20 Dec 2008, 11:26pm
Beauty Being Green Shopping:
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Beauty Products Roundup for the Holidays and 2009

Booth's Bootiful Booty

Some of Booth's Bootiful Booty

My Clarins obsession (see my Clarins posting) spurred a whole series of discoveries and contemplations of many other wonderful potions, lotions and beauty enhancers that I thought I’d share with you. Best of all many of the goods on my current wish list offer great value and are readily available at totally affordable prices. Most can also be purchased online, so there’s still time for last-minute holiday shopping.

Booth’s skin care products will keep your skin satiny soft and smelling luscious well into the new year. Their Tahitian Monoi Body Soufflé seems good enough to eat and as the label says, you can apply it all over your body in the morning. Or evening. Or morning and evening. Or morning, noon and evening. Well, you get the idea. You’ll likely even want to share it with a loved one!

CARGO'S PlantLove Lipstick

CARGO'S PlantLove Lipstick

Looking for a gift idea that won’t impact your wallet? How about a tube of lipstick, a small yet always much appreciated mini luxury item? CARGO, the innovative cosmetic line that was launched nearly ten years ago and that also ranks as a favorite among the stars, has come out with PlantLove lipsticks, luscious tubes of color that are exciting both for their environmentally-friendly packaging and the precious cargo inside. No mineral oils or petroleum are contained within the botanical formula of their lipsticks yet they glide on to your lips like soft butter on bread. Made entirely of corn, the tube is also covered with flower paper embedded with real seeds that you supposedly just have to moisten and plant. Not sure how well that works but they do look pretty.

Why not consider a bottle of quality shampoo for you or the last few on your list? Only if it’s one of Paul Mitchell’s Tea Tree blends. Specially infused with Australian Tea Tree Oil, these formulas care for your hair and scalp with the help of many moisturizing and invigorating properties. The Tea Tree Lavender Mint is particularly good for triggering your daily dose of shower-aromatherapy.

Here in the mountains I’ve learned not to mess around with my skin care which is why I’ve started to use Skin Medica TNS Ultimate Daily Moisturizer with an SPF of 20 on a daily basis. I’m sure you’ve all heard that some sunscreens can do more harm than good. You can be ultra safe with this sun protection and all other Skin Medica products since this is a company focused on enhancing skin appearance and reducing the signs of aging.

And here’s the latest update from Bobbi Brown, another of my favorites: You can now buy the Bobbi Brown Makeup Manual at booksellers nationwide. Click here to have a sneak-peek at the video. May we all feel beautiful and good in our skin throughout this new year and forever!

16 Dec 2008, 12:06am
Food & Wine Shopping:
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Even More Great Online Boutiques for the Holidays

A Larimer Square Keepsake

A Larimer Square Keepsake

O.K., if you’re anything like me you’ve only completed about half of your holiday shopping.  The remainder you’re perhaps planning to do by the end of the week.  I suggest you keep it simple, shop online and have the goods mailed directly to those on your list (including yourself).  There’s still time!

I just returned from a quick trip to Denver and as always, I’m in love with Larimer.  That would be Larimer Square, one of the most happening places in the country, an historic neighborhood populated with exciting restaurants, bars and shops.  If you’ve been there you know that colorful banners typically adorn this quaint area, also known as Larimer Street.  You can actually own a piece of this landmark destination by purchasing a Larimer Messenger Bag, a fun fashion accessory—great for guys and gals—crafted out of the banners that once flew high over this part of Denver’s renowned LoDo (Lower Downtown) district.  They’re a green shopping choice as well.

Napa Soap Harvest

Napa Soap Harvest

I’ve also discovered some wonderful soaps and bath products for men and women from Napa Soap Company.  They’re handcrafted in Napa Valley, California and yes, you guessed it, most include a dose of wine in their mix.  If Soapignon Blanc, a rich mixture of grapeseed, olive, avocado and sunflower oils and white wine, grapefruit and pomegranate sounds good to you, you’ll love how it feels on your skin.  Their Body Butter combines brown sugar, grapeseed oil and white wine, so, of course, you’ll have to pick up at least one of these for yourself in addition to having them shipped off to your friends.  Yum!

