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Obituary- Bob Maurer

… Revered Lake City artist, 96, mirrored quickening pulse ofLake City in early 1970s. Born in Brooklyn, New York, April 4, 1928, Bob Maurer followed a passion for art from his earliest years. His acclaimed art career extended from Brooklyn to eventually Lake City and then on to Grand Junction and Gunnison. Early in life, his art career took a brief intermission 1947 to 1950 when he served in the U.S. Army Reserves as an upholsterer apprentice and as Army Sergeant/Cook from August, 1950, to April, 1952. At his death, age 96, earlier this spring at Aspen Ridge Alzheimer’s Special Care facility in Grand Junction, the former Lake City resident told jokes and conversed with family. He retained his art skills until shortly before his death, avidly scanning a blank sheet of paper and then skillfully creating a line drawing depicting family and friends and creating a lifelike image of a family dog. On the day of his death, he inquired about family members and, in a final gesture, laid aside his art markers and pencils for one last time. “And that was just dad,” says Maurer’s daughter, Kim Spirek, “like the Energizer Bunny, he was a fighter to the end.” A memorial service will be held at Veterans Memorial Cemetery, 2830 Riverside Parkway in Grand Junction, at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, July 9. As a native New Yorker, Bob received formal art training at Cooper Union and School for Visual Arts in New York. Fresh out of college, he joined the scenery painters union and painted scenery for such Broadway smashes as “Voice of the Turtle”, “Oklahoma!”, “I Remember Mama”, and “Detective Story”. A blind date on August 25, 1957, was particularly eventful. As luck would have it, Bob’s date that night was Lydia Victoria Holtz (1928-2007), a native of Fitchburg, Massachusetts, who was working as a fashion illustrator in New York City. Smitten at first sight, Bob and Lydia married on September 21, 1957, just three and a half weeks after their initial date. The couple relocated from New York to Denver in 1959 and started a family. In Denver, Bob was art director for ABC Television. He opened Studio 10 with corporate accounts which included Pepsi Cola before relocating to Boulder, Colorado, where he worked as graphic designer at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. Despite having a fine house and comfortable livelihood on the front range, the Maurers were restless. When asked about their eventual relocation from comfortable Boulder to a pioneer cabin in a small town called Lake City on Colorado’s Western Slope, Bob Maurer reflected, “sure we had a comfortable home but in retrospect we spent 10 months of the year camping out, we liked rural areas better than we liked city life.” 1972 was a milestone year for Bob and Lydia, and their young family, which by that point had grown with the birth of eldest son Marc, twin daughters Kim and Lisa, and youngest son Toby. Enchanted with the art prospects of Lake City, they arranged with Harold Stewart to purchase a near-century-old log commercial building at the southwest corner of 4th and Silver Street. The structure had a storied past starting with Bank of Lake City in 1876 and engineer and surveying headquarters for brothers J.J. and J.W. Abbott. Still later and before the Maurers opened The Artists’ Workshop, the log structure with clapboard siding was home of W.C. Blair’s Lake City TIMES and SILVER WORLD Newspaper from 1916 until the newspaper ceased publication in 1938. In Lake City, the Maurers made ends meet by creating an inspirational art studio and gallery which they christened The Artists’ Workshop featuring pen and ink, calligraphy, acrylic, oil, and watercolor artwork of local scenes which they created, together with the works of other local artists. The original log cabin building was enlarged with an addition, now World of Gem Creations, starting in 1975. Relocating to Lake City, according to Bob Maurer in 1972, “has been the most rewarding experience of our married lives. We’re breathing fresh air and meeting a lot of people who enjoy the same lifestyle we do. We have found a good place to raise our children and we have found friends who are not afraid of openness and love. What more could you ask?” The Artists’ Workshop, a combination of print shop, mini gallery and the Maurer family residence with its round oak dining table and nearby coffee pot, was the epicenter of Lake City’s resurgence starting in the early 1970s. Comfortable entertainers who enjoyed lively conversation and debate with like-minded progressives, it was at the Maurer dining room table that initial conversations were held on the formation of a local historical society and museum, in 1973, and — January 22, 1974 — it was at the Maurer family’s round oak dining table that initial discussions were held which resulted in the formation of Lake City Area Medical Center.  While small Lake City, set in a virtual wilderness setting had many good points, Mrs. Maurer as the mother of four young children acknowledged that the lack of medical facilities was a glaring drawback. “I was getting very nervous about there being no doctor,” Lydia said in 1975, “when you have youngsters who hunt, fish, and ski you get that way.” In addition to Bob and Lydia Maurer, also present for that initial landmark discussion on the requisite need for establishing locally-based medical facilities were Terrance Burnell who worked with Outward Bound on the upper Lake Fork, and local business owner Margaret Therese Ryan. Others taking part in those early discussions were Lake City native Jessie Hunt Wheeler, Tom Ortenburger, and Bob and Becky Weeks. I believe Phil & Susie Mason and Burton Smith and Patsy (Smith) Troutner were also involved. Lydia Maurer headed up a group of local volunteers to raise $5,000 and convince members of Pioneer Jubilee Women’s Club to vacate the front portion of their Silver Street club rooms — now Linda Gardner’s Inklings in the Mountains

