231 N. Silver St. Ste 2,
Lake City, CO 81235

Tag: Colorado

Intent EMT Students…

Students and observers were spellbound earlier this month during an initial welcoming lecture by EMS Director Buffy Witt at the start of a five-month Emergency Medical Technicians class at Lake City Area Medical Center. A total of seven students are enrolled in class which began last Tuesday, January 9, and continues with classroom instruction on a weekly basis from now until June, after which students prior to certification will complete required clinicals.Seven apt students enrolled in the class are Eric Barker, Sarah Decristino, Kelly Elkins, Eli Loper, Grant Loper, Roxanne Loper, and Danny Oge, shown above in photo by Katherine Heidt with EMTs Dan Humphreys and Amanda Hartman, foreground, who are among those on tap to assist with EMT instruction during the class. Others who will be assisting with classroom instruction are Andrew Spangler, from Pagosa Springs, together with locals including Rachel Moore, Melody Crump, Leslie Nichols, and Sara Barker.Early word on this winter’s EMT enrollees is that they are enthused and are imminently up to the hard study ahead.

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Local Items

With the one-year anniversary of the 28-hour power outage in and around Lake City coming up in early February, Lake City night owls were perhaps reminded of the importance of electricity during a brief power outage which occurred between 12:55 and 2:05 a.m. last Saturday, January 13.Local linemen Brent Boyce and Logan Rhodes once again came to the rescue after being notified of the outage, the men identifying a breaker at the Ball Flats substation which had mysteriously opened, shutting off power to a total of 937 meters extending from the middle of Lake City up valley as far as Sherman.Boyce and Rhodes checked local overhead lines on the chance a downed tree or heavy snow load had caused the breaker to open. Finding no interference, they returned to the substation and successfully closed the errant breaker to restore electric service.No negative impacts such as frozen pipes were reported as a result of the brief outage.By coincidence — and again during last weekend’s cold, snowy days — an OCR (Oil Circuit Recloser) on the C Phase electric line near Powderhorn failed on Sunday morning, January 14. Gunnison County Electric Lineman Dustin Cadwell responded to home turf and after checking the lines for any obstructions, re-energized the line after closing the circuit. The Powderhorn area electric outage lasted from 8:27 to 9:04 a.m. and impacted a total of three meters extending from Milk Gulch Ranch to Blue Mesa Subdivision.Kathy and Harvey DuChene are back in town after two weeks in Belize with Silver Street summer residents Tom and Myreta Davis. After spending a day in Belize City, they took a one-hour water taxi ride to the Caye Caulker barrier island where accommodations were thatch-roofed bungalows near the beach. There are no automobiles on the Caye, only golf carts, but bicycles are part of the accommodation package so they were able to ride almost everywhere on the island. Highlights included multiple meals featuring rock lobster and ceviche (which quickly became favorites), along with the “occasional” pina colada or Belikan beer. After a few days on the Caye, another water taxi ride brought them back to Belize City where a hired a cab took them to Santa Elena on the west side of the country. Accommodations again were bungalows, this time in the rain forest at Maya Mountain Lodge. The rainy season in Belize was later than normal this year, and everyone quickly learned why it’s called a Rain Forest. The humidity was close to 100 percent most of the time.Finding the cab driver who drove them to Santa Elena is an interesting story. On their first full day in country, they were visiting an old navigation light on the coast near Belize City where there is a monument to Baron Bliss, a British Royal who, in 1926, wanted to visit British Honduras but never got there. He died on his yacht before he made it to shore. He was fascinated with the Colony, so he bequeathed to it about 1 million British pounds on the condition that the money be used for the benefit of the people. It has been used as seed money for parks, libraries, schools and museums. Luis Rodriguez, a young Belizean cab driver and freshly licensed tour guide was at the Bliss Monument with his mother and niece and told the travelers this story.Kathy and Myreta are masters at chatting people up, and before they knew it, they had tentatively arranged for Luis to pick them up after their stay on Caye Caulker and drive to Santa Elena. Luis, who lives in Santa Elena, became the couples’ tour guide and even invited the Lake Citians to his home to celebrate the New Year with him and his extended family. While in Santa Elena, the couples visited Mayan ruins of Caracol, paddled canoes through the Barton Creek Cave archaeological site and took a day trip to world-famous Tikal National Park in Guatemala. Tikal is a world heritage site and ranks in importance with the Acropolis in Greece, the Great Pyramids of Egypt and Machu Picchu in Peru. Other places are the Botanical Gardens of Belize, a Butterfly Pavilion, and the Belize Zoo.All of this was accomplished while dodging frequent rainstorms and one especially heavy downpour which, fortunately, happened while they were under a pavilion having lunch. The frequent rains meant that a lot of time was spent avoiding mudholes and puddles and caused a proliferation of biting insects which feasted on the tender norte-americanos.On the last day in Santa Elena, Harvey and Kathy took a cooking class and learned how to maketamales (Belize style) and hot chocolate the way the ancient Maya made it. Chocolate was the drink of kings in the Maya world, and was not made for common folks. They drank it anyway. If a bunch of Maya warriors shows up in Lake City, they are probably looking for the local chocolate drinkers.When the two weeks was over, all agreed that this had been an interesting trip. Abundant bug bites are persistent reminders of the experience. Sympathies are extended to former county sheriff Ron Bruce whose 97-year-old mother, Doris Opal (Guffey) Bruce, has died in Sun City, Arizona. Mrs. Bruce, who was born in November, 1926, was a native of Vandalia, Illinois, and was the last in a large family which included four sisters and four brothers. Her husband, a Southern Baptist Minister at Columbia, Missouri, and later Casa Grande, Arizona, predeceased in July, 1971.Following her husband’s death, Mrs. Bruce continued work as an elementary teacher at Tempe, Arizona. She later moved to Peoria, Arizona, which continued to be her home until her death.In addition to Ron, her eldest son, Mrs. Bruce is survived by two younger sons, Dave Bruce and his wife, Barb, who live in Maryland, and Mark Bruce, a resident of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Graveside services were planned in Tempe, Arizona.Fourteeners’ home basketball games last week against the local heroes’ counterparts from Moffat and Center in the San Luis Valley were wisely called off as

