sneak peak vail weekly newspaper for march 8th, 2012
DESCRIPTION
Vail town Ski race series wraps up, smartphones debut at the snowball festival, slifer, smith and frampton's 50th - growing up with Vail.TRANSCRIPT
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 1
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www.sneakpeakvail.comThursday, March 8 - March 14, 2012
Smartphone drink ordersdebut at Snowball
Making ski tracks withtop energy experts
Slifer, Smith and Frampton’s 50thGrowing up with Vail
Vail Town Series
Alpine races pitvalley’s best in
friendly competition
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2 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 3
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speakup reachoutThe Suicide Prevention Coalition of the Eagle Valley
you re not alone
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www.speakupreachout.org
Think suicide is the only solution?Get help now.Funding is available for counseling services
Visit our website to learn moreThis project was supported by Grant No. 2007-DJ-BX-0075 awarded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance. The Bureau of Justice Assistance is a component of the Office of Justice Programs, which also includes the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the National Institute of Justice, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, and the Office for Victims of Crime. Points of view or opinions in the document are those of the author and do not represent the official position or policies of the United States Department of Justice.
(c) 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property. AT&T, the AT&T logo and all other marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual property and/or AT&T affi liated companies. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.
YOUR LOCAL SOURCE FOR AT&T
(c) 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property. AT&T, the AT&T logo and all other marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual property and/or AT&T affi liated companies. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.
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As a child, Sarah Braucht loved being a Girl Scout so
much that as an adult she took on a volunteer role for Eagle Valley Girl Scouts.
The role has become a “full-time job” – despite the fact that she has no children of her own in the program.
“I loved going to Girl Scout camp as a girl. I liked being in the outdoors, singing songs, trying new foods, making crafts and making new friends,” says Braucht. “I was very shy and quiet growing up and through the Girl Scout cookie program and community service projects, I learned to find a voice of my own and grow into leadership roles.”
This year marks the 100th anniversary of Girl Scouts of Colorado, and an upcoming event in Gypsum will celebrate the milestone with activities like a Girl Scout Cookie eating contest, a vintage Girl Scout Uniform fashion show and dis-plays depicting Girl Scouts through the decades and into the future. The event is from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Mar. 10 at the Eagle County Fairgrounds Exhibit Hall. It is open to the public, and admission is $5.
Scouting basicsGirl Scouts of Colorado serves more than 30,000 girls
across the state – and they do much more than just sell cook-ies. Here in Eagle County, activities are diverse and general-ly determined by the participant’s age. The focus for younger girls is learning key Girl Scout principles such as learning to be considerate and use resources wisely, while older girls put those principles into action through community service projects and mentoring the younger Scouts. Interspersed at all levels are activities to encourage individual growth.
“Eagle Valley Girl Scouts do everything you can dream of,” says Braucht. “There are great things going on at all levels of Girl Scouting. Local Girl Scouts have made over-night bags for foster care children, read stories to the el-derly, planted flowers in front of a school and volunteered for church community dinners. Some of the older girl troops have traveled to Disneyland and Washington, D.C.”
Braucht is not alone in the importance in that scouting continues to have in her life as an adult. In fact, 76 percent of all Girl Scout alumnae report that Girl Scouts had a positive impact in their lives. According to the organization, 45 of 75 women (60 percent) in the U.S. House of Representatives are former Girl Scouts and 53 percent of all women business owners are former Girl Scouts. Those aren’t bad odds.
Colorado Girl Scouts
Celebrate 100 Years
Girl Scouts commemorate with fashion show, cookie contest at Gypsum event. By Kat Jahnigen
[See GIRL SCOUTS, page 23]
4 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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Despite some of the sweetest powder conditions of the
season last Thursday afternoon, lifelong Vail resident Jed Schue-tze was drawn to the freshly groomed face of the Golden Peak downhill course. Forget the glades – gates were calling.
“I love to powder ski, don’t get me wrong, but the chance to get out here and go fast in a safe environment is just a blast,” says Schuetze, a 32-year-old former Ski and Snow-board Club Vail (SSCV) racer who made the All-American squad for slalom while at the University of Colorado. “I never thought when I was done at CU I’d race again, but I got talked into it this season. It’s still a blast.”
Schuetze and roughly 50 other racers took to the course as part of the final Vail Town Series of 2012, an annual collec-tion of much-loved races organized by SSCV. The crowning runs on March 1 came after two months of weekly compe-tition, including a championship slalom event on Feb. 23. Events boasted giant slalom and Super G races (dubbed “Su-per George” after the official après party spot, The George).
Although alpine juggernaut Ian Lochhead wasn’t at the final race, he still came out on top in the overall rankings for the season, followed closely by Thursday’s champ, John Kemp. In the women’s division, overall winner Georgia Wettlaufer rightly justified her top spot with a win in both GS and Super G, barely edging by Julia Littman, who fin-ished second on the day and season. While the skier divi-sions were determined by tenths of a point, snowboarder Uve Burns blew the competition away in both events to fin-ish nearly four points ahead of his nearest competition, Brian Hutchinson.
Where newbies meet old prosIt’s hard to imagine just how many stellar alpine racers live
in tiny Eagle County. Along with Schuetze (who took third overall on the season), the field included former World Cup qualifiers, Ski and Snowboard Club Vail coaches and college downhill stars, rounded out with a spattering of skiers and snowboarders who’d never once been on a race course.
Dressed in his powder-day finest, Minnesota native CJ Rutten navigated the course after a friend convinced him to register earlier in the morning. It was his first time taking a snowboard down anything nearly as intimidating as the Golden Peak course, where iconic downhill stars like Lind-sey Vonn honed her skills.
“I have nothing else to compare it to, and I’m not a racer so I can’t critically analyze the course,” Rutten laughs. “It
was just a good time – a lot more difficult than I expected, and way steeper than the flat-landing we’re used to back in the Midwest.”
The Town Series has earned a storied reputation for this kind of democratic, all-inclusive feel – more than a few folks took runs on fat powder skis, and even telemarking is al-lowed. While Rutten signed up out of sheer curiosity, com-petition for the top five men’s spots was expectedly heated,
Alpine Adrenaline
at Golden PeakFirst-timers and former pros square off in the final Vail Town Series of the season.By Phil Lindeman
Teddy Fargrelius does some gate bash-ing at last Thursday’s final Town Series Alpine race. Billy Doran photo
Vail Town Series overall results
Men’s Alpine division1. Ian Lochhead, 38.93 points2. John Kemp, 38.7 points3. Jed Schuetze, 38.01 pointsWomen’s Alpine division1. Georgia Wettlaufer, 38.06 points2. Julia Littman, 37.86 points3. Lyndsay Strange, 36.76 pointsMen’s snowboard division1. Uve Berns, 21.3 points2. Brian Hutchinson, 17.39 points3. Patrick Porsche, 12.16 points
[See TOWN SERIES, page 20]
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 5
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With the last name Schleper, it’s hard to believe Johnny Schleper isn’t a professional skier. His older sister, Sarah, was a top-ranked alpine specialist with four Winter Olym-pics appearances before retiring this season, and younger brother Hunter is an up-and-coming Giant Slalom racer with the U.S. Ski Team.
In typical middle-child fashion, Johnny Schleper started skiing, but quickly veered away from the family calling. He’s now the lead guitarist for MTHDS, a six-piece band that proves Eagle County can produce more than bluegrass
and ski racers.MTHDS now calls Denver home – the video for “Positive
Movement” was inspired in part by the city’s massive annual zombie crawl event – but the band remains firmly rooted in the mountains, with a fresh mix of rock instrumentals, hip-hop sensibility and a spattering of island-tinged funk. It’s no wonder MTHDS comes from the snowboard trick of the same name: a method is all about easygoing style and soul.
The group is fresh off a three-week tour with California rockers The Expendables. The whirlwind tour took them across Arizona, Colorado, California and Nevada, culminat-ing with a show at the House of Blues in Las Vegas – the band’s largest exposure to date.
The six members (MCs Nick Dillen and Lawrence Kerr; bassist Chris Chipouras; synth/acoustic player Neil Yukimu-ra; drummer Chris Holdridge; and Schleper) are relaxing in Denver before returning to Vail for a show at The Sandbar in West Vail on April 13, followed by a first-time appearance at the South by Southwest music festival in Austin.
Schleper spoke with SneakPEAK about the boost of play-ing with a big-name group, how MTHDS has embraced the freedom of the Internet (all three of their albums are avail-able for free at MTHDSmusic.com), and why he’s looking forward to racing his sister.
Sneak Peak: You and the rest of the band just returned from a pretty large tour with The Expendables. Did you seek them out, or did they come to you?
Johnny Schleper: We’ve been trying to work with them for a while now, but they came to us eventually, probably a month or a month and a half before the tour. We were just incredibly excited and pumped. We kept asking ourselves, “Is this really happening?” We were really able to connect with those guys and the people from Silverback (The Ex-pendables music label).
SP: The tour gave you guys tons of exposure, more so
than it has had in the past. Where does MTHDS go from here, and how do you build off that momentum?
JS: We’ve played occasionally in those markets before, I’d say about half of them, but the tour helped us be able to play places we’ve never been before. It’ll push us into even more markets and we’ll work with that as we write new mu-sic. We’ve kind of built a fan base on the west coast, so our next step is to move toward the east coast. It’s all building toward our album this summer.
SP: Are you guys on a label right now?JS: Nope, we’re not. We’ve been kind of looking, but
we’re at the point where we need to control what we’re do-ing. Right now, we’re taking it very much day-by-day. I think we’re all on the same page with that, too. We pick each other’s brains pretty often.
As far as a label, there’s so much overhead before you get anywhere, and we really don’t make money as it is. We can’t ignore that the music business has changed a lot, and we give quite a bit of ours away for free. The idea of pushing our singles out is the direction we’re heading. We want to make albums, but the singles and EPs are more manageable these days.
Local band finishes busy tourMTHDS guitarist Johnny Schleper talks music
By Phil Lindeman
Vail native Johnny Schleper (left) and singer Lawrence Kerr perform with their band, MTHDS, in Lake Tahoe. The mountain-based band recently finished a tour with The Expendables. MTHDS photo.
[See MTHDS, page 24]
6 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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REASON #564,712TO OWN A PIECE OF THE VAIL VALLEY:
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Douglas Landin | Lionshead Offi ce970.479.0242 - dir. | 970.376.1299 - [email protected] Chair, Vail Board of RealtorsDirector, Colorado Association of Realtorswww.LandinVail.com
Think of Vail, and soon after you think of its famous skiing terrain, you’ll probably think of
its sparkling ski villages and high-end homes clustered in the valley.
The company behind much of that, Slifer, Smith and Frampton Real Estate, is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year. The company, whose growth has both paralleled and been intertwined with the growth of Vail itself, began as a one-man operation and now boasts 17 offices in Eagle and Summit counties and more than 100 brokers.
Meet the man with the original vision: Rod Slifer. Now in his 70s, Slifer arrived in Vail at the age of 27, when the resort was nothing but a couple makeshift buildings and the beginnings of a few trails.
“Making Vail happen”A native of the Denver area, Slifer had studied business
in college, before spending a few years in the Navy. After World War II, like many other soldiers who helped shape Colorado’s ski areas, he moved to the mountains. From 1960 to 1962, he lived the “ski bum life” in Aspen, working as a ski instructor, waiter and house painter.
In 1962, a friend from Aspen, Vail’s first ski school direc-tor, told Slifer about a new resort being built a few hours away – Vail – and invited him to come on board as the as-sistant ski school director.
“So I came,” Slifer says. “I got here May 1, 1962. They were building the lifts and cutting trails. The Lodge at Vail
was the first hotel and the Vail Village Inn was on the corner, and that was pretty much it.”
Vail Associates, as the resort company was called at the time, had an office at the base of the mountain and a few trailers to house workers. Vail founders were hard at work – Earl Eaton was out cutting trails, Peter Seibert was out raising money, and others were out building lifts. Slifer was working in the resort’s humble office, managing paperwork and answering phones. That first summer was intense, he remembers.
