Search Results for: resort town life

Community Calendar Thursday, March 21–Wednesday, March 27

Once When I was You gallery show at the Center for the Arts through March 28.

THURSDAY 21

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Crack of Dawn Group topic discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-1 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Thursday)

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: 11 Step Meditation at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•8 p.m. Live music by Vandelux att the Public House.

FRIDAY 22

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Open AA meeting: Readings from Living Sober at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-2 p.m. Oh Be Joyful hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 625 Maroon Avenue. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•7-8:15 p.m. Open AA Speaker Meeting in the rectory at Queen of All Saints, 970-349-5711.

•7 p.m. Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour presented by the Crested Butte Search and Rescue team at the Center for the Arts.

•8 p.m. Live music by the Thing at the Public House.

•8:30 p.m. Live music by Reno Divorce at the I Bar Ranch.

SATURDAY 23

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Big Book Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•10:30 a.m.-noon St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Literature at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•7 p.m. Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour presented by the Crested Butte Search and Rescue team at the Center for the Arts.

•7:30 p.m. Live music by Perpetual Groove at the Almont Resort.

•8 p.m. Live music by Rainbow Girls at the Public House.

SUNDAY 24

•11 a.m. Palm Sunday Partnership Service at All Saints, with music, 403 Maroon Ave. (UCC), Crested Butte.

•6 p.m. Open AA meeting: Topic Discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•7:30 p.m. Adult pickup basketball in the CBCS high school gym, enter through the doors by Tommy V Field.

MONDAY 25

•1:30-3:30 p.m. Gunnison Valley Hospital hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 513 Main Street. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•6 p.m. Opera Colorado presents Cinderella at the Center for the Arts.

•6:30 p.m. The Hartman Castle Preservation Corp hosts Dr. Vandenbusche at the Mallardi Cabaret Theatre on Elk Ave.

•6:30-8:30 p.m. Open table tennis in Jerry’s Gym at the Crested Butte Town Hall.

•7-8 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 3rd Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Conscious Caregivers Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Navigating Grief & Loss Bereavement Support Group, www.livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 2nd Monday)

•7:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Favorite Big Book Reading at Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

TUESDAY 26

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Mediation AA & Al-Anon at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•9 a.m. Socrates Café, a philosophical discussion group, at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535. (1st and 3rd Tuesdays)

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Closed AA meeting: Readings from Came to Believe at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•4 p.m. The Crested Butte Library hosts a Writers Group.

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•5:30-7 p.m. Trivia at the Crested Butte Museum. (every Tuesday)

 WEDNESDAY 27

•7:30 a.m. Crested Butte Rotary’s weekly speaker series in the Matchstick Lounge at the Elevation Hotel, Mt. Crested Butte. (2nd and 4th Wednesdays)

•noon Closed AA meeting: 12 Step & 12 Tradition Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon Free T’ai Chi Lower Level Town Hall, all are welcome. 

•2-3 p.m. Nicotine Anonymous for Young People meeting. Young Life building next to Ace. (every Wednesday)

•2-3:30 p.m. Walking tours with the Crested Butte Museum. (every Wednesday)

•4 p.m. Parkinson’s Association of the Rockies, a support group, meets at the Adaptive Sports Center in the Mt. Crested Butte base area. (every 3rd Wednesday)

•6:30-7:30 p.m. Al-Anon Meeting for families and friends of alcoholics in the back room of the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-6482.

Tucker Andrews and Cal Hill stomp onto podium at CBMR

Challenger Tour continues for two local athletes

By Than Acuff 

Tucker Andrews got a “wild card” spot and Cal Hill earned the last spot on the qualifier list and both made the most of their shot at the adult Freeride World Tour Challenger Series event in Crested Butte on Friday, March 15. Andrews ended up winning the men’s snowboard division while Hill took third in the men’s ski division.

The Challenger Series is a pipeline to the adult Freeride World Tour next year and is a series of three stops that started in Crested Butte. Athletes have a handful of ways to make it in the series. They can qualify based on results from competitions throughout the winter. They get picked as standout athletes from former world tours or junior freeride champions or they get a “wild card” spot left open by tour organizers for local athletes at each stop.

 “The single event wildcards are some of the local legends who the community knows and engages the town and resort,” explains Freeride World Tour executive director Brennan Metzler. “It makes for a more fun, connected local event.”

Hill is a Crested Butte Mountain Sports Team (CBMST) coach and a Western Mountain Sports Team athlete. He has been competing on the qualifier tour all winter taking fourth place in 3* qualifier comps at Copper and Breckenridge and then a seventh place finish at a 4* qualifier event in Taos. His results earned him enough points to get the 20th of 20 available spots at the Challenger Series and he stepped up to the plate on his home hill.

The venue was Spellbound/High Life which can make for a difficult decision for athletes. While High Life provides a high line score with technical, high consequence moves, the main Spellbound side has opportunities for high-speed moves and massive air. Oftentimes it’s either one way or the other.

Hill managed to mix in both by opening his run by spinning a three (that’s a helicopter to us older folks) off the top to drop into Toilet Bowl. Hill then skied up onto the handrail portion of Toilet Bowl and once he was done greasing the technical parts, he shot out skier’s right into the open area of the venue to throw a backflip off one feature and then lined up one last massive air to throw another backflip over Wylie’s before crossing the finish line.

“There’s really two sides to the venue and it’s tough,” says Hill. “I wanted to highlight both sides of the venue and show I can ski both. Find that balance, it’s a tough balance.”

Andrews hasn’t competed in an event like this since 2012 but after some coaxing by Crested Butte Mountain Sports Team (CBMST) director Eddy Cohn, he decided to jump in.

“He was at the Breadery where I work and he kept asking me to jump in,” says Andrews. “It took a little convincing by him.”

Andrews’s plan was to go for the highest line score possible in High Life and to keep it moving and add in a little flair near the bottom.

“I wanted the most fluid way to get down and to go fast and scoped out a couple bumps at the bottom,” explains Andrews. “Technical then ‘freestyley’ putting two and two together.”

It was enough to catapult Andrews to the top spot and now the two local athletes look ahead to the next stop in the Challenger Series in Silverton March 25-27.

“I’m waiting to hear if I got a spot at Silverton,” says Andrews. “If they’ve got room for me, I’m definitely going to try to make it. I’d be stoked.”

Hill has more coaching to do with the CBMST and will feed off that to continue following his passion.

“I’m looking forward to getting stoke from the groms,” says Hill. “I do it for fun and my love of skiing.”

Profile: Virginia Roark

By Dawne Belloise

The bath fixtures in her CB South duplex are “piss yellow,” Virginia Roark laughs, who figures some local must have had a say in the color choices because, “the drugs were really good back then in 1980.” But she happily calls it home and through her many years here, she has worked as a favorite cook at local eateries and as a housekeeper.

Virginia was born and raised in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in the heart of the Berkshires, spending as much of her time in the woods as summer would allow. One summer evening, her brother presented Virginia with the epitome of cool—a bike he built especially for her. “It was two-tone green with coaster brakes, a banana seat and monkey handlebars,” she grins of that 1973 memory. “I rode that thing in the woods. I was mountain biking on this thing when mountain biking was being born in Crested Butte.” 

A Catholic schoolgirl from third grade through high school, Virginia was studious with good grades. In high school, she lived on Twizzlers and milk because there wasn’t a food cafeteria in her small school, just an eating area with tables. Her main high school interest was acting and theater. She signed up for every play and was even doing Shakespeare, all of which she says, “changed my life.” She graduated in 1982.

