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Colorado Seen THE PARK IN WINTER 02/2011 Also n AsiAn new yeAr
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Page 1: ColoradoSeen 02-2011

Colorado Seen

THE PARK IN

WINTER

02/2011

Also n AsiAn new yeAr

Page 3: ColoradoSeen 02-2011

From the EditorColoradoseen continues to evolve.we are moving from a fixed publication

date once a month to a floating schedule of 12 (or more) issues per year, publishing as stories are ready.

This allows us to respond more quickly to timely events, such as Denver’s Asian new year celebrations (page 22), and improve the quality and depth of the content.

we’ll also be varying the structure and size of the magazine. some issues will have multiple stories, and some will be devoted to a single subject. we’ve already dropped the table of contents pages as repetitive and a drain on resources better devoted to the stories themselves.

we’ll be putting up a notice when a new issue is due. But visit the site often — you never know what you may find.

Colorado Seen

An internet image magazine

Editor & PublisherAndrew Piper

we welcome comments and letters. submit them to: [email protected]

To submit work or story ideas for consider-ation, send an e-mail to:

[email protected]

If you would like to advertise in Coloradoseen, send an e-mail to

[email protected] for information on rates and interactive links.

Copyright © 2011 Coloradoseen

On ThE cOvEr:Clearing winter storm clouds give rocky Mountain national Park’s ypsilon Mountain the visage of a seething-but-frosty volcano.

PhotographersColoradoseen is always looking for compelling photoessays about Colorado.

Pitch your idea at www.coloradoseen.com

Page 4: ColoradoSeen 02-2011

Eric Pendergrass tows son henry, 2½, as he snowshoes the Glacier Gorge trail below Bear Lake in colorado’s rocky Mountain national Park.

WALKING IN A

WINTER WONDERLANDColorado’s rocky Mountain national Park goes through a transformation with the change in seasons.

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An educational sign showing horseshoe Park and the Mummy mountain range in summer contrasts with the view in January.

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Walking on (frozen) water, snowshoers cross the 33-foot depths of Bear Lake, which in summer is a blue pool reflecting the surrounding mountains.

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It is a leisurely 24-mile drive over Trail ridge road from the Kawuneeche Valley on the west side of rocky Mountain national Park to Many Parks Curve on the eastern slope.

in the summer.in the winter,

when Trail ridge road is closed to cars by up to 25 feet of snow, the same trip requires a 180-mile circle over Berthoud Pass, through six counties, and out onto the plains around Denver.

But it is only the road that is closed. The two halves of the Park remain mostly access-able, and become different worlds when frosted (or blanketed) by snow and ice.

wildlife come down from the higher elevations to areas where dinner is not buried in a deep freeze.

Hikers and campers are re-

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sTory & PHoTos

By Andy PIPEr

A tree holds a lost hat along the shores of Bear Lake, left. A “snow play” area, below, is set aside for sledding and tubing in hidden valley, on Trail ridge road in the Park’s eastern half.

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A Park for all seasons

Longs Peak14,259 ft

Wild Basin

←115 miles to Denver

vi

a Us 40 an

d i-70

Kaw

unee

che

Val le

y

Never

Summer

Mtns

Color

ado

Rive

r

Mummy Range

Glacier Gorge

Bear Lake

Lake

Gra

ndby

Shad

ow M

tn La

keGrandLake

Ypsilon Mountain 13,514 ft

Con

tinen

tal D

ivid

e

Horseshoe Park

Trail ridge road(white segment closed in

winter)

scale varies in this perspective view

N ➣

8

Although the closure of Trail ridge road by snow each year in mid-october leaves the park divided, much of the acreage remains accesable to visitors. (exactly how much depends on ones tolerance for winter weatherand rugged terrain.) whilethe number of visitors declinesby 90% from peak summermonths, there were still72, 809 visits in December,2010 — or 2,350 perday. The part of the Parkeast of the ContinentalDivide draws visitorsfrom the populousFront range.

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Longs Peak14,259 ft

EstesPark

Wild Basin

Mummy Range

Glacier Gorge

Ypsilon Mountain 13,514 ft

Horseshoe Park

65 miles to Denver

via Us 36 and i-25 →

placed by snow-shoers, sledders and skiers — both cross-country and downhill.

rushing streams and springs become ice sculptures

summer thunderheads are replaced by eerie lenticular clouds that hover down-wind of the peaks of the Continental Divide like alien motherships.

in short, the Park is open for business — just a somewhat different kind of business.

“it’s a great place in winter,” says eric Pendergrass of Fort Collins, snowshoeing with his son, Henry, in Glacier Gorge.

“My wife is a student, so we leave her to study and come up here for some fresh air and exercise. it’s a great getaway.”

It is a little less crowded, however. with a drop in visitors of nearly 90 per cent (July 2010 saw 699,101 visitors; only 72,809 came in December) the traffic jams and shuttle buses of summer are gone.

Although there can be competition for parking spaces at the most popular trailheads for winter

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The eastern closure point of Trail ridge road is a popular place to snowshoe or ski.

