Category Archives: Colorado

The Circus Is In Conifer

Winter                                                  Settling Moon

The fireplace and the entire mantel, including side cabinets is visible. This is progress. We can turn the he and she chairs toward the fireplace, then begin the seasoning of the refractory glass.

Kate continues putting together the Swedish shelves, banging and whacking. Leaves the dogs anxious. Gertie, our German shorthair, stuck by my side as I emptied boxes. At one point I got down on the floor to access a drawer. She scooted forward and put her paw on my leg.

The circus has two tents dismantled, folded, put on the train and now deployed in Colorado.  The roustabouts have laid down stakes, got out pulleys and are hoisting the heavy canvas. The circus is in Conifer.

A Not So Pleasant Job

Winter                                                            Settling Moon

Bright blue sky, lodgepole pines still heavy with snow, brilliant sunshine. And cold. We’ve now been here a full week. More boxes unpacked, more utilitarian tasks accomplished, many more still to go.

Unpacking seems like a job, a not so pleasant job. You know, a job you need to do to pay the rent, but that you don’t enjoy very much. Although when I get to unpacking my books, that will change. I love rearranging my books and this is a once this decade chance to do it for all my books not culled in the move.

The common areas come first. Living room, bathrooms, reading room, kitchen. Unpacking for them is a chore, no way it’s not, but the result when done is very satisfying. I’m excited about getting our two reading chairs set up facing the fireplace.

I have to season the refractory glass, six small fires separated by at least half an hour, then we’ll have a fire, a cup of coffee and a book. A key new spot in our house. (this is, of course, after I get all the boxes unpacked that are in front of the fireplace.)

The living room, on the basement level, has the couch, coffee table, leather bench and, right now, the TV sitting on two pieces of styrofoam on a furniture pad on the floor. Together we’re not strong enough to position it on its mount and lift both of those into the cabinet where it will reside.

We paid Mike the Fence Guy his final chunk. I’m pleased with his work.

A Blast of White Smoke

Winter                                                           Settling Moon

Bacon and cheese omelette this morning. Eating out has begun to diminish in its attraction, but we still need to unbox most of the kitchen things. Why? Because Kate’s putting together Swedish shelving. It will hold the pots and pans and bulky cooking accessories.

We walked the aisles of a darkened (really, not yet shopping day lit) Safeway, an iconic Western grocery store chain after our business meeting ate Aspen Perks. This one seemed even nicer than the King Sooper, more like a Lunds or a Byerlys. You can work out the demographics of Conifer from this information.

On a recent day I propped my head on a window ledge and looked out the window at lodgepole pine. Their branches droop toward the ground and I wondered why. After the recent snowfall, I learned the answer, at least part of it. These branches bend, but do not break. As the snow grows heavy on their needles, a certain load threshold is reached and puff, a blast of white smoke. Many more revelations to come.

I learned a long time ago that a revelation of your own, even if well known to others, is worth a lot.

 

The Cardboard Liberation Front

Winter                                                               Settling Moon

Our first Colorado business meeting this morning. Aspen Perks Cafe. We’ll have a lot to discuss. The various costs incurred recently and upcoming costs. A to do list that includes get medical insurance, find a doctor, register the car and get a Colorado driver’s license. Not to mention the CLF, the Cardboard Liberation Front that has been active here since Christmas Eve.

It’s cold, -2 this morning. Just like a regular Minnesota December.

When Holly and Eduardo came over on Christmas, Holly said, “Yes, I like to say it’s nine months of snow.” Eduardo moved his hand back and forth out of her sight. We’ll have to live here awhile to understand, but the last frost coming on average on the Summer Solstice makes me think she might have the spirit of the place right.

We’re trying to get the dogs settled into a new routine. Dogs, like humans, need some structure to their day to feel free, a paradox.

Almost a Week

Winter                                                    Settling Moon

Tom and I got here a week ago tonight; Kate followed the next day. A week, almost. The events of the unloading are already stories, no longer present, far overwhelmed by the settling tasks.

The pace is, both by altitude and attitude, deliberate rather than hurried. Much like, as friend Bill Schmidt said, the pace elderhood takes as its mantle.

Off now to Rome. Adrian Goldsworthy’s Augustus is scholarly rather than dramatic, but it puts Augustus in his time and place. Well worth reading. I look forward to getting back to the Latin not long after the first of the year.

Coloradans and Snow

Winter                                                                     Settling Moon

A disappointment of ravens. A phalanx of snow plows. While driving into Denver this morning, Kate and I reached an entrance just as four orange snow plows with monstrous blades and tiny whirring salt and sand spreaders drove onto the 285 in front of us. They fanned out in what is known as the snow plow blocking maneuver, with one on the left shoulder, then, a full snow plow length back and a snow plow width over, another, then the third, the fourth covering the right shoulder. The drive became slow, about snow plow speed.

We were on our way for an important settling task, buying a washer and dryer. Not good to be without them. We found a warehouse like place that sells mostly to contractors and got a good deal.

