast forward to just over ten years after that when I found myself living in Telluride, an equally beautiful place as Paris, and surprisingly enough, working at the Telluride Children’s Ski and Snowboard School.  There I learned that a friend of mine was teaching Bobbi Brown’s kids to snowboard.  The Bobbi Brown? I inquired.  Bobbi Brown of make up and beauty fame?  I quickly learned that Bobbi Brown was in many ways as much of a fixture in the Telluride community as alpenglow sunsets—or almost at least.  She and her family have been coming here for over fifteen years.  And like many other children of T-ride families, her kids practically grew up on the Magic Carpet.  As Bobbi’s fame grew so did her willing participation in so many of Telluride’s events and charities.

I finally met this make up diva extraordinaire when I interviewed her for my Travel Fun radio show.  It was easy enough for me to decide what to wear for that meeting and how to do my hair, but in terms of make up, I almost folded.  Did I go for the quintessential Telluride look and just put on a bit of make up or should I enhance myself a tad more?  Just as it’s often better to be overdressed than under dressed, I figured I should do my eyes some in addition to the cursory sweep of powder, blush, concealer and gloss.  Not surprisingly I realized when I met Bobbi that she wasn’t wearing a smack of make up at all.  Indeed she appeared more like a Tellurider than I.

“I never wear make up when I ski, when I’m at the beach or when I exercise,” she readily told me.  I tried not to feel self conscious about my somewhat made up look and proceeded to ask her about her take on beauty and her life in Telluride.  I quickly learned that Telluride has been a source of inspiration for Bobbi on many levels.  Many of her products, in fact, have been entirely Telluride inspired.  “Extra,” her ultra-rich skin care products, for example, were created in response to the harsh, dry climate of the mountains.  “All the years of coming here, I couldn’t believe how my skin looked,” Bobbi said.  “I looked like an old woman.”  She knew that drinking water was essential but she realized even more the importance of developing a product that would hydrate and protect your skin at the same time.  “Extra’s” super-hydrating tinted moisture balm has an SPF of 25.  “It’s like three products in one,” Bobbi says.

Upon seeing her boys come home wind-burned and chapped from a day on the mountain, Bobbi set out to replicate that intense rosy color earned from a day in the outdoors.  Slopes, a particularly color-saturated line of cosmetics directly resulted from her wintertime observations.  One summer produced  Stonewashed Nudes, a collection that came about from hikes picking stones in Telluride.  “The nude face is more about putting on colors that look like your coloring but don’t make you look washed out,” Bobbi says.

This natural approach lies at the very foundation of Bobbi Brown’s beauty philosophy.  That is how she entered the cosmetics business in the first place.  While working as a professional make up artist, she would constantly mix up different cosmetics in order to achieve the colors and looks that she found to be more natural.  After a chance encounter with a chemist, she was able to create a lipstick that seemed to be missing from the market, a very down-to-earth color just one shade darker than her own lips.  That lipstick is now called Brownie and it’s the number two selling lip color of her collection.

Today Bobbi is as much of a fixture on high-profile programs such as the Today Show as on the slopes of Telluride.  And as I learned while chatting with her, all of us are so much better off because of her and her approach to beauty.  “Make up is a way for a woman to look and feel like herself, only prettier and more confident,” Bobbi says.  Indeed she is a huge proponent of women—young and old—feeling good about themselves.  She’s not into artifice; there’s no putting on a mask with the Bobbi Brown look.  “Confidence is the key to beauty,” Bobbi says.  “Self esteem and confidence are the foundation to feeling and looking pretty.”

Bobbi in Her Telluride Home

Bobbi in Her Telluride Home

Bobbi particularly emphasizes these traits for teens and underlines the importance of the need for young women today to have positive role models.  For women approaching their forties or over forty, she wrote “Bobbi Brown Living Beauty,” her fourth book that is actually a lifestyle book about how to look fresh, pretty, and healthy as you head into your fifties.  “I wrote this as a gift to the women I know,” Bobbi said.  “It also helped me to come to terms with the fact of turning fifty.”

