Colorado Hotels & Lodging Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride The Rockies: Colorado Hotels & Lodging Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride The Rockies
by maribeth
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Togethering in the Rockies
Togethering. Certainly there was a lot of that this past weekend. Thanksgiving kicks off the season—especially here in the Rockies—when friends and family gather in houses, condos and cabins to share their vacation time together.
Togethering is the term coined not too long ago by travel agents and other travel industry experts to refer to the tendency of vacationing together as a family unit, often with extended family members and/or relations from previous marriages. “This coming together of combined families and friends has been more of a trend the past few years,” says Steve Togni, General Manager of Mountain Lodge at Telluride, a handsome property skirted with ten well-appointed slopeside cabins and an alluring lineup of condos, all perfect for families looking to settle into the mountains for an extended stay. “It has become less about skiing,” Steve adds. “It’s more about shopping, spa going, dining and just being in the mountains. I would describe these stays more as winter vacations rather than ski vacations. There’s definitely more of it going on in the winter than in the summer.”
A lot of people choose to rent large homes out West and many families return to the same house year after year. Clearly there’s beauty in having your own special hideaway without being encumbered by the expense and hassle of owning it yourself. “We have people coming back to the same property year after year,” says Maité Daguerre, Director of Operations at Elevation Vacations, a company that specializes in luxury rentals in Telluride. “People love the personal touch and great service we provide,” Maité continues. “It’s all about relationships. When someone checks in to a big luxury home—or even a small guest cottage—we meet them at the door, show them how to use the stereo, help them out however possible.”
I’ve togethered a number of times with my family in Aspen where my parents have a large condo. It’s always different there than being reunited at other locales; it seems the mountain and the lively town of Aspen provide the foundation for all. Both, of course, are good to escape to when the togethering element becomes a bit too much. My favorite times togethering in Aspen have been when it has just been my dad and me. Can togethering be about only two people?
When our family isn’t occupying our condo, it’s rented out and managed by Frias Properties of Aspen, the biggest rental company in Aspen that offers a variety of lodging possibilities in Aspen and Snowmass. “Our bookings are looking good for the season,” says co-owner Chuck Frias. “The international guests will be down from the Australian and Brazilian markets and also from Europe since the euro is weaker than it was last year, but we’re pricing more aggressively to make up the difference.”
Unless you’ve been squirreled away the past few weeks, you know that the travel bargains are better than ever, so this is the time to take advantage of savings of up to thirty percent off on lodging and some airfares. Certainly if people are considering travel, they’re going to put a premium on time with their families. Folks will still want to get together and often it’s easiest to meet in a fun destination in the Rockies when families are spread out between Denver, Phoenix and New York.
Word has been that the outlook is more tenuous for Steamboat Springs this season, but the Sheraton Steamboat Resort isn’t complaining. They’re set to reopen December 4 after a $20 million renovation and bookings are full. The makeover transformed this fine Starwood property from a 350-room hotel to a 200-plus establishment composed of a good number of luxury condos. They offer several different possibilities for families looking to find a living situation that meets their taste and budgetary needs. Their two- to three- bedroom villas are more high-end, but all are ski in/ski out and freshly decorated in their new modern mountain look.
You can find all kinds of lodging options throughout the Rockies for your togethering. No matter what the price tag, you’re sure to save some on dining expenses if you make use of the glorious kitchen facilities that appear to be at the heart of the accommodations best suited for families.
But what about those truly extraordinary reunions such as a very special wedding anniversary or a landmark birthday when money is no object? The gem in the RockResorts crown is most definitely Trapper’s Cabin, a magnificent four-bedroom, four-bath hideaway in Beaver Creek that sleeps up to ten people. Renovations on Trapper’s Cabin were completed last winter and the amenities such as a sleek professional kitchen and a game room complete with a pool table, poker table and large flat screen T.V. are enough to keep the whole gang happy for days.