An interesting phenomenon. The Colorado drivers seemed stumped by the snow, then cold, which left the highways often covered with compacted snow. They went very slow, braked into curves and seemed generally flummoxed. First hint of this came going down Shadow Mountain Drive when we encountered a tow truck with a long cable snaking down into a twenty, thirty foot drop-0ff, the other end attached to what looked like a Subaru with a Thule ski-carrier. It was hard to identify for sure because the only thing I could see was the car’s roof.

Kate thinks, and I agree, that Colorado drivers are used to snow that comes, then goes away. Quickly. We drove, Minnesota style, on past them. No sudden movements and no close following.

Start Spreading the News

Winter                                                                        Settling Moon

No Denver Post newspaper sleeve to fit under our mail box yet. Paper, wrapped in orange gets tossed on the driveway. Makes sense. First morning with my new whiz bang snow blower, all yellow and rust free. I set out toward Black Mountain Drive from our garage, learning the various maneuvers: joystick turns snow thrower, tilt joystick snow thrower chute changes angle, right grip engages movement, left the augur, various speeds and the “power steering” which consists of levers on each handle that, when pressed, disengage the wheel on that side. It was a cold morning, around 9.

When I got to the road, I picked up the morning paper and tossed it back toward the house, not quite making the covered area over our front door. More fiddling with the controls, learning to seat them in muscle memory. Though the snow was powder, the driveway had slushy matter from a previous snow storm and made the going a little tougher than I’d imagined.

By the time I hit the front of the house it was a surprise to see orange come out the chute of the snow blower, followed by, yes, shredded newspaper. Today’s Denver Post went through the augur, up the chute and out in many pieces over our driveway. A lesson.

The small plants and patchy grass, the rocks and lodgepole pine stumps have disappeared under a blanket of white and the dogs come romping in, shaking snow as they run. I’d say they like it.

Settling Tasks

Winter                                                Settling Moon

Settling task of the day so far, cut the tape joining a copper rod and my favorite snow shovel, then clearing the small deck off Kate’s sewing area and the stairs up to the loft. Settling task of the mid-morning. Crank up the bright yellow cub cadet two-stage snow-blower and clear the driveway. Oh, and retrieve the newspaper.

I’m having a mild case of acute altitude sickness, mainly shortness of breath on exertion and poor sleeping. It will pass.

Breakfast. Then out to find a new dryer and washer.

Stars and Galaxies

Winter                                                       Settling Moon

Jon came out and assembled our new snow blower. It’s a yellow cub cadet with power steering (no kidding), a big light and a joystick controller for the blower. We’re ready now.

We’ve already unloaded many boxes, with many, many more to go. Kate’s focusing on the kitchen and I’m helping her move boxes and arrange them for ease of work. The loft space over the garage has received some early attention since it has the computer with all my passwords. I will post pictures when we get a bit further along.

The dogs have claimed our back yard, running and sniffing, testing the boundaries. No attempts to escape as yet. This is a five foot fence and will provide a challenge even to Gertie. A challenge, unfortunately, that she’s probably able to surmount. But not yet.

Last night driving back from Evergreen, headed toward Conifer, Orion stood, tilted to his side, just above the mountains. The sky itself was black, pricked with stars and galaxies. Yesterday, too, a family of mule deer buck, doe, and two fawns crossed Shadow Mountain Drive ahead of us.

 

Nocturne the First: Shadow Mountain

Winter                                                     Settling Moon

Our first night with all of our belongings here. The mattress! How I longed for it when it wasn’t here.

We went out for dinner tonight, looking for something fun. Driving down Black Mountain Drive, Hwy. 78, toward Brook Forest Inn, we went curving past the eastern boundary of the Arapaho National Forest, always down hill from our spot near the summit of Shadow Mountain. The Brook Forest Inn has peculiar hours and was dark when we finally got there.

78 connects with 73 just outside of Evergreen so we kept going, turned left on 73 and went into this little mountain town, a tourist spot at various seasons though it was fairly empty tonight.

Not knowing the restaurants we found the Little Bear, a biker cum blues cum country bar. The tables have initials carved in deep. The walls have dollar bills with quaint sayings, names and dates. My favorite, though somewhat familiar: In Defense of Alcohol I’ve done some pretty stupid things sober, too.

The waitress, whose t-shirt read ‘Did I Have Fun Last Night’, asked us if we were there for the special. Ummm. No. Bison tenderloin kebabs with mashed potatoes, salad and thick doughy bread. It was delicious. Enough for 2 with boxes to take home.

This place has had John Lee Hooker, the Greg Allman Band, Johnny Winters and many others. A good find and a good place to celebrate our new home.

It has, according to its propaganda “…the reputation of being Colorado’s rowdiest mountain bar. Skiers and tourists mingle with colorful locals during their respective seasons in what the Denver Post has described as “popular pandemonium.””