To look at this vibrant lady with incredibly dewy and radiant skin, you would never guess that she’s fifty plus.  Her products seem to be working for her but I can tell that it’s mostly about attitude and lifestyle.  She’s also a big believer in massage and regular exercise.  “Both help to release toxins and oxygenate your blood which will help your skin immensely,” Bobbi says.  She concluded her interview with me with a chunk of her biggest advice which she clearly adheres to tenfold.  “Stop beating yourself up and feel good now, because in ten years you’ll look back at pictures from now and say how good you looked back then.”  Well, I don’t think many of us can disagree with that!

Bobbi points out that that’s true for men as well but she also acknowledges that men have it a little easier.  “Men are lucky because they can look good a little grungy and with lines around their eyes,” she says.  Although women have the added benefit of beauty enhancers such as the much-necessary concealer and lipstick.  “Men should be sure to take care of their skin and moisturize,” Bobbi continues.  “But the only other products they can use are perhaps self tanners, bronzing gels and tinted moisturizers.”  Sorry guys, all the rest of the good stuff is for us.

In 1994, Bobbi Brown essentials went international, debuting in Harrod’s in the U.K.  In 2003, her Brightening Collection was launched in Asia.  Move over Paris, there’s plenty of room for this enterprising américaine.

 

Bobbi’s Beauty Tips

Concealer is the secret of the universe.

A pop of blush is the quickest way to add a healthy glow to the face.

Strive to be comfortable and relaxed.

Find a make up that suits you.  A very natural look might work better for some women whereas others might want to introduce more color.

Be open to change.  It’s probably best not to do your make up the same exact way you did it a decade or more ago.  “Don’t get caught in a rut,” Bobbi says.

It’s good to focus on one thing; if you’re going to have smoky eyes, make sure you have pretty, soft cheeks and lips.

The same goes for your clothes:  If you’re wearing a glitzy sequined dress, keep the accessories subtle.

Be sure to have a good skin care regime that will keep your skin looking fresh.

Always moisturize, moisturize, moisturize.

Consider wearing jewelry as make up.  Don earrings or necklaces that will enhance your complexion and put on a big beautiful pair of earrings if you’re not feeling so pretty.

Use lip liner sparingly as it can dry out your lips.  Plus Bobbi doesn’t like to see a dark line around the mouth.

Every woman should have a shade of lipstick that she can swipe on without looking in the mirror.

Pair down what you bring when you travel—maximize your use of mini items as much as you can.

Always do something to your face to make you look more attractive.  “It’s a big mistake not to do anything to look brighter or fresher,” Bobbi says.  “Those are the women I like to help the most.”

Travel with good face moisturizers such as face oils.  “I put a ton of face oil on before and after I board the plane,” Bobbi says.

Bring something special with you on your trip such as black eyeliner or some shimmer.

Always be nice.  A smile is the best way to engage someone.

When you feel good, you look good—so make smart food choices, exercise and drink water.

Love more.  “When you feel love, you look more beautiful,” Bobbi says.

20 Oct 2008, 4:09pm
Colorado Mountain Living Telluride The Rockies:
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Comments Off on Fall in Telluride: Riding the Gondola

Fall in Telluride: Riding the Gondola

Me Sightseeing on the Gondola

Me Sightseeing on the Gondola

Boy, am I glad to be back!  I’ve survived my technical difficulties and will try to catch up with my blog postings this week.  (Give me a plume and a few sheets of parchment any day!)

If you think I appear somewhat like a Bond girl in the photo on the left, it’s because I’m riding the gondola that connects Telluride to Mountain Village.  Yeah, I thought I’d go for more of a slick Europhile look here since a lot of people conjure up hair-raising scenes from a 007 flick when they first ride our gondola.  Two systems builders, one from Salt Lake City, the other from Switzerland (not surprisingly!) collaborated to create this fine example of modern technology, a veritable air-born shuttle that spans three miles as it sails above the slopes at treetop height. A super green transportation choice that operates the better part of the year on wind-powered electricity, the gondola has greatly minimized the amount of air and noise pollution in Telluride while keeping vehicular traffic at a minimum.  It always promises an exciting ride as well as safe delivery to the next station.  Visions of heart-racing adventures become dashed when you learn that in the twelve years of its existence, only one evacuation was required and that was on the intercept gondola, the four-minute spit that goes between the core of Mountain Village to the parking area.  (Rescuers do, however, regularly train for such missions, just in case.) 