If you’re looking for wines to drink, be sure to order some nectars from Quady Winery.  Their sweet wines serve as the perfect accompani-ment to your holiday desserts.  No time to whip up an unctuous delight for your special feast?  (You know you’ll be tired of Christmas cookies by then.)  You absolutely must order your pièce de résistance from the Sticky Toffee Pudding Company.  Wow!  English baker Tracy Claros hand makes these little wonders and packages them with so much love and attention they’re sure to woo you and the top gourmands on your list.  Her English Lemon Pudding is award winning, but try the chocolate and toffee confections as well.  Best served warm with cream or ice cream.

Remember that Ruth’s Toffee and Telluride Truffle are offering ten percent discounts when you mention BonjourTelluride.com.

8 Dec 2008, 1:09pm
Food & Wine Shopping:
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More Great Online Boutiques for the Holidays

The holiday table seems to be taking center stage this year which means that many discerning hosts are looking to procure some of the finest products for their special feasts.  Lamb is an excellent choice for New Year’s celebrations, but only the finest will leave your guests thinking about your festive meal throughout the year.  I’ve discovered Lava Lake Lamb, all-natural, certified organic grass-fed lamb from Idaho, that is absolutely succulent.  In purchasing this lamb, you are also supporting an ambitious conservation plan to preserve the lands where this livestock has been raised for generations.

Olive Oil:  Round Pond's Liquid Gold

Olive Oil: Round Pond's Liquid Gold

You’ll want to serve a fine red wine with your lamb dinner and perhaps also some vegetables, oven-roasted with superior quality olive oil.  Round Pond,  another family-owned company, is dedicated to producing exceptional food and wine products; they’ll readily supply you with acclaimed wines and gourmet foods from their Napa Valley estate.  In traditional French fashion, I would still end such an extravaganza with a wedge of cheese and a serving of salad.  Vermont once again earns my vote, especially for a handcrafted cheddar—aged one to four years—from Grafton Village Cheese Company.  For a truly remarkable addition to your cheeseboard, select the Grafton Duet, their Premium Vermont Cheddar layered with a Minnesota Blue Cheese.  It’s as beautiful as it is delicious.

Toffee, a sweet made by boiling molasses or sugar with butter, seems to enjoy special recognition around the holidays.  Nuts—especially almonds—and chocolate are typically added to this confection that presumably originated in England during the early part of the eighteenth century.  There are many variations on this theme but for me, the essential is for toffee to taste buttery good and fresh and not stick to your teeth!  Ruth’s Toffee fulfills that criteria and more.  This family-owned business is located just over an hour from Telluride in a very remote part of Colorado.  Clearly they manage to have only the finest ingredients delivered to their door.

In addition to being welcomed additions to your table, all of the above would, of course, make for excellent gifts.  

1 Dec 2008, 8:08pm
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Great Online Boutiques for the Holidays

Sure you might plan to cut back this year, but I know you’ll still do some shopping.  And if you’re anything like me, you’ll be picking up as much for the people on your list as for yourself!  This is the one big time of the year when we get out into the stores or even better, cozy up to the online boutiques.  

I’m easing your Internet shopping searches by presenting you with some of the best boutiques I’ve found on the Web.  As always, quality, originality, fun and even ambiance count a lot for me in my shopping experience and I can assure you that that’s just what you’ll find in the establishments below.

So put on the kettle and fix yourself a nice cup of tea.  

Prime Rib Roast from Allen Brothers---yum!

Prime Rib Roast from Allen Brothers---yum!

Food items are a big hit with most people most of the time.  You want to make it good though—none of those Hickory Farms gift boxes for me, thank you.  How about steak, rib roast or Beef Wellington for your mother-in-law’s holiday table? (Or for yours?  Remember, one for me, one for you.)  You’ll find the finest meat in the land at Allen Brothers.  You might want to consider smoked salmon as a starter for that special holiday feast.  Call Bill Tomicki (805-969-5848), editor of ENTREE, to place an order of delicious gently smoked or smoke-roasted salmon from Santa Barbara Smokehouse for you and your best friends.