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300 Runners in Saturday’s 28th Solstice Ultra Run

The first of the summer’s big-time events, the 28th running of the San Juan Solstice, takes off on a literal sprint from Lake City Park at 5 a.m. this Saturday, June 22, with the last stragglers crossing the town park finish line by mandatory cut-off 16 hours later.The 50-mile mountain ultra race is coordinated by a vast corps of volunteers who routinely receive high marks from the runners and public-at-large for conducting one of the friendliest ultra runs with most helpful volunteers to be found in Colorado.Jerry Gray heads the board of directors of San Juan Solstice, Inc., overseeing the race and tells inquiring journalists that the popularity of the ultra-run continues to expand.The race is Federally permitted by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management for a maximum of 300 runners who are allowed to traverse the route on public lands. For the first time in its history, a number of those on the waiting list with hopes to be able to run will in fact not be among the 300 fleet-of-foot starting on Saturday morning.In addition to 300 runners registered to take part in this Saturday’s Solstice, as of Tuesday this week the waiting list numbered a total of 92 and “almost certainly,” according to Gray, “some of those will be disappointed.” Optimistically, Gray refers to those who will inevitably be disappointed and helpfully suggests for those on the waiting list who are not allowed to run that there “are plenty of other attractions in Hinsdale County,” among them the five 14,000’ peaks and innumerable, less-traversed 13,000’ peaks, for those wishing to burn off a little energy.The list of registered and waiting list runners is fluid, according to Gray, with four registered runners dropping on just Tuesday morning alone as the result of schedule conflicts or, more probable as Gray suspects, injuries which result from over-training.Prior to trotting off from the town park starting line at 5 a.m. on Saturday, three briefing sessions are planned for the lucky 300 registered runners, families, friends and admiring public at 3 p.m., 5 p.m., and 6 p.m. on Friday, June 21, during which runners will be advised on current trail conditions, bountiful aid station locations and drop-off protocol for the individual runners and, of course, the dreaded “grim sweeper” cut-off times for laggers at individual aid stations and the 16-hour, 9 p.m. mandatory finish in town park.A highlight of the Friday afternoon briefing sessions will be Mark Wing and his wife, Rita, of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe who will reference the terrain through which the Solstice runners are about to run as traditional Ute lands.Like last year, Mark and Rita Wing will also be up pre-dawn on Saturday conducting a smudge ceremony prayer at the 5 a.m. starting gate.This year’s 50-mile San Juan Solstice route is identical to prior years despite earlier concerns expressed just last month about expansive snowfields along the Continental Divide portion of the race route. Those snowfields, according to Gray, have now greatly diminished owing to warm temperatures in the high country.Far from smooth sailing, however, the adaptive corps of runners may still expect a succession of bracing stream crossings on the dash up Alpine Gulch, together with snowfields at the upper portion of Alpine and stretching down into higher elevations of Williams Creek.Runners are also advised of several snowfields which they will traverse along the Continental Divide.Trail conditions on portions of both Alpine Gulch up from Henson Creek and Williams Creek leading down into the upper Lake Fork Valley were complicated by windblown deadfall which would have made it necessary for runners to hop across or detour around fallen trees. As timely improvements just days prior to Saturday’s ultra run, a Bureau of Land Management axe and saw crew was out on both Monday and Tuesday this week segmenting and removing sections of fallen timber blocking the running trail.San Juan Solstice is revered for its empathy toward runners who are competing in the annual race and inteegral to the run are bountiful aid stations which are set up at key locations along the route.After leaving Lake City and trotting up Henson Creek, the first significant climb is up Alpine Gulch and up and over a grassy ridge before dropping down into Williams Creek.After leaving town park and the preliminary route up Henson Creek, a watering station is located on CR 20 at the turn off to Alpine Gulch.The trail up Alpine Gulch is challenging with a total of seven creek crossings. Water depth this year is described as “normal” — in other words, “challenging,” this year.The first runners’ aid station — an ideal location, perhaps, to change sopping wet sock and/or running shoes carried by the runners — is located at the upper end of Alpine Gulch captained by a crew led by Craig Blakemore.Due to this first station’s remote, high elevation location, water is not available, although runners can graze on energy-producing snacks. Cut-off time for runners to reach the Alpine aid station is 7:30 a.m.Subsequent aid stations — all equally well equipped with sustenance, water, the energy drink Tailwind and the energy gel Embark Maple Energy — are Williams Creek Campground, David Maxwell and team in charge of operations and cut-off time for runners 10 a.m.; the aid station on upper Wager Gulch near Carson is once again being coordinated by Lily Virden, cut-off time noon.Next up for replenishment is the Continental Divide aid station captained by Susie Arnold, cut-off time 3:45 p.m., followed by Mary Kay Jergens and crew with an aid station adjacent to Highway 149 at the base of the Sawmill Park Road, cut-off time 6 p.m.The final two aid stations respectively captained by Peggy Vickers and high-energy crew, and multi-generational Malinda McDonald and her mother, Bobbi Vickers McDonald, are respectively located amid aspen groves at upper Vickers Ranch and, finally, at the finish line in Lake City Park. Respective cut-off times are 8:15 p.m. at Vickers and 9 p.m. town park.For runners trudging along and at