Moving out of high school, she wavered between a career in computer science and becoming a chef. Virginia enrolled in SUNY Cobleskill in upstate New York and received an Associate of Science degree as a professional chef. “Cobleskill was so beautiful. We’d get in the car and cruise the back roads of Schoharie County,” the relatively untraveled countryside where the Catskill mountains meet the Adirondacks. Afterwards, she moved to Schenectady, New York, for a couple years, working in little restaurants before deciding that she needed to get out of the city. “I started thinking, why am I in Schenectady when I could be skiing for free?” Virginia learned to ski when she was 13, in a small Massachusetts resort where there was night skiing. 

She took a job at Stratton Mountain Resort in Vermont as a line chef at the Stratton Mountain Inn. In 1986, it was just as difficult to find housing in a ski resort town as it is today, but she finally landed a cozy little one-bedroom cottage right across the street from the West River. She worked and skied for the year-and-a-half she was there and recalls, “It was one of the best jobs in my entire life.” 

Virginia’s then-boyfriend convinced her to move to Cape Cod, but she confesses, “I hate the beach. I hate salt water. If you give me an option of where I want to vacation, it’s not going to be the beach.” But she spent three summers there, longing for the slopes and dreaming about skiing the west for the winters. Virginia sent out resumes to Copper Mountain, Breckenridge, Sun Valley and the Grand Butte Hotel in Mt. CB. The latter hired her, and she also got housing for $100 per month. “Okay, it was four of us sharing a two-bedroom.” 

She had never been west of Pennsylvania, but she loaded up her car and drove to Colorado in 1989. She arrived in CB on Halloween. “Driving up the valley, I was still in shock I had made it over Monarch alive. I immediately saw Mt. CB and I was in awe. I remember going in to get a PO Box and my first impression of CB was, these women don’t wear makeup, they dress for function not fashion. I had found my people. My second thought was, shit, this is a small town and everyone will know what you do,” she laughs.

When the job at the Grand Butte just wasn’t paying the bills, Virginia responded to a help wanted sign in the window of the Paradise Café. “Patsy Lucci handed me a napkin and told me to fill out my name and phone number. It was a naplication,” she laughs. She was hired. “And that’s how I met most people in CB. I learned you don’t burn Mac’s cinnamon raisin toast because he could see it through the kitchen and he’ll tell you about it.” 

When her old boyfriend showed back up in town, Virginia married him and they moved to Big Sky, Montana. “My marriage sucked, but my job and the skiing were fantastic. It was an amazing place to be.” After the winter, they returned to Cape Cod, then followed the winter snows to Summit County in 1991 where Virginia got a job at the Outpost restaurant at Keystone at the top of the North Peak. She was working the graveyard shift as a baker. “If you missed the 11 p.m. gondola, you weren’t making it to work. I had to take three busses and two gondolas to work, and we weren’t allowed to ski down.” It was 18-hour days for her but Virginia loved the job, which came with a ski pass to Keystone, Copper and A-Basin. “One of my favorite jobs ever was making these itty-bitty desserts, like cakes and crème brûlée, at 11,000 feet. My favorite dessert to make was a sacher tort,” which she explains was a chocolate bomb. “The ganache had to be perfect, like glass.” 

Virginia stayed on for two winters, and when she discovered she was pregnant that second winter in 1993, she decided to move back to CB. After stopping in at the Paradise for lunch, Leisure Lee asked her when she was coming back to work. “I said as soon as you find me a place to live.” Two hours later, she had a job and a place to live. Dakota Douglas Roark was born November 19 that year on opening day of ski season. 

Virginia had to leave the Paradise after Dakota was born and she began her housekeeping career where the hours worked better for daycare. She later took a job with High Country Resorts which she said was “one of the best jobs I’ve ever had as housekeeper.” She stayed with them for nine-and-a-half years, becoming their head housekeeper. Feeling the time was right, Virginia started her own housekeeping business in 2003, cleverly naming it Virgin Cleaning. “My motto was, clean like the first time.” 

Throughout her 20 years in CB, Virginia had been working for Susan Gardiner. “Going to see her and cleaning her home was the highlight of my week. It was always a pleasurable experience chatting with her.” The work for Susan became full time when Susan became ill and Virginia was there for Susan up until a couple of months before she passed away, “when she needed nursing care.”

Virginia closed Virgin Cleaning at the end of 2019 and went to work as a cook at Tully’s in CB South. “Then COVID hit and once it hit, that was the end of that job.” In 2020, Virginia was severely hit with COVID that continued for eight months and left her disabled. She wound up at National Jewish Health in Denver as they had a long COVID department. “It was August 2021 and COVID had fried my brain. I’m now dyslexic and I had never been before.” Although she has setback days she’s feeling physically better, but she’s unable to work.

Virginia’s deck in CB South is knee deep in white as she looks out her window. Her days are spent playing with her dog. These days, she takes the bus around for shopping, to the post office, and she’s still an avid Pokémon Go player in town. “This is home. I’ve lived here more than half my life. I couldn’t imagine living anywhere else. I don’t care what happens in town, it’s never gonna be Houston no matter how hard they try,” she grins. 

Community Calendar Thursday, March 14–Wednesday, March 20

Once When I was You gallery show at the Center for the Arts through March 28.

THURSDAY 14

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Crack of Dawn Group topic discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-1 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Thursday)

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: 11 Step Meditation at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

FRIDAY 15

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Open AA meeting: Readings from Living Sober at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-2 p.m. Oh Be Joyful hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 625 Maroon Avenue. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•5 p.m. Royal Ruckus with live music by Beer Hunter and Sam Eberle at Kochevar’s.

•5:30 p.m. Live music by ThreeFour9 at the Talk of the Town.

•6:30-10 p.m. Winter Songwriter Shuffle concert: Wood Box Heroes at the Center for the Arts.

•7 p.m. Al Johnson movie tributes at the Majestic Theatre.

•7-8:15 p.m. Open AA Speaker Meeting in the rectory at Queen of All Saints, 970-349-5711.

•7:30 p.m. Firebird Theatre’s All in the Timing at Almont Resort, 10209 State HWY 135, Almont. $20. firebirdcb.com/timing/

•8 p.m. Live music by Just How and Walter Balltell at the Public House.

SATURDAY 16

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Big Book Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•10:30 a.m.-noon St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•11 a.m. Storyweaver Games grand opening at 901 W Tomichi Gunnison.

•3:30 p.m. The Trailhead Children’s Museum and the Majestic Theatre host a Crafts and Cinema with a showing of Surf’s Up.

•5-8 p.m. Monthly Artwalk at participating galleries of downtown Crested Butte.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Literature at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•6:30 p.m. The Crested Butte Film Festival presents a “Best Of” short film program at The Majestic Theatre.

•6:30-10 p.m. Winter Songwriter Shuffle concert: Ward Davis at the Center for the Arts.

•7:30 p.m. Firebird Theatre’s All in the Timing at Queen of All Saints’ Parish Hall, 403 Sopris Ave., Crested Butte. $20. firebirdcb.com/timing/

•8 p.m. Live music by Funk You at the Public House.

SUNDAY 17

•1 p.m. 50th anniversary of the Uphill/Downhill Memorial Al Johnson Race, starts at the bottom of the North Face Lift.

•4 p.m. Live music by Highlifters at Butte 66.

•5 p.m. St. Paddy’s Day celebration with live music by FIG at Kochevar’s.

•5 p.m. Quiet service, All Saints in the Mountains Episcopal Church, 403 Maroon Ave.(UCC), Crested Butte.

•6 p.m. Open AA meeting: Topic Discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•7 p.m. Firebird Theatre’s St. Patrick’s Day Improv Show at Almont Resort, 10209 State HWY 135, Almont. $10. firebirdcb.com/improv/

•7:30 p.m. Adult pickup basketball in the CBCS high school gym, enter through the doors by Tommy V Field.