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25 Sep 2008, 11:55am
Colorado Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride Travel:
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Comments Off on Telluride Ski Resort is Tantamount to Fun

Telluride Ski Resort is Tantamount to Fun

Lowering the Goods

Lowering the Goods

Not long after I returned home from my month of travels back east, I tuned in to the constant comings and goings of a helicopter whirring in the skies near my little slopeside apartment.  There was so much activity, in fact, that I said a prayer for the people involved since choppers in the mountains typically mean a search and rescue mission.  My concern swelled until someone enlightened me, informing me that the copter operation concerned the ski area; these workhorses of the sky had been engaged to deliver lift shacks, towers and other materials to an elevation of over 12,000 feet for the installation of the new Revelation Lift.  Oh, of course, I thought to myself and my mood quickly changed from one of dread to elation.

I chatted about Revelation Lift and more with Dave Riley, CEO of Telluride Ski and Golf, during a recent Travel Fun interview.  Entering his second year on the job, Dave has a lot to be proud of at Telluride Ski Resort.  He has been instrumental in opening up a bunch of new terrain including Palmyra Peak, Black Iron Bowl, Gold Hill Chutes 6-10 and now Revelation Bowl which will be ready to go with the start of this new ski season.  

Veteran Ski Patrolman Surveys the Terrain

Veteran Ski Patrolman Surveys the Terrain

“I have to give the ski patrol a lot of credit for most of these openings,” Dave said during our interview.  Much avalanche control work was required to pave the way for the public and ski patrol did double time with this last winter, particularly since it was a banner snow year.  It seems that almost as a reward to them, Dave went ahead and leased some fancy Howitzers from the U.S. Army; these 105 mm artillery weapons certainly pack enough punch to trigger slides far out on the peaks and couloirs.  New snowcats have also been acquired, high-performing mountain monsters that will be winched up on at least a couple of the trails off of the Revelation Lift to guarantee some nice corduroy for those of us looking to take a break from the bumps.  

I was thrilled to learn that most of the runs off of Revelation—the highest lift on the mountain which also happens to be above tree line—are single black diamonds.  (Oh, what did you think I was hardcore?)  “It’s like a high alpine, European bowl,” Dave says.  “It’s a great snow catcher and the views are extraordinary.”

Virgin Revelation Bowl

Virgin Revelation Bowl

The scenery here is probably what best sets Telluride apart from most other mountain resorts in the country.  “We have the largest concentration of 13,000 to 14,000-foot peaks here,” Dave points out.  “It’s like the Swiss Alps of America.”  We both agree, too, that the combination of the old mining town of Telluride (a National Historic District) with Mountain Village, a more recent European-styled assortment of buildings and homes works well together to suit the needs of both residents and visitors.  Both are connected by a gondola, providing free transportation and outstanding views to all that ride it from the wee hours of the morning until midnight.

Dave Atop Palmyra Peak

Dave Riley Atop Palmyra Peak

Dave, an incredibly passionate skier that has worked in many top destinations throughout the West, travels to four to six different ski areas a season.  Sure, he’s a little biased but I can tell he’s sincere when he talks about how Telluride offers an unparalleled ski experience in North America.  “Telluride is consistently good,” he emphasizes.  “There are no lift lines here, there’s good sunny weather and the snow is great.”  

At this point, I tap into the ski instructor within me and mention that we enjoy great teaching terrain in Telluride as well.  “There’s a good balance for beginner, intermediate, expert and even extreme skiers and boarders,” I add.  

“Our Ski and Snowboard School is unmatched,” Dave volleys back.  “The instructors provide great instruction with a real personalized touch.”  

Fabuleux!  I scored one for the home team.  I almost added that we all try really hard as well but I didn’t want to blur the line too much between radio interviewer/travel writer and ski instructor, especially with my boss.  One thing’s for sure:  We all share an immense enthusiasm for the mountain and that passion is conveyed to every person we encounter.  Dave exudes it as well which is probably partly why he’s been able to improve so much on an already darn good thing.

