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PROFILE: Pete Basile

by Dawne Belloise

You don’t have to pay the dues to appreciate the blues, but Basile gets it. The Jersey boy holds the blues and the artists who create the music in high regard and he has an innate understanding of the genre.

As a long time KBUT DJ, Pete says he sometimes wonders himself why he chose blues, and solely blues, for his radio program, Luigi’s Blues Review, now seven years running (Friday mornings, 8 to 10).

“I’m a white kid from New Jersey,” he laughs. “Do I really feel the difficulties and angst of life like they do? How hard do I have it? I think maybe it’s more that you can really feel the angst and hardship of people who write and sing blues. If you’re listening to more popular music, the emotion doesn’t necessarily come through like it does in the blues,” he says. “I’ve always been blues-based in music, which most (modern) music is derived from.”

Pete’s very first radio program in 1989 was called Asleep at the Wheel, named so because it was an early bird 6 a.m. show and ran for four hours. It leaned more toward classic rock and blues, but Pete felt there was a need for a strictly blues show.

From all the positive responses people give him about the show, it’s apparent he was on to something everyone wanted.

You would think that after two and a half decades, most people would know the real Luigi’s identity but, Pete smiles, “To this day, people are still finding out that I’m Luigi. The name started off as a radio show I had at the time called Luigi’s Lunchbox,” yet another incarnation of his show whose name he had inadvertently tagged. Later he discovered “Luigi’s lunchbox” was also a Mafia code word for a case in which to carry a concealed weapon (like a machine gun in a violin case), back in the days when Italian crime families ruled the cities.

Luigi’s been doing his radio show since he first rolled into town, back when the KBUT studio was in the old bus garage. “I got into radio because it sounded like fun. I think I named the show and then came up with the Luigi voice. I never really had a heavy New Jersey accent,” Pete says in his native New Jersey accent. “When I first started doing the show, I’d do the introduction in that accent and then fall back into my voice but people encouraged me.”

Although he does have that East Coast Jersey accent, his on-air accent is most definitely heavily affected. Pete claims that he was never a performer, although he grew up playing piano and specifically loved ragtime, and he’s most definitely not an extrovert, so both the accent and the fact that it’s a radio show where he can’t be seen enhance his anonymity, because he’s basically a really shy guy.

“DJing is one of the highlights of my week. If I could translate that into making a living that would be cool,” Pete says, but he’s also thrilled to be part of the well-loved team of volunteer deejays of KBUT.

photo by Lydia Stern
photo by Lydia Stern

Pete arrived in Crested Butte by way of his college friends, who, he says, “were talking a big game about skiing, moving to a ski town, but then everyone bailed except one guy, and he wanted to move to Tahoe.”

Having visited a high school friend who was living in Breckenridge and who later moved to Crested Butte, Pete knew he was destined to live in Colorado. He grew up skiing Vermont’s Mad River Glen. “Mad River had the same feel as Crested Butte as far as narrow trails through trees, wildness, and certain areas you could hike to that were not known to everybody and not on the trail maps. I had just graduated from Boston College with a degree in philosophy. I was packed and ready to move to a ski town.”

Pete chose wisely and headed to Crested Butte. “I got into town at 8 p.m. Halloween night, just as it was beginning to happen. A band was playing at The Eldo and I didn’t have a costume and it was go time. I ended up being “and” in a cardboard canoe between Lewis “and” Clark. That night convinced me and I said to myself, I’m gonna like it here.”

It’s been 25 years since that Halloween night. “I didn’t think I’d be here that long,” Pete says with raised eyebrows and a wide grin.

 

“I realized when I turned 44 that I’d been here half my life!”

Pete’s done the usual shuffle of employment in town and at one time owned and operated The Eldo, from 1996 to 2001, with his partner Ted Bosler.

But to backtrack a bit, Pete originally hailed from Whippany, N.J., a suburban community. As the oldest of four boys, his father was a New York City stock trader and the only white-collar guy in his immigrant Italian family. Pete’s mom was a stay-at-home Irish mother. As a kid, Pete played little league baseball and soccer in junior high. His first job was in a bike shop, Whippany Cycle. “It was all BMX in those days. I was into bikes, not competitively—I built jumps. It was when I was working there that I bought my first mountain bike,” which gave him the love of mountain biking that he enjoys today, although these summer nights and days, he works as much as everybody else in town during the busy season so he hasn’t had much time for biking.

He does make time for his softball team, The Winehouse Monkeys. Most nights, you can find Pete tending bar at The Secret Stash.

As a blues hound of sorts, Pete tries to see as much live music as he can but admits, “It’s hard to give up four days of work and spend close to $800 for a weekend of getting out of town. You’re missing work and spending much money,” but he adds that he recently went to see Greg Allman at the Belly Up in Aspen. “That was sweet. The band was good, it was awesome.” He also went to the Tedeschi-Trucks Band show in Snowmass this summer. “Trucks is one of my all-time favorites, along with Eric Clapton,” Pete says.

He’s surprisingly good with the written word, even though he proclaims that he’s not much of a talker. Grammatical errors and the frequency with which they’re made, especially in the press, are justifiably annoying to him, so much so that he was recruited to help proofread local artist Lian Canty’s Alphabet Menagerie book, and he penned three of the poems for it (available at Townie Books on Elk Avenue).

“When pushed, I can write. It’s always been something that interested me but it became an assignment,” he says of his first contribution to a published book. “I really didn’t like school that much and writing has always felt like an assignment,” he confesses, but in actuality, he writes quite well. “I might actually enjoy it, if I put my mind to it,” he says, but adds somewhat jokingly that he doesn’t think he has the attention span to sit down and focus enough to actually do it. “In the future, I can see myself writing, maybe contributing to different publications or even the Crested Butte News… observations, essays, editorials,” and with his keen eye for grammar, he may just have a future in proofreading.

“I can also see myself doing Mark Twain sort of stuff. His sense of humor resonates with me. Short stories is what I have the attention span for,” he grins. He thinks he was tested for ADD at one time in school, and being a bartender probably isn’t helping.

“In the future, I don’t know how I see myself, that’s the whole problem,” he laughs of his general philosophy so far of floating through life. Pete seems to be enjoying it to the max. He’s pretty proud of his contribution to Lian’s book. “It made me realize that I can do it but I need someone to prod it out of me.”

He’s still an avid skier, and that was the main reason he moved out here, but he knows now that’s secondary to just being here, in a community. “Just the kind of people a place like this attracts. I enjoy being in the mountains and the climate’s great. It beats the heat, that’s for sure. The plan is to stay here the rest of my life. I’m just not sure how that’s gonna happen yet,” Pete says with a chuckle.

Busy weekend keeps everyone on their toes

Visitors, thieves, speeders and bears 

By Mark Reaman

It was not the busiest day of the year in Crested Butte (that goes to July 4), but it was perhaps the busiest weekend of the year in Crested Butte.

Thousands of visitors and second homeowners, along with hundreds of artists at the Crested Butte Arts Festival and bikers and support crews at the Big Mountain Enduro World Series event, made for some big crowds.

With crowds come ramifications. Crested Butte/Mt. Crested Butte Chamber of Commerce director Dave Ochs said overall, things came off pretty well, given that two major events were sharing the town.

“The feedback I’m getting for the Arts Festival is that it was a mixed bag,” he said. “Saturday took a hit after the tents closed up and people seemed to stay away from downtown. Once the tents close up, things can quiet down a bit on Elk Avenue. That didn’t help the restaurants or businesses. However, the Friday night opening brought people to Elk.

photo by Lydia Stern
photo by Lydia Stern

“The new signage among the art tents directing people to the brick-and-mortar businesses helped a lot and was appreciated, as was the longer layout that spread out the festival,” Ochs continued. “Certain retail shops said they killed it and others said it was miserable and the street closures shouldn’t happen. Despite the usual rain and weather, the event seemed to be a great success and further bolstered a large community, second homeowner, and returning visitor appreciation.”