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Kaminski Resigns as Sheriff’s Dept. Undersheriff

Since last week’s edition, a third resignation, from Hinsdale County Undersheriff Kaminski, has occurred within the staffing ranks of Hinsdale County Sheriff’s Office.On the heels of Sheriff Kambish and Deputy Brennan Pantleo, whose resignations were reported in the June 7 edition of SILVER WORLD, Undersheriff Jordan Kaminski submitted a resignation letter dated last Thursday, June 13.Kaminski’s tenure as deputy dates 2012-2014, and again 2018-2020. He served as Hinsdale County Undersheriff from September, 2020, until present.Sheriff Kambish, who will be succeeded by former sheriff Ron Bruce effective July 12, has stated he does not intend to appoint a replacement undersheriff, telling WORLD “I will leave that up to Ron.”With the resignations of Sheriff Kambish, Undersheriff Kaminski, and Deputy Pantleo, law enforcement personnel at short-staffed Hinsdale County Sheriff’s Dept. consists of Sheriff Kambish until July 12 and then Sheriff Bruce, Deputies Denham Starnes and Sarah Poet, and Seasonal Deputy Mark Zeckser.The text of Undersheriff Kaminski’s letter of resignation is as follows:“Sheriff Kambish,Please accept this as my official letter of resignation. With the appointment of interim Sheriff Ron Bruce, and hearing from him and the Board of County Commissioners, I believe that it is time for me to tender my resignation.It has been an honor to work for you in serving the community. I have learned a great deal and greatly appreciated the opportunity these last five years.My resignation will take effect June 23, 2024, or earlier if you so desire. Again, thank you for the opportunity.Jordan KaminskiUndersheriffHinsdale County Sheriff’s Office”

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High water runoff in the lower Lake Fork River, is on track to peak early this year….

High water runoff in the lower Lake Fork River, which typically occurs between June 15 and 18, is on track to peak early this year as a result of warmer than usual daytime temperatures.   Higher than normal river flows in the Lake Fork below Henson were recorded starting in late May, ramping up to 111 percent of long-term, 86-year average with 1,020 cubic feet per second (cfs) water which was recorded at the lower Lake Fork Gateview calibrator last Sunday, June 2.   Water in the Lake Fork continued at higher than usual volume through mid-week this week, peaking at 1,070 cfs on Monday, June 3, and 1,080 cfs on Tuesday, June 4, and then increased to 133 percent of long-term average, 1,310 cfs, early Wednesday morