I would like to encourage both residents, new business owners, new homeowners, and visitors to turn off their lights at the end of the day. This dramatically helps prevent unnecessary light pollution for our exceptionally beautiful starry night skies.Of special importance is that this weekend, the Perseid Meteor Shower will be taking place. The peak of the shower is predicted to be Sunday night into early Monday morning. By turning off your lights and “turning on the night” everyone will have a better chance to “catch” a shooting star or two.Many thanks to everyone for cooperating to preserve our night skies for future generations. Sincerely,Lake City SkiesPhillip Virden
I am writing to share the exciting news about the return of the Ute Mountain Ute’s Red Sky Drum Group Dancers to Lake City on August 17th, 2024, and to request your support in making this valuable cultural event possible.Last year’s performance by the Red Sky Drum Group was a tremendous success, captivating our community with their vibrant dances unique to this land. The event not only celebrated the rich heritage of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe but also fostered a deeper understanding and appreciation of their traditions within our community that well precedes Lake City’s existence. The overwhelming interest and positive feedback we received have inspired us to expand this program for 2024.This year, we aim to enhance the event by adding a beading class following the snow dance, providing attendees with a more hands-on cultural experience. The class will be a workshop where participants can Memberlearn traditional beading techniques and create their own pieces of art, further immersing themselves in the traditions of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe.To bring this vision to life, we need your support. We are seeking $100 donations to cover the costs of travel, accommodations, and payment for the Red Sky Drum Group dancers. Your generous contribution will help us provide a unique and meaningful experience for our community while honoring and preserving the history of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. By donating, you will play a crucial role in: We are looking for a $100 sponsorship level ideally but your support at any level will make a significant difference and is greatly appreciated.To make a donation, please visit our website www.lakecityarts.org or contact Katie Briggs at [email protected]. Donations can also be mailed to: Lake City ArtsPO Box 876Lake City, CO 81235 Thank you for considering this request and for your continued support of our exciting and educational programs. Together, we can create an unforgettable experience that honors the legacy of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and enriches our town. Sincerely, Katie [email protected] Executive Director www.lakecityarts.org
Angels walk among us. I met a few of them three weeks ago in an hour of great need.Shortly before midnight I was jolted awake by something stabbing me in my lower back. It was a kidney stone – 3 millimeters of unrelenting misery. I can’t fully describe the pain in a family newspaper, but on a scale of 1-10, this was a 20. Still, I thought I could pop a couple of Tylenols and tough it out till dawn. But the pills came right back up along with the rest of last night’s dinner. So, after an hour or so of writhing and retching, we made the call to 9-1-1.The angels appeared in my bedroom a few minutes later, and a few minutes after that I was loaded up in their ambulance and headed to Gunnison. When I woke up the next morning my pain – and my angels – were gone.I’ve been spending summers and Christmases in Lake City for 22 years, never really appreciating the gift these angels are to our community. They show up day or night, bringing aid and comfort. And they do it without pay! They are the best of us, and I want to publicly thank each of them. If anyone would care to join me in supporting Hinsdale County EMS, you can donate online at https://hinsdalecountyems.square.site or by mail at PO Box 277 Lake City, CO 81235 With deepest gratitude,Mike CoffinLake City
Unlike the room’s usual appearance as a town trustees’ meeting room with an orderly arrangement of chairs and meeting table with piles of paperwork, the Town of Lake City’s Armory multipurpose room was transformed into a lively bistro of sorts last Friday morning for the long-anticipated opening of the Senior Connections’ Senior Center.Chairs were drawn up to tables with red checkered tablecloths dotted about the room inviting guests to pause for conversation while perhaps imbibing from a fully stocked coffee bar and partaking of snacks which, for the center’s opening last week, included freshly baked banana bread. Also of interest were the room’s non-edible accoutrements, a cache of neatly stacked and intriguing boxed board games and puzzles which await closer inspection.Looking out over the room and mingling crowd with satisfaction last Friday were staunch proponents of expanded senior citizen services in Lake City, including the newly furnished senior center which will be open with regularly scheduled hours on a year-round basis.On hand and glowing with satisfaction on Friday were Senior Connections volunteers such as Cheryl Tate, Lonnie Sweet, and Mary Nettleton, all of whom have been putting in long hours since January with the envisioned goal of not only a well-equipped and vitalized senior citizen center but also an impressive array of expanded senior citizen services.Also, on hand last week celebrating the opening of the new Senior Center was staff from Silver Thread Public Health, including public health director Tara Hardy who is equally enthused with new developments in terms of senior services. Working in tandem with Silver Thread Public Health and a direct result of the enthused Senior Connect Team volunteers, the Senior Center in the town trustees’ Armory meeting room is now open 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Fridays August 9, 16, 23, and 30 through this month and increasing to both Wednesdays and Fridays starting in September.Additionally, team members are working with Mountaineer Movie Theatre owner Phillip Virden on a no-charge Senior Movie Night at 7 p.m. Tuesday, August 20, featuring the John Wayne Western classic, “True Grit”. Senior Walking is also planned in the Armory from 2 to 3 p.m., Tuesday through Friday starting in September.Home cooked lunches, either sit-down or grab & go, or the potential of deliveries to homebound residents, will resume the second and fourth Fridays in September. Specifics of the luncheon meals are still being worked out, although the new Senior Center will remain the central focus with sit-down meals on those Fridays served 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m., together with the grab & go or home delivery