MONDAY 18

•1:30-3:30 p.m. Gunnison Valley Hospital hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 513 Main Street. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•6 p.m. Mindful Meditation with Jenny Ward at the Crested Butte Library.

•6:30-8:30 p.m. Open table tennis in Jerry’s Gym at the Crested Butte Town Hall.

•7-8 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 3rd Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Conscious Caregivers Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Navigating Grief & Loss Bereavement Support Group, www.livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 2nd Monday)

•7:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Favorite Big Book Reading at Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

TUESDAY 19

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Mediation AA & Al-Anon at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•9 a.m. Socrates Café, a philosophical discussion group, at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535. (1st and 3rd Tuesdays)

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Closed AA meeting: Readings from Came to Believe at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•5:30-7 p.m. Trivia at the Crested Butte Museum. (every Tuesday)

•6 p.m. Free yoga at the Crested Butte Library. (every 3rd Tuesday)

 WEDNESDAY 20

•7:30 a.m. Crested Butte Rotary’s weekly speaker series in the Matchstick Lounge at the Elevation Hotel, Mt. Crested Butte. (2nd and 4th Wednesdays)

•noon Closed AA meeting: 12 Step & 12 Tradition Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon Free T’ai Chi Lower Level Town Hall, all are welcome. 

•2-3 p.m. Nicotine Anonymous for Young People meeting. Young Life building next to Ace. (every Wednesday)

•2-3:30 p.m. Walking tours with the Crested Butte Museum. (every Wednesday)

•4 p.m. Parkinson’s Association of the Rockies, a support group, meets at the Adaptive Sports Center in the Mt. Crested Butte base area. (every 3rd Wednesday)

•6:30-7:30 p.m. Al-Anon Meeting for families and friends of alcoholics in the back room of the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-6482.

Profile: Lo Storer

By Dawne Belloise

“There’s always been a lot of transfer between Crested Butte and my Smugs,” Lo Storer says of her childhood home, Smugglers Notch, Vermont, a ski resort just on the other side of the mountain from Stowe. She notes that Backcountry Skier magazine is based in her hometown, so she already knew about CB when she moved here in 2009 and laughs, “Honestly, I was looking for a cowboy.” 

She was raised in a little chalet on the side of Smugglers Mountain by parents who were working at the resort, so she began skiing as soon as she could walk and grew up in ski school daycare. Lo spent a good deal of her time doing equestrian activities, horseback riding and showing horses English style, and in competitions across the state until she was 17. Riding was an impetus for her to come to Colorado, she says, “I wanted to ride Western. I hated English. It was too proper.” 

Growing up in a ski town, Lo liked that the mountains were the center of everything in her close-knit community and how, in a small town, when someone is lost everyone feels it, but when Lo lost her best friend in a car accident in 10th grade, it changed the course of her life. “When you deal with death that young, it shifts your priorities. I was on track to achieving more and going to a very good college. I played Olympic Development soccer, that was my thing, and I went all around the country doing that. When Emily died, it made me question what I actually wanted.” Lo made it through high school, graduating in 2006. 

Lo attended Johnson State College in Vermont, studying photography and environmental politics. In part, it’s what led her to go West. “Basically, I dropped the ball on everything and started raging. Nothing made sense anymore.” In 2009, Lo came to CB to work for her friend’s business, Escape Body Works. She also began volunteering for Adaptive Sports, helping with lessons. She enrolled at the Mountain Heart massage school and graduated from there in the fall of the 2009. 

By the spring of 2010, Lo had returned to Vermont to work at Riverberry Farms, one of the biggest organic farms in the state, planting, picking and packing. She utilized her massage experience, working as a massage therapist at Stowe Mountain Lodge, and riding her snowmobile over the mountain from Jeffersonville and back. “Jeffersonville is on the other side of the mountain and the road closes in the winter. It takes only 20 minutes by sled as opposed to driving one-and-a-half hours.” In the summers, she was back on the farm. Lo started her own landscaping business while working on the farm and doing massage. Three years later, she moved to Telluride.

In Telluride, Lo taught for Adaptive Sports while still doing massage and also working at a ski shop. “I lived up Lizard Head Pass close to Ophir. It was sketchy living up there because some nights the gate would come down when the avalanche danger was high so I couldn’t get home.” Luckily, she had a friend with a house in town. After the winter, Lo moved on to Moab in 2012, where she got a job at a bike shop and learned to mountain bike. “I loved it there but it got too hot and that’s when I moved back to CB.”

She was hired as a horseback riding guide for Fantasy Ranch and also worked in their office. She did the Crested Butte thing and got a dog, Cyrus. Pursuing photography, the following year Lo returned to Vermont to start her own business. “I finally found the bravery to move forward with my art,” making that leap of faith after she had previously broken her shoulder during a training with sit-ski and couldn’t farm or do massage therapy anymore. “So I went into photography professionally,” she says of her business, Lo Storer Photography. Her photography project, called “Beings of Yoga,” came about after Lo became a yoga teacher, completing 500 hours in Vermont, “I’ve been teaching seven years now.”

Lo decided to move to Montana to attend Rocky Mountain School of Photography in Missoula in 2021, for a six-month intensive study. From there, she spent the autumn on a ranch on the Flathead Reservation. Lo had planned to return to Vermont, but she stopped in Crested Butte to see a couple friends on the way home in November of 2021. She wound up staying. “And here I am,” she laughs, “living in CB South and I think I’ve moved a total of 12 times since I got back. I was homeless and had stints where I had to stay with friends between places. But I’ve been primarily doing photography and I’ve done pretty well.” 

She returns to Vermont for her photography shoots every two or three months. “I do a lot of headshots and branding—small women-owned business branding. I did a lot of yoga photography in Vermont,” for which she became very well known, shooting brands like yoga clothing line Lululemon and Ladies AllRide, which holds mountain bike clinics all over the world out of Bend, Oregon.  

“I would like to stay and make it work here,” she says of CB. “I think the secret to that, for me, is continuing to take brand work that’s out of the valley. My passion is photographing outdoor adventure sports and outdoor lifestyle and that involves travel. I’m working on making that happen. I’ve always had a hard time making CB work. I partied too much and I’m always trying to piece it all together. I went back to Vermont and got sober. The valley is becoming way more supportive of sobriety, the sober community here is really phenomenal. It’s a big part of what keeps me here. It’s beautiful and magical and anytime I’ve moved away all I wanted was to get back,” she says and notes, “but it’s also like a vortex, a place where you come head to head with your shit. The good is amplified and the bad is amplified. Everything is so extreme and it’s challenging to find that balance point.”

Recently, Lo lost another dear friend. “Kelli Lightfoot passed this past November and I was part of her hospice team. Kelli was my best friend and she followed me out here from Vermont,” and Lo felt all those emotions from the death of her high school friend resurface. “What’s healing for me is nature at night.” Lo clicks into her Nordic skis to hit the Peanut Lake trail after dark, or she skins up the mountain. “I’m a big backcountry skier and that’s so healing. It’s calm and peaceful at night.”

Lo says she’s tried on a lot of hats since returning—running the CB Farmers Market last summer, teaching yoga at Thrive and she’s still an instructor at Adaptive Sports. However, photography is her mainstay. “I’m also a certified life coach and trying to make my life work here. I’m trying to put together a wilderness therapy program for kids and adults. Backcountry skiing and mountain biking are the things that have kept me sane and supported my mental health and taught me skills to manage life. There’s some crossover between photography and therapy and there’s therapeutic benefits to photography. I’m just trying to put it all together and see what comes out of it.”

Community calendar Thursday, March 7–Wednesday, March 13

Once When I was You gallery show at the Center for the Arts through March 28.