If you want to go all French on me, you’ll finish off this feast with a glorious cheese platter and a lightly-dressed salad.  Contact Vermont Butter and Cheese Company for your most refined creamery needs such as delectable goat cheeses, crème fraîche, mascarpone and a sea salted cultured butter that would make you swear you’d just procured it from the Sunday morning market in Normandy.  Call upon My Boulangerie for ready-to-bake artisanal breads to arrive at your door in time to pop them in the oven for your special meals.  You’ll also feel as though you’re in Paris when you nibble on My Boulangerie’s buttery croissants, brioches and a variety of other French bakery items and treats.

Specialty Goat Cheese from Vermont Butter and Cheese

Specialty Goat Cheese from Vermont Butter and Cheese

O.K., now if you go the whole nine yards and really do it up in style, you’ll serve a lovely tray of coffee and chocolates at the end of your fine repast.  (Or provide the necessary ingredients so that your loved ones may do so.)  The Broadmoor Hotel boasts a robust blend of coffee, rich and elegant, worthy of the name of this world-renowned establishment.  Telluride Truffle rings in as the finest chocolates of the Rockies, and if you truly want to round out the selection of quality mountain-born sweets, you’ll order some famous almond toffee from Enstrom’s.

I love recommending top-of-the-line products from the West and France, all in the same breath.  High Desert Foods will fill your pantry (oh, that’s right—this is supposed to be about gifting) with the glorious flavors of organic fruits grown in the red rock country of the Colorado plateau.  Fruit confitures, tomato sauces and smoke dried tomatoes stand out among their specialties.  Look for more to come in the upcoming months.  Telluride Gift Baskets rounds up many other artisan- style food items in Colorado including jerky, jams, honeys, mustards and more.  All are arranged with great care in Colorado-made baskets, perfect for friends and family that enjoy delectable treats packaged with heaps of mountain charm.  More jams and specialty food items—this time with a French flair—may be procured at Trois Crepes, a Web-based business that also distributes some of France’s best baking ingredients such as chestnut cream.  Ever hear of wine confits?  They are flavorful little jellies that catapult even your finest cheese offerings into an extraordinary gastronomic adventure.  You may purchase these and other prized comestibles from France along with a plethora of handsome nonfood gift items at Quel Objet.  

High Desert Blackberry Conserve

High Desert Blackberry & Wild Blueberry Conserve

How about going a little green?  You can outfit most of the people on your list with a beautiful, handmade water bottle from Harmonik.  Made of eco-friendly materials whenever possible, Harmonik Bottles are like totable works of art that people are sure not to leave behind.  Plastic castoffs begone!  For the wee ones in your life, shop at Eco-Kids for all natural creative play-dough and fingerpaint.  You’ll find more fun ideas for children at CBHStudio, especially in the Little Packrats section.  I’m gaga over their colorful totes and backpacks that feature happy animal designs of horses, dogs, penguins and other lovable critters.  Oh, to be a kid again.  But big kids can have fun shopping here, too, especially on the messenger and laptop bag pages where you’ll find more style-y creations which are also crafted out of durable vinyl.  For more great green gift ideas, check out what I wrote about Daryl Hannah just a couple of months ago.

Doggie Knapsack from Packrats:  How Cute is That?

Doggie Knapsack from Packrats: How Cute is That?

For clothing for men, women and children, why not be fanciful with eye-catching togs from BaliDog?  These Telluride-designed, Brazilian made creations are just as well suited for the yoga studio as for a night out on the town.  But I can’t stray long from the Old World.  A tour around the Alpen Schatz Web site is almost as heartwarming as visiting Christkindlmarkt, the Christmas markets of Germany.  Here you’ll discover all kinds of alpine treasures for men, women, children and even your pets (definitely not to be forgotten this time of year).  High-style items for both you and your doggies include traditional leather belts and collars handcrafted in the alps.