“It was really hard work,” he says. “Everyone worked
seven days a week, helping each other out to make Vail hap-pen.”
The mountain first opened in December of 1962, and lift tickets sold for $5. It wasn’t the best snow season and Slifer remembers taking his first runs down the now-famous Back Bowls.
“You were skiing down there through the weeds, wonder-ing if you were going to hit a rock,” he remembers with a chuckle.
Of course, snowier winters followed, and he remembers years when the Back Bowls yielded powder up to his head
Meet Rod SliferSlifer, Smith and
Frampton celebrates 50 years of Vail success
By Melanie Wong
“Growing up with Vail”
(l-r) Rod Slifer, Harry Frampton and Mark Smith joined forces in the Vail real estate market in 1994. Photo courtesy of Slifer, Smith & Frampton
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 7
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OUR SUCCESS IS YOUR SUCESS....VAIL VALLEY RESIDENCES RECENTLY LISTED OR SOLD
Douglas Landin | Lionshead Offi ce970.479.0242 - dir. | 970.376.1299 - [email protected] Chair, Vail Board of RealtorsDirector, Colorado Association of Realtorswww.LandinVail.com
Landmark Residence 206 | Lionshead3 bedroom, 4 bath | 1,592+/-sq. ft.SOLD PRICE: $1,150,000
83 Hollyhock Ct. | Eagle Ranch5 bedroom, 6 bath | 5,374+/-sq. ft.
SOLD PRICE: $1,366,000
– the stuff of legends for sure, and that’s what Vail would become.
The first few years, the resort relied on the business of Front Range skiers, although Denver and Aspen naysayers said the drive was too far. But people came, and Vail grew in popularity every year.
The resort earned further prestige when President Gerald Ford made Vail his part-time residence, putting Vail on the map and attracting other high-profile guests and residents.
“(I came) on blind faith. Vail was very small then. We never imagined it’d be this big,” he says. “I think all of us believed in it, that it would succeed, but nobody knew how big it would be.”
Real estate pioneerYou could say Slifer was Vail’s original real estate pioneer
– at the resort’s beginning, he was in charge of showing Vail Associates investors potential building sites. Someone sug-gested he get a real estate license, which he did in 1962. For 25 years, he ran Vail Home Rentals.
“It just happened. Being here from the ground floor, I knew there would be opportunities. In 1966, I bought the land the office is on,” he says, indicating to the Bridge Street offic-es, steps from other village landmarks such as the Covered Bridge and Pepi’s. “I planted my roots and took a chance.”
In 1968, Slifer started his own brokerage, Slifer and Com-pany, and began developing Bridge Street, West Vail and ex-panding down to Eagle-Vail, now among some of the most
sought-after locations in the area.The other three individuals who eventually became the
partners in the modern day Slifer, Smith and Frampton ar-rived later on the scene, but nonetheless played major roles in the area’s development.
Jim Flaum, a real estate veteran and former Navy pilot, became the vice president and managing broker for Vail Associates Real Estate in 1983. In the late ‘80s, develop-ers Harry Frampton and Mark Smith formed East West Part-ners, concentrating on building a new development: Beaver Creek.
The independent companies grew as dueling brokers in the valley until 1994, when the four decided they would work better as partners, not rivals.
“I said, ‘I think we would be better off together,’ and we agreed we would not do it unless two-plus-two equaled eight, if we could all be much more successful together – and we were,” Slifer says. “We really grew up with Vail.”
Mr. VailIn addition to being instrumental in Vail’s private develop-
ment, Slifer also played a key role in Vail’s public develop-ment, serving as mayor for 11 years (from 1978 to 1985 and 2004 to 2007) and town councilman for 16 years (from 1977 to 1985 and 1999 to 2007). His legacy includes major proj-ects that have included integral elements of the town. Slifer helped inaugurate Vail’s public library, as well as spearhead-ed the building of Vail’s first parking structure.
“That was a real leap of faith,” he says of the parking. “We had to go to voters for $3.5 million and we were the first ski area to build a structure. Everyone else just parked on dirt lots.”
The iconic cobbled walkway of Bridge Street was part of Slifer’s work as well.
“It was controversial when we heated the streets,” he remembers. “I’d be watching people (from my office) ev-eryday fall, their skis going down the street. Creating the cobbled streets was a great accomplishment and we were one of the first resort towns to do so.”
Looking ahead to both the town and the brokerage futures, Slifer says the company’s success will go hand-in-hand with Vail’s success. However, the company’s focus will probably be quite different from what it was in 1962.
“Vail has built out this valley,” he says. “Everything in the future will be redevelopment of older residences and build-ings. Growth has really gone down-valley, as Vail has be-come unaffordable for the average working person.”
As for the town and the mountain, Slifer expects it to re-ally come into its own as a community.
“It’ll just get better and better,” he says. “We now have (a) third generation of children being raised here and we’ve really become a community. Our success really depends on the success of Vail.”
Brokers from the growing real estate company take a ski day in 1995.Photo courtesy of Slifer, Smith & Frampton
SneakPEAK editor Melanie Wong can be reached at [email protected]
8 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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Y ou know you live in a tru-ly a one-of-a-kind place when you can discuss the global energy crisis with
scientific, policy and venture capital experts from around the world while sitting on a chairlift
But that’s exactly what happened last Saturday on the Centennial Express Lift at Beaver Creek on a bitter cold, but beautiful morning on an open and impeccably groomed mountain, during the first-ever Vail Global Energy Forum (VGEF). About two dozen conference participants took ad-vantage of the first-tracks skiing event before discussions began in earnest at the Vilar Performing Arts Center.
You also know you live in a place like no other when a U.S. Senator, presenting to a packed auditorium made up of some of the world’s foremost experts on energy issues, wears a sport coat, a striped dress shirt – and blue jeans and cowboy boots. And that too took place at the forum when Senator Mark Udall of Colorado presented remarks on “The Global Energy Challenge,” a speech in which he compared advancements in energy technology to the life-saving im-provements in mountain climbing equipment since World War II.
Yes, the Vail Valley is truly unique, a place where critical scientific and political issues can be addressed alongside rec-reational pursuits with seemingly no incongruity. Vail is also unique in that it is a community seeking to manage growing energy demands and transition to new energy technologies, a fact made readily apparent during last weekend’s Global
Energy Forum.The Global Energy Forum brought top experts from all
over the world, such as Tom Petrie, Vice Chairman of Bank of America; Jeffrey Ball, formerly The Wall Street Journal’s environment editor; Dr. Ernest Moniz, Director of the En-ergy Initiative at MIT; Dr. Burton Richter, Nobel Laureate in Physics, as well as policy makers such as Colorado Gov-ernor John Hickenlooper, Udall and former U.S. Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury and Secretary of Labor, George P. Shultz.
“The VGEF is dedicated to the search for sustainable solu-tions to one of the most pressing issues of our times – how to produce enough clean, cost-efficient energy while we bridge the transition to renewable energy solutions of the future,” says Vail resident, Jay Precourt, who endowed Precourt Institute for Energy at Stanford University. The institute brought the forum to the valley, along with the Vail Valley Foundation.
Learning about the futureMany Vail Valley residents who attended the conference
appreciated the incredible learning opportunity. “The energy that (the organizers) put into bringing these
outstanding people to Vail is a tribute to Vail and to the de-sire people have to learn,” says conference attendee and part-time Vail resident Carolyn Smith. “It’s amazing – we’ve got some of the brightest people here.”
Though conference attendees came from all over the coun-try, many – like Smith – came from somewhere up or down the valley.
“I wanted to learn a little more about the new technology, the solutions,” says Maisa Metcalf, one of 18 students from Colorado Mountain College’s (CMC) Edwards campus.
She says that the first day she was “a little disappointed”
by all the emphasis placed on natural gas. “I thought it would be talking more about new technologies to become sustain-able. But (on the second day I felt) more positive because they are talking more about renewable energy, solar, wind, the innovation part – not just natural gas. But I think over-all it’s been a very good thing, especially here in the valley, because it’s important for us to learn more about it. It’s the future. It’s what we all need to learn, no matter where you work, in all sectors of society.”
The CMC students joined 67 other students from numer-ous Colorado colleges who attended the forum thanks to scholarships provided by conference organizer Carl Colby.
George Mizner, a psychiatrist from Vail, also commented on the focus on natural gas.
“It’s interesting the clear-cut emphasis on gas develop-ment, certainly on the efficiency of it, and the concern on the part of all the participants on the environment, ” says Mizner.
He adds that another notable theme of the conference was the fact that “all of these speakers have been in favor of a mixture of solutions.”
Colorado at the forefront Mizner, as well as a number of speakers like Hickenlooper
and Udall, pointed out that Colorado has been in the lead regarding all the developments.
Udall even gave a shout-out to several Vail companies that have adopted some commendable energy innovations. He mentioned Vail Resorts, which recently installed 42 200-watt solar panels that will produce enough energy to power Adventure Ridge, as well as provide lighting at Eagle’s Nest. Walking Mountains Science Center also meets 35 percent of its electricity needs through on-site solar energy, and Holy Cross Energy has a number of programs to reduce green-
Global Energy Forum brings
Big Issues HomeMaking ski tracks with top
energy experts at Beaver CreekBy Kat Jahnigen
Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper took a few runs on Vail Mountain last Saturday prior to his keynote address at the first Vail Global Energy Forum at Beaver Creek. Zach Mahone photo.
[See ENERGY FORUM, page 17]
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 9
9
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After local resident Nicholas Luchycky lost a battle to leukemia last December, his friends and family set to work creating an event in his memory.
The result is a fundraising event at Pazzo’s Pizzeria in Eagle on Saturday, March 10 from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., ben-efiting the Vail Valley Charitable Fund, which provides mon-etary assistance and fundraising support to residents facing a medical crisis. The fund had helped Luchycky through his treatment and two brain cell transplants.
The event will feature live music and a silent auction, and all food proceeds will be donated as well.
“He always wanted to help out VVCF because of the help they gave him,” says Nick Luchycky’s brother, Patrick Luchycky, one of the event organizers. “There are always
people in need, and the fund has been there and been helping residents for years. If we can keep the love flowing and be able to raise money and help people in their time of need, that’s something that brings us satisfaction and joy. That’s what life is all about.
Nick Luchycky was a lifelong Eagle County resident and was 36 when he passed away. According to his brother, he enjoyed climbing, hiking, music, playing a building guitars, and snowboarding.
“He fought it hard and survived two stem cell transplants,” Patrick Luchycky says. “He was a good friend, inspiration and lover of life.”
To contribute items to the auction or for more information, contact Pazzo’s owner Tom Clinton at 970-337-9900.
Memorial fundraiser at pazzo’sEagle restaurant helps local charitable fund
By Melanie Wong
SneakPEAK editor Melanie Wong can be reached at [email protected]
The first annual Pink Vail event, ben-efitting the Shaw Regional Cancer Cen-ter, drew nearly 700 skiers and 1,900 donors, a big success for the fundraiser.
According to Lindsay Warner, Vail Valley Medical Center’s manager of communications and publications, the March 3-4 event raised $175,000 and donations are still coming in. The site, www.pinkvail.com, is still up and run-ning, and the tally continues to grow.
The event was supported by the hos-
pital, Vail Mountain and various busi-nesses around town, which donated goods and services. Some employees personally raised money and other businesses put together teams, which participated in on-mountain skiing events the day of the fundraiser bash.
The event culminated in a “Celebra-tion Ski Down” to Arrabelle Square in Lionshead, fittingly decorated with pink lights, where the band Gomez played a free concert. Skiers could per-sonalize a ski bib to say they were ski-ing in celebration of a loved one.
“The Celebration Ski Down was the pinnacle,” says Warner. “We all came together and skied down Simba into Li-onshead -- there were about 300 people there. At the bottom of the run you saw people together hugging and crying. That’s when I was really proud to be a part of this.”