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A snowshoer crosses a deep drift in the Kawuneeche valley.

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activities — Glacier Gorge and Bear lake.

even the section of Trail ridge road closed to cars is open to foot traffic, and from Many Parks Curve, the hardiest skiers hike in several miles to natural runs of several thousand feet from the ridge down into the Fall river valley and Horseshoe Park. The closed road also offers an open, flat, and easy trail for beginning snowshoers.

Westerly winds generally deliver deeper snow to the western half of the Park, giving up their moisture as they climb the heights of the Continental Divide.

in the Kawuneeche Valley north of Grand lake, the braided headwaters of the Colorado river become a smooth white blanket, marked by the tracks of elk, deer, rabbits, birds and hunting predators such as foxes and coyote. And the occasional skier.

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Snowfall is heaviest in the Kawuneeche valley. At left, a campsite notice board is capped with white. Below, tracks show wildlife have simply stepped over a buried fence.

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12Low sun and snow reveal the trail left by a hunting coyote casting about for prey on the frozen headwaters of the colorado river.

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13Low sun and snow reveal the trail left by a hunting coyote casting about for prey on the frozen headwaters of the colorado river.

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At left, two elk stags lock horns in a battle for dominance in horseshoe Park.

At right, a mule deer stag browses underbrush on the snow-brushed slopes of aptly-named deer Mountain.

Below, a browsing elk carries a hitchhiker — a magpie looking for parasites in the elk’s shaggy winter coat.

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Under a coating of ice and snow, the roaring river descends into horseshoe Park from the Mummy range.

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But the eastern half of the park is no stranger to winter storms or deep snow, especially at the higher elevations. Heavy winds, blowing snow, and unplowed white roads can lead to sudden white-out conditions even for drivers in the lower reaches of Moraine Park, the Beaver Meadows, or Horse-shoe Park.

Above 9,000 feet — the elevation of popular winter activity destina-tions Glacier Gorge and Bear lake, the weather can change fast, as the peaks of the Continental Divide high overhead create their own microclimates of wind and snow.

And even on clear days, strong winter winds rippling over the mountain peaks mold the surreal formations called lenticular (or lens-shaped) clouds.

But sun or snow, windy or calm, over 2,300 people, on average, still come each day to sample the special charms of the Park in winter. n

Lenticular clouds form downwind of the continental divide, a sure sign of strong winds overhead.

Page 20: ColoradoSeen 02-2011

Winter gales wreath Longs Peak (14,259 ft) with blowing snow and cloud, and stir up a ground blizzard on the shores of Bear Lake, below.

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Winter gales wreath Longs Peak (14,259 ft) with blowing snow and cloud, and stir up a ground blizzard on the shores of Bear Lake, below.

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Sunlit western ridges of Longs Peak fade away as a snowstorn descends from the continental divide. constantly changing weather is the one certainty at the Park in winter. n

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Welcoming the New Year with a bANg

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Welcoming the New Year with a bANg

As lions dance and chest-rattling fireworks detonate, a hand lights another string of

explosive good luck for the year of the rabbit.

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I t’s called the cái ching, or “plucking of the greens” — a play on

words, since “cái” in Mandarin can mean either “green” or “fortune.”

it brings good luck for the new year.

lions, portrayed by two people in costume, approach an offering (often lettuce) set out by a household or business seeking good luck in the coming year, swallow the greenery, and then spit it out as a blessing.

Traditionally linked to Kung Fu societies, for whom it is a sign of success to have a lion dance troupe, the cái ching is the traditional way of celebrating the Chinese lunar new year.

At Denver’s Far east Center, the performance is conducted by the shaolin Hung Mei Kung Fu association from Boulder, which also give a dem-

celebrating the year of the rabbit, Ben Walin holds a bunny belonging to a young friend.

At right, two youngsters in traditional clothing get a boost to watch the lion dance.

Opposite, Amanda Smith lifts her lion costume as she climbs a 10-foot pole in pursuit of lettuce representing good fortune.

ThE yEAR Of ThE RAbbIT began February 3, and Denver’s Far East Center celebrated Saturday with fireworks and traditional lion dances to bring good luck to people and businesses.

sTory & PHoTos By Andy PIPEr

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onstration of the members’ martial arts’ skills.

The troupe conducts the cái ching for every shop or business that hangs lettuce and fireworks over their entryway, usually taking both days of a weekend to visit each locale.

The ceremony is accompanied by a procession of ban-ners and a graceful tintinabulation of drums and cymbals.

And a rib-rattling 30-second can-nonade of hundreds of firecrackers that becomes a physical assault for anyone within a dozen feet. n

huy Lam (above and right) breaks four paving tiles over his head in a demonstration of Kung Fu mastery during the celebration.

Oranges are an auspicious fruit for the new year.

At right, after the celebration, ‘fortunate’ red and green remains of fireworks and lettuce line the sidewalks

young members of the Shaolin hung Mei Kung Fu school hold banners offering “Good Luck.”

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As lions dance to bring good luck to a Far East center restaurant, a young diner looks on in fascination. n

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