Did I just say handcrafted?  Absolutely.  Why not buy something truly extraordinary that will be cherished for years or at least for the duration of two to three good ski seasons?  I’m talking 100 percent, American made, supremely-crafted goods here.  Museum quality.  Birdhouseking showcases handmade birdhouses of heirloom stature, fashioned by a master woodworker that is eighty-five years young.  Exceptional carpentry skills (and lots of high tech know-how) are applied to entirely different objets d’art at Wagner Custom Skis.  Located just outside of Telluride, Wagner crafts sybaritic boards in a progressive, super eco-friendly manner.  

I think the only ones I’ve forgotten about so far are Leo and Clara.  That would be my two kitties.  Of course I fit the model of a single woman with two cats who sits on her couch, sips tea and reads while her pussycats are curled up beside her.  (Oh, if life was only always so good!)  I’m quite confident in any event that my little babies will be receiving some lovingly crafted, earth-friendly pet toys from Purrfectplay this year.  That sweet little site also sells pet bedding, good to know if ever I decide to kick them off of my bed.

Be sure to visit my Shopping page on this site where I’ve written more extensively about my favorite online boutiques.  There you’ll also find an offer for a special discount from Telluride Truffle when you order from them on my behalf.  Next to tea, cats and books, chocolates are also a girl’s best friend.

Bon Shopping!

 

Just a Few More Ideas  

I think magazine and newsletter subscriptions always make for great gifts, especially if you match the right publication to the right reader.  For Paris, Paris Notes is my all-time favorite.  For all of France, subscribe to France Magazine.  Right now they’re offering holiday gift subscriptions at a reduced rate; click here and be sure to use promotion code PR07G.  And for a good read on high-end travel (and some shopping) worldwide, check out the above mentioned ENTREE.

1 Dec 2008, 8:06pm
Art & Culture Denver Hotels & Lodging Shopping:
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Holiday Time in Denver

Ebenezer Scrooge at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts

Ebenezer Scrooge at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts

Having grown up in upstate New York, a trip to the big apple was almost a tradition around this time of year to take in the festive ambiance, glittering decorations, holiday entertainment specials and a bit of shopping.  For many of us, Denver is the big city and I already know a lot of people planning a trip there before winter truly sets in.  For shopping, a trip to Cherry Creek Shopping Center is a must.  Cherry Creek Mall and Cherry Creek North serve as home to some of the most alluring stores in the Rockies.  I suggest you stay at Loews Denver Hotel, a luxury property that is offering screaming deals on weekend travel (Thursday-Sunday) with rates beginning as low as just over $100. a night.  They’re a short shuttle ride away from the mall and they offer a ton of perks and discounts on Cherry Creek and more that will make your stay pay for itself. Entertainment-wise, you’ll want to take in at least one of the exciting shows at The Denver Center for the Performing Arts A Christmas Carol and Jersey Boys are sure to be tops, and in my opinion, the perfect antidotes to any bah humbug sentiments brought on by these blustery times.  Denver has become quite the arts capital, you know.  Why, it almost reminds me of New York City.

Cherry Creek Shopping Center, 303-388-3900, www.shopcherrycreek.com

Loews Denver Hotel, 303-782-9300, www.loewshotels.com/denver

The Denver Center for the Performing Arts, 303-893-4100, www.dcpa.org

A Christmas Carol Finale

A Christmas Carol Finale

22 Nov 2008, 6:48pm
Colorado Mountain Living Shopping Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride:
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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!)

This Year's Lineup at Paragon

This Year’s Lineup at Paragon

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.)

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Daryl Hannah on Green Living

Daryl on the Mesa in Telluride

Daryl on the Mesa Outside of T-ride

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.

Daryl Modeling a Chain Mail Purse Made from Aluminum Can Pull Tops

Blonde Beauty Modeling a Chain Mail Purse Made from Soda Pop Pull Tab Tops by a Womens' Artisan Co-Op in Brazil

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 Chillin' with DHLoveLife.com

Daryl Chillin' with DHLoveLife.com

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.

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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