The funds raised go toward breast cancer programs at the Shaw Cancer Center. The programs go beyond medi-cal care – Shaw offers hair consulta-tions for women who have lost their
First pink Vail a success Donations total more then $175,000 and growing
By Melanie Wong
[See PINK VAIL, page 24]
10 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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During Snoop Dogg’s head-lining set at Snowball Mu-
sic Festival last Saturday, there was a very palpable sense of old meets new.
In between sending tweets and snapping Instagram shots on smartphones – a technology that was some 10 years from being invented when the 40-year-old Snoop cut his first track – music fans were ordering drinks.
The technology, dubbed Smartbar, was a curiosity dur-ing the opening day of the festival on Friday. People milled around a bare-bones tent near the main stage, picking their way through a free app they downloaded through GetSmart-bar.com.
The deceptively simple set-up alludes to the simple tech-nology at the heart of Smartbar: open the app, select your drinks from a list, enter an email address and credit card number, and place the order. The system sends a confir-mation code, and as you walk from your spot to the tent, “bartenders” – really inventor Casey Curtis and his business partners – fill the order from a single iPad. Your drinks are waiting when you arrive.
“Just like any technology, you have early adopters who pick things up before anyone else,” Curtis said as he poured a round of drink orders, glancing back and forth between a single iPad and several cases of liquor. “We see cell phone payment and this kind of instant connectivity as the future, and this weekend has supported that.”
Curtis put the app in the hands of these early adopters –
the same people who aren’t afraid to switch to the “time-line” feature on Facebook – and in an expected fashion, they couldn’t stop talking about it. While other festivalgoers up-wards of 10 or 15 minutes to get a beer at the small collec-tion of drink tents, Curtis’ partner Bryan Haver estimated the three bartenders at Smartbar could serve people six to eight seconds after they arrived at the tent.
“The reaction so far has been great,” Haver said. “People like it, the convenience of not waiting in line or being away from the music.”
The reaction was surprisingly rapid. By the time Snoop played a mere day after the beginning of the festival, word about the technology had spread through the thousands of music fans, and for good reason: at the beginning of a rela-tively short song like “Gin and Juice,” they could order a drink, enjoy the music, walk to the bar during the second verse, and be back in the crowd before the final chorus. Cur-tis estimated at the peak of the headlining acts, they were fill-ing several hundred drink orders per hour, and they sold out of at least one product every night (the Pabst supply seemed to be permanently dry.)
“The best thing about the app and what gave us lots of encouragement was how many return customers we saw,” Curtis said near the end of the night. “It showed me they re-ally liked the technology, and it accomplished what we set out to accomplish.”
Make no doubt about it: Curtis sees Smartbar as the bar of the future, and Snowball was his testing ground. As he began filling another drink order, a college friend gave him the equivalent of a trademarked tagline.
“Don’t tell me this isn’t the best thing since beer itself,” his friend said. “You can stay partying while ordering your
drinks. It’s the smart way to bar.”
The beauty of simplicityIt helps that Curtis and his promoters give off a certain
easy-going, guy-at-the-bar kind of vibe. When they did a soft launch of Smartbar at the Snowglobe Music Festival in Tahoe, Calif. – another festival operated by Snowball part-ners Chad Donnelly and Scotty Stoughton – they hired col-lege friends to talk about the app. All in their mid and late twenties, the guys would go through the crowds with phrases like, “Smart babes drink Smartbar,” and walk older guests through ordering on the app.
And it definitely doesn’t hurt that beer practically sells it-self, particularly when combined with a pervasive technol-ogy like smartphones and a festival environment, where the less fans have to worry about, the better.
Curtis understands the need for simplicity, because he knows first-hand the frustration of music fans at large-scale festivals. – he’s a self-professed festival junkie and admits such events aren’t without a number of flaws.
“You pay a lot of money for these things, between the festival itself, travelling to the venue and everything else,” Curtis said. “You want to make the most of the experience. But when you miss out on what’s going on because you’re waiting in line, it can be frustrating.”
The idea for Smartbar came when Curtis attended an oys-ter festival a little over a year ago. He waited in line 20 min-utes to get a beer ticket, then another 30 minutes at the drink tent. In short, he says, it was a waste of time. As a business graduate with the coveted sensibility of an early adopter, he turned that frustration into an opportunity.
From that initial spark, creating the business was rela-
‘Smartbar’ debuts drink ordering app at Snowball Music Festival. By Phil Lindeman
bartendingfuture
Sights from Snowball: Photos by Zach Mahone.Afroman, owner of 2 hit singles, “Because I Got High” and “Colt 45” performs a short set at Snowball Music Festival. Fans were disappointed he only played a few songs, and by the fact he had no afro.
of the
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 11
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tively simple. There were a few initial over-head costs – purchasing an iPad, developing the custom backend and app, searching for partners – but he now says the operation costs little more than a typical drink tent.
“I’ve been an entrepreneur for a long time, always with the focus of building a sustainable business while making the world a better place,” Curtis said. “This is making it a better place through shorter lines and positive vibes for the festival.”
The future of SmartbarWhen Snoop Dogg’s set ended on Saturday, Curtis was
convinced he had a bona fide success on his hands. From here, he and his crew plan on visiting the final Donnelly-in-spired festival in Vermont, Snowmont. Curtis has also been looking toward to event-filled summer, with an eye on mas-sive festivals like South by Southwest in Austin and Bonna-roo in Manchester, Tenn.
Curtis’ pitch hasn’t been without snags. The system has no way to confirm age, and at Snowball, relied on people first getting wristbands from an ID check – a process that can take time and make the line-free selling point moot.
But Curtis and his partners are convinced Smartbar is the kind of rare technology that links the digital world with the physical one. When they’ve proven its worth at festivals, they see no end in sight: it could move into stadiums or oth-er venues where lines are prevalent. The system is simple
enough, Curtis thinks it’s reasonable that local restaurants would contract Smartbar to fit the technology to their bar-tenders.
“As the technology and our user base grow, we want to expand,” Curtis said. “The great thing about this is there’s really no limit to where we can go and what we can do.”
Crowds knew how to party as the 2nd annual Snowball Festival. Right: Snoop Dogg headlined Saturday night in Avon. Snoop did not disappoin the crowd with his classics.
Sneak Peak reporter Philip Lindeman can be reached at [email protected]
12 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
12
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For Edwards resident Karin Weber, inspiration for her new book came from the most unlikely of sources – prison inmates.
The inmates at California’s Valley State Prison for Women, some serving up to double life sentences, provided the material for Weber’s new book, “Perspectives: The Journey Within.” The longtime local, world traveler and community activist will share the new pub-lication as part of the Bookworm’s local authors event in April at the Edwards bookstore.
“I’ve been thinking about a book and how to go about it for three years,” Weber says. “I was encouraged to juxtapose quotations from the sages with the quotations from the inmate – ends up the human condition is the same, whoever you are.”
The book, Weber’s final project for her degree in spiritual psychology, reads like a poi-gnant children’s book – if children’s books tackled introspective revelations and psychologi-cal principles. The small publication features quotes from famous philosophers and thinkers, including Buddha, Gandhi and Einstein and, pairs them with quotations from inmates who have been through the “Freedom to Choose” (a leadership and conflict resolution program) and are illustrated with photos from Weber’s travels.
Spiritual psychologyWeber’s own journey has had many destinations, to say the least. She’s traveled the world,
including extensively in Asia. She moved to Vail in 1989 with her husband Bob, and raised their now-grown children. They had previously lived in various places, including New York state and Texas. As she puts it, they planted their roots in the mountains because they were simply going “where they belonged.”
In her career path, she’s worked as a stockbroker and sales manager for Merrill Lynch, and has Master’s degrees in special education and spiritual psychology.
The latter brought her to her current project. Her friend, former Vail physician David Paul, told her about his studies in spiritual psychology and suggested Weber might like the two-year Master’s program through the University of Santa Monica in California.
Eyebrows might rise at the very mention of the phrase “spiritual psychology,” which is defined as “the study and practice of the art and science of human evolution in conscious-ness.”
Weber was skeptical at first, too, but was interested when she saw the effect it had on Paul’s life.
“I didn’t think I needed it,” Weber says. “I always took pride in not showing emotion and in my academic knowledge.”
She completed the program in 2005, and says it’s changed her outlook on life. “It’s not about religion. The concept is that we are spiritual beings having a human ex-
perience, and that life is a learning process,” Weber says. “It’s a learning orientation to life through which people accept responsibility, learn to communicate and use everything for their growth, whether good or bad.”
Freedom to Choose in actionThe concepts of spiritual psychology have been put into practice in the California state
prison system. Students of the course, including Weber, help hold a three-day program at the Valley State Prison for Women.
The experience is intense – as the gates slam shut and the students and hundreds of in-mates hunker down for the program in a crowded gymnasium, people who have known nothing but violence most of their lives are listened to, learn to listen and taught to com-municate effectively.
“For many, it’s the first time they’ve learned to communicate without violence and it’s the first time they’re told they have freedom to choose what they want to be,” Weber says. “Women are learning better ways of showing up in the world. There’s less violence among the women who participate, and they’re taking these skills and passing them onto their chil-dren and families.”
The program is based on the work of Holocaust survivor and psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, who noticed that a group of men in the concentration camp refused to let their circumstances dictate their attitude. His conclusion was that the only freedom that cannot be taken away is the freedom to choose one’s attitude.
That idea goes a long way with inmates, has expanded to other areas in California, and has made an impact on Weber’s personal life.
Besides experiencing personal growth, the experience inspired another book, “Postcards from Grandma,” that illustrated philosophical principles through photos. The work is a mes-sage of sorts to her grandchildren.
Now Weber wants to bring a similar program to Eagle County’s youth and at-risk popula-tions and is seeking volunteers and partners to help get the program off the ground.
“The great thing is that volunteers can be trained to help build this,” she says. “(The ideas) are so liberating. It’s applicable for everybody – living authentically, living without external references to what I should be or do, and knowing that we have a choice regardless of the circumstances and taking 100 percent responsibility for our attitude.”
Bringing “Freedom to Choose” to eagle CountyAuthor, volunteer Karin Weber on her latest project
By Melanie Wong
Edwards resident and community activist Karin Weber sits on the new campus of Roundup River Ranch with her dog Tashi. Weber was instrumental in starting the camp. Her newest project is bringing a conflict resolution and psychology pro-gram to help at-risk populations in Eagle County. Karin Weber photo.
[See KARIN WEBER, page 30]
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 13
13
5 bedroom, 7 bath Vail home on a ridge-top location with panoramic mountain views captured by fl oor-to-ceiling windows.
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Classic and cozy 4 bedroom, 5.5 bath, 6,304 sq/ft ski retreat with nice views and ski-in/ski-out access. Just a short distance to fabulous dining and spa at The Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch.
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Beautifully furnished 6 bedroom, 5.5 bath home with spectacular Gore Range views. Ski-in/ski-out convenience, oversized master, media room and private hot tub. Well priced but owner will consider all offers.
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14 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
14
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52 WEEKS VAIL VALLEY
of the
sneakPeak wants you to send in your photo submissions that capture what makes living in the Vail Valley great. We’ll feature one photo each week, so send in images from your latest ad-ventures and other captured moments from around town, along with a short caption, to [email protected].
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A train pulls into the Glenwood Springs station.Credit: Jennifer Sewall
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 15
15
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This weeks specialsAll Night Every Night
Éclairs, Profiteroles, and Gougères... oh my!
All three of these tradi-tional favorites are made from a batter known as “Pâté a Choux.” Pate a what? Pro-nounced “pah-tuh-shoo”, this batter is the foundation for many petite French pas-tries, including the afore-mentioned that we’ve come to know and love so well. Literally translated, Pâté a Choux means “cabbage paste “ in French, however,
the recipe does not include cabbage, or any kind of cab-bage derivative as an ingredient. Instead, the batter is a mixture of water, butter, flour and eggs.