There’s no fear whatsoever of catching cabin fever at the Tempter House, the Hope diamond of high-end lodging in the Rockies, situated right here in Telluride, perched at 12,200 feet at nearly the summit of Telluride Ski Resort. The Tempter House is one of the most secluded and romantic destinations you will encounter with 360-degree panoramic views that will make you feel like you’re floating on a mountaintop cloud. A couple’s massage or private catered dinner can be arranged or you can just relax with a glass of wine in front of the master bedroom’s wood burning fireplace and focus on your hunny. This must be why it’s referred to as the Tempter House! (Actually the name is inspired from Temptation Chute, a gnarly couloir that plunges down the mountainside on the out-of-bounds side of the house.) The Tempter House is, however, totally ski in/ski out. Many more glorious amenities are also offered. Expect to pay about $5,000. a night. Now that’s what I call topnotch togethering.
Mountain Lodge Telluride, 866-368-6867 or 970-369-5000, www.mountainlodgetelluride.com
Elevation Vacations, 888-728-8160 and 970-728-8160, www.elevationvacations.com
Frias Properties of Aspen, 800-633-0336 and 970-920-2000, www.friasproperties.com
Sheraton Steamboat Resort, 866-716-8134 and 970-879-2220, www.sheraton.com/steamboat
Trapper’s Cabin, 970-754-5788, www.trapperscabincolorado.com
Tempter House, 866-888-7197, www.tellurideskiresort.com/TellSki/info/tempter-house
Special Travel Tips for Telluride and Steamboat Springs
There are many great deals for kids to fly for free to Telluride and Steamboat. Click on the below links to find out more.
Colorado Mountain Living Shopping Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride: Colorado Mountain Living Shopping Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride
by maribeth
Comments Off on Getting Ready for Ski Season: Part Two
Getting Ready for Ski Season: Part Two
I grumbled as I pushed past cartons stacked as high as the ceiling to access the last of the plastic containers filled with my winter clothes. Now what the heck am I still doing with all this? I thought. I eyed one box in particular marked “silver punch bowl, serving trays and flower holders.” These grand accoutrements—along with my super fine porcelain demi-tasse cups and flouncy dining room chair covers—bore little resemblance to my current life. I should sell these and the odd pieces of furniture that are also blocking my path on eBay. Especially now that times are so tough. I eyeballed them alluringly, briefly contemplating opening a box or two to remove a few cherished items such as my silver candlesticks and fancy candy dishes. What’s the point? I knew I couldn’t shoehorn another thing into my little apartment. Instead I just grabbed my skis and boots (alpine and nordic) and snowshoes and closed the door on this storage area filled largely with remnants of my past life.
And in doing so, I entered my second phase of readying myself for ski season. Thank goodness this changing out of closets and gear only takes place twice a year. Back home I shuffled my affairs about, grateful that mountain living required me to keep a sizable collection of hats, mittens and winter jackets in my closets year-round since even in June the thermometer can easily dip to freezing on especially clear nights. I carefully counted out my ski socks, making sure that I had enough to cover me for at least eight days, knowing full well that once the mountain gets busy I wouldn’t want to be forced to do laundry in the evening to assure myself nice clean socks. (As a rookie ski instructor, I made the mistake of thinking I could get two days out of a pair of socks by draping them in my locker every other night. That was a mindless mistake that created an unspeakable issue I never imagined I was capable of contracting!)
Next stop to the ski shop. Paragon on main street is my favorite. I have bought all of my gear from them and they have been super efficient about keeping my skis in good shape. I dropped them off for a tune and knew that they’d grind them on their state-of-the-art tuner and then wax them so that my skis would be prepped to glide and perform at their optimal level. “Ski tuning is not just for racers,” Peter, the store manager tells me. “You have to take care of them, get rid of the scratches, gouges and oxidation so they can better accept the wax and provide you with a superior ski experience. We’ll make sure your edges are sharpened, too, my sweet Bessie.” (Peter and I have quite the history together, but now is not the time to stray from my storyline.)
Colorado Mountain Living Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride: Colorado Mountain Living Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride
by maribeth
Comments Off on Getting Ready for Ski Season: Part One
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.
“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.