In general, Ochs said a weekend like the last one is good to have for the valley. “Whether sales or business are up or down, events like the Arts Fest and BME/EWS are iconic and very in line with the culture and pulse of who we are and what we have to offer,” Ochs said. “The guests and visitors here for both events were those who favorably embrace what Crested Butte is all about. They are very welcome guests, and are indeed ‘return visitors’—this time of year, and in our other seasons.”

On the darker side, local law enforcement and safety crews were busy. Aside from dealing with the tragic death of a competitor on stage three of the Big Mountain Enduro (BME) event on Saturday (see story page 12), there were missing bikers, the return of the bears to town and lots of things being stolen.

“We had a lot going on this past weekend. There were lots of moving parts,” summarized Crested Butte assistant chief marshal Mike Reily.

“There were lots of people out and about and [that] usually means lots of activity for our officers,” concurred Mt. Crested Butte police department spokesperson Marjorie Trautman.

Crested Butte Fire Protection District EMS coordinator Mike Scott said given the numbers, the department was as busy as expected. “We are and were very busy this weekend with standard stuff but for a volunteer organization, it is very trying to the system,” he said.

Stealing is bad

Two expensive tents were stolen from the BME base camp in the field by the Center for the Arts. One was a huge 40-foot by 20-foot Oscar Blues tent worth between $8,000 and $10,000. The Crested Butte Mountain Resort tent worth about $5,000 was also taken. Both went missing in the wee hours of Saturday morning.

“Those were pretty complicated to take down. They were huge,” said Reily. “Somebody was pretty bold stealing them. I would guess they drove into the field and it wasn’t quiet. Those tents were big, heavy and ungainly. And they’re unique. We’ve been looking but no one has put them up nearby to stay dry.”

A vehicle was stolen from the north side of town early Monday morning as well. That incident was apparently instigated by the need for someone to get back home after 2 a.m. when public transportation was long finished. The car was found Monday morning in Mt. Crested Butte on Hunter Hill Road near a condo complex.

Up in Mt. Crested Butte, there was a burglary this weekend. Someone broke into a house on Gothic Road that was being renovated. Tools and other items were taken from the residence. “That sort of thing is very disappointing,” said Trautman.

Trautman said officers also responded to the report of a missing biker in the Horse Ranch Park area on Saturday night. That was after they had spent most of the day dealing with the race fatality. When officers got to the Horse Ranch Park scene, the biker emerged so the entire Search-and-Rescue team was not called out to action.

Bears finding food

The bears seem to be returning with a purpose. The big bear that was treed in Crested Butte two weeks ago for about 17 hours by Second and Elk returned to the same tree on the Saturday of Arts Festival weekend.

Given the numbers of people and the congestion in the center of town, officials decided to try to get the big fellah out of the tree. The Crested Butte Fire Protection District sent over a ladder truck. An official from Colorado Parks and Wildlife sprayed the bear with some pepper spray, which agitated the bruin. They then sprayed him with water, which pushed him out of the tree. He scrambled up the alley and went into another tree on Maroon Avenue.

“That is what we hoped for and expected,” said Reily. “That’s the natural instinct and their normal go-to reaction. They want to go up a tree. The tree on Maroon was off the beaten path and no one could really see him. He stayed put a while and then came down and we assume got out of town.”

Reily said the big bear has come into town frequently and there is a little bear that seems to be doing the same thing. “Both these guys are not being shy,” Reily explained. “They have broken into cars and buildings around town. The little one punched out the glass panels in a garage door this weekend and inadvertently hit the door opener. He went in and dragged out the garbage can to the lawn.”

Trautman dealt with a different type of bear encounter. Apparently a visitor who was camping in the Schofield Park area knew she had spilled some sort of mint liquid on her backpack so she placed the pack in a tree away from the camp while she slept. As expected, a bear was drawn to the pack but was more persistent than expected. It managed to break the tree branch and absconded with the pack. It has not been seen since. Inside the pack was the woman’s identification, so Trautman helped her with a replacement I.D. so she could fly back home.

Lots of traffic issues, but overall—not too bad

While Crested Butte officers were dealing with a disorderly bar patron at about 2 a.m. Sunday, someone saw the unattended marshal’s car in the post office parking lot. When the officers returned to the vehicle, they found that two of their tires had been slashed.

All of the cases are still under investigation.

Both Reily and Trautman said the bigger numbers resulted in more traffic issues. Mt. Crested Butte officers dealt with “a myriad of speeders on the highway and in town,” said Trautman.

“We had tons of parking complaints in town,” added Reily. “People were parking everywhere, including in front of driveways. They were also driving fast so we had a lot of people calling us about speeding and driving complaints.

“But really, overall, with all those people in town, it went pretty well,” Reily concluded. “There were times I looked down Elk and it was a wall of people between the tents. As for the race, having some tents by the Rainbow soccer field and some at the [Center for the Arts] seemed to spread out the impact. The weekend went pretty well. We were just very busy.”

“We are hearing it will all slow down in a few weeks when kids head back to school,” said Trautman. “Reduced numbers usually translates to reduced incidents. I think we’ll see that by mid-August.”

Benchtalk August 7, 2015

Mountain to Mountain author at Townie Books

Colorado author Shannon Galpin will read from her memoir, Mountain to Mountain, on Thursday, August 6 at 6 p.m. at Townie Books. Mountain to Mountain is the story of Galpin’s journey to war-torn Afghanistan to help the women of that nation and then discovering that she was the first woman to ride a mountain bike in the country. Shannon Galpin was National Geographic’s 2013 Adventurer of the Year and producer of the upcoming 2015 documentary film, Afghan Cycles. A portion of the proceeds from book sales will go towards supporting the Crested Butte Community School’s sister school in Afghanistan. Townie Books is located at 414 Elk Ave and can be reached at 349-7545.

Museum Summer Speaker Series starts Thursday

On Thursday, August 6 the museum will welcome Carol Patterson as the featured speaker for the first Summer Speaker Series. Carol will speak about Ute Elder Clifford Duncan, who passed away this year. This event starts at 7:30 p.m. Patterson is a cultural resource manager, archaeologist and tribal consultant with Urraca Archaeological Services in Montrose. She has taught cultural anthropology and archaeology at Mesa State University in Montrose and Grand Junction and Metropolitan State University in Denver.

Get bonded at a summer soiree

An English Summer Soiree featuring Gilbert & Sullivan’s Trial By Jury will be performed on Tuesday, August 11 with two performances, at 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. at the Union Congregational Church located at Maroon Ave. and Fourth Street in Crested Butte. A High Tea reception will be served between the two performances to all audience members. Co-producers Emily and Elizabeth Bond invite Gunnison County residents and visitors to this family-friendly, comical and entertaining event that will feature actor Adam Bond who was recently featured in the title role of CNN’s Finding Jesus.

First Friday Art Walk: Live Music with Kipori Woods in Gunnison

Kipori Woods, or “Baby Wolf” as he is known, will entertain at the Gunnison Arts Center during the First Friday Art Walk on Friday, August 7. He is an award-winning blues, funk and jazz solo artist from New Orleans who puts on an electric and energetic show. This amazing singer and musician has shared the stage with greats such as the Neville Brothers, Kermit Ruffins and has honed his skills from his grandfather, the great Big Easy bass player “Luscious” Lloyd Lambert. Be sure to stop by the Arts Center during the Art Walk to check out brand new exhibits and listen to some incredible unique music.

8×10 Play Festival at the GAC

Are you an aspiring playwright? The Gunnison Arts Center is accepting 10-minute play submissions up until August 8. Entries will be reviewed by the GAC’s theatre council and eight finalists will get the opportunity to produce their play and see it come to life on stage at the 8×10 Play Festival. Visit the GAC’s website under the events and theatre tab for rules, performance information and how to enter your play. A money prize will be awarded to the first-, second- and third-place winners and will be announced the week following the festival. Play submissions are due on August 8.