The term “choux,” which means cabbage, refers to the shape of the pastry after it is baked, especially profiteroles. “Profiterole” is the French term for a small, round, cream-filled pastry, which is commonly known to us as a cream puff. Cream puffs are made using Pâté a Choux batter that is piped and resemble little round cabbages after they are baked. Éclairs are similar in that they are made from the exact same batter, but they are piped differently, so they boast an elongated shape. “Gougère” is the French term for savory cheese puff. Gougères are made using the same Pâté a Choux batter, but also include savory ingredients such as grated cheese, herbs, and spices.
In each of these applications, the Pâté a Choux paste will rise and form a hollow shell via mechanical leaven-ing when it is baked. Mechanical leavening is what occurs from the steam that is created when water and butter evap-orate during baking. The steam creates a hollow cavity in the pastry, leaving a shell that can easily be filled with your favorite cream or filling.
Typically, éclairs are filled with a custard-like pastry cream. Despite the complicated name given to this univer-sal batter, Pâté a Choux is actually really easy to make. And what’s even better is that the baked, unfilled shells can be placed in an airtight container and stored in the freezer for weeks. When you are ready to serve them, the shells can simply be thawed, refreshed in the oven (this will help crisp them up a bit and keep them from getting too soggy after they are filled) and filled with pastry cream or even ice cream! The following is a basic recipe for Pâté a Choux. Bon appétit!
SneakTReaTS: French pastriesEclairs, Profiteroles - fancy names, but not hard to make
Felicia Kalaluhi
Ingredients:1 1/2 cups water1 1/2 cups milk1/8 tsp. sugar1 pinch salt1 1/3 cups butter1 1/2 cups flour2 3/4 cups eggs
Method:1. Combine the water, milk, sugar, salt,
and butter in a medium sauce pot and bring to a boil.2. Add flour and stir vigorously with wood-
en spoon over heat until moisture begins to evaporate from mixture (will become thick and pull away from bottom and sides of pot.)3. When a film has developed on the bottom
of the saucepot, remove from heat and place mixture in a mixing bowl with a paddle at-tachment. On low speed, gradually add eggs. Mix until eggs are fully incorporated.4. Remove mixture from mixing bowl and
place in pastry bag with a medium to large size pastry tip. If you prefer lines in your pastry shells, use a star tip. If you prefer a smooth pastry shell, use a round tip.5. Pipe batter onto sheet pan lined with
parchment paper. For éclairs, pipe the bat-ter to the desired length of the éclair. Applying different amounts of pressure will determine the width of the éclair shell. If you apply more pressure, the pastry will be wider, and less pressure will result in a skinnier éclair. For profiteroles or cream puffs, pipe the batter into rosettes or dots about the size of a quarter or half dollar.6. Lightly brush the piped batter with egg
wash and bake at 375 degrees until pastry rises, turns golden brown in color, and is hollowed on the inside. The best way to test if they are done is to break one open. Once the shells are done, you can remove them from the oven to cool.7. After the shells are cooled, use a
kitchen thermometer to poke a small opening in the underside of each pastry shell.8. Using a pastry bag and a small, fine-
point pastry tip, fill the shells with your favorite cream. Just insert the tip into the small opening and squeeze until the cream gently pushes back at the tip. Be careful not to overfill or the pastry shell will burst open.9. Drizzle chocolate or your favorite gar-
nish on top of each pastry and enjoy!
Pate a Choux
Sneak Peak columnist Felicia Kalaluhi can be reached at [email protected].
16 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
16
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The statistics can be shocking: 13 percent of people in Eagle County can’t read well enough to fill out a job appli-cation or pick through a bus schedule, according to a 2003 study by the National Center for Education Statistics.
Although the numbers are harrowing, they both worry and inspire the coordinators for The Literacy Project of Eagle County, a free program dedicated to fighting illiteracy.
“I’m always surprised that there are individuals in our community that are illiterate, and how they’re (able to be) functioning in the community,” Executive Director Colleen Gray says.
Founded in 1990, The Literacy Project is split into a num-ber of regular tutoring services for youth and adults, punctu-ated with a handful of special events throughout the year. As of now, the non-profit serves 275 adults through English as a second-language sessions, 120 students with elementary and middle school initiatives, and 80 families through the “Lit-eracy is for Everyone” and “Raising a Reader” programs.
According to Gray, The Literacy Project is unique because it addresses every level of illiteracy in the community, from parents to children – no exclusions. A student will often register for tutoring, and the coordinators will discover the parent is part of a program as well. This connectivity helps volunteers engage entire families with programs like “Lit-eracy is for Everyone,” which provides homework help and kindergarten care for children while parents take a develop-mental education course at Colorado Mountain College.
“What we’ve been able to do is work with the students, children and adults who need our help,” Gray says. “There’s a continuum of literacy assistance we can provide. We’re reaching entire families to strengthen the skills of everyone.”
Downvalley program blossomsAlthough The Literacy Project in Vail and Avon remains
consistently strong, the downvalley portion has waxed and waned, due in large part to a lack of staffing. When Kira Chaney Barclay came on as the Eagle and Gypsum Program
Coordinator last year, there were only two consistent tutors for the entire area.
“Part of the small interest came from turnover and a lack of consistency,” Chaney Barclay says. “I want to build a new foundation and attract new talent.”
In her short time as coordinator, Chaney Barclay has made impressive steps in that direction. The core of volunteer tu-tors has jumped from two to 10, along with several profes-sional teachers who train incoming volunteers. In the “Read-ing Buddies” program, which links high school students with elementary students, 19 teenagers from Eagle and Gypsum regularly meet with younger students to write book reports and go over reading assignments.
“We have a much greater number of new people now than when I showed up,” Chaney Barclay says. “It’s building steam, but it’s a slow process. Next school year is where our
relationships will really blossom.”The student literacy programs are handled completely by
volunteers, and most align with the school year. Volunteers are expected to commit at least nine months to middle school programs and six months to most others. These volunteers range from professionals and business owners to mothers and retirees, and all are trained by volunteer teachers. It’s a challenge to find new, dedicated volunteers, but the tutors are some of the best promoters.
“What works real well for our program is word of mouth,”
Giving the gift of readingTutors with The Literacy Project boost learning
Share the talentLove to read and want to give back? The Lit-
eracy Project looks for volunteers year round to help with all their programs, including el-ementary and middle school tutoring, along with adult ESL courses. Visit the Web site at www.LiteracyProjectEagleCounty.org to fill out the appropriate forms. All volunteers go through a background check.
By Phil Lindeman
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 17
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Gray says. “Parents see that their children are making prog-ress, and the tutors see how involved they become. They tell their friends how rewarding it is, and they want to get in on it as well.”
Beyond this word-of-mouth element, one key to Chaney Barclay’s success in Gypsum has been taking the program directly to school administrators and parents. Students re-quire a referral to enter a tutoring program like “Study Friends” – the most basic tutoring program – and she simpli-fied the process to be easier for teachers. She recently met with the Parents Teacher Association at Gypsum Creek Mid-dle School to explain these changes, as well as give valuable face time. She wants people to know The Literacy Project is
alive and well downvalley.“I tell these different groups we can help,” Chaney Bar-
clay says. “A huge part of what I’m doing now is building those relationships and putting our name out there. People need to know we’re here.”
Along with meetings at individual schools, Chaney Bar-clay is taking the lull of March to make other changes. As of now, coordinators look primarily at enrollment numbers to gauge interest – there are very few stats of community benefits. Eventually, she’d like to use the Colorado Student Assessment Program results as proof of her volunteer’s ef-forts. It’s a side effect of her previous work in the medical field, where concrete measures are vital.
“I came into this from a much different background, so one of my goals is to establish some measure (of success),”
Chaney Barclay says. “We don’t want to just have hours tu-tored. I want to bring a measurable scale to know if we’ve really been successful.”
The nonprofit struggleAs with many nonprofits, funding is a consistent worry
for Gray and Chaney Barclay. Every program on The Lit-eracy Project roster is completely free – otherwise, the low-income families who need the most help wouldn’t be able to participate.
“We’re always looking for money,” Gray says. “It’s a con-stant struggle, but we are always open to donations.”
The nonprofit is supported through fundraisers, personal donations and grants from the Eagle Valley Library District, which also gives space at the Avon and Eagle libraries for four full-time employees.
As is to be expected with a literacy program, fundraisers usually have some kind of book element, Gray says. In sum-mer, she coordinates an author luncheon, and on March 22, they’ll host a showing of the “Hunger Games” movie at the Eagle Theater.
As The Literacy Project’s downvalley efforts continue to grow, Chaney Barclay expects interest from both donors and participants to grow in kind. She admits volunteering is in her blood and is convinced the program is headed in the right direction.
“For me, even outside of work, I’ve always had volunteer-ing as part of my life,” Chaney Barclay says. “When I found this opportunity, I was excited. It has been totally reward-ing.”
SneakPEAK writer Phil Lindeman can be reached at [email protected]
house-gas emissions and promote wind energy and hydropower.
While much of the forum focused on promising emerging technologies, poli-cies to help transition to a more secure and diverse energy supply, and how to satisfy growing global energy needs in an economically viable way, some of the most valuable lessons for confer-
ence attendees were more personal and close to home.
“The main point is the behavioral resistance that sets it all back because people aren’t willing to change their habits,” says Smith. “We could drive cars that are more efficient, make sure our homes are more efficient – that our furnaces were up to date, that our
refrigerators are new. Much of the ac-tivities that we can do today are very available to us. There’s all kinds of wonderful things that are coming down the road, but we don’t need to wait to truly get started on energy efficiency.”
SneakPEAK writer Kat Jahnigen can be reached at [email protected]
ENERGY FORUM –––––––––––––––––––– [From page 8]
Tutor Sandra Spaeh (right) works with student Car-men Alvarado as part of the Eagle Literacy Project’s adult Study Friends program. Photo special to Sneak-PEAK
18 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
18
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Nausea, fatigue, headache, weakness and dizziness. These all may sound like symptoms after the morning of your very first rush week in col-
lege, but all of these symptoms are actually signs of a much more prevalent condition that is encountered here in the mountains of Colorado. That condition is altitude sickness, also known as High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE). According to articles published in the Science Daily, Scientific Reports and the New England Journal of Medicine, these feelings of illness are often directly related to the lower content of oxygen that is found in the earth’s atmosphere above 7,000 feet.
Our bodies need oxygen-enriched blood to perform optimally on a daily basis and at alti-tude, this becomes even more critical as our bodies become for lack of a better term, oxygen starved. There is a new lozenge out on the market that claims to help with all of these symp-toms for up to four hours at a time -- Altitude Adapt.
Altitude Adapt is a dissolvable or chewable lozenge, which contains Vitamins C and B12, as well as a proprietary nitric oxide blend. To keep this discussion in layman’s terms, a 2011 edition “Scientific Reports” states that nitric oxide is a “signaling molecule” that our bodies produce through metabolism. Its formation is crucial for the control of blood pressure, blood flow and other bodily functions.
Nitric oxide is a vasodilator, meaning it widens blood vessels so they can carry more blood, and hence more oxygen to the vital organs and cells of the body. The widening of these blood vessels results from the relaxation of smooth muscle cells within the vessel walls. A significant percentage of the general population that travels to the higher altitudes of Colorado to play (roughly 25 million annually) will unfortunately feel the effects of al-titude sickness.
The problem for many of these visitors may be that they do not have the time to properly acclimate their bodies to the related effects of higher altitude conditions and may experi-ence altitude sickness, or hypoxia, as a result. Hypoxia is the state caused by deprivation of oxygen, resulting in altitude sickness and its symptoms. This is where Altitude Adapt comes to the rescue.
The New England Journal of Medicine reported that the true remedy for hypoxia at Al-titude is nitric oxide, which is exactly what Altitude Adapt delivers quickly once ingested. Kristin Holt, who sells the product across the country, says that adults who recognize they have an issue with high-altitude sickness should take a lozenge twice daily, once in the morning and again midday. It also helps to start taking it prior to your arrival at altitude.