THURSDAY 7

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Crack of Dawn Group topic discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-1 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Thursday)

•3:30-6:30 p.m. Potluck and Poetry at the Gunnison County Library. 

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: 11 Step Meditation at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

9 p.m. Public House presents: Big Something with The Ries Brothers.

FRIDAY 8

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Open AA meeting: Readings from Living Sober at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-2 p.m. Oh Be Joyful hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 625 Maroon Avenue. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•2-4 p.m. The League of Women Voters of the Gunnison Valley and Rumors Coffee and Tea House host a petition signing event in support of Initiative 89 Coloradans for Reproductive Freedom.

•5-7 p.m. Once When I Was You opening gallery reception at the Kinder Padon Gallery. 

•7:30 p.m. Firebird Theatre’s All in the Timing at Public House, 202 Elk Ave., Crested Butte. $20. firebirdcb.com/timing/.

•7-8:15 p.m. Open AA Speaker Meeting in the rectory at Queen of All Saints, 970-349-5711.

•8 p.m. Live music by Leftover Salmon at the Center for the Arts.

SATURDAY 9

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Big Book Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•8:30 a.m. The Gunnison County Republicans caucus meets at Fred Field. Only registered republicans can attend.

•10:30 a.m.-noon St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•3 p.m. The Firebird Theatre presents Peter Pan at the Queen of All Saints’ Parish Hall, 403 Sopris, Crested Butte. All ages. $10-Adults, $5-Children, firebirdcb.com/peter-pan.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Literature at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•7:30 p.m. Firebird Theatre’s All in the Timing at Almont Resort, 10209 State HWY 135, Almont. $20. firebirdcb.com/timing/.

•8 p.m. Live music by Leftover Salmon at the Center for the Arts.

SUNDAY 10

•3 p.m. The Firebird Theatre presents Peter Pan at the Queen of All Saints’ Parish Hall, 403 Sopris, Crested Butte. All ages. $10-Adults, $5-Children, firebirdcb.com/peter-pan.

•5 p.m. Quiet service, All Saints in the Mountains Episcopal Church, 403 Maroon Ave.(UCC), Crested Butte.

•6 p.m. Open AA meeting: Topic Discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•7:30 p.m. Adult pickup basketball in the CBCS high school gym, enter through the doors by Tommy V Field.

MONDAY 11

•1:30-3:30 p.m. Gunnison Valley Hospital hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 513 Main Street. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•6:30-8:30 p.m. Open table tennis in Jerry’s Gym at the Crested Butte Town Hall.

•7-8 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 3rd Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Conscious Caregivers Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Navigating Grief & Loss Bereavement Support Group, www.livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 2nd Monday)

•7:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Favorite Big Book Reading at Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

TUESDAY 12

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Mediation AA & Al-Anon at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•9 a.m. Socrates Café, a philosophical discussion group, at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535. (1st and 3rd Tuesdays)

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Closed AA meeting: Readings from Came to Believe at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

WEDNESDAY 13

•7:30 a.m. Crested Butte Rotary’s weekly speaker series in the Matchstick Lounge at the Elevation Hotel, Mt. Crested Butte. (2nd and 4th Wednesdays)

•noon Closed AA meeting: 12 Step & 12 Tradition Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon Free T’ai Chi Lower Level Town Hall, all are welcome. 

•2-3 p.m. Nicotine Anonymous for Young People meeting. Young Life building next to Ace. (every Wednesday)

•4 p.m. Parkinson’s Association of the Rockies, a support group, meets at the Adaptive Sports Center in the Mt. Crested Butte base area. (every 3rd Wednesday)

•6:30-7:30 p.m. Al-Anon Meeting for families and friends of alcoholics in the back room of the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-6482.

9 p.m. Public House presents: Doom Flamingo.

Profile: Ginny Turner

By Dawne Belloise

Like Crested Butte kids, Ginny Turner grew up at the end of the road, but in Girdwood, Alaska, home to Mt. Alyeska. In fact, locals of that town were known as “End of the Roaders,” she tells. Also like CB, it’s a ski resort town except, she smiles, “You can see the ocean from the top of the mountain.” Ginny’s father was chief of grooming at the ski area, which came with perks like a free ski pass for her. She recalls that it was kind of like the wild west back then with plenty of partying, and as the resort gained popularity, she relates it to CB, “People being pushed out, not enough places for workers to live, and it got expensive.”

As kids they skied, of course, and the area had night skiing. When the snows melted, it was all about biking and playing in the woods. If it was raining, which it did a lot there, Ginny laughs that they’d still go out and play, “Rain wasn’t an excuse because it was raining all the time.” Since the local school only went through eighth grade, the high schoolers were bussed to Anchorage. “I got on the bus at 5:30 in the morning and school started at 7:30 a.m. I was doing cross country skiing, running and track so we didn’t get home until much later.” 

“In the winter, I left home in the dark and got back in the dark because from December through mid-February, it didn’t start getting light out until 10 a.m. and it was dark by 3 p.m.” The upside to that was that the sun never seemed to set during the summers. Throughout school, Ginny trained in sports constantly, because, “The high school ski racing in Alaska is a very competitive, high-pressure scene,” she says. 

By the time she graduated from high school in 1993, she knew she wanted out of Alaska. Ginny chose Western State College (WSC) (now Western Colorado University) because the brochure looked nice. “The brochure said 360 days of sunshine and I was coming from one of the most northern rain forests in the world where we get so much precipitation yearly. I wanted the sunshine.” At WSC, she had already spoken with the Nordic coach. “I wasn’t really sure what I wanted to do but I was pretty burnt out and I was done with Nordic racing. So I decided I didn’t want to keep doing that to myself. I needed a break,” she felt.

Once settled into Gunnison, Ginny laughs that she became localized. “I was full on in my broomstick skirt, my Guatemalan sweaters and wearing patchouli. I went from grunge to hippie pretty quickly. But I loved Western. I made a lot of really good friends there. I loved Hartman’s so I went running there a lot.” 

In 1995, Ginny applied for the high school coaching job for the CB Nordic Team. She was only 19 years old and had a blast teaching 18-year-olds. The position reignited her love of Nordic skiing and she coached for three years. “That’s what got me into Crested Butte and back into Nordic skiing and I’m grateful for that. I lived in Gunnison but was in CB a lot,” she says, so she moved up valley in the winter of 1999.

Ginny was working at the Avalanche during the winter of 1999/2000, when she met her now hubby Sean Turner. Having been a ski bum long enough, Ginny felt it was time to switch up gear and be a beach bum for a while. When she told Sean she had decided to move to southern California, he told Ginny he was also moving there and suggested they share a U-Haul. They had been dating and decidedly liked each other, but at the time, they were barely committed. They moved to separate towns in the same area in California, “I was 25 and gun shy,” she smiles.

Ginny moved to San Diego. “At the time I was really interested in physical fitness and personal training. I figured San Diego is such a mecca for fitness.” She had worked at Rocky’s Gym in Gunnison for a couple of years and felt that she would not only enjoy becoming a personal trainer, but she’d be really good at it. Ginny started out working at one of those giant gyms while getting certified for personal training. She took her education further and enrolled at the University of California at San Diego. 

“It was basically their night school, a year-long program,” where she learned physiology, anatomy, how to program design, how to assess people and body composition. She was certified as a personal trainer in 2000 through the International Sports Science Association (ISSA). Afterwards, she was additionally certified with the American College of Exercise (ACE), and then in 2005 through the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), who are more clinically based, such as dealing with heart conditions, diabetes and obesity. 

In 2004, Ginny was hired at a private studio called Malagros. “I worked with so many different kinds of people, conditions and the most difficult clients in California. So much is based in behavioral change. It’s not about calories or diets or exercise, it’s about making positive changes in behavior to support a healthy lifestyle.” She explains that the most difficult clients were those having to deal with behavior change. “It was frustrating. They didn’t see the changes that they wanted to see because at the time, we weren’t training in a way that changed behavior, we were training to lose weight. As new research comes out and is proven now, we’re understanding how to help people better. This is the reason I love training so much, the learning is never over,” she says of her now 24 years of experience.

Ginny and Sean married on the Hawaiian island of Kauai in 2004. “We decided to do more than share a U-Haul,” she grins. Their son Augie came along in 2006 and daughter Lulu was born in 2009 in Encinitas. “We went from the hospital straight to the beach to get their toes dipped in the Pacific because we wanted them to be in touch with the ocean. It was a great place to have kids. There were naked babies on the beach all the time.” 

Ginny started a mobile personal trainer business for home, offices and even the beach. “It was really good with two little kids since I was able to do it on my own schedule.” But the tides changed and Ginny decided that southern California just wasn’t her place. Even though it was a great place to have kids, they determined they didn’t want to raise their children there. They considered moving to Alaska, Oregon and northern California but, in the end, the young family returned to Crested Butte in 2011.

Sean was working construction and Ginny was making sandwiches at Why Cook when she started doing little group workouts in the park in CB South and Rainbow Park. She also helped with the winter sports conditioning program through the town, the ever-popular Achy Backs and Creaky Knees conditioning classes, but Ginny really wanted to open her own place. “I was tired of traveling and training in random places and wanted my own space. Gretchen Wassinger ran out of the Daily Dose one day and said the space above her was for rent.” Ginny signed the lease in 2014 and her fitness place Core was born. In 2019, she bought a space in the Horseshoe Building behind Clark’s Market to host her fitness training. In her gym, she runs group classes and personal training. “My philosophy in training is rooted in functional training,” she explains. Her tagline is “Train to Play.” “We do a lot of core focus. There are four personal trainers and three other class instructors.” Ginny feels she’s come full circle from the time she began coaching those high school kids with the CB Nordic team. “I still work with so many of those parents and I’m training them now at my gym.” 

Ginny is grateful for her life here and she feels there’s endless exploration to be done in the area. “I love the valley. Just this summer I found a whole new place that I’d never been to—Owl Creek pass,” she says. “What really makes me happy and keeps me here is the community and the amazing year-round recreation. I love that you can ice skate on Blue Mesa and then go skiing and then zip somewhere else for a bike ride or a hike,” she says of the never-ending diversity of outdoor life here.

Community Calendar Thursday, February 29–Wednesday, March 6

•February 29–March 3 at 9 p.m. 4 Night run with Spafford at the Public House in Crested Butte, CO.

•March 2-9 at 3 p.m. The Firebird Theatre presents four days of Peter Pan at the Queen of All Saints’ Parish Hall, 403 Sopris, Crested Butte. All ages. $10-Adults, $5-Children, firebirdcb.com/peter-pan.

THURSDAY 29

Last day of the Dumb Logic gallery show at the Center for the Arts.

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Crack of Dawn Group topic discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-1 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Thursday)

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•5 p.m. Meet and Greet with GCEA’s CEO Duane Highley at 37250 W Hwy 50, Gunnison CO 81230.

•6-8 p.m. Histories of CB Open Mic Night presented by the Crested Butte Historic Preservation Plan at the Eldo on Elk Avenue.

•6:30 p.m. The Holly plays at the Majestic Theatre followed by a Q&A with the films director Julien Rubenstein.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: 11 Step Meditation at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•7 p.m.-12 a.m. Vyktorya’s (Dickie Brown) quincera birthday celebration at the Talk of the Town with live music by DJ Hanaman.

FRIDAY 1

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Open AA meeting: Readings from Living Sober at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon-2 p.m. Oh Be Joyful hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 625 Maroon Avenue. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•5-7 p.m. Live music by Strand Hill at billy barr at the Elevation.

•6:30 p.m. Live music by Easy Jim at the Almont Resort.

•7 p.m. Subject to Change Improv Troupe comes the Mallardi Cabaret Theatre.

•7-8:15 p.m. Open AA Speaker Meeting in the rectory at Queen of All Saints, 970-349-5711.

SATURDAY 2

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Big Book Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•10:30 a.m.-noon St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•4 p.m. Kissidugu Liberté performance at the Center for the Arts.

•4:30 p.m. Subject to Change Improv Troupe comes to the Mallardi Cabaret Theatre.

•5:30-8:30 p.m. Live music by the Shed at the Talk of the Town.

•6:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Literature at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•7 p.m. Subject to Change Improv Troupe comes to the Mallardi Cabaret Theatre.

•7 p.m. Kissidugu Liberté performance at the Center for the Arts.

SUNDAY 3

•11 a.m. Partnership Service at All Saints in the Mountains Episcopal Church, with music, 403 Maroon Ave.(UCC), Crested Butte.

•5 p.m. Family African Arts event at the Crested Butte Library.

•6 p.m. Open AA meeting: Topic Discussion at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•6 p.m. American climber and recent winner of the Piolets d’Or, George Lowe gives a presentation at the Mallardi Cabaret Theatre. Hosted by the Crested Butte Avalanche Center.

•7:30 p.m. Adult pickup basketball in the CBCS high school gym, enter through the doors by Tommy V Field.

MONDAY 4

•1:30-3:30 p.m. Gunnison Valley Hospital hosts a Mountain Mamas meeting at 513 Main Street. For more information contact Kelsey Weaver at kweaver@gvh-colorado.org or 970-648-7071.

•5:15-6:30 p.m. Western Colorado University offers Spanish classes for beginners in Gunnison, western.edu/academics/center-learning-innovation/ or call 970-943-2885. (every Monday and Wednesday until March 6)

•6:30-8:30 p.m. Open table tennis in Jerry’s Gym at the Crested Butte Town Hall.

•7-8 p.m. Cultivating Hope Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 3rd Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Conscious Caregivers Cancer Support Group, livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 1st Monday)

•7-8 p.m. Navigating Grief & Loss Bereavement Support Group, www.livingjourneys.org/calendar, free. (every 2nd Monday)

•7:30 p.m. Open AA meeting: Favorite Big Book Reading at Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

TUESDAY 5

•7:30 a.m. Open AA meeting: Mediation AA & Al-Anon at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•9 a.m. Socrates Café, a philosophical discussion group, at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535. (1st and 3rd Tuesdays)

•10 a.m. Storytime at the Crested Butte Library, 970-349-6535.

•noon Closed AA meeting: Readings from Came to Believe at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage is open for shopping and donations. 421A Sopris Avenue, stmarysgaragecb.org.

•5:15-6:30 p.m. Western Colorado University offers Spanish for beginners classes in Crested Butte, western.edu/academics/center-learning-innovation/ or call 970-943-2885. (every Tuesday until March 5)

WEDNESDAY 6

•7:30 a.m. Crested Butte Rotary’s weekly speaker series in the Matchstick Lounge at the Elevation Hotel, Mt. Crested Butte. (2nd and 4th Wednesdays)

•noon Closed AA meeting: 12 Step & 12 Tradition Study at the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-5711.

•noon Free T’ai Chi Lower Level Town Hall, all are welcome. 

•2-3 p.m. Nicotine Anonymous for Young People meeting. Young Life building next to Ace. (every Wednesday)

•4 p.m. Parkinson’s Association of the Rockies, a support group, meets at the Adaptive Sports Center in the Mt. Crested Butte base area. (every 3rd Wednesday)

•5:15-6:30 p.m. Western Colorado University offers Spanish classes for beginners in Gunnison, western.edu/academics/center-learning-innovation/ or call 970-943-2885. (every Monday and Wednesday until March 6)

•6:30-7:30 p.m. Al-Anon Meeting for families and friends of alcoholics in the back room of the Union Congregational Church, 970-349-6482.