Birthdays:

August 6- Jeremiah Robinson, Marlene Stajduhar

August 7- Scott Meyers, Kelly Ward, Mara McLaughlin

August 8- Beth Gallagher, Martha Walton, Gail Buford, Ruth Romer, Heather Talbot, Alexis Miller, John Wickett, Judy Williams

August 9- Sky Houseman, Scott Millard, Happy Brown

August 10- Chris Gaither, Bruce Alpern

August 11- Amy Williams, Kathleen Ross, Steve Cook

August 12- Linda Priest, Mert Theaker, Jewel Millard, Spencer Madison

soccer_august72015

ONE WEEK, ONE PASSION:  Challenger Sports brought their new soccer camp, One Week, One Passion, to Crested Butte, providing high level training for the local soccer kids. Julian Arthur and Nathan Sawyer did agility-training drills on Monday.  photo by Lydia Stern

artopening_august72015

SUMMER SCENES:  An artist reception for Kathryn “Taffy” Barry was held at the Piper Gallery on Thursday, July 30.  photo by Lydia Stern

publicpolicy_august72015

POLIC POLICY FORUM:  Former US Senator from Colorado, Mark Udall, spoke about “Global Terrorism; Insights Gained in Four Years on the Senate Intelligence Committee” for the Public Policy Forum at the Center for the Arts on Wednesday, July 29photo by Lydia Stern

 

Wameo Question:
What is your next adventure on the list?

 

Annie_Sixby_august72015

Go to South America and travel on a mule down to Patagonia

Annie Sixby

Erin__august72015

Going to Montana for the
off-season.

Erin Dickie & Badu

Tyler_King_august72015

A baby on the way.

Tyler King

Cameo_Paige_august72015

Walking from the top of the Queen to the top of the Lady.

Paige Stephens

John_Best_august72015

Going back to school.

John Best

Tragedy cuts short Big Mountain Enduro

“Just sad, really”

by Than Acuff

The energy was off the Richter scale leading up to the Big Mountain Enduro (BME) races hitting the trails around Crested Butte Friday through Sunday, July 31 to August 2. Not only were the top riders from the BME circuit in town, but the event was also part of the Enduro World Series, drawing the top mountain bike enduro racers from the world to Crested Butte.

Organizers had three incredible days of racing planned for the more than 300 riders in attendance, opening on Friday, July 31 with stages on Roaring Judy and Doctors Park. Saturday’s plan was to have athletes ride Trail 400 from Star Pass and then head up Block and Tackle and along Double Top before dropping onto Waterfall Creek.

The enduro was set to wrap up on Sunday with a stage set for Trail 403, two stages in the Evolution Bike Park and then the finish with a stage on Upper Loop and Tony’s Trail. Overall, riders would be covering 13,500 feet of climbing and 17,700 feet of descending over the three days, averaging 23 miles of riding per day.

“We were all super psyched on the planned stages and the courses were perfect for world-class enduro racing,” says BME Executive Director Brandon Ontiveros.

photo by Matt Wragg
photo by Matt Wragg

“I think it was really rad what they came up with,” adds Team Griggs Orthopedics rider Evan Ross.

And with the help of Mother Nature, the trails were set up for riding fast and hard.

“It was as good as it can be,” says Ross. “It’s been a nice, wet summer, dried up for the races, it was perfect really.”

Once the stages were announced, riders had Thursday to get practice rides in on some of the venues and people were charging.

“People were having such a blast,” says Ross. “It was cool to ride a trail and then see how other people ride it.”

Friday saw athletes crushing Roaring Judy and Doctors Park, laying down amazing times from the pro class down through the amateurs. The fastest time on Doctors Park came in at 14:28:03 and the fastest time laid down on Roaring Judy was 10:53:73.

While Ross won both stages to finish the day on top of the standings in his class, Dylan Stucki had the fastest local time on Doctors Park, cracking the 16-minute mark.

“Day one was successful and most riders were jazzed on the first two stages,” says Ontiveros. “Everyone was eagerly awaiting the next big day starting up on Star Pass.”

Saturday proved to be more of the same with riders ramping up for a climb up to Star Pass before dropping down Trail 400 and then heading up to Double Top to ride down Waterfall Creek.

As organizers started working through the start list, Brick Oven rider and Alpineer bike mechanic Bartolomej Stuchlik had posted the second best time on that stage among the first round of pro class riders, and Ross had the second-fastest time down 400 in his class finding the trails, once again, in great shape.

“Conditions were really good,” says Ross.

“Energy and stoke level was high,” says Ontiveros. “I was racing with Will (Olson) and dropped a few riders before him. Everyone up at the top of Star Pass was mesmerized and even Will was in good spirits; not only with the views but with the great course/stage we had ahead of us that day.”

Then tragedy struck as Will Olson, an accomplished enduro racer, crashed on his ride down Trail 400 and died from injuries sustained in the crash. Olson, from Edwards, Colo. won the Aspen/Snowmass BME event earlier this season, was sitting in third place in the overall BME points series and was in ninth place in the men’s veteran expert 30+ class heading into Saturday’s stages.

The fatality rattled racers and organizers and after a meeting that day, the event was cancelled and a group memorial ride on Sunday on the Lupine Trail was planned instead. Riders came out in droves for the group memorial ride Sunday.

The BME circuit will continue with its final race of the series September 4-5 in Winter Park. The Enduro World Series heads to Whistler for the next stop of the World Tour this weekend.

“Will was one of the best riders in Colorado, has won BME races before and was favored to win his category at the EWS stop in CB, until the fatal accident occurred,” says Ontiveros. “He was very skilled, respected by the bike community and was always a helpful and positive soul at our events.”

“It was kind of a funky ending,” adds Ross. “Just sad, really.”

As for a return to Crested Butte next year, Ontiveros says that will take some insight and continued communication among all parties involved.

“Not sure, still a lot to think about and discuss internally and with our local partners here in CB,” says Ontiveros.

Follow up: scratching the backcountry rash

A few quick notes or updates following last week’s backcountry rash editorial:

—We received an email Tuesday morning from Gunnison County public works director Marlene Crosby. She said county workers would be heading up to see if they could help with the Gothic Road bog situation. “We continue to receive lots of calls about the bog hole above the Town of Gothic. Even though it is a Forest Service Road and they are responsible for the repair/rebuild of that section of road I am sending a backhoe and multiple truckloads of material to the site today to try to stabilize it and dry it out enough that it is passable. I’m not sure how long the repair will last, but felt it is important to provide service to our residents and visitors.”

Thank you so much, Marlene. I think everyone appreciates that sort of attitude to step up and help even when a problem doesn’t fall into “your” box of responsibility. Hopefully that effort will work.

—The Coal Creek Watershed Coalition is addressing the uncomfortable issue of human waste in the backcountry. See Sarah Coleman’s letter on page 6. The one toilet the group placed up the Slate River is filling to the brim every week and provides an indication of how much poop is being produced up there. It’s a lot. Don’t drink the water. Sarah has a way you can help keep it a little more pristine up there.

—I can say I took a few good bike rides this past week and made the extra effort to greet everyone on the trails. And there were plenty of people, many of them travelling in family packs. Pretty much everyone was very nice and friendly—with the exception of a new “local” couple that ignored my greeting to have a great day with stone faces. Oh well. What can you do? Have compassion, I guess.

—Up at RMBL, a pickup drove by several “No Trespassing” signs on private property last week and the occupants went for a hike. RMBL could have had the truck towed. They didn’t. According to the Mt. Crested Butte Police Department, “If someone is trespassing on private property, the property owner has the right to request that a summons be issued or not. [RMBL director] Ian Billick was the reporting party in this case. Ian was advised by the officer that, due to the parking on private property, it was his right to have the vehicle towed. He chose not to do this, but requested that charges be pressed once contact was made with the vehicle’s owner.” That happened and the driver was issued a summons for trespassing. Had Ian’s patience run out, it could have made that driver’s day a lot worse.