For those who have not had issues with problems, but would like to use Altitude Adapt as a safe measure against the potential altitude related symptoms, it is available in a very
convenient and easy-to-carry six lozenges, individually sealed package. Users should expect to feel the effects of Altitude Adapt roughly fifteen minutes after taking it. There is also a rumor floating around that it can help tremendously as a hangover cure. Seriously.
The research behind nitric oxide is nearly a decade in the making, developed by Nathan Bryan, professor of molecular medicine at the University of Texas and co-founder and chief science officer at Neogenis Labs. Bryan’s research has been focused on therapeutics to re-store nitric oxide levels in the human body.
“The past ten years of my research have been dedicated to creating nitric oxide outside of the human body,” he says.
Bryan has successfully done this by combining multiple plant-based products. The prod-uct is activated through saliva where it then enters your blood stream and goes to work for the betterment of your stay during your ski vacation.
Pete Halden, who works at a retailer at the base of Beaver Creek resort, says that Altitude Adapt has been difficult to keep stocked on the shelves where he works and that visiting ski-ers have embraced the product and appear to be seeing some positive results.
“It works great as a headache remedy as well,” he says.Altitude Adapt is available in many shops throughout the Vail Valley including, Gorsuch,
Christy Sports, Pepi’s Sports, Vail Sports, the Covered Bridge Store, Beaver Creek Sports and many other sporting good outlets in the valley.
SneakGeaR: altitude adaptProduct aims to ease high-altitude sickness woes
By Larry Grossman
SneakPEAK writer Larry Grossman can be reached at [email protected]
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 19
19
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20 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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even for someone with a storied race history like Schuetze. After averaging 48.3 seconds in his first two GS runs, he sat in third place, followed closely by another top-ranked slalom specialist, Dak Steiert.
“It’s good to get out and challenge yourself, to stay on top of your skills,” says Steiert, a 25-year-old SSCV alum who spent time on the FIS World Cup circuit. “People who aren’t used to racing would be surprised how hard it is, but you have competition from guys who raced in college or were on the U.S. Ski Team. It keeps you fresh.”
A community affairAs with other public race events in the valley – the Vail
Recreation District’s summer mountain bike series comes to mind – it was easy to spot the die-hard athletes: they sported colorful spandex and padded mitts, all slathered with logos from Spyder, Komperdell and Edwards-based favorite, Fuxi Racing USA. When other downhillers passed the finish line,
they gathered and chatted excitedly about the tight upper gates and surprisingly slick middle section.
After dipping past the final gate, SSCV alpine coach Me-lissa Jones stopped next to a group of fellow coaches, all wearing the club’s trademark royal blue. She was slightly out of breath following the loopy GS run, and admits it’s bet-ter that her young pupils – 13 and 14-year-old boys – don’t come out to heckle their coach.
“It’s easier to not have the kids around – it’s definitely more of a ‘do as I say, not as I do’ situation,” Johns says between deep breaths. “The kids were out here earlier and took six or seven runs with no problem. I take two, and I’m sucking wind.”
Depending on travel, the majority of SSCV coaches try to race at least once during the Town Series, and the cham-pionships were no exception. Along with Johns, about six coaches hit the course to hone their skills and enjoy a bit of downtime.
“We were all racers growing up, so we still have a love for it,” Jones says. “It keeps the passion alive, sort of reminds us why we get out there and coach every day.”
SSCV athletes weren’t the only ones conspicuously miss-ing at the opening heats of the GS. Other spectators were few and far between, limited to fellow racers and a girlfriend or two. But 48-year-old West Vail resident Steve Wallace no longer races for praise and acclaim. For the long-ago mem-ber of the University of Wyoming ski team, it’s about re-living the thrill of competition and seeing friends who still chase the same rush.
“You get that heart going up there, the adrenaline, and there’s nothing better,” Wallace says after a tight run to end the GS. “You run into lots of people you know from around town. You can’t help but enjoy it.”
SneakPEAK writer Phil Lindeman can be reached at [email protected]
Calendar of eventsThursday, March 8Jimkata at the SandbarJimkata is a nationally touring electro-rock band blending heavy beats, synthy hooks and big guitars to create music with both modern and timeless appeal. Show starts at Vail’s Sandbar at 10 p.m. Check out their latest EP at jimkata.com.
Thursday, March 8Leftover Salmon at the VilarColorado’s own Leftover Salmon brings their bluegrass, Ca-jun, funk, Southern rock, boogie, Caribbean, Latin and jazz sounds to Beaver Creek’s Vilar Center. Show starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased online at www.vilarpac.com, by phone at 888-920-2787 or in person at the VPAC Box Office in Beaver Creek or Marketplace Box Of-fice in Vail Village.
Thursday, March 8Street Beat Concert: Less Than JakeAfter blazing the trail for ska punk in the ‘90s, Less Than Jake continues to please audiences at their live shows The concert is free and part of the Bud Light Street Beat Free Concert Series. Show starts at 6:30 p.m. At Solaris in Vail Village.
Friday, March 9 and Saturday, March 10Kids Pajama Parties at Alpine Arts CenterThe Arts Center will have art activities, pizza and a movie. Friday’s party is for children ages 7 to 12 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday is for kids ages 3 to 6 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Cost is $30 for the evening, which includes pizza and materials. Register online at www.alpineartscenter.org or call 970-926-2732.
Friday, March 9 and Saturday, March 10Plein-air artists reception at Cogswell GalleryAward-winning plein air oil painters Mitch Baird, Eric Ja-cobsen and Lorenzo Chavez will be showing their works at
Cogswell Gallery from March 7-10. “Plein Air” is “a style of painting produced outdoors in natural light from start to finish. An artist reception will be held both days from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. The artists will be present and painting live.
Friday, March 9 and Saturday, March 10Live music at Alpine TavernSkin the Rabbit plays at East Vail’s Alpine Tavern from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Friday. Chris Migini performs from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday.
Friday, March 9St. Petersburg State Orchestra at the VilarThe orchestra and chief conductor Roman Leontiev present “Tschaikowski.” Show starts at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $65 and are available online at www.vilarpac.com, by phone at 888-920-2787 or in person at the VPAC Box Office in Bea-ver Creek or Marketplace Box Office in Vail Village.
Saturday, March 10Pure Barre donation-only class in EdwardsThis Pure Barre class is supporting Roundup River Ranch, a camp that enriches the lives of children with chronic and life-threatening illnesses by providing free camp experienc-es year-round. $20 donations suggested. Call 970-306-1310 to reserve a spot.
Saturday, March 10Nicholas Luchycky memorial fundraiserThis fundraising event is from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Pazzo’s Pizzeria in Eagle. Event includes live music and silent auc-tion items. Food and drink proceeds and all money raised to go to Vail Valley Charitable Fund.
Saturday, March 10Girl Scouts 100th anniversary celebrationJoin the Girl Scouts from noon to 4 p.m. at the Eagle County Fairgrounds Exhibit Hall in Eagle. Activities include a vin-tage fashion show, Girl Scouts through decades displays, workshops from the 100th History Patch program, cake and ice cream, and much more. Open to the public and admis-sion is $5.
Saturday, March 10The Foot at Loaded Joe’s
This Denver alternative band returns to Loaded Joe’s. Show starts at 9 p.m. at Loaded Joe’s in Avon and is free.
Sunday, March 11Jeremy Wright North American Snowshoe ChampionshipsPart of Beaver Creek’s Adventure Snowshoe Race Series, this final race will take place in McCoy Park. Preregistration is $30 p.m. and available online, day-of registration is $35.
Sunday, March 11Ann Hampton Callaway’s Ella Fitzgerald Salute Jazz and pop vocalist and Platinum Award-winning writer Ann Hampton Callaway brings a multi-media tribute to Ella Fitzgerald. Tickets are $55 and are available online at www.vilarpac.com, by phone at 888-920-2787 or in person at the VPAC Box Office in Beaver Creek or Marketplace Box Of-fice in Vail Village.
Tuesday, March 13Vail Annual Community MeetingFull-time and part-time residents, business owners and oth-ers interested in the Town Council’s priorities and activities are encouraged to attend at Donovan Pavilion in Vail. The meeting will include a state of the town report with particu-lar emphasis on the state of the economy, plus much more. For details and start time announcement, call 970-479-2115.
Tuesday, March 13Great Education Colorado presentation The Education Foundation of Eagle County, a new group spearheaded by parents, is holding an informational meeting to talk about educational funding in the state, how it affects Eagle County, and how to stay informed on changes. Presen-tation starts at 6 p.m. at Berry Creek Middle School.
Tuesday, March 13Chris Issak at the VilarIssak presents music from his new album “Beyond the Sun.” Show starts at 7:30 p.m. at Beaver Creek’s Vilar Center. Tickets are $98/135 (based on seating) and available online at www.vilarpac.com, by phone at 888-920-2787 or in per-son at the VPAC Box Office in Beaver Creek or Marketplace Box Office in Vail Village.
TOWN SERIES ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– [From page 4]
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 21
21
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22 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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A SUICIDE PREVENTIONSPEAKER EVENT
SPEAKUP REACHOUT The Suicide Prevention Coalition of Eagle Valley
A special thank you to our partners:Colorado Mountain College, Gourmet Cowboy,
Eagle River Youth Coalition, Avon Police Department, and Eagle County.
Dr. Sally Spencer-ThomasBe a Shining Light of Hope:
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Editor’s Note: Minturn-based sports fan Patrick Whitehurst writes for www.fanrag.com. Read his mus-ings on the site or in Sneak-PEAK.
For some sports fans, March Madness is the most wonderful time of year. Ev-ery March, the best college basketball teams in Amer-ica battle it out for three weeks for the right to play on the first Monday night in April.
Millions of Americans join in on the Madness by fill-ing out brackets. Whether you’re hoping to earn bragging rights in the office pool or simply want to make sure you do better than your spouse or loved ones, everyone needs a little help with their picks.
I’ve been running brackets and picking winners since I was in the sixth grade. My hopes and dreams of telling my friends and classmates that I knew more than them ended (at least temporarily) when Pervis Ellison and Louisville beat a Duke Blue Devils team that I somehow came to em-brace.
Through the years I have become addicted to March Madness. Every year I fill out three brackets. I always use one to pick Duke, in another I opt for Cinderella stories and upsets, and for my final entry I pick the team with the best player in the country. Sure I’ve occasionally picked the national champions correctly, and I have even won a few pools that I entered. But I’ve come to understand that
filling out your bracket (whether I picked Carmelo’s “Or-angemen” or Jason Kidd’s “Cal Bears” is the best part of March Madness.
Most people pick the lowest seeds and teams with the best regular season records to do well in the NCAA tour-nament. Everybody has one or two “bracket busters” that complement their normal picks consisting of teams from their home state or alma maters. This is all fine and good until a #12 seed beats a #5 (it happens every year), all #1 seeds make the Final Four (it’s only happened once, in 2008), or not a single #1 or #2 seed makes the Final Four (it happened last year for the first time ever).
When the tournament field is announced on Sunday, fans across the country will be maniacally searching for their bracket X-factor and slotting teams into the Final Four. They will try to identify the mid-major sleepers they hope are this year’s Butler or George Mason while pick-ing which top seed will be the first to fall. With all of the variables and luck involved, some alternative strategies are needed to predict winners in matchups too close to call.
History: Don’t be surprised to see elite programs like Kentucky, Kansas, North Carolina, Duke, Michigan State, Florida, Connecticut or Syracuse reach the Final Four -- their coaches have been there before.
Nicknames, colors and vacation spots: After #4 seeded Arizona beat three #1 seeds and won the tourney in 1997, I asked a friend why she picked the Wildcats. She was the only person in the pool to pick Arizona and she replied, “I think Wildcats are tough to beat, they wear red white and blue, and we just went on a vacation to the Grand Canyon.”