•7-10 p.m. Live music with Floyd and Jackie at the Crested Butte Mountain Theatre.

Mt. CB recall election candidate questions

The town of Mt. Crested Butte is holding a special election to recall councilor Roman Kolodziej from the town council. The election takes place until Tuesday, February 13 and all registered voters in Mt. CB should have received their ballots in the mail by now. 

There will be two questions on the ballot: the first asks whether to recall Kolodziej from the town council. If the majority votes are in favor of Kolodziej’s recall, then the second ballot question will ask for the selection of his replacement. Four candidates are running for the seat if Kolodziej is recalled. 

This is the final week of a question-and-answer series we are running to provide information to Mt. CB voters on the positions of Kolodziej and the four candidates. Here’s what they had to say:

Roman Kolodziej

What are your ideas for getting more affordable housing in Mt. CB? 

Here is an idea I’ve already promoted. 

Across Emmons Road from the soon-to-be-renamed “rasta lot” is a town-owned parcel of land at the northwest corner of the paid parking lot where snow is currently stored. Over a year ago, I proposed the idea of building affordable housing on it. Here’s how it might have, and still might, work. The town would donate the lot for development. The Downtown Development Authority (DDA), of which I sit on the board, could freely spend some of the millions of dollars it has on design, horizontal infrastructure and/or other project expenses. I approached other potential partners about them making cash or in-kind contributions to bring the project to reality.

Here are the issues the project ran into. 

The town’s main sewer line not only runs under the development site, but drops 50 feet or so from Emmons Road to the site itself. Moving the line wouldn’t be cheap, but it is possible. 

Access. The project could be accessed from Gothic Road directly, though a more effective access point would be through an adjacent parcel owned by the Muellers. 

Perhaps the most significant issue is the fact that the town’s parcel, and every parcel from there to the Grand Lodge, are all tied to one Planned Unit Development (PUD). Our project most likely needs to be a PUD as well to accomplish certain things (altering setbacks, height restrictions, etc.) but you can’t have two PUDs on top of one another. This would require “decoupling” the existing PUD, which is cumbersome but not impossible. 

Fun stuff, right?! Due to the challenges this idea posed, town staff felt time and energy would be best spent on other parcels. I still hold out hope for the project. 

What would be your approach to balancing goals that might conflict — such as promoting tourism and limiting environmental impacts, or balancing STRs with housing opportunities for locals?

One thing I’ve been asking for from the Tourism and Prosperity Partnership (TAPP) is their explanation of marketing “doneness.” In other words, what is the success metric they use for marketing that indicates they should turn it off or tone it down? They are very good at taking the “more = good” perspective, but being able to understand when to temper marketing efforts might help us better gauge tourism capacity in our valley.

How can the town help bring back more vibrancy to the Base Area?

Helping the three largest base area property owners decouple the PUD that restricts individual property development there. It would allow us and them to approach individual projects as we do elsewhere in Mt. CB.

If you are not chosen, would you run in the next regularly scheduled council election?

I’m not sure. During my time on town council, I’ve dedicated myself to thoughtfully fulfilling my role while advocating for my community and have contributed to some positive and impactful decisions. If enough voters believe, or are led to believe, otherwise and vote me out of public service, it will force me to reconsider where I choose to put my energy.

One person, dead or alive, you would choose to ride up with on the Silver Queen, and why?

I’d like to ride up the Queen with Winnie the Pooh. 

Chair lift rides offer me opportunities to be contemplative and reflective and I’ve found it satisfying to lean into both while riding to the top. Pooh demonstrates an idyllic approach to life that is kind and simple and sometimes when I get off the lift, I am able to see myself navigating life in a similar way, albeit for a brief moment. 

It would be great to talk with Pooh about his perspective and understand how I might carry those brief moments of clarity with me once I leave the lift. 

You wouldn’t expect a boring answer from me about the founding fathers or something, would you?

Bobbie Sferra

What are your ideas for getting more affordable housing in Mt. CB? 

Affordable housing is not only a huge challenge for Mt. CB, but this issue has been front center since I have been coming to Crested Butte over 15 years ago. I have just begun to educate myself on how new projects are financed using grant monies, low interest loans and tax credits. New developments require a number of units designed for affordable housing. The cost of building continues to rise and the north valley cost is one of the highest in the nation at $750–$1000 per square foot. Even a small house or duplex is close to a million dollars or higher to build. How is this affordable for towns, developers and qualified buyers? The question really becomes who is responsible for providing housing for employees. Mt. CB has done a wonderful job of providing affordable housing to town employees; however, I don’t believe that the town of Mt. CB should be using tax dollars to provide housing for the business communities. So the question becomes, how do we continue to have a vibrant workforce for the many businesses, and partner with these businesses to begin to solve these issues. The town should encourage developers to consider building rental units that may better meet the needs of low income and seasonal employees. In addition, the town should encourage the hotels and businesses that rely on seasonal employees to repurpose hotel rooms for affordable housing, as well as provide incentives to private individuals to rent to local workers. 

What would be your approach to balancing goals that might conflict — such as promoting tourism and limiting environmental impacts, or balancing STRs with housing opportunities for locals? 

Before any decision is made on a controversial issue, the community needs to be informed and have an opportunity for input. It is the responsibility of each town council member to be thoroughly knowledgeable about alternatives, be informed of pros and cons, and based on the data, make the best decision for the town. 

How can the town help bring back more vibrancy to the Base Area? 

The base area is the main hub of Mt. Crested Butte. By providing more restaurants, shops and entertainment, visitors would be encouraged to stay on the mountain. The town and resort should work in partnership to ensure essential businesses exist in the base area year-round and provide more opportunities for activities beyond skiing.

If you are not chosen, would you run in the next regularly scheduled council election?

Absolutely! I am retired and would like the opportunity to serve in the community where I live.

One person, dead or alive, you would choose to ride up with on the Silver Queen, and why?

I would choose my friend, Doctor Pete Harrelson. Pete is a long-time friend in Telluride who was the first person in 2024 to be killed in an avalanche a week ago. Pete was fun and lived life to the fullest. His death was a reminder on how fragile life is and the importance of friendship and staying in touch with those we love.

TOM ROLLECZEK

What are your ideas for getting more affordable housing in Mt. CB? 

Currently, there are provisions in place for new developments that allocate units to affordable housing as part of the building requirements. I suggest we work with each developer’s unique situation and always provide agreement for units, even if they are existing. The alternative is a monetary sum and inadequate to build in our high price environment. The goal should be guiding policy for beds locally, even if they are older units. I also believe there are many existing opportunities in the commercial sector of Mt. CB that are underutilized. Negotiating incentives with landowners for undeveloped lots, could offer viable options for future housing.

What would be your approach to balancing goals that might conflict — such as promoting tourism and limiting environmental impacts, or balancing STRs with housing opportunities for locals?

In any good negotiation, both parties walk away with less than they expected. If this is not the case, the resulting deal will fail as a result of the inequities. As the great Mick Jagger put it, “You can’t always get what you want, but if you try sometimes, well, you just might find. You get what you need.” In respect to the two examples you provided, or many others, it’s beneficial to approach with an open mind that is ready to accept compromise.  

How can the town help bring back more vibrancy to the Base Area?