Beauty Colorado Telluride: Beauty Colorado Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride
by maribeth
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Bobbi Brown’s Beauty: As Natural as the Mountains of Telluride
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 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.
Colorado Mountain Living Telluride The Rockies: Colorado Mountain Living Telluride The Rockies
by maribeth
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Fall in Telluride: Riding 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.)
Colorado Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride Travel: Colorado Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride Travel
by maribeth
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Telluride Ski Resort is Tantamount to Fun
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.
“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.”
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, 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.
Mountain Living Telluride The Rockies: Mountain Living Telluride The Rockies
by maribeth
Comments Off on The Perils of Mountain Living
The Perils of Mountain Living
Last week was Bear Awareness Week here in Telluride. A number of events such as a parade, a kid’s movie and seminars were held to help people become more aware of this mountain community’s bear activity and more importantly, how to respond to it. I didn’t attend a single one, mostly because I’ve been chained to my desk. Also I guess I felt like I didn’t need to raise my bear awareness any more: It was already on high alert. I’ve been increasingly coyote conscious as well, especially since I have two kitties that love to play outside where the bears and coyotes roam. (What can I say? They get fat and depressed if I sequester them in my little apartment.)
I remarked to myself how odd it looked in New York City on my recent visit when I saw basic trash bags and cans lined up along the street awaiting the next morning’s pick up. That seemed so foreign to me since I had become accustomed to seeing all forms of garbage in full lockdown mode since I moved to Colorado well over six years ago. (I was partly wondering why the garbage wasn’t hidden from NYC’s rodent population, I guess.) A bear could make many tasty meals off of our garbage, so we lock off everything from street-side trash receptacles to big waste bins outside of homes and buildings. Still, though, the bears know they can find more to feast on in Telluride and the outlying area than in the woods. (There’s, of course, always a tourist that stupidly plops out a bag of garbage, a virtual ursine offering that greatly comprises all of our community efforts.) It’s true, you’re more likely to encounter a bear lumbering through the alleyways of T-ride at 3 a.m. than on a camping expedition along the Continental Divide.
It’s easy for me to stay clear of the backstreets, but walks home at night have recently been riddled with fear. (I rarely drive here since the gondola is my primary form of transportation and I live about a ten-minute walk from the station. More on the gondola later.) I’ve seen many bears since I’ve been out here and each sighting has been thrilling, mostly in the happy sense because I’ve been at a safe enough distance from them not to feel any threat. I’m just a little concerned about coming up against one and having us both—errrrrrrrr—surprise each other. I read in a Living with Wildlife in Bear Country pamphlet that it’s best to run downhill. Well, that’s not always an option. Plus I’d hate to count on me outrunning a bear. It’s recommended to sing. So I’ve taken to singing if I come home at dark. Since I’m such an awful singer, my vocalizations frittered into more of a la-dee-dah-dee-dah. Then they transgressed into whistling, which I’m thinking might be a little too ear piercing for the bear. God only knows, maybe my bizarre sounds would throw a bear into some kind of a crazed state.
To make matters worse, I have to walk past this upturned tree stump on my way home. It never fails. Its dark, craggy roots look like a big black bear on its hind legs about to lunge for me. I shudder and cringe as I scurry by this silhouette and not surprisingly my whistling at this point sounds more like a cockatoo on the verge of hyperventilation. That darn thing gets me every time.
Maybe I’ve become too hypersensitive all around. I’ve also taken to sniffing the air. You don’t have to possess an acute olfactory awareness to smell bear. I’ve smelled bear before and it was at a distance of at least one hundred feet. It’s strong! The problem with this mode is that if you happen to get a whiff of let’s say some doggy do, it’s apt to send you into a tailspin. This very thing happened to me the other day when I was hiking, but I’m still thinking that I was picking up the scent of a bear.
Bears are most active now since they’re preparing for hibernation. The females bed down toward the end of October; the males early November. Lately I’ve been thinking maybe this is not a good time of year to be single. I’ve envisioned myself walking arm and arm with a handsome man until that dreaded moment when he’s required to fend off our Ursus americanus. We encounter the beast crouched before us, flashing incisors, paw raised and ready to tear us to shreds. Then ever so valiantly, my lover forces the bear to cower with nothing but a fierce shout and the bear skulks off into the underbrush. Oh, my great protector, my ever-so brave, prince charming.
I’m fine once I enter my humble abode. That is unless one of my kitties is still out. That one is typically Clara and I’ve had to sneak out many nights and call her, forever fearful that there might be a bear hiding in the shadows. It was midnight the other night and she still hadn’t come home. I was worried sick and even after two Tylenol PM, I only half slept. Then at two-thirty a.m. I was awakened by the howls of coyotes. Those blood curdling yelps that sound half human, half beast. I bolted out of bed, desperately searching for my pajamas and glasses and then was finally able to fly out the door. I quietly and pleadingly called, “Claraaaa, Claraaaa,” so as not to awake the neighbors. The whole while my heart raced wildly—so much so, in fact, that I was sure I could chase off both a bear and a coyote if such a situation presented itself to me. Clarie was nowhere to be found. The coyotes’ wretched sounds finally abated and only the trickling of the nearby ravine could be heard.
I returned home not knowing if my little cat was dead or alive. Five minutes later I heard her cry at the door. She strolled in like she had just spent the afternoon in the park.
I read the following in our local paper the other day under the COP SHOP: MEMO TO MOUNTAIN VILLAGE RESIDENTS: You live in a place called Mountain Village. It’s a village in the mountains. This is why bears and coyotes come near where people live. (Or, better said, some people build houses near where bears and coyotes live.) There’s no need to call the cops on every bear, raccoon or coyote you see, is there?
Calling the police about the wildlife would be the last thing I’d do. In fact, even if a bear entered my Mountain Village apartment (which is possible since the entrance door is on the ground level), I’d do my best to find a way not to call the police. I’d be afraid the poor thing would be shot.
But that doesn’t mean I’m any less fearful of bumping into one. Maybe I do need that big strapping guy in my life after all.
Colorado Division of Wildlife, 303-297-1192, www.wildlife.state.co.us; you’ll find lots of information here about how to live with wildlife.
P.S. Just days after I initially wrote this, Clara spent an entire night out, I’m convinced I saw a bobcat chase Leo, my other kitty, and my neighbor told me a mountain lion was recently spotted in the vicinity. Maybe the perils of the concrete jungle are more manageable. I can’t wait until the cold weather sets in so that most of the critters—especially my own—tuck themselves into their dens for many snow-blanketed days of slumber.
Being Green Shopping Telluride Travel: Being Green Shopping Telluride Travel
by maribeth
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Daryl Hannah on Green Living
The breakdown of Daryl’s biodiesel car left her nearly stranded in Montrose, the largest city in the region situated about an hour and a half from Telluride. Clearly she was not going to make it to the KOTO studios in time to do a Travel Fun interview with me, so we chatted on the phone together instead. (Daryl was actually holed up inside one of the teepees at the Ute Indian Museum, an interesting place that I have yet to visit.)
A few technical difficulties challenged me back at the studio. I was pulling together a live program—a rarity in the almost five years I’ve been doing radio—and my button pushing faltered somewhat, particularly at one point when I forgot to turn off the DJ mike during the musical break. Half of my phone conversation with another caller was broadcasted on the airwaves. Fortunately I wasn’t chatting about anything too private! I continued with more music from the “Kill Bill,” soundtrack for the second musical break, overlooking a cut that requires keen censorship. A few F-words later, I said a big “ooops” and hoped that the FCC wasn’t tuned in. Daryl was more than gracious throughout the whole interview, particularly during my assorted goof ups. Thankfully, she clearly has a tender attachment to KOTO, Telluride’s own community radio station.
In addition to her memorable performances in the original “Blade Runner,” “Splash,” “Wall Street,” and more recently the “Kill Bill” series, Daryl has been busy championing causes and spreading the word about green living. She is a keen environmentalist. And this is not so new because Daryl has been a vegetarian since the age of eleven.
Actually Daryl is turned off by the green word. Just like with organic and sustainable, she thinks those words are overused. “They really don’t take into account the social connectedness of things,” Daryl emphasizes. “You need to consider the social aspect of everything.”
Daryl practices what she preaches when she can. “I’m trying to get off of fossil fuels and the grid as much as possible,” she says. In addition to zipping around the mountains in her not-so new—but souped up—biodiesel car, Daryl lives in a one-bedroom home out here on a mesa, a simple house built from an old barn that was going to be torn down. “It’s solar powered, nontoxic and as sustainable as possible,” she says. Many organic elements have been incorporated into the interior and exterior design including a “couch” made from locally gathered, moss-covered rocks. “I just pull off the cushions and spray wash it down every once in a while,” Daryl chuckles.
I imagine Daryl’s Telluride home to be fairly minimalist. “I subscribe to the church of stop shopping,” she revealed. She thinks people are better off wearing old clothes and making them cool by stenciling them. She’s also an advocate of consignment stores. “Growing cotton for one T-shirt requires much too much water for that to be a sustainable product,” she explains. I unfortunately didn’t have a chance to tell her that I believe in buying quality products that you treasure forever. That’s the French way. Buying in quantity is more of an American addiction.
Daryl’s Web site is a good place to go to inform yourself about living less conspicuously on this planet. It’s also fun and the best way to get to know the real Daryl Hannah. You can shop there for some of her hand-chosen products such as an aluminum water bottle and a travel essential bag filled with most of her favorite travel must-haves including a safe sunscreen (most are carcinogenic), arnica (good for sore muscles), Super Salve, an ultra-rich balm that’s great for lubricating nostrils and such before, during and after airplane travel and more along with other terrific products. (Daryl also likes to bring sage from the mesa with her on her travels, but you’ll have to round up some of that on your own.)
Ecotourism is a term that Daryl feels is getting overused as well. She encourages people to look closely at places that promise to be green. For her, it’s important that ecoresorts exhibit a real connectedness with the local community. Hotelito Desconocido in Mexico and Al Karm and Babata, two ecolodges in Egypt, all destinations that Daryl features on her video blogs, are resorts committed to fostering a mutually beneficial relationship with their environs.
Daryl also encourages people to go to our National Parks more “cause nobody uses them.” She cited the Channel Islands, off the coast of California, as an example of a rare site little known to people. Her “Natural Wonder” video blog on her Web site documents this unique place and its habitat.
She’s also done a number of video blogs on people that have inspired her, people that she considers to be her heroes. In one of the video blogs, Daryl visits with Richard Branson, a well-known English business magnate, but also one of the world’s leading investors in renewable energy and resource efficiency technology.
At this year’s Telluride Film Festival, Daryl met Paul Watson, a tireless environmentalist dedicated to the protection of animal rights. He was here showing his film, “Pirates of the Sea.” Daryl plans to join up with Paul soon on his ship, and from the way she talked, I suspect he’ll soon be featured as one of her “heroes,” too.
For now, however, Daryl is in London filming “Blind Man’s Bluff” with the English actor Tom Conti.
Ute Indian Museum, Montrose, Colorado, 970-249-3098, www.coloradohistory.org/hist_sites/UteIndian/Ute_indian
Daryl’s Web site is www.dhlovelife.com
Al Karm Ecolodge, Mount Sinai, Egypt, www.awayaway-sinai.net/main/st.%20katherine_sub/al_karm
Babata Ecolodge; I’m working on finding a link!
Hotelito Desconocido, Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, 800-013-1313, www.hotelito.com
National Park Service, Channel Islands, www.nps.gov/chis
Daryl’s Book Picks
Anything by Michael Pollan. “I think they should be mandatory reading for everyone,” Daryl says. She particularly recommends “The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals” and his recent book, “In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto.”
Daryl also enjoys reading books that tell the story of the people and the place she’s visiting. “Love in the Time of Cholera,” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, for example, is her suggestion for travels to South America.