options.A series of informative lectures are also being lined up for Senior Citizens, including Gary Shondeck of Gunnison-based Shondeck Financial Services & Insurance who has offered to come to Lake City on Friday, October 4, starting 10 a.m. for a presentation which will include details on changes to Open Enrollment for Medicare Part D. Shondeck will also be available to work with individuals.Other potential lecture topics sponsored by the group may include the popular topic of taxes by a knowledgeable accountant and an attorney who will be invited to address local seniors on legal documents such as wills and Do Not Resuscitate directives.During a sit-down interview with Senior Connect Team members Cheryl Tate and Lonnie Sweet prior to last week’s Senior Citizen Center opening, Tate marvels at literally thousands of volunteer hours which have been expended toward the revitalized services for Senior Citizens ages 60 years and up who live within Town of Lake City and adjacent rural portions of Hinsdale County.Referring to the volunteerism spirit, Tate says, “It truly takes a village… if the result of all this effort is the way we envision it, it will have been well worth it.”Tate credits the town and county senior citizens for their energy and determination. “They all have great ideas,” she says, “and they’re energized.”Senior services in Hinsdale County are under the umbrella of Silver Thread Public Health, Tara Hardy expressing her gratitude for the re-energizing efforts of the “grassroots” group.Public Health has several staff openings and continuing through this month will be reviewing applications for the positions of a Senior Citizen Coordinator, who will be available to assist with the Senior Connections group, as well as a second position handling consumer protection which is also being filled.Work by the volunteer Senior Connect group dates to January this year when a group of concerned local residents —these including Cheryl Tate, Lonnie Sweet, Lori Lawrence, Rick Hernandez, Faye Underwood, Mary Nettleton, Dan McGee, and Dawn Kortmeyer — put their heads together with the goal of addressing the needs and wants of the local senior population which they felt were not being met.The grassroot organization’s first goal was to peruse the county’s voter registration lists and determine the number of seniors living in the county. From a list of 723 voters, they determined fully 52 percent of the registered population is age 60 years and over or, more broadly 60 percent of the county’s registered voters are over age 55.The next step, according to Tate and Sweet, was to contact existing seniors’ organizations in other regional communities such as Silverton, Creede, Saguache, and Nucla/Naturita to learn what services they offered in terms of senior centers and senior lunches and, just as important, their sources of funding to support the programs.With that information in hand, Tate says they scratched their collective heads, wondering, “what do we do now?”An important early addition to the corps of grassroots local volunteers was enlistment of an energetic, non-senior, Hinsdale County Commissioner Greg Levine, who was an enthusiastic addition to the group.Levine’s enthusiasm and talents “are invaluable,” Tate says. It was at this point pre-spring this year that the volunteer group was also expanded to include Tara Hardy of Silver Thread Public Health.It was through casual conversations with Town of Lake City Recreation Director Ben Hake that the suggestion was made for use of both the kitchen and adjacent town-council meeting room in the Armory. While occupied for town meetings on
The atmosphere was festive and town was lively on August 1 for the Celebrate Lake City event, celebrating the County’s founding 150 years ago in the year 1874.From 1 p.m. until 3 p.m., folks were free to explore the upstairs courtroom at the County Courthouse where cannibal Alferd Packer was tried, and from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m., a community picnic was held, catered by CLIMB Elevated Eatery, serenaded by the musical stylings of Tim Mallory and blessed by Pastor Jason Santos.While everyone ate, County Commissioner Kristie Borchers gave a speech detailing the history of the area, beginning with the collapse of the Mesa Seco plateau into the Lake Fork Valley 700 years ago, when the Slumgullion Earthflow dammed the river, creating Lake San Cristobal.Borchers explained, “The lake was a favorite camping spot when Native American tribes used this land as summer hunting grounds. The Ute Territory was subsequently reduced under several different agreements, driven by gold and silver exploration in the San Juan Mountains. The state of Colorado created Hinsdale County on February 10, 1874.”Borchers thanked the crowd for coming to the “summer party,” explaining that the actual birthday of the county was in February, when Lake Citians celebrated out on the ice at Lake San Cristobal.“We spent some time this winter gathering up a timeline of 150 years of work improving our county,” she said, directing people to the Visitor’s Center for a full timeline.The abbreviated timeline Borchers recited, which she deemed ‘snapshots in time,’ is as follows: 1877, construction of the Hinsdale County Courthouse, which remains largely unchanged, where Susan B. Anthony spoke and Alferd Packer was tried for murder; 1881, telephone service reached Lake City; 1889, the first passenger train arrived; 1907, the first automobile arrived; 1915, the first tourists from Texas arrived; 1921, women won the right to vote, and the Town Trustees were an all-female board, also, a big flood washed out the train depot, tracks and roundhouse; 1937, construction of several auto courts began and there were individual cabins available for rent; 1950, the first Jeep tours began, using Otto Mear’s constructed backcountry roads for recreational sightseeing and not just as supply routes; 1954, the Chamber of Commerce sponsored construction of Deer Lakes; 1956, reliable electricity was established in Hinsdale County; 1968, water and sewer systems were established, the same year the Lake City Ski Hill opened; 1975, the Lake City Medical Center was opened downtown; 1978, National Register for Historic Places designated Lake City a Historic District, which remains one of the largest historic districts in the nation; 1985, Highway 149 paving over Slumgullion Pass was completed; 2013, Ute Ulay stabilization project began, along with the Papoose Fire, impacting Upper Rio Grande; 2019, more than 100 + significant avalanches impacted Hinsdale County; 2020, Hinsdale County purchased Peninsula Park.Borchers concluded her speech saying, “Thank you to those of you serving Hinsdale County, living in Hinsdale County or partnering with Hinsdale County. We appreciate all the work you do.”
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