—It may be hard to fathom this weekend, when top-flight artists and premier mountain bike teams are in town, but the pedal will come off the metal pretty soon. It will slow down. Schools start up in Texas and Oklahoma and Denver in a few weeks. There will be an outflow of numbers from the backcountry and the valley. There will be opportunity to take a breath. Hang in there and enjoy what looks like a potential stretch of sunshine (with some regular afternoon monsoons). It all will be back to normal.

—Mark Reaman

Zach Guy wins Breckenridge 100, Bryan Dillon takes 68-mile title last weekend

“I was by myself and hurting worse than ever before”

by Than Acuff 

Team Griggs Orthopedics (Team gO) was in effect in Breckenridge last weekend as Team gO riders Zach Guy and Bryan Dillon both stood on top of the podium by day’s end.

Guy continues to lead the way on all mountain bike races long and hard, winning the Bailey Hundo title back in June, and after some R-n-R in Italy, returned to race mode last weekend to win the Breckenridge 100.

It was Guy’s second take at the Breckenridge 100. He first jumped into the Breck 100 fray back in 2011 finishing 11th overall. The second time around, Guy slashed close to an hour off his previous time to complete the 100-mile long race in a time of eight hours, 39 minutes and two seconds.

photo by Kaitlyn Archambault
photo by Kaitlyn Archambault

Despite his recent spate of success this summer, Guy held his expectations in check.

“The first time I was just hoping to get through it and maybe finish top 10,” says Guy. “This one I still didn’t have expectations, I thought top five would be great.”

The course is laid out in three loops, all starting and finishing in the town of Breckenridge and crossing the Continental Divide three times. The first loop opens with a climb up over Wheeler Pass, reaching an altitude of 12,408 feet. While Guy was in the mix up front with five other riders, he knew the course turns into a somewhat technical singletrack descent off of Wheeler Pass and made his first move as they approached the top of the climb.

“I knew I wanted to be in front for the downhill,” says Guy. “I think I gained about 15 seconds or more on the technical section to the top.”

Guy proceeded to bomb down and build a nearly four-minute lead as he headed out onto loop two. Feeling good but aware of the chase pack lurking somewhere behind him, Guy switched gears in an effort to prevent a catastrophic meltdown.

“I was just thinking about conserving energy, don’t blow up and if they catch me, I will be able to stay with them,” explains Guy.

Guy maintained his gap through the second loop, though he still had no idea how far ahead he was heading out onto loop three. While climbing up to get over Boreas Pass on a road similar to Walrod Gulch in Cement Creek, Guy cratered and came close to losing it all.

“That’s when I hit a wall mentally and physically,” says Guy. “I just wanted to get off my bike and sit down. I was by myself and hurting worse than ever before.”

Guy kept pushing though, hoping to make a recovery once over the top and back on a singletrack descent.

“I figured if I made it to the top of the pass, I could recover on the downhill and once I’m on a trail, I’m happy again,” says Guy.

Following the descent, the course turns back up to head over Boreas Pass once more and it was on the final climb that Guy saw his competition closing in. As he headed up Boreas Pass into a slight headwind, he caught a glimpse of two riders about two minutes back and started sweating it.

“I thought if they started working together, they could catch me,” says Guy.

In one last act, Guy stomped on the throttle on the final section of the climb to the top of Boreas Pass to seal the win.

“I got a burst of last-minute energy and put in a hard kick,” says Guy. “I was hammering at that point and knew that once I got on the downhill, they wouldn’t catch me.”

He finished three-and-a-half minutes ahead of his closest competitors for his second 100-mile race win of the season.

Meanwhile, Dillon spent the morning racing to his third Beck 68 title in a row and second race win in a row this season.

Dillon dominated the competition two weeks ago in the Fat Tire 40 and carried his momentum into the Breck 68. Dillon battled with seasoned pro racer Kelly Magelky through the first loop of the race and the two headed out on the second and final loop neck-and-neck before Dillon put a gap on Magelky to win the race by five minutes.

Guy heads over to Aspen next weekend for the Power of Four race and then returns to the pain cave when he heads to Leadville for the prestigious Leadville 100 on August 15.

Benchtalk July 17, 2015

Blood drive in Mt. Crested Butte 

A Mt. Crested Butte blood drive will be Monday, July 20 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Lodge at Mountaineer Square ballroom. All donors will receive a free t-shirt. To schedule an appointment, contact the Bonfils appointment center at 1-800-365-0006, ext 2. Or sign up online at www.bonfils.org and enter site code #A255.

Outside editor to read from new book at Townie Books

Bestselling author, historian, and Outside magazine editor Hampton Sides will read and sign his new book, In the Kingdom of Ice: The Grand and Terrible Polar Voyage of the USS Jeannette, on Friday July 24 at 6 p.m. at Townie Books. Sides is the author of seven bestselling books. In the Kingdom of Ice is the unbelievable true story of the doomed 1879 voyage of the USS Jeannette and its crew, trapped on the arctic ice for two years while attempting to find a passage through the Bering Strait to geographic North Pole and its fabled open polar sea, a supposed warm, shallow, open sea that could easily be sailed. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, contact Townie Books at 349-7545.

Readers in the Rockies author at the library 

Each summer the Crested Butte Friends of the Library sponsors Readers in the Rockies at the Old Rock Library. Readers in the Rockies brings Colorado authors to speak about their latest works, both fiction and nonfiction. On Wednesday, July 22 at 7 p.m. Benjamin Whitmer, author of Cry Father, will appear at the library as part of Readers in the Rockies. Whitmer’s novel was a finalist for the Colorado Book Award in 2015. Cry Father is a darkly comic novel with “deft descriptions of biker bars, greasy spoons, mean streets” and what it means to live on the sharp-edged drug world in and around Denver and Alamosa.

Elizabeth Overholser Artist Reception Thursday

Artist Elizabeth Overholser presents “Wildflowers from the Mountain Side” at the Center for the Arts. Columbines, glacier lilies, paintbrushes, lupine and so much more are part of her work. Elizabeth’s quilted art interpretations are of wildflowers found in the Crested Butte area during the summer months. Based on annual visits to the Upper East River Valley since 1974, Elizabeth produces functional art for people to enjoy. In addition to wall hangings, she makes items such as quilts and potholders, hoping her creations will be useful as well as make people feel good. An opening will be held at the Piper Gallery Thursday, July 16 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Her show runs to July 20.

Public Policy Forum on the bomb

“Why We Dropped the Bomb, and Who May Be Next?” is the title of the July 22 Crested Butte Public Policy Forum talk. It will take place at the Crested Butte Community School at 7:30 p.m. and admission is free. The speaker is William Lanouette, the author of Genius in the Shadows: A Biography of Leo Szilard, the Man Behind the Bomb.

Monthly film, Alive Inside is this Thursday, July 16 at Oh Be Joyful Church  

Winner of the 2014 Audience Choice Award at the Sundance Film Festival, this stirring documentary follows social worker Dan Cohen as he fights against a broken healthcare system to demonstrate music’s ability to combat memory loss in Alzheimer’s patients and restore a deep sense of self to those suffering from it. Alive Inside chronicles the astonishing experiences of individuals around the country who have been revitalized through the simple experience of listening to music and reveals the uniquely human connection and healing power we find in music. Please note this film plays at the Oh Be Joyful Church, 625 Maroon Avenue in Crested Butte.

Birthdays

July 16– Jake Sunter, Elias Friedman, Ron Copenhauer, Al Leonetti, Tuck, Eli Lambro

July 17– Katey Brandenberger, Lochlan Fletcher, Kristi Miller

July 18– Eric Beck, OB Oberling, Melissa Leftwich, Emma McDuff

July 19– Lina Glick, Cis Berry

July 20– Jacob Bernholtz, Laura Freeman, Henry Cahir, David Villanueva

July 21– Tom Martin, Maila Olson, Lisa D’Arrigo, Leslie Locklear, Peace Wheeler, Ross Orton, Ashley Harrington

July 22– Lucy Zavala, Walker Carroll

chopwood_july172015

LIVE YOUR PASSION:  New business, Chopwood Mercantile owned by Lisa Cramton and Travis Underwood, brings the concept of a “public house” to outdoor retail. They are located on Elk Avenue between First and Second Streets.       photo by Lydia Stern

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WOODS WALK WEDDING: Vanessa Carmean and Mark Van Akkeren were married on June 20, 2015 at the Woods Walk. Their reception was held at the Club at Crested Butte. Congratulations!    photo by Alison White

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FLAMENCO:  Jessica Evans-Wall instructed a flamenco dance class at the Pump Room on Friday, July 10.       photo by Lydia Stern

 

If you were a wildflower, what would your name be?

 

Chris_july172015

Sun Seeker. Chris Rich

 

David_july172015

Tailings. David McKenney

Cesar_july172015

Awesome Blossom. Cesar Sanchez

Julia_july172015

Coral Buttons. Julia Van Raalte

Barbie_july172015

Udon Ilean. Barbie Adams

Community Calendar: Thursday, July 16 – Wednesday, July 23

THURSDAY 16
• 6-6:45 a.m. Meditation at Yoga for the Peaceful, by donation.
• 7 a.m. The Whatever Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 8 a.m. Ecumenical Meditation at UCC.
• 8:30 a.m. Women’s book discussion group at UCC.
• 8:30-9:30 a.m. Worship Service at Oh-Be-Joyful Church.
• 8:45-10 a.m. Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 9-10 a.m. Yoga Outside at Center For The Arts Outdoor Stage
• 9 a.m. Guided Walking Tour of Crested Butte with the Crested Butte Mountain Heritage Museum. Meet at museum. 349-1880.
• 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Gunnison County Branch Office is open at the Crested Butte Town Offices.
• 9:30 a.m. Painting Petals in Paradise with the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts with the Wildflower Festival. 349-2571.
• 10 a.m. Mothering Support Group at Oh Be Joyful Church. (Last Thursday of every month.)
• 10 a.m. Yoga for Everyone with Yoga for the Peaceful on the Center for the Arts Outdoor Stage. 349-7487.
• 10:15-11:15 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Lunch Time Yoga – All levels. Town Hall Fitness Room.
303-483-5935.
• noon All Saints in the Mountain Episcopal Church Community Healing Service at Queen of All Saints Catholic Church. 349-9371.
• noon CORE Stability. 970-901-4413.
• noon-1:15 p.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 12:30 p.m. ACBL Sanctioned Open Bridge Game. 349-5535.
• 4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage open, free clothing and bedding. 310 Belleview.
970-275-5285.
• 4:30-6 p.m. Crested Butte Community Food Bank open at Oh Be Joyful Church (First Thursday of every month.)
• 5:30 p.m. Communion Services at Queen of All Saints Catholic Church.
• 5:30-6:45 p.m. Slow Flow at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 5:30-6:45 p.m. Vinyasa Flow Yoga – All levels. Sunset Hall, CB South. 970-596-9826.
• 5:45 p.m. Werk It Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 6-8 p.m. Adult outdoor pick-up soccer in Town Park. 349-5338.
• 6:30 p.m. AA Open Meditation at UCC.
• 7 p.m. Women Supporting Women Group Discussion at the Nordic Inn.
• 7-9 p.m. Sunset Contemplative Photography in CB’s Back Alleyways with the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts. 349-7044.
• 7:30 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous meets at 114 N. Wisconsin St. in Gunnison.

FRIDAY 17
• 6:30 a.m. All Levels Yoga Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 7:30-8:30 a.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga For The Peaceful.
• 8:30 a.m. Alanon at UCC Parlour (in back). 349-6482.
• 8:30-9:30 a.m. Worship Service at Oh-Be-Joyful Church.
• 8:30-9:45 a.m. Vinyasa Flow Yoga – All levels. Town Hall Fitness Room. 303-483-5935.
• 8:45 a.m. Core Power Yoga Class at the Pump Room.
• 9 a.m. Juliette’s Balance Barre at Western Pilates Studio in Crested Butte. 596-1714.
• 9-10:30 a.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 9 a.m.-noon Open Wheel Throwing at the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts. 349-7044.
• 10-11:15 a.m. Kundalini Yoga – All levels. Town Hall Fitness Room. 970-275-2767.
• 10 a.m.- 3 p.m. Simply Sketching Wildflowers with the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts and the Wildflower Festival. 349-2571.
• 10:15-11:15 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• noon-1:15 p.m. Restorative Yoga at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• noon Closed AA at UCC.
• noon Metabolic Blast at CORE. 970-901-4413.
• 4:30-5:45 p.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 5-7 p.m. Wildflower Canvas & Cabernet with the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts and the Wildflower Festival. 349-2571.
• 5:30 p.m. Communion service at Queen of All Saints Catholic Church.
• 5:30-7:30 p.m. Pick-Up adult Karate, Fitness Room at Town Hall.
• 6-7 p.m. Poi Playshop at the Pump Room.
• 8-9:30 p.m. Partner Dance Night – Swing with the Dance Collective at the Pump Room, 349-7487.

SATURDAY 18
• 7:30 a.m. Open AA at UCC.
• 8 a.m. Indoor Biking Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 8:30-9:30 a.m. Worship Service at Oh-Be-Joyful Church.
• 8:45-10 a.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 9-10:30 a.m. Community Yoga at the Sanctuary Yoga & Pilates Studio, Gunnison.
• 9:15 a.m. All Levels Yoga Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 10:15-11:15 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 10:30 a.m. Hip Hop dance cardio class at the Pump Room. 415-225-5300.
• 10:30-11:45 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 1-5 p.m. Wild Pages – Floral Inspiration for Mixed Media Journaling with the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts and the Wildflower Festival. 349-2571.
• 5:30-7:30 p.m. Wildflower Canvas & Cabernet with the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts and the Wildflower Festival. 349-2571.

SUNDAY 19
• 7-8 a.m. Meditation at Yoga for the Peaceful, by donation.
• 8:30 a.m. Mass at Queen of All Saints Catholic Church.
• 8:30-9:30 a.m. Worship Service at Oh-Be-Joyful Church.
• 9 a.m. Worship Service at UCC Church.
• 9-10:15 a.m. Easy flow at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 9:30-11 a.m. Community Yoga – All levels. Town Hall Fitness Room. 303-483-5935.
• 10:15-11:15 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 5-6 p.m. All Saints in the Mountain Episcopal Eucharist at Queen of All Saints Catholic Church. 349-9371.
• 5-7 p.m. Pick-Up Adult Basketball. HS Gym, CBCS.
• 5:30-6:45 p.m. Restorative Yoga at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 6 p.m. AA meets at UCC.
• 6:30 p.m. Duplicate Bridge at UCC. Call 349-9296.
• 6:30-7:30 p.m. Guided Meditation – All levels. By donation. 308 3rd St., CB.
518-423-1414.
• 7 p.m. Gamblers Anonymous meets at the Last Resort.