Immediately I thought, “Maybe she’s on to something!” This logic can help when faced with similar situations
this year. Forget about stats and records and put the mas-cots in the octagon. It’s easy to pick a winner for Wolver-ines (Michigan) vs. Owls (Temple) or Mountaineers (West Virginia) vs Racers (Murray State). If you’re torn between the match up of Florida and Wisconsin, just think -- would you rather be sipping margaritas on the beach or drinking semi-frozen beers while ice fishing?
Tourney Tested: Here’s an interesting stat to keep in mind -- of the last seven teams to win the NCAA tour-nament, five have won a preseason tournament. Three of those teams, including last year’s winner, UConn, won the Maui Invitational. This season Duke won the Maui Invi-tational, but be warned. Duke has fared worse than other winners in Hawaii when it comes to March Madness. The Blue Devils won in Maui in 2001 and 2007 but exited early in each of those seasons. Other programs to win tourna-ments before conference play started this season include Syracuse (NIT), Murray State (Great Alaskan Shootout), and Mississippi State (2K Sports Classic).
Stats don’t lie: We know that a #16 seed has never won a single game in the NCAA tournament. Furthermore, only four #15 seeds have ever won a game, three #11 seeds have reached the Final Four, and the highest seed to ever win a title was the 8th seeded Villanova Wildcats (there’s that mascot again!) in 1985.
Whatever method you use, let the Madness begin! Have fun balancing stats with your love for certain programs and conducting theoretical mascot death-matches during March Madness. Good luck, and remember that when all else fails, fill out another bracket or two.
SneakSpORTS: Basketball season is here Columnist helps you pick a method to your madness
Patrick Whitehurst
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 23
23
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Though the program’s goal is to help participants build confidence and character, develop leadership skills and learn to make the world a better place, most of this hap-pens through activities that are so fun the girls don’t even notice the lessons involved. Open to girls from kindergarten through 17-years-old, activities run the gamut from extraor-dinary field trips to sports skill-building clinics, commu-nity service projects, cultural exchanges and environmental stewardships.
Character building and cookiesFor Kymberlee Marquez, a seven-year-old from Gypsum,
who has been in Girl Scouts for two years, the highlight of Girl Scouts has been the trips.
“You get to go on field trips, like to Denver and to the animal shelter (in Eagle) – we volunteered to help (the ani-mals),” says Kymberlee, who belongs to Troop #14359 in Eagle. “We got to look at the cats and dogs and where they do operations on the pets.”
Kymberlee’s mom, Rosalie Marquez, however, sees more value in Girl Scouts than just the fun experiences.
“She’s become more willing to talk to people,” says Mar-
quez. “She wasn’t really shy before, but she’s definitely become more confident. She sees the things that the other Girl Scouts are doing – like travel – and wants to do it, gets excited about it.”
Another thing Marquez appreciates is that it exposes Kymberlee to new things.
“I’m not an animal person,” she says, “but they took them to the animal shelter, and I wouldn’t ever do that. She learned to crochet last year, and I couldn’t teach her that.”
These are the kinds of experiences that make volunteer work so rewarding, says Braucht. “My favorite part is see-ing girls grow into confident young women, learn new skills they never thought possible, and passing on a 100 year tradi-tion of creating strong women of the future.”
Kymberlee, meanwhile, gives little thought to becoming a strong woman. She’s more excited about the upcoming celebration in Gypsum, where she hopes to volunteer – and maybe compete – in the cookie eating competition.
“I love eating cookies,” she says.
5th annual FuxiTime Super Combi at Ski Cooper a hit
The scene at the base of Ski Cooper’s Blackpowder Race Course was something out of a bizarre, trippy ‘80s film: lots of neon, plenty of goulash, flowing beer and the sounds of oom-pah in the background.
It’s what folks have come to expect from the FuxiTime Super Combi, organized by namesake Franz “Fuxi” Fuchs-berger of Edwards-based race shop Fuxi Racing USA, and the fifth annual race series didn’t disappoint.
Roughly 55 racers from Vail, Leadville and elsewhere around the mountains came to compete in Super G and Giant Slalom last Sunday, with the best combined times from two heats of racing in each determining the winner.
And for the first time ever, Fuxi (right) took first place in his own event, squeaking past second place finisher Ari Otterson with Team Aspen in the “elite” class, which combined the best racers of the competition in an exhilarating super seed. Jennifer Kaufman (left) of team Graham’s Gapers was the top-placed women, finishing 11th overall in the “elite” class. Schneehexephotography.com photo.
SneakPEAK writer Kat Jahnigen can be reached at [email protected]
GIRL SCOUTS ––––––––––––––––––––– [From page 3]
24 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
24
If you ever had hip pain you know how agonizing it can be. Several years
ago I devel-oped hip pain without sustaining any signifi cant trauma or injury. I received various treat-ments without seeing any improvement. I was told I had bursi-tis and having surgery done could correct the problem. In search-ing for a conservative solution. I met a sports injury specialist who was developing a dynamic new treatment for soft tissue (muscles, tendons, etc) injuries. This tretment is called Active Release Treatment (ART).
He examined my hip and found a muscle that had gotten so tight it created a “false hip arthritis”. After three treatments, my hip pain was gone and I
have been running pain free ever since.
Generally, we see this very common type of muscle imbalance
in runners and skiers. Over the last eight
years I have developed expertise in using ART as
a treatment. If you are having hip pain, make an
appointment to come and see us. By the end of your
appointment, you will know what is causing your pain
and also see some signifi cant relief. One exam and treatment
will tell us whether this progressive treatment of sports injuries will be
a solution to your problem.
LPINEHIROPRACTIC& Soft Tissue Diagnostic Center
Dr. Daniel Chesney, DC Dr. Tina Bragg, DCActive Release Technique (ART)Benefi t from the same techniques the PGA & NFL use.
(970) 949.6244
Hip Pain
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SP: Talk a bit about musical style. After five years as a band, are you still into the same stuff you enjoyed when you started, or have you expanded your palate?
JS: We’ve definitely expanded. We’re always exploring new things, and I think we have a sound, but we don’t have a genre. I think that makes it captivating for more people. They’re able to easily get into it and enjoy.
SP: As you write new songs and get ready for a fourth album (set for a summer release), how would you describe the current MTHDS sound?
JS: We’re trying to explore a little bit of everything, espe-cially the things we haven’t done yet. We’ve played around with indie rock, some harder stuff, even some stuff with syn-thesizers, you know, four-on-the-floor dance music. What it comes back to is how we tie it all together with easy melo-dies and catchy hooks. That’s the most important thing, is keeping it listenable.
SP: Do you feel obligated to provide fans a familiar sound? Have you ever come up with something that just doesn’t work?
JS: When we write songs, someone will have an idea or structure, and we write around that. Sometimes, it doesn’t work, but we try to figure that out before we bring it to an audience. It actually takes a few months of rehearsing and pounding things out before we play it live.
SP: Onto your mountain roots. Do you ski or snowboard?I prefer to ski, but I do it both. I still get out and do it often.SP: Do you ever challenge your sister to a race?JS: It’s been a little while, but I still get out with my broth-
er a bunch. My sister retired from the World Cup, so I’m excited to get out and ski with her more. I didn’t have the chance to do it much while she was on the race circuit. Our competitive nature definitely comes out just about every-where, so everything turns into a race. It’s just an unspoken
thing.SP: The Snowball Music Festival just came through town,
and it brought with it a lot of contention. As a musician, give me your thoughts on having a big-time festival in the valley.
JS: We played it last year, and I thought it was great. There’s good music, it brings people into the valley, and I’m sure they get a monetary boost out of it. Anything that brings more, varied music into Vail is a benefit. You only have a very limited number of venues and it’s tough to bring in big acts. We had some buddies from Denver playing this year, from Tatanka and Kinetics. They’re happy to get on the stage with those other acts and reach a new audience.
SneakPEAK writer Phil Lindeman can be reached at [email protected]
hair in chemo, or special massage therapists to help with post-surgery pain.Top fundraisers included Shelly Jarnot, a local breast cancer survivor, who raised more
than $7,500. Her team raised more than $15,000. Another fundraiser and hospital employee, Charles Berlik, raised more than $7,000 in honor of his grandmother, who died of breast cancer.
The Arrowhead Alpine Club, who formed the team Alpine Bosom Buddies, were the top fundraising team, raising $17,000, and skiing the entire day as well.
The event was such a success that plans are in the works to hold it again next year.“This was a huge event for Shaw specifically, with nearly 2,000 people supporting it from
all over the country,” Warner says. “Shaw has been around for a decade now and it’s great to see that kind of support,”
SneakPEAK editor Phil Melanie Wong can be reached at [email protected]
MTHDS –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– [From page 5]
PINK VAIL –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– [From page 9]
A participant in the Pink Vail event, benefiting the Shaw Cancer Center, poses with a homemade sign. Skiers participated in the Celebration Ski Down to Li-
onshead last weekend in honor of cancer survivors and loved ones lost to cancer. Kent Pettit photo.
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 25
25
Open 10-7 M-F, 10-6 Sa, 12-5 Sun • 926-0400In the Crystal Building, Riverwalk at Edwards
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Young writers’ cornerPoems, musings from Eagle County middle school students
This page is proudly sponsored by the advertisers below:
I am From
I am from the dry hot summersThe long blistering cold winters
The tall mountains looming above meThe ski passes hanging from my neck
Year after year
I am from the state of ColoradoIn the town of Edwards
I am from the counting of toesevery morning
To the screams for comfort in the dark roomFrom the hard wood pews underneath me
To the bag of goodies next to me
I am from Marc and Cyndi
I am from the mourning and cryingthe wondering why he’s gone
The constant sympathy food at our door.The cards, the phone calls
apologizingIt doesn’t make it better
I am from the all girl family
I am from the long drives to campthe happy cheerful smilesthe tight hugs of friends
The fun we haveto the crying when leaving
I am from Rainbow Trail Lutheran Camp
I am from the red houseThe long busy weeksUnending school days
No stop to sports
I am from the swish of the hoopThe blow of the whistle
To the never ending exhaustion
I am from the hair and makeupto the perfect pair of jeans
I am from the unending blaring ofcountry music in my ears
To the honking of my saxophone
I am from the read bookson the floor
To the unfinished Spanish homeworkcompleted at lunch
I am from the non stop gigglingof friends
to the seriousness of reality
I am from the dreaming of loveto the crushes on boys
I am from the close knit community of churchTo the Wednesday fun every week
I am from the love that holdsour family together
when togetherness can’t
I am from the memoriesof the past
To the soon to be over days of middle schoolof the present
And the dreams waiting to be achievedof the future
- Hannah Gershenoff, Berry Creek Middle
The Stage
Acting is when your imagination becomes realityIf you want to fly
You canIf you want to live with the knights, and princesses
You canYou can do anything you want to do
When you enter the stageActing is when a group of people form a team so they can
live their dreams togetherYou may not know them
But you will soonYou become teammates
As soon as you enter the stageActing is telling a story to others
You use emotions to tell a taleWith 100 characters or two
You tell a story to the audienceWith their eyes locked on youThe minute you enter the stage
Acting is a burning passion where the fire never diesYou love to do it
It gives you a chance to follow your dreamYou will never stop loving it
No matter what you do with your futureYou are an actor
As long as you are on the stage
- Nicole Falk, Homestake Peak
26 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
26
CAUTIONI’m Crazy About
PASTRIES!!
HOURS7:30AM - 2PM
Closed Tuesday
Located in The Vail Racquet CLub
A longtime Vail favorite
with the purchase of a bottle of wine (per couple) 5:30-6:00 pm
(entire party must be seated by 6:00 pm)
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970.476.5828Dinner 5:30pm-close
Reservations AcceptedNext to Children’s Fountain, Vail Village
with a new look!
Save $2 on a great six-pack of Dig, the spring seasonal by New Belgium Brewing. This deal is only available at Alpine Wine and Spirits and only if you see Clay. Stop by Alpine Wine and Spirits in the City Market in West Vail.