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Avalanche Danger, Snowpack Soar After Massive Storm

Colorado has weathered its first major storm, the snowfall — upwards of 9” over the weekend in LakeCity — combined with gusty winds resulting in significant avalanche danger as of mid-weekthroughout the San Juan Mountains. As of Tuesday portions of the Elk Mountains including the towns ofCrested Butte and Mt. Crested Butte were listed in red as Category 4 with dangerous conditions, whilethe San Juan Mountains, and both southern and northern portions of the San Juan Mountains,including Lake City, are within an area of unstable and drifting snowfall which is considered of“considerable” avalanche danger according to Colorado Avalanche Information Center.For the San Juans, says the information center, a Special Avalanche Advisory remained in effect as ofWednesday with new snow and powerful wind creating dangerous conditions with the likelihood ofhuman-triggered avalanches. Recreationists are advised to limit their activities to slopes less thanabout 30-degrees without steep overhead slopes. “You can easily trigger an avalanche at all elevationsand on all aspects,” says the Avalanche Center“ recent avalanches, shooting cracks, and collapsesare signs of unstable snow and signs to stick to lower-angle terrain.”Apart from snow field fissures and unstable, wind-blown cornices at higher terrain, last weekend’swindfall in terms of snow and water content comes at an opportune time following recent months andweeks with minimal, below average snowfall. Natural Resources Conservation Services’ 11,560’-elevation SnowTel site on Slumgullion Pass above Lake City is now up to 89 percent medianprecipitation as a result of last weekend’s storm and continuing, intermittent snowfall this week.Snow depth at the upper Slumgullion snow gauge site was just 17” as of January 1 and increased to 20”depth on January 10; following last weekend’s snow dump and as of Tuesday, January 16, SlumgullionSnoTel now stands at 29” snow depth with a corresponding 5.8” of weather content. Median snowwater content for this time of year on Slum is 7.4” water, hence we are now at 89 percent of the medianin terms of water which is locked in the snow. The median — as patiently explained by BruceHeath — is the point where there are as many readings above as there are below based on snowdata which has been collected from 1991 to 2020.As a result of this most recent massive storm, Gunnison River Basin, which includes the Lake Fork,is now 94 percent of the 30-year median while adjoining Upper Rio Grande is slightly less, 71percent of long-term median. Percentages for these and other Colorado water basins are highlighted in Natural Resources Conservation Service map whichis illustrated below. In addition to the Slumgullion SnoTel site, other neighboring SnoTel site readings post-storm includeWager Gulch, 11,132’, on the upper Lake Fork which as of Tuesday clocked 23” snow depth with 4.2”water content; by comparison snow depth at the upper Wager Gulch reading site stood at just 13”snow depth with 2.7” water on January 1.On the Upper Rio Grande, the Bear Town snow measuring site, elevation 11,600’, had 45” snowdepth with 8.1” water content on Tuesday this week — more than double just 21” snow depth with 5.0”water on January 1.Cochetopa Pass, 10,061’, measured 78 percent of median precipitation on Tuesday, January 16, with14” snow depth and 2.2” water content; in the northern Gunnison River Basin, Butte SnoTel Site, at10,200’ elevation, has a whopping 47” snow depth with 8.8” water content which is 133 percent of the30-year median; Schofield Pass, 10,653’, stands at 99 percent median precipitation as of Tuesday, 63”snow base with 13.4” water.

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