MONDAY 20
• 6:30 a.m. Strength and Conditioning with Janae or Pip at CORE. 901-4413.
• 7 a.m. Boot Camp Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 7:30-8:30 a.m. Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 8:30-9:30 a.m. Worship Service at Oh-Be-Joyful Church.
• 8:45 a.m. Core Power Yoga Class at the Pump Room.
• 8:45 a.m. Pilates at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 9-10:15 a.m. Ashtanga Yoga – All levels. Town Hall Fitness Room. 970-275-2767.
• 9-10:30 a.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 9 a.m.-noon Volunteer at RMBL for Revegetation and Weeding. 349-1288.
• 10:15-11:15 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• noon-1 p.m. Yoga Therapeutics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 12:30 p.m. ACBL Sanctioned Open Bridge Game. 349-5535.
• 4-8 p.m. Soo Bahk Do classes for kids and adults. 349-7752.
• 5 p.m. Mothering Support Group at the GVH Education House, 300 East Denver St. (First Monday of every month.)
• 5:30 p.m. Communion Service at Queen of All Saints Catholic Church.
• 5:30 p.m. Yin/Yang Circuit with Ginny and Jess at CORE. 901-4413.
• 5:30-7 p.m. Moms in Motion class at the GVH rehab gym.
• 7:30 p.m. Open AA at UCC. 349-5711.
• 7:30 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous meets at 114 N. Wisconsin St. in Gunnison.

TUESDAY 21
• 7 a.m. The Whatever Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 7:30 a.m. AA/Alanon Open at UCC. 349-5711.
• 8:30-9:30 a.m. Worship Service at Oh-Be-Joyful Church.
• 8:45-10 a.m. Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 9 a.m. Guided Walking Tour of Crested Butte with the Crested Butte Mountain Heritage Museum. Meet at museum. 349-1880.
• 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Contemplative Photography: Rivers, Wetlands, and Water as Metaphor at the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts. 349-7044.
• 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Gunnison County branch office is open at the Crested Butte Town Offices, 507 Maroon Ave.
• 10:30-11:45 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 11 a.m. Art Heroes – National Park Service at the Old Rock Library
• 11:30 a.m. League of Women Voters meeting at 210 W. Spencer in Gunnison.
• 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Lunch Time Yoga – All levels. Town Hall Fitness Room. 303-483-5935.
• noon AA Closed at UCC.
• 2-4 p.m. Tech Tuesdays at Old Rock Library. 349-6535.
• 4-5:30 p.m. St. Mary’s Garage open, free clothing and bedding. 310 Belleview. 970-275-5285.
• 4-6 p.m. Canvases & Cocktails with the Art Studio at Bonez. 349-7044.
• 5:15 p.m. RedCord suspension class at Western Pilates Studio in Crested Butte. 596-1714.
• 5:30 p.m. Communion Service at Queen of All Saints Church.
• 5:30 p.m. Beading Night at Pema Dawa. 349-7563.
• 5:30-6:45 p.m. Easy Flow at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 5:30-6:45 p.m. Vinyasa Flow Yoga – All levels. CORE Fitness Studio above A Daily Dose. 303-483-5935.
• 5:45 p.m. All Levels Yoga Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 6-7 p.m. Community Connection Night at UCC Parlour.
• 6-7:15 p.m. Celebrate Recovery upstairs at Oh Be Joyful Church. 970-596-3846.
• 6-8 p.m. Adult outdoor pick-up soccer in Town Park. 349-5338.
• 7-8 p.m. Meditation at Yoga for the Peaceful, by donation.
• 7-8:30 p.m. Blessing Way Circle support group at Sopris Women’s Clinic. 720-217-3843.
• 7:30 p.m. RMBL’s Tuesday Talk Series at the RMBL Community Center in Gothic. 349-7231.
• 7-9 p.m. Pick-up adult Karate, Fitness Room at Town Hall.
• 7:45-9:45 p.m. Drop-In Adult Volleyball, CBCS MS Gym

WEDNESDAY 22
• 6:30 a.m. All Levels Yoga Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 7:30 a.m. Rotary meeting at the Grand Lodge.
• 7:30-8:30 a.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga For The Peaceful.
• 8 a.m. Circuit Cycling at the Gym. 349-2588.
• 8:30 a.m. High Country Conservation Advocates day hikes. Sign up at www.hccacb.org.
• 8:30-9:30 a.m. Worship Service at Oh-Be-Joyful Church.
• 8:45 a.m. Mat Mix at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 9-10:30 a.m. Prana Vinyasa at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Two Buttes Senior Citizens van transportation. Roundtrip to Gunnison. 275-4768.
• 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Plein Air Watercolor Workshop Series at the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts. 349-7044.
• 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Tempered Glass Mosaics for Middle School at the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts. 349-7044.
• 10:15-11:15 a.m. Yoga Basics at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• noon Closed AA at UCC.
• noon-1:15 p.m. Easy Flow at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 4-8 p.m. Soo Bahk Do classes for kids and adults. 349-7752.
• 4 p.m. Water Warriors – Coal Creek Watershed Coalition at the Old Rock Library.
• 5 p.m. Mass at Queen of All Saints Catholic Church.
• 5:30 p.m. Prenatal Yoga class in Crested Butte South. 349-1209.
• 5:30-7 p.m. Restorative Yin Yoga Nidra – All levels. Town Hall Fitness Room.
303-483-5935.
• 5:45 p.m. Boot Camp Class at The Gym. 349-2588.
• 6-7:45 p.m. Prana Vinyasa Yoga at Yoga for the Peaceful.
• 7-9 p.m. “GriefShare,” a grief recovery seminar and support group, meets at Mt. Calvary Lutheran Church, 711 N. Main St., Gunnison. 970-349-7769.

EVENTS & ENTERTAINMENT 

THURSDAY 16
• 9 a.m.-noon RMBL’s Summer Science Tour with Dr. Ross Conover – “How to Hatch an Egg.”
• 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Book singing by Sandra Cortner at Townie Books.
• 5 p.m. CB Film Fest “Dinner & A Movie” at Mountain Oven Organic Bakery. The movie Alive Inside plays at 7 p.m. at OBJ Church. 349-7487.
• 5-7 p.m. Peggy Morgan Stenmark Poster Signing/Art Reception at Rijk’s Family Gallery.
• 5:30-7:30 p.m. Elizabeth Overholser Artist Reception at the Piper Gallery of the Center for the Arts. 349-7487.
• 6 p.m. Townie Books presents David Gessner with his new book, All the Wild That Remains: Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, and the American West.
• 7 p.m. CBMF’s Crested Butte Opera Studio Gala with the Festival Symphony Orchestra at the Center for the Arts.
• 7 p.m. Author & speaker Bruce Eckel hosts a presentation & discussion on “Creating Trust Organizations,” at Rumors Coffee House.
• 7 p.m. Jim Sargent plays at the Princess Wine Bar.
• 6:30 p.m. Gunnison Ranchland Conservation Legacy’s 20th Anniversary Celebration featuring the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band at the I Bar Ranch. Music at 7:30 p.m.
• 7:30 p.m. Crested Butte Opera Studio Gala at the Center for the Arts.
• 10 p.m. Lost Network plays at the Eldo.
• 10 p.m. Karaoke upstairs in the Sky Bar at the Talk of the Town.

FRIDAY 17
• 9 a.m.-noon & 1-4 p.m. Help RMBL plant 1300 native seedlings. 349-1288.
• 4-7 p.m. Chuck Grossman plays on the patio at Butte 66.
• 4-8 p.m. Rosalind Cook & Michael Mahoney Artist Opening at the River Light Gallery.
• 4:30-8:30 p.m. KBUT’s 13th Annual Friday Night Fish Fry at Crank’s Plaza, 508 Maroon.
• 5:30 p.m. 3rd Annual Gunny Grass Bluegrass Festival at the I Bar Ranch.
• 7 p.m. Crested Butte Film Fest presents Alive Inside at the Gunnison Arts Center.
• 7 p.m. Chuck Grossman & Dawne Belloise play at the Princess Wine Bar.
• 10 p.m. Blackberry Bushes Stringband plays at the Eldo.

SATURDAY 18
• 9 a.m. The 32nd Annual Grin and Bear It Trail Run, starts at CBNC with a barbeque to follow.
• 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Stepping Stones hosts Fun Fest at the Town Park. 349-5288.
• 11 a.m. Six Points Barbecue & Fundraiser at 1160 N. Main St., Gunnison.
• 3 p.m. 3rd Annual Gunny Grass Bluegrass Festival on South Main St. in Gunnison in front of the GAC.
• 5 p.m. Annual Celebration Gala at the Big Mine Ice Arena.
• 7 p.m. Craig McLaughlin plays at the Princess Wine Bar.
• 10 p.m. Cranford Hollow plays at the Eldo.

SUNDAY 19
• 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Crested Butte Farmers Market on Elk Avenue.
• 11:30 a.m. Rachel VanSlyke plays at Coal Creek Grill.
• 3-7 p.m. Happy Hour Sundays with Chuck Grossman at the Eldo.
• 6-8 p.m. Sundays @ 6 featuring Mahogany Splinters at Legion Park in Gunnison.
• 7 p.m. Tyler Lucas plays at the Princess Wine Bar.

MONDAY 20
• 11 a.m. Opera Dress Rehearsal at the Center for the Arts.
• 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Bonfils Blood Drive hosted by Crested Butte Mtn. Resort at the Lodge at Mountaineer Square Ballroom. 800-365-0006, ext. 2.
• 5:30 p.m. Alpenglow: Roxy Roca on the Center for the Arts Outdoor Stage.
• 7 p.m. Jackson Melnick plays at the Princess Wine Bar.
• 8 p.m. Shannon Stichter hosts Open Mic Night at Pitas in Paradise.

TUESDAY 21
• 4-6 p.m. Canvases & Cocktails with the Art Studio at Bonez. 349-7044.
• 6 p.m. ArtTalk with Judith Cassel-Mamet at the Art Studio of the Center for the Arts. 349-7044.
• 6 p.m. Chuck Grossman and Dawne Belloise play at the Princess Wine Bar.
• 6:30 p.m. Mipso plays at the I Bar Ranch.

WEDNESDAY 22
• 5-7 p.m. Gunnison Crested Butte Regional Airport Open House in the main terminal of the Airport.
• 5:30-7:30 p.m. Live! from Mt. Crested Butte on the Red Lady Stage featuring Samantha Fish.
• 5:45 p.m. Pinnacle Race presented by Griggs Orthopedics at Evolution Bike Park. Register by 5:15 p.m.
• 6-9.m. Rachel VanSlyke plays at Montanya Distillers.
• 7 p.m. Opera Opening Night – Don Pasquale at the Center for the Arts. .
• 7 p.m. Benjamin Whitmer, author of Cry Father, at the Old Rock Library as part of Readers in the Rockies.
• 7 p.m. Renee Wright & Nichole Reycraft play at the Princess Wine Bar.
• 7:30 p.m. Little Shop of Horrors at the Mallardi Cabaret Theatre. 349-0366.
• 7:30 p.m. Pool Tournament upstairs at the Talk of the Town.
• 7:30 p.m. Public Policy Forum hosts William Lanouette, PhD on “Why We Dropped the Bomb and Who May Be Next” at CBCS.

KIDS CALENDAR

THURSDAY 16
• 3-8 p.m. Youth Gymnastics, Jerry’s Gym at Town Hall 349-5338.

FRIDAY 17
• 11 a.m. Storytime for ages 3 and up at the Old Rock Library.

SATURDAY 18
• 3 p.m. Storytime for preschoolers at Townie Books.
• 4 p.m. Storytime for kindergarten-third graders at Townie Books.

MONDAY 20
• 4 p.m. Soo Bahk Do classes for kids at Town Hall. 349-7752.
• 4:45 p.m. Soo Bahk Do classes for juniors at Town Hall. 349-7752

TUESDAY 21
• 3-8 p.m. Youth Gymnastics, Jerry’s Gym at Town Hall 349-5338.

WEDNESDAY 22
• 11 a.m. Baby/Toddler Storytime at the Old Rock Library.
• 4 p.m. Summer reading program for ages 8-12 at the Old Rock Library.
• 4-8 p.m. Soo Bahk Do classes for kids at Town Hall. 349-7752.

Profile: Dr. Duane Vandenbusche

by Dawne Belloise

In the far corner of Crested Butte’s oldest saloon, Dr. Duane Vandenbusche holds court over a gaggle of long-time regulars. Peppered among the normal banter about work, wives, and spectacular bike trails is the trivia that ranges from sports to local history and its celebrities, prepared especially for the Kochevar’s brood for the Friday end-of-week happy hour celebration.

photo by Lydia Stern
photo by Lydia Stern

The graying gang is particularly adept at calling out the correct answers to the broad smile of Dr. Vandenbusche. Some of them were once his students during his 53-year tenure as history professor at Western State College (WSC), now Western State Colorado University (WSCU). A prolific writer, Dr. Vandenbusche is fluent in so many eras and aspects of history, particularly of the Gunnison Country, he’s written ten books, with another on the way this winter.

Born in the Motor City (that would be Detroit), when he was a young child his dad built tanks in a defense plant during WWII in Milwaukee where, according to Dr. Vandenbusche, six men on his block alone died in that war.

“When you shipped out you never knew if you were going to make it back. In 1944 when my grandmother died, my dad took over the family dairy farm in the upper peninsula of Michigan in the town of St. Nicholas. It was a Belgian farming community where everyone’s name started with a ‘V,’” he says. His father emigrated from Antwerp, Belgium in 1920, with grandparents and siblings arriving the following year. His mother hailed from Wisconsin, the so-called cheese capital of the nation. With dairy farming in his genes, he remembers, “I milked cows every morning and evening until I went off to college at age 18.”

Vandenbusche recalls the rigor of Michigan farm life: “I took my showers in the Escanaba River which bordered our property and empties into Lake Michigan. We didn’t have any indoor plumbing and we heated the water on the old wood cook stove, using a big tin washtub for baths in the winter.”

Growing up, he played all the sports in high school—track, football, basketball and baseball. Because of all that variety he developed into a pretty good athlete, plus, “The only way you got anywhere was to walk or ride your bike.” He graduated fourth in his class but laughingly adds that there were only 12 in his entire graduating class of 1955.

“I loved growing up and being on the farm but I wasn’t very good at being a farmer,” Vandenbusche admits. “I wasn’t very mechanically minded.” In his farming community, he was only the second kid to go to college, attending Northern Michigan University on Lake Superior, where he spent “many a day studying by the river,” until he graduated in 1959 with a bachelor of arts degree in history.

Although he was a decent student, Vandenbusche claims he barely knew what grad school was and had set his goals for teaching high school until Oklahoma State University offered him a full scholarship to continue his education. He earned his master of arts degree and Ph.D. in history there.

With the baby boomer generation coming of age and the Korean War veterans returning, there was a tremendous demand for teachers in 1962. “We students who were finishing our degrees would get called out of the classroom for phone calls for jobs. I could have gone anywhere,” Vandenbusche says. When a friend turned down a job at WSC because the college wouldn’t hire his wife as well, Vandenbusche put his name into the applicant hat.

The WSC interview was conducted by an Oklahoma State University faculty member since Vandenbusche was still finishing up his dissertation there, and since he didn’t have a phone, Vandenbusche gave the WSC review board the number for the student union public phone booth so they could call with their decision. They chose well and sent him a contract in the mail that week.

Signed, sealed and delivered, he got into his 1965 two-tone Ford pick-up and cruised Highway 66 to Springfield, driving on to Colorado Springs and west. “As I went over Monarch I was doing 25 mph and hugging the far side of the road, away from the edge!” he says of his first trip over a real mountain pass. (Now he skis Crested Butte’s challenging back bowls and the vertical plunge of Red Lady Bowl and Cottonwood Pass, and still hikes long, high trails to Aspen).

When he got to Gunnison, he rented a room on South Main Street in Mrs. Georgia Andrews’ rooming house and started his career teaching history at WSC in the fall of 1962. He’s been there ever since and when classes resume in the fall, he’ll begin his 54th year. “I go year to year,” says the robust professor. “As long as I feel good, I’ll keep teaching.”

Vandenbusche tells the story of how, in 1971, colleague Ernie Degutis was the reluctant track coach. “They asked me to come out and hold a watch, to time the men’s track team. A couple of weeks later they asked me to come with them to a Greeley track meet to help, so I started going to the track meets. Ernie loved this because he had someone doing his job and he didn’t have to do it.”

Vandenbusche didn’t get paid for doing the coach’s job for the first few years but eventually Tracy Borah, who was (in Vandenbusche’s words) the crusty old athletic director, called him in and said, “Dammit Vandenbusche, you’re doing all the work. You are the coach.” And so it was that he became the official coach of the men’s cross country track and field.

It was a rough start for the program and Vandenbusche admits, “Our program was terribly bad at the time. We didn’t have an indoor track and the outdoor track was cinder. We were starting from the bottom up. But I was a relentless recruiter. By 1981, we had won our first Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship and we were on our way. I went to see Dr. Mellon, our college president, telling him that Title 9 has arrived, giving women equal opportunity with men in sports so we can be dragged into the 20th century kicking and screaming or we can establish a women’s cross country track program and look good.

“Dr. Mellon agreed but said we also needed a women’s alpine and Nordic program.” Vandenbusche recruited and organized both the ski and track women’s programs. “We hired a women’s coach and we were onward and upward in the women’s ski program. We were 13th in the nation our first year, seventh in the nation the second year, and from that time on we were fourth or better. Eventually the women won four national championships and the men won seven nationals.

“Also, we had four Olympic runners come out of the track and field team, three men and one woman.” He retired his coaching position 37 years later in 2007.

History is still Vandenbusche’s passion and people flock to his presentations. “I’ve always been interested in the past and how it might affect the present and future. I read every novel of Zane Gray. My favorite aspect of history is the West, some of the problems they had in the past are still the same problems they have today—water, use of public lands, environment and the fact that 35 percent of Colorado is owned by the federal government and 79 percent of the Gunnison country is owned by the federal government. It has a big impact in this area, like ranchers who are grazing on public lands, ski areas because permits are required and Blue Mesa and its three dams are federally owned. It has an impact because it’s responsible for recreation every year, so in terms of all this, the federal government has had a big impact on the West and the Gunnison country. Anytime anyone owns 79 percent of anything it has a big impact.”

With an early interest in the history of mining, railroads and ranching, Vandenbusche loaded up his Bronco with his fishing rod, sleeping bag, and food and visited practically everywhere in the wilderness. “I’d spend two or three nights camping and just walking out and exploring. I got to learn the backcountry, and I’d read all the Gunnison newspapers from 1880 to 1975.”

Growing up in an ethnic Belgian community where everyone spoke Flemish, and English with a heavy accent, Vandenbusche felt right at home when he first came to Crested Butte. “Most of the people came from the old country and were first-generation. They spoke a foreign language or with a clipped accent. It felt like home. The people were basically the same, my kind of people.” He remembers, “The greatest polka place in the world was Frank and Gal’s,” a local saloon long gone. “I learned to polka in the dance halls and wedding dances in upper Michigan and I spent a lot of time with the old timers here.”

He’s gathered the stories of the original Crested Butte mining families—Panion, Saya, Sedmak, Hidgson, McNeil, Gallowich, Sporcich, Mihelich, Starika. “Those were the days, my friend,” he smiles.

“I never plan to leave here. It’s the best place I’ve ever been. I ski all the good runs, the back bowls. Of course I still do the extremes, I just don’t jump off of cliffs or anything like that,” he laughs, but you’re not sure you believe him because he’s in remarkable form.

“The Gunnison country has done much more for me than I have for it,” Vandenbusche modestly adds with sincere devotion. “I love it. Why wouldn’t anyone want to be in the best fishing, skiing, mountain climbing and biking places, and one of the most beautiful areas in the world? It’s been a love affair for the past 53 years.”

 

Stay healthy…keep moving

“Keep moving.”

That was the sage advice from former Chronicle and Pilot editor Lee H. Ervin during the wedding reception of former Crested Butte News editor Eddie Stern last weekend in Denver. Lee lives in New Mexico now and as part of his job he interviews older people.

He said women tend to be healthier than men as they age but the key to healthy aging for both genders is to “keep moving.” That sounds like pretty good advice and all you have to do is look around at the people aging here and those growing older in say, Ohio. There is a difference between the 82-year-old who walks, bikes or skis in Crested Butte and the 72-year-old who waddles into the Columbus Golden Corral for the early bird buffet.

Lee was talking about individuals but since it is Tuesday and I can’t write about the Elk Avenue slurry seal debacle without continually shaking my head, laughing or crying, I’ll make the cheap and easy editorial move and build on Lee’s advice for Crested Butte.

“Keep moving.” There is really no such thing as a healthy community that never changes. Being stagnant leads to being boring and sluggish. It is good to move.

Our tourism-based economy is about to go off for about two months. No one will describe the coming summer as stagnant in the short term. But that is part of our problem. Crested Butte depends on giant economic peaks that strain our infrastructure and are then followed by giant dips that make it precarious for local businesses to make it. In the long-term, that template can be stressful.

So in an effort to “keep moving,” Crested Butte is adding to its traditional outdoorsy image and attractions. A new organic focus on arts and education is helping to keep us moving beyond the Old Faithfuls of mountain biking and skiing. That is healthy.

Right now there is an effort to look at the big picture here through the One Valley Prosperity Project (OVPP). That effort is gathering information and is actively promoting a community dialogue to perhaps help this community to keep moving.

Unlike some, I don’t anticipate a panacea to come out of the OVPP. So far the OVPP indicates that those living here like it here. We all wish we made more money here. We all don’t want to become just another stereotypical tourist town in the mountains.

Of course, the details of any final plan are where there might be real tension. Some will lobby for more, more, more, while others will argue for a return to the slower paced “good old days.” I have always said the OVPP could save a lot of time and money by having someone from each side of the divide, say an Eric Roemer and a Sue Navy, sit down and come up with a plan. If they can agree on a direction, then odds are pretty good that everyone could.

Some organizers in the OVPP claim that the final plan will result in a common core baseline upon which every decision in the valley between now and infinity can be based. That won’t happen. Healthy communities need good representatives and leaders for the times to step up and set a direction. That usually happens in elections when the people decide who gets to sit down and map out the next leg of the road trip. Chances are if someone goes too far afield, they won’t get put back into local office. That usually keeps everything moving in manageable doses.

Crested Butte is constantly changing and that is part of the dynamic of a healthy community. It “keeps moving.” People come and go. Those relocating here now are doing so for reasons different from those who came here 20 years ago. I’ll go out on a limb and say the biggest game changer has been the Crested Butte Community School. Having a quality K-12 school in a wonderful place with a ski resort is a major draw to those who can afford it. And more and more people are figuring that out.

I do think the OVPP can end up being a valuable tool. While healthy communities need to “keep moving,” they also need solid foundations and the OVPP might be able to provide some of that foundational focus. A continued good community needs both young and old people living in it. Rich and poor should be able to rub shoulders. It needs workers either living near or having easy access to their jobs. They need good schools, good opportunities for community dialogue and good opportunities for local businesses to succeed. It needs to actively protect its special attributes. The OVPP might help reinforce those community elements.

Decisions in the future won’t be based entirely on an OVPP study from 2015. They will be based on those who step up to help keep a community moving in a direction that is healthy at the time. That requires thoughtfulness and an ability to stay nimble. The OVPP can provide a snapshot of needs and wants at this particular time and that is useful, but not a miracle cure for the few things that ail us.

“Keep moving.” Good advice. How we move is up to those living here at any given time and have the most influence on where we end up.

Lee must be moving a lot. He still looks good in his grandfather years. And a quick shout out to Eddie Stern and his new wife, Ellen. They chose last Friday to “keep moving” and take a major life step. It seems a good, healthy choice. That is all any individual, couple or community can really ask for—healthy choices based on the decision to keep moving.

—Mark Reaman