As mentioned, an intentional meeting between the base area stakeholders, landowners and town is overdue; let’s outline potential opportunities and set timelines for projects. Financial investment is a crucial part of a successful outcome and should be prioritized in these negotiations. Any resulting actions should encourage investment from local businesses such as retail, food and beverage, hotels and guest services. By focusing on economic vibrancy, we will create a landscape of locally owned businesses, exciting community recreation projects and a thriving base area resort.  

If you are not chosen, would you run in the next regularly scheduled council election?

Indeed, my original intention was to run in the general election 2024. I would likely re-apply.  

One person, dead or alive, you would choose to ride up with on the Silver Queen, and why?

Chuck Norris; I would like to see the North Face tremble under his skis.  

PETER ESSELSTYN

What are your ideas for getting more affordable housing in Mt. CB? 

In my five years in Mt. CB, I have heard countless “opinions” on how to solve affordable housing but none of them include quantifying the problem. In my experience, you are unlikely to solve a problem if you don’t characterize it first. To that end, I believe the town (including Crested Butte and Gunnison County) needs to determine what the current and future affordable housing needs are and set a road map with quantifiable goals and schedule to meet these needs. What are the types of housing needed? Dormitory style? Miniature housing style? Family style housing? If this type of analysis has been done, I have yet to hear about it. 

This affordable housing issue has been a long running problem. This past year, the Crested Butte News ran a story about the need for affordable housing in the “20 Years Ago Today” section. I felt I was reading an article that was written today! Perhaps with forward thinking planning and a clear roadmap, we won’t still be talking about this issue 20 years from now. 

Of course, this is not solely a Mt. CB issue. The town of Crested Butte and Gunnison County also are stakeholders in this quandary. Other resort towns that I have visited offer incentives to property owners to house locals. They may include property tax incentives, resort/business incentives for housing local employees, etc. I also question what the town’s responsibility is versus what the private employer’s responsibility is. I don’t believe the town(s) have the sole responsibility to solve this, but can provide a variety of incentives to support the needs of the local businesses.

What would be your approach to balancing goals that might conflict — such as promoting tourism and limiting environmental impacts, or balancing STRs with housing opportunities for locals?

At first glance, I would say that each of these items need to be weighed on their own merits and I don’t think there is necessarily a balance between each of these topics exclusively. We are largely a tourist-based economy in the north valley and to that end, if tourism takes a downturn, then many of the businesses and investments in the area will also drop. I certainly support limiting environmental impacts when done in a measurable and practical approach that makes a real impact. The environment and natural beauty here in the north valley are one of the biggest reasons we have a tourism-based economy.   

I don’t claim to have all the answers regarding STRs vs. housing opportunities for locals, but I struggle to connect STRs with solving local housing issues. The way I see it, there are many STRs currently available, but are market priced, making them out of financial reach for many of the seasonal and/or local workers. Also, STRs by definition are limited to 30 days making long-term living situations unrealistic. I am curious to know how Mt. CB allocates STR fees they collect to address opportunities for local’s living concerns and is this allocation sufficient.

How can the town help bring back more vibrancy to the Base Area?

When my wife and I purchased land in Mt. CB in 2016, we heard the rumors that Vail may purchase CBMR. We were excited for that possibility as historically Vail has invested heavily in their resorts and the base area at CBMR certainly was ripe for an injection of vibrancy. However, the property owners at the base area are diverse and not limited to a single property owner. I am of the belief that the town needs to provide a pathway for investment in the base area in terms of removing approval roadblocks and providing incentives. Vibrancy at the base area would be good for all involved. For right or wrong, when people think of Mt. Crested Butte, the first thought is the resort and base area. We already have excellent choices in lodging and transportation, and several very well-run restaurants at the base area, but after the lifts stop running in the late afternoon, the base area attendance quickly drops. An inviting and walkable base area is what people desire when they come to a ski resort complete with a variety of shops, day and night restaurants, bars that are open in the evening, perhaps a brewery, and attractions common in more developed ski towns, are all vital to the base area. Expanding on the existing great venues will attract more people to spend their off-slopes time in Mt. CB.

If you are not chosen, would you run in the next regularly scheduled council election?

Yes. I see that Mt. CB is at somewhat of a crossroads. We have not had a choice in town council members for many, many years! Suddenly we have four very qualified people vying for one potential seat. This tells me that the residents of Mt. CB are looking for a change in town leadership and are willing to step up to the challenge. I know a couple of the other people who are running in this election, and I believe Mt. CB will benefit from the contributions of any of these candidates. I and the current slate of candidates jumped into this race for a variety of reasons. I would continue with the same intentions I have now for the fall. I voted against Mt. CB’s last fall’s ballot question on term limits, as extending term limits doesn’t address the issue of why residents have not been running for town council. It is positive to see that this concern is past us given the number of contenders in this town council election.

One person, dead or alive, you would choose to ride up with on the Silver Queen, and why?

Hmmm, the Queen ride isn’t much time to talk with historical inventers or scientists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Nikola Tesla or Albert Einstein, but since we’d be on a chairlift for only 7 minutes, I’d like to talk with James Curran. James was a railroad engineer from Omaha, Nebraska and he invented the ski chairlift in 1936. I would be interested to know if he considered the fact that one of the best ways to cool an object (a person) is to hang it from a wire and blow cold air at it… !!!

BRUCE NATION

What are your ideas for getting more affordable housing in Mt. CB? 

There is currently a bill in the state legislature that is looking to tax STRs as commercial property if they are rented for more that 90 days a year. While I don’t think that bill is perfect, if enacted it would provide a lot of additional funds for affordable housing and reduce housing being bought up by speculators while still allowing for locals to rent their property for some extra income when they desire.

I would also want to promote more density where it makes sense. I think the Pitchfork development is a great model. It has a good mix of affordable housing and unrestricted housing, all in a relatively small footprint.  

What would be your approach to balancing goals that might conflict — such as promoting tourism and limiting environmental impacts, or balancing STRs with housing opportunities for locals?

I have two philosophies on balancing goals like these. The first is we need to make the easy way, the right way. The easier we make it for everyone to use public transport or walk or stay in a hotel the better. The second is to use tax policy to encourage the results we want to see rather than simply banning something we may not like. For instance, using STR taxes to pay for or incentivize affordable housing.

How can the town help bring back more vibrancy to the Base Area?

I would talk to the local business owners in the base area to try and find what support they need to stay open later. Many of the restaurants and shops are closing at 5 p.m. and not leaving much for people to do while there. I’m very encouraged by A Bar Above being open late seven nights a week with live music. How can we replicate their success with the rest of the mountain?

I’d also like to see some kind of food truck\cart access at the base area. We used to have a waffle cart, what happened to it?

If you are not chosen, would you run in the next regularly scheduled council election?

Absolutely. My original plan was always to run in November.

One person, dead or alive, you would choose to ride up with on the Silver Queen, and why?

Jesus. I’m not a religious man, but I still have a lot of questions. If he can walk on water, he probably shreds on snow.

Mt. Crested Butte celebrates its golden anniversary

It all began with the ski area and an elevator…

By Kendra Walker

The new year marks a momentous milestone for the town of Mt. Crested Butte: its 50th anniversary of incorporation. From its humble beginnings as an unknown ski resort surrounded by nothing but ranchland and national forest, this town at 9,375 feet has evolved and grown over the past five decades. Even so, Mt. Crested Butte continues to draw a tight-knit community with the same spirit and resilience that first shaped its beginnings at the base of Crested Butte Mountain. 

This year, the town of Mt. Crested Butte will host several anniversary celebrations to commemorate 50 years as a town, including a series of history talks at the Elevation Hotel. The next anniversary talk takes place this Monday, January 8.