If you have a photo you would like to have in sneakSHOTS, just send us an email with the picture and a brief description, kudos or shout-out to [email protected]. Please include “sneakSHOTS” in the subject line.
Looking for some specialized pint glasses for St. Patrick’s Day? Go see Jo Jo at Kitchen Collage in Edwards. Kitchen Collage carries everything you need to entertain for any holiday or occasion.
sneakSHOTS | Who’s Up To What
Black Diamond Bistro is the perfect setting for a romantic evening out and a great place to enjoy dinner with friends and family. Call Lisa and James for your reservation today at 970- 949-1251. The Bistro is located at the Charter in Beaver Creek.
Dr. Foster wants to help you “discover chiroprac-tic”! Headaches, neck or back pain, sports injuries, Dr. Foster does it all! Call today 970-328-5501 and let the healing begin!!!
Caitlin, Mary, and the team at Vintage Magnolia put together these beautiful arrangements for a recent wedding in Vail. Call Vin-tage Magnolia for your flo-ral needs at 970-926-5000.
Where’s Kerri? She
opened an new shop
above and behind Marko’s
Pizza in Edwards. Call for
an appointment today!
970-926-2633. Happy cus-
tomer: Philip Qualman
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 27
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275 Main St., C106, Edwards • 926.1979Next to the Bookworm
20% off entreesMon. & Thur.
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Contemporary winter menu offered nightly with wine pairings &
extensive dessert menu.
Happy Hour 3-6 pm nightly
1/2 off drink specials82 E. Beaver Creek Blvd. in Avon, 970.949.7019
Thurs: Ladies NightFri: DJ Mista MistaSat: DJ Mista Mista
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AVON
BEAVER CREEK
Dining GuideA Quick Peak at Where to Eat.
Agave | 1060 West Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.748.8666
Avon Bakery & Deli | 25 Hurd Lane | 970.949.3354
Avondale Restaurant | 116 Riverfront Lane | 970.790.5500
Blue Plate | 48 East Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.845.2252
Bob’s Place | 100 West Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.845.8566
Carniceria Tepic | 240 Chapel Place | 970.949.6033
China Garden | 100 West Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.949.4986
Columbine Bakery | 51 Beaver Creek Place | 970.949.1400
Domino’s Pizza | 51 Beaver Creek Place | 970.949.3230
Fiesta Jalisco | 240 Chapel Place | 970.845.8088
Geno’s Sandwiches | 100 West Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.949.0529
Gondola Pizza | 240 Chapel Place | 970.845.6000
Loaded Joe’s | 82 East Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.748.1480
Montanas Cantina and Grill | 82 East Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.949.7019
Nozawa Sushi | 240 Chapel Place | 970.949.0330
Northside Coffee and Kitchen | 20 Notingham Rd. | 970.949.1423
Pazzo’s Pizzeria | 82 East Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.949.6093
Swiss Hot Dog Company | 101 Fawcett Rd. | 970.467.2013
Subway Avon | 47 E. Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.949.1312
Ticino | 100 West Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.748-6792
Taqueria No Se Hagan Bolas | 91 Beaver Creek Place | 970.845.7959
Vin 48 | 48 East Beaver Creek Blvd. | 970.748.9463
8100 Mountainside Bar & Grill | Park Hyatt Beaver Creek | 970.949.1234
Beano’s Cabin | 210 Plaza Way | 970.754.3463
Beaver Creek Chophouse | Beaver Creek Lodge | 970.845.0555
Blue Moose Pizza | 76 Avondale Ln. | 970.845.8666
Black Diamond Bistro | 120 Offerson Road | 970.949.1251
Coyote Cafe | 210 The Plaza | 970.845.9030
Dusty Boot Saloon | 210 Offerson Rd. | 970.748.1146
Flying Pig Sandwich Shop | 76 Avondale Ln. | 970.845.0333
Foxnut Asian Fusion and Sushi | 15 W. Thomas Place | 970.845.0700
Golden Eagle Inn | 118 Beaver Creek Plaza | 970.949.1940
Grouse Mountain Grill | 141 Scott Hill Rd. | 970.949.0600
Mirabelle Restaurant | 55 Village Rd. | 970.949.7728
Osprey Lounge | 10 Elk Track Ln. | 970.754.7400
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European Cafe & Bakery
Pizza
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Italian Sandwiches
Pizza
Coffee House
Southwest Grill
Sushi & Asian, Thai
Coffee House
Italian/Pizza/Grinders
Hot Dogs & Soup
Sandwiches
Italian Food & Pizza
Mexican
Rustic American
Organic/Local American Cuisine
Contemporary American
Steakhouse
Pizza & Sandwiches
American Comfort
Tex-Mex
Steakhouse & Saloon
BBQ & Deli Sandwiches
Asian Fusion & Sushi
Contemporary American
Seasonaly Focused Fine Dining
French Cuisine
Tapas Bar and Lounge
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Rimini Cafe | 45 W. Thomas Place | 970.949.6157 Gelato, Chocolate & Wine L D $ • • •Rocks Modern Grill | 27 Avondale Le. | 970.845.9800 Classic American Grill B D $$ • • •Saddleridge | 44 Meadow Ln. | 970.754.5450 Contemporary Colorado Cuisine D $$$ • •Spago | The Ritz Carlton, Bachelor Gulch | 970.343.1555 Seasonal American D $$$ • • •Splendido at the Chateau | 17 Chateau Ln. | 970.845.8808 Rustic American & Seafood D $$$ • • • • • •
Italian Pasta Grill D $$$ • • • •Toscanini | 60 Avondale Ln. | 970.754.5590
Denotes sneakPeak Advertisers$ = $10-$20, $$ = $20-$40, $$$ = $40+B = Breakfast, L = Lunch, D = Dinner
28 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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test pilot .......20%juggler .........26%anchor ..........35%interpreter ........20%aunt and hugger ....50%miracle worker .......18%dancer and twirler .....15%bringer of sunshine ....25%
chef at dish restaurant .......100%
come see veronica at dish restaurant
open 11 to 6 tues-sat | 926-3007 | corner at edwards | cutvail.com
lover of the pig....22%big teddy bear.....31%
fi sh “whisperer”......38%uncle “aayyyy-bear”.....40%
dirty joke encyclopedia....27%mountain and river navigator.....18%
butcher at cut: artisan meat + seafood 100%
come see john at cut: artisan meat and seafood
Who wants to spend the day cooped up in the kitchen? Life's too short! Let us do the cooking for you!
If You Can Imagine It...We Can Create It!
EDWARDS
EAGLE-VAIL
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Coffee & Crepes B L
L D
$
$Chinese, Asian
• •
•
•Bookworm | 295 Main St. | 970.926.7323
Balata | 1265 Berry Creek Rd | 970.477.5353 American Cuisine L D $$ • • • • •Bonjour Bakery | 97 Main St. | 970.926.5539 Homemade Bakery & Soup B L $ • •
Asian Spice Bistro | 69 Edwards Access Rd. | 970.926.6628
Dining GuideA Quick Peak at Where to Eat.
Dish | 56 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.3433
Cafe Milano | 429 Edwards Access Rd. #A208 | 970.926.4455
Cafe 163 | 105 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.1163
Belmont Deli | 105 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.1796
E town | 295 Main St. | 970.926.4080
Eat! Drink! | 56 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.1393
Fiesta’s Cantina | 57 Edwards Access Rd. | 970.926.2121
French Press | 34295 US Highway #6 | 970.926.4740
Gashouse | 34185 US Highway #6 | 970.926.2896
Gore Range Brewery | 105 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.2739
Henry’s Chinese Cafe | 175 Main St. | 970.926.3050
Grouse on the Green | 100 Kensington Dr., Cordillera Divide | 970.926.5788
Ristorante Ti Amo | 40982 US Highway #6 | 970.845.8153
Route 6 Cafe | 41290 US Highway #6 | 970.949.6393
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American
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Contemporary American
Tasting/Wine Bar, Paninis
Mexican
French Bistro
Colorado Wild Game Grill
Rustic Pub
Chinese, Asian
Pub/American
Italian, Pasta
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Dusty Boot | 1099 Capitol St., Eagle | 970.328.7002
Dog House Grill | 10663 Highway 6, Gypsum | 970.524.1660
Steakhouse/American Cuisine L D
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Eagle Diner | 112 Chambers Ave., Eagle | 970.328.1919
Ekahi Grill and Catering | 116 Park Street, Gypsum | 970.524.4745
Traditional American Diner
Hawaiian Style Food
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Fusion Cafe | 422 McIntire St., Eagle | 970.328.1234 American B L D $
Grand Avenue Grill | 678 Grand Ave., Eagle | 970.328.4043 Casual American L D $ • •
Luigi’s Pasta House | 1143 Capitol St., Eagle | 970.328.5400
Mantos | 106 Oak Ridge Ct., Gypsum | 970.524.6266
Pasta & Pizza
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Moe’s Original BBQ | 630 Grand Ave., Eagle | 970.337.2277 Barbecue B L D $ •Paradigms | Corner of 4th and Capital St., Eagle | 970.328.7990
Pastatively Roberto’s Italian Cuisine | 94 Market St., Eagle | 970.328.7324
Creative American
Classic Italian
L D
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Pazzo’s Pizzeria | 50 Chambers Ave., Eagle | 970.337.9900 Italian/Pizza/Grinders L D $ • • •Red Canyon Cafe | 128 Broadway Ave., Eagle | 970.328.2232 Breakfast & Lunch Sandwiches B L D $ •Yeti Grind | 330 Broadway Ave., Eagle | 970.328.9384 Coffee & Sandwiches B L $ •
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• • •Gypsum Grill Steakhouse | 686 Trail Gulch Rd., Gypsum | 970.524.7365 Steakhouse L D $ • • • •H.P.’s Provisions | 1160 Capitol St., Eagle | 970.328.5280 B L D $ • • • •Heidis Brooklyn Deli | 150 Cooley Mesa Rd., Gypsum | 970.777.3663 Soups & Sandwiches B L D $ • • •
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Back Bowl | 50 Chambers Ave., Eagle | 970.328.BOWL American Cuisine/ Bowling L D $$ • • •Dietrich’s Cafe | 313 Chambers Ave., Eagle | 970.328.5021 Coffee, Sandwiches, Soups, Ice Cream B L $ • •
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Denotes sneakPeak Advertisers$ = $10-$20, $$ = $20-$40, $$$ = $40+B = Breakfast, L = Lunch, D = Dinner
4 Eagle Ranch | 4091 Highway #131, Wolcott | 970.926.3372 Ranch Western Atmosphere L D $ • • • • • •Baboune’s | 0131 Chambers Ave., Eagle | 970.328.2425 Omelets, burritos and more B L $ • •
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 29
29
Happy Hour Daily 4-6 pm$3 Pints, Bud, & Bud Light bo� les
$4 Well cocktails $5 Selected glasses of wine
Now brewing our own beer!Fly Fisher Red Ale, Powder Day Pale Ale
GRB Lager, GRB Vanilla PorterNHL • College Basketball • NBA ALL IN HD!
$6 Apps & $8 PizzasDuring any basketball of hockey game. Mug Club members only. Memberships still available.
105 Edwards Village Blvd Edwards • 970.926.2739
$6 Two Tacos and a Beer
Vail Village • 232 Bridge St.Large Groups Welcome
476-5100 • orehousevail.com
New late night menu 10pm to 1am
Aprés Special
MINTURN
VAIL
EDWARDS
Dining GuideA Quick Peak at Where to Eat.