Telluride Ski Resort, 970-728-6900, www.tellurideskiresort.com; be sure to check out Dave’s blog at that site.

Dave’s Book Pick

“Ski the 14ers:  A Visual Tribute to Colorado’s 14,000-foot Peaks from the Eyes of a Ski Mountaineer,” by Chris Davenport.  Ski mountaineering is one of Dave Riley’s personal passions.  

Now Warm Up that Baby---Ski Season is Almost Here!

Now Warm Up that Baby---Ski Season is Almost Here!

22 Sep 2008, 10:19am
Art & Culture Colorado Telluride Telluride Festivals:
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Telluride Film Festival: A Moviegoer’s Lovefest

Alpenglow Over Telluride During Filmfest

Alpenglow Over Telluride During Filmfest

We have one little movie theatre here in Telluride, a one-screen wonder called The Nugget.  It’s a rare gem housed in an historic building of the same name and it keeps Telluride moviegoers content year-round.  (The Nugget Building once boasted a bank, the very place where Butch Cassidy pulled off his first heist.)

For one long weekend of the year, however, we become Cinephile Central.  This has been occurring every Labor Day Weekend for the past thirty-five years.  This is when the Telluride Film Festival takes over our mountain town and transforms it into a center for the appreciation of the motion picture arts.  More than six hundred people—volunteers and paid staff—work before, during and after the festival to make Telluride the film capital of the world this first weekend of September.  Nine very different movie screening venues are created so that film lovers from Sweden to West Africa to Hollywood can come and watch movies for over three days in optimal conditions—that’s to say in spaces where the sound and picture are nothing less than fantastic.

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Redstone Rendez-Vous

Redstone Inn:  One of Colorado's Best-Kept Secrets

Redstone Inn: One of Colorado’s Best-Kept Secrets

After having been away a month, I couldn’t wait to get back to Telluride.  I just wanted to sleep in my own bed with my two kitties and bury myself into the quiet of my little mountain nest.  The drive from Denver to T-ride is about seven hours and since I’m not much of a car person, I like to break it up with a stop at my brother David’s house.  He and his wife, Geri, live in Redstone, Colorado, a charming little town very much at the halfway point of my Denver/Telluride journey.  Normally I would stay overnight, giving us plenty of time to catch up; but the three of us were rather pressed for time, so they suggested we lunch at the Redstone Inn instead.

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More LoDo Love

Larimer Square in Denver's Lower Downtown

Larimer Square (photo courtesy of DMCVB)

My late-August jaunt was such a flash trip to Denver that I didn’t have time to hit my favorite haunts, most of which are located in LoDo, Denver’s historic Lower Downtown, a 26-block area between the main part of downtown and Union Station.  This section is fun to explore by foot so that you can best take in its abundance of high western Victorian buildings, many of which house interesting stores, art galleries, restaurants, bars and hotels.

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16 Sep 2008, 12:29pm
Colorado Denver Restaurants Romance & Relationships Shopping Travel:
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Night Out in Denver

I love visiting a place when it’s in the throes of a big happening.  It couldn’t have gotten much bigger recently in Denver during the Democratic National Convention.  The streets were buzzing with all kinds of people from all over the country, all over the world, in fact.  I had never seen so many fashionable looking people in the mile high city—the old cow town myth has certainly been put to rest!

After a short while though I was feeling rather alone in the crowd.  So I went and sought comfort at Tattered Cover, one of my all-time favorite bookstores and certainly one of the finest book emporiums in our country.  Their LoDo, or Lower Downtown, location pleases me the best; this worked out well since that’s the area where most of the Convention hoopla was taking place.

Fortunately just as I was beginning to tire from checking my e-mails from my cozy armchair at this most welcoming bookstore, I received a call from David Craig, General Manager of Hotel Teatro, Denver’s award-winning boutique hotel.  It was time for some distraction and I was more than willing to receive it from this charming man, certainly one of Denver’s most eligible bachelors.

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