History of incorporation

Just 89 residents lived within the proposed boundary of Mt. Crested Butte in 1973 before incorporation. The ski area was established back in 1961 when Dick Eflin and Fred Rice purchased 600 acres on Crested Butte Mountain and obtained forest service permits for ski trails. Over the next 12 years, the ski area added lodges, ski lifts, condos and homes.

“The ski area opened the same year I was born. We were both born the summer of ’61,” says Andy Eflin. “My dad used to show the original photos of the base area and tell people, ‘Here’s the valley before I screwed it all up.’” 

Jokes aside, Andy feels the ski area opened the doors for people who probably wouldn’t have found this place otherwise. “Crested Butte was not really on the map back in those days. There wasn’t a whole lot going on in Crested Butte and there wasn’t a very viable means to support yourself, so I feel the resort brought an industry to the valley that was a little more sustainable and certainly a fun industry that gets people outdoors.”

Andy remembers the early years of the ski area—the original warming house building, the T-bar lift and rope tow, the old Italian gondola, the skating pond and his grandmother’s gift shop at the base area. 

Then in 1970, Howard “Bo” Callaway and his brother-in-law Ralph Walton acquired the ski area. “I was 6 years old when my father and uncle bought the ski area and we moved here,” says Scout Walton, who remembers living in the Whetstone building and getting let out of school early on Fridays to go ski. “My life was ski racing and climbing mountains and doing those things with friends.”

To continue building out the base area, Ralph and Callaway formed the Crested Butte Development Company. “You couldn’t really bring a lot of people here because there weren’t a lot of places to stay,” says Scout. 

“One of the first keys was real estate sales,” says Scout. We had to earn our capital every year, which is why real estate has always been important. There were a lot of people working together with that shared interest. Back then it was all swashbuckling entrepreneurs, and it was very collegial amongst everybody. The ski area was so important to the community.”

Crested Butte Development Company brought new development projects that included the Whetstone, Axtel, Emmons and Gothic buildings, named after the peaks they face.

The seed for town incorporation was first planted with a proposed elevator for the three-story Gothic building. “People found that every time they wanted to build, they had to go all the way to Gunnison for permits and permissions,” explains Sandra Cortner, who started the Crested Butte Pilot newspaper and covered the town’s journey to incorporation in 1973 and 1974. “You had to drive to Gunnison for everything: laundry, grocery, doctor, bank, clothing. And law enforcement was tough because the police were 30 miles away.”

The proposed Gothic elevator would be the first in the area and the Gunnison County commissioners had never been asked to consider a building with an elevator before. “There was all this hullabaloo about the elevator and getting it approved,” says Cortner. ​​“Walton and the ski area general manager Gus Larkin knew there must be a better way to get their building plans approved. And so the ski area began petitioning for incorporation and getting people behind the idea. Walton was the one who suggested Mt. Crested Butte for the name.”

The majority of the residents saw the benefits of incorporation. It would help people living and building there to have control over zoning decisions and have a say in how the community was governed. It would also ensure that tax revenue from the ski area was collected strictly for town use instead of being dispersed throughout the county. “They wanted to control their own destiny,” says Cortner.

Although residents considered annexation into the town of Crested Butte, state law required that an annexed area be contiguous with the town annexing it. Two miles of privately owned land separates Crested Butte and the ski area, so annexation was not an option.

In September 1973, 40 qualified electors signed the petition proposing town incorporation. The petition was presented to the District Court judge, who then nominated five commissioners to set up an election regarding town incorporation. 

Then on November 6, 1973, electors voted 50 to 12 to incorporate. “Mt. CB was the first municipal incorporation in the state since 1920 and one of the first ski resorts to incorporate,” says Cortner. Other ski areas like Snowmass and Vail have since followed Mt. Crested Butte’s lead. Just last spring, Keystone became Colorado’s newest town when residents voted for incorporation.

The beginning of 1974 marked Mt. Crested Butte’s official incorporation when “they had to figure out how to be a fully functioning town,” says Cortner. “They had to do all these things you don’t think about: elect a council and a mayor and then hire a marshal, figure out how to tax people, set a budget, figure out snowplowing and road maintenance, name streets, set zoning and building inspections, create ordinances and codes. The people who owned the lodges and businesses really worked together after incorporation to try to make it go smoothly.”

On January 8, 1974, citizens established the first town council and elected Gus Larkin as the first Mt. Crested Butte mayor. The council approved a 4% sales tax in April 1974, passed the town’s first budget of $17,800 in August and hired town manager Jim Dean in 1975. The town held its first town picnic in the summer of 1975.

Celebrating 50 years

Today, the town’s original population of 89 residents has grown to nearly 1,000 people. People visit Mt. Crested Butte year-round to ski, mountain bike, hike, search for wildflowers, peep at the changing aspen colors and enjoy the breathtaking views of the surrounding mountains.

“I think it’s really amazing that this town and the ski resort were formed by just a few individuals with an idea. It was their passion to make sure this town was able to grow,” says Mt. Crested Butte events coordinator Rebecca Gagne. “And it’s only been 50 years, it wasn’t that long ago. It’s cool to know these things are still happening.”

As part of its 50th anniversary celebrations, the town is hosting a history talk on January 8 at 6 p.m. at the Elevation Hotel to commemorate the original date of the first mayor and council election. Andy will present a slideshow of historic photos compiled by his father and ski resort founder Dick Eflin. Additionally, Scout will discuss the movement of Mt. Crested Butte’s incorporation and his father’s involvement, and Ethan Mueller will share the Mueller family’s movement to purchase Crested Butte Mountain Resort in 2004. The Crested Butte Museum will also host a pop-up museum featuring pre-1974 Mt. Crested Butte artifacts and photos.

A final history talk will take place on February 12 at the Elevation, featuring a panel of current and former mayors, council members and managers of Mt. Crested Butte. Gagne said the town is working on finalizing additional anniversary celebrations for the rest of the year.

“I’m hoping these celebrations bring a new awareness that we are our town,” says Gagne. “There’s often a misconception that we’re one town with Crested Butte down the hill, and Mt. Crested Butte is not defined as its own town well enough. This is an exciting way to get out to the community itself and also the general public that visits.”

Back in November, the town held a kick-off anniversary talk to commemorate the vote for town incorporation, and Gagne says she was impressed with the community turnout. “I polled the audience how long they’ve lived here. I asked them to raise their hands if they’d lived in the town 10+ years, then 20 or more, then 30 or more,” says Gagne. “When I hit 50, there were still eight hands in the air. People find this is their home and stay. And they were so proud.”

Current mayor, Nicholas Kempin, has lived in Mt. Crested Butte for 23 years.

He says there are so many things that make this place special, “but something I’m in touch with every day is the natural beauty of this place. It is the common thread for our community and a primary reason for being here,” he says. “The place, the people, and the Mt. CB lifestyle have had a profound positive effect on me. It is an honor and pleasure to work on behalf of a place I love.”

Scout acknowledges that a lot has changed in Mt. Crested Butte over the years, but “I like to focus on the things that are not different. I see all the things that drew my mom and dad here to saddle up on a new venture. That’s why my family has moved back to the valley, and it’s hard to imagine anything different.”

“Although we have seen a lot of growth and development here, we still can get away from it all really quickly,” reflects Andy. “This is a desired place because it’s so beautiful. It’s a wonderful way of life.”

Kempin too hopes the celebrations this year help residents and visitors learn the value of the community and gain the motivation to keep it going. As for what he hopes for Mt. CB in another 50 years? “Frequent powder days.”

Special thanks to Sandra Cortner for sharing her knowledge of the town of Mt. Crested Butte’s incorporation. The historical facts gathered for this article came from Cortner’s copyright writings in the Crested Butte Pilot, Crested Butte Magazine, Crested Butte…Love at First Sight and Crested Butte Stories…Through My Lens.