Alpenrose | 100 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.8899
Kirby Cosmos | 474 Main St. | 970.827.9027
Alpine Tavern | Vail Racquet Club, East Vail | 970.476.7888
Magusto’s | 101 Main St. | 970.827.5450
Atwater on Gore Creek | Vail Cascade Resort | 970.476.7014
Minturn Country Club | 131 Main St. | 970.827.4114
Bart & Yeti’s | Lionshead, North of Arrabelle | 970.476.2754
Sticky Fingers | 132 Main St. | 970.827.5353
Billy’s Island Grill | Lionshead | 970.476.8811
Turntable | 160 Railroad Ave. | 970.827.4164
Bearfi sh | West Vail Mall | 970.476.7596
Minturn Saloon | 146 N. Main St. | 970.827.5954
Bistro 14 | Eagle’s Nest, Top of Eagle Bahn Gondola | 970.445.4530
Block 16 | The Sebastian Vail, 16 Vail Rd. | 970.477.8000
Blu’s | Downstairs from Children’s Fountain | 970.476.3113
bol | Solaris, 141 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.5300
Bully Ranch | Sonnenalp Resort | 970.479.5460
Campo de Fiori | 100 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.8994
Centre V | The Arrabelle at Vail Square, Lionshead | 970.754.7700
Chicago Pizza | 1031 S. Frontage Rd. | 970.476.7000
CinéBistro | Solaris, 141 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.3344
Flame | Four Seasons, Vail | 970.477.8600
Elway’s Steakhouse | 174 East Gore Creek Dr. | 970.754.7818
Frost | The Sebastian Vail, 16 Vail Rd. | 970.477.8050
Game Creek Restaurant | Vail Mountain | 970.754.4275
Garfi nkel’s | Next to Lionshead Gondola | 970.476.3789
Gohan Ya | West Vail Mall | 970.476.7570
Joe’s Famous Deli | 288 Bridge St. | 970.479.7580
Kelly Liken | Gateway Building, 12 Vail Rd. | 970.479.0175
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Continental
Southern BBQ
European American Bistro
Traditional American
Regional American
Steakhouse
Casual American
Coffee and Sandwiches
Steaks/Seafood
American
American
Mexican/American/Western
American
New American
Contemporary American
Casual American
American/Western
Authentic Italian
Traditional French Brasserie
Pizza and Italian
American Bistro
Mountain Fare/Steakhouse, Aprés,
Steakhouse, Aprés and Dinner
Contemporary American
New American
American Pub
Asian Cuisine
Sandwiches
Seasonal American
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•La Bottega | 100 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.0280 Northern Italian L D $ • • • •Lancelot | Next to Children’s Fountain | 970.476.5828 Prime Rib/Steaks/Seafood D $$ •Larkspur Restaurant | Golden Peak | 970.476.8050 Creative American L D $$$ •
Smiling Moose Deli | 1170 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.2400
Vista At Arrowhead | 676 Sawatch Dr. | 970.926.2111
Subway Edwards | 439 Edwards Access Rd. | 970.926.7010
Woody’s Kitchen & Pub | 27 Main St. | 970.926.2756
Zino Ristorante | 27 Main St. | 970.926.0777
Deli
Contemporary American
Sandwiches
Bar & Grill
Contemporary Italian
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Mirador | 2205 Cordillera Way, Cordillera Lodge & Spa | 970.926.2200 Regional/Seasonal Fare B L D $$ • • • • • •
Sato | 56 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.7684 Sushi & Japanese Cuisine L D $$ • • •
Denotes sneakPeak Advertisers$ = $10-$20, $$ = $20-$40, $$$ = $40+B = Breakfast, L = Lunch, D = Dinner
Marko’s Pizzeria | 57 Edwards Access Rd. | 970.926.7003 Pizza & Pasta L D $ • • • •Main St. Grill | 97 Main St. | 970.926.2729 American Grill L D $$ • • • • • •
Local Joe’s Pizza | 280 Main St. | 970.926.4444
Log Cabin Sports Bar and Grill | 34500 Highway 6, #B1 | 970.926.9726
Pizza
American/Mexican
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Old Forge Co. | 56 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.2220 Pizza, Paninis & Salads L D $ • • •
Larkburger | 105 Edwards Village Blvd. | 970.926.9336
Last Course Dessert Bar & Pastries | 275 Main Street C-106 | 970.926-1979
Organic Gourmet Fast Food/Burgers
Tapas/Wine Bar/Desserts
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Juniper Restaurant | 97 Main St. | 970.926.7001 Contemporary American D $$$ • • •
30 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
30
949-1423 • 20 Nottingham Rd., Avon(on the Northside of I-70, next to Conoco)
Music & Movement Classes for Newborn-Kindergarten...
...and the Grownups Who Love Them
OFFERING CLASSES IN EDWARDS AND EAGLE
MUSIC TOGETHER OF THE VAIL VALLEY970.343.0439
www.musictogethervailvalley.com
Register Today!Classes Begin March 26!
Make music an exciting part of your child’s life!Limited seats for spring semester! 970.446.7912
©2011 sneakPeak. All rights reserved.
Publisher...Erinn Chavez
Editor...Melanie Wong
Ad Director...Kim Hulick
The Glue...Shana Larsen
Graphics...Scott Burgess
Photography...Billy Doran
Reporter...Phil Lindeman
Ad Sales...Stephanie Samuelson
VAIL
Dining GuideA Quick Peak at Where to Eat.
Nozawa | Holiday Inn, West Vail | 970.476.9355
Ocotillo | Vail Mountain Marriott Resort & Spa, Lionshead | 970.477.5675
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Sushi/Asian
Southwestern Steak House
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Ore House | 232 Bridge St. | 970.476.5100 Steaks/Seafood D $$ • • • •Osaki’s | 100 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.0977 Sushi/Japanese D $$ • •Pazzo’s Pizzeria | 122 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.9026 Italian/Pizza/Grinders B L D $ • •Pepi’s | By the Covered Bridge | 970.476.4671 Continental/Wild Game L D $$ • • • •
Red Lion | Top of Bridge St. | 970.476.7676
Qdoba | 2161 N. Frontage Rd. | 970.476.7539
American
Mexican
L D
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•Russell’s | By the Covered Bridge | 970.476.6700 Steaks/Seafood D $$ • • •Sandbar Sports Grill | West Vail Mall | 970.476.4314 Americana B L D $ • • • •
Sweet Basil | 193 E. Gore Creek Dr. | 970.476.0125
Subway West Vail | 2161 N. Frontage Rd. | 970.476.3827
Sushi Oka Hibachi | 100 East Meadow Drive. Suite #4 | 970-476-1588
Creative American
Sandwiches
Sushi, Asian
L D
B L D
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Tap Room | Top of Bridge St. | 970.479.0500 Contemporary American L D $ •Terra Bistro| 352 Meadow Dr., Vail Mountain Lodge& Spa | 970.476.6836 B D $$ • • •Contemporary American
The George | 292 Meadow Dr. | 970.476.2656
Up The Creek Bar & Grill | 223 Gore Creek Dr. | 970.476.8141
Vendetta’s | 291 Bridge St. | 970.476.5070
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Westside Cafe & Market | 2211 N. Frontage Rd. | 970.476.7890
Wendy’s Alpine Coffee Shop | 4695 Racquet Club Dr.
Yama Sushi | 168 Gore Creek Dr. | 970.476.7332
Yeti’s Grind | Located in the Solaris | 970.476.1515
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Vail Chophouse | 675 West Lionshead Place | 970.477.0555
Eclectic Pub
American Cuisine
Italian & Pizza
Casual American
Pastries
Sushi and Pacifi c Spices
Coffee & Sandwiches
Steakhouse L D $$$ • • • • •
Denotes sneakPeak Advertisers$ = $10-$20, $$ = $20-$40, $$$ = $40+B = Breakfast, L = Lunch, D = Dinner
Montauk Seafood Grill | Lionshead Village | 970.476.3601 Creative Seafood/Meat L D $$ • •Moe’s Original BBQ | Upstairs from the General Store, Lionshead | 970.479.7888 Barbecue L D $ • • •Mezzaluna | Lion Square Lodge, next to Eagle Bahn Gondola | 970.477.4410 Modern Italian l d $$ • • •Matsuhisa | Located in the Solaris | 970.476.6682 Japanese/Peruvian D $$ • •May Palace | Next to City Market, West Vail | 970.476.1657 Chinese L D $ • •Market Café | The Sebastian Vail, 16 Vail Rd. | 970.477.8000 International Café B L D $ • •The Marketplace | One Willow Bridge Rd. | 970.477.4370 Family/American/European B L D $ • • • •
Lord Gore & the Fitz Lounge | Manor Vail at the base of Golden Peak | 970.476.4959 Contemporary American D $$ • •Los Amigos | Top of Bridge St. | 970.476.5847 Mexican L D $ • • • •Ludwig’s | Sonnenalp Resort | 970.479.5429 Contemporary American B D $ • •
Old Forge Co. | 2161 N Frontage Rd | 970.476.5555 Pizza, Paninis & Salads L D $ • • •Old Forge Co. | 521 East Lionshead Cir. | 970.476.5232 Pizza, Paninis & Salads L D $ • • •
La Tour | 122 E. Meadow Dr. | 970.476.4403
Left Bank | Sitzmark Lodge in Vail Village | 970.476.3696
The Little Diner | West Lionshead Plaza | 970.476.4279
French and American
French
Classic Diner, Traditional Favorites
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“The ultimate volunteer”In Eagle County, Weber has also found her passion in volunteerism, serving on the boards
of local programs ranging from the Bravo! concert series to the Vail Symposium to volun-teering for home hospice. That involvement stems from the love of seeing passionate people actualize their ideas, she says.
“I’ve met person after person in the valley who had dreams and actualized them here,” she says. “Those programs, from The Literacy Project to the Walking Mountains (Science School), are examples of that.”
Most recently, Weber played a key role in starting Roundup River Ranch outside of Dot-sero, part of the Hole-in-the-Wall system for camps, made to help seriously ill children.
In 2005, her friend and Roundup River Ranch founder Alison Knapp posed the idea, and Weber jumped on board to make it happen.
“She said, ‘Absolutely this is a fabulous idea,” says Knapp, likening Weber to the Ener-gizer bunny.
“She’s the ultimate volunteer. She’s like a vessel that never fills – she’s always interested in learning new things and getting involved with projects,”
The newly-finished camp served 120 kids last year during their first summer of opera-tions. This year, they plan to hold spring, summer and fall session, eventually serving 1,500 children each year.
SneakPEAK editor Melanie Wong can be reached at [email protected]
KARIN WEBER ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– [From page 12]
Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012 | sneakpeak 31
31
Air Induction ServiceAir Filter PlacementAlignmentsAlternatorsBall JointsBattery ReplacementBearingsBelts/HosesBrake CaliperBrake RotorsBrakes-Front DiscBrakes-Rear Disc/DrumCabin Vent Filter ReplacementCatalytic ConvertersIgnition CoilsCoolant Fluid ServiceC.V. AxlesDiesel Diagnostic ServicesDiesel RepairDistributor Caps and RotorsDOT InspectionsFan BeltsFlat RepairsFuel Filter ReplacementFuel InjectorsHeadlight ReplacementHosesLube, Oil, and FilterPre-owned Vehicle InspectionMuffl ers and Tail PipesOxygen SensorsRack and Pinion SteeringRadiator ReplacementRotate and Balance TiresSerpentine BeltsShocks and StrutsStartersThermostatTie Rod EndsTune UpTransmission Fluid ServiceUniversal JointWater PumpsWiper Blade ReplacementAND MORE!
328-9000 695 Lindbergh Dr.
Gypsumwerksauto.com
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Complete Brake Service
Must present coupon*Most Vehicles*Not combined with any other offer*See store for details* Expires 3/31/12
Must present coupon*Most Vehicles*Not combined with any other offer*See store for details* Expires 3/31/12
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Must present coupon*Most Vehicles*Not combined with any other offer*See store for details* Expires 3/31/12
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Must present coupon*Most Vehicles*Not combined with any other offer*See store for details* Expires 3/31/12
with purchase of any oil change ($3995) up to 5 qt.
and $10 off new battery
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Gas or diesel fuelfi lter service
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32 sneakpeak | Thursday, March 8-Wednesday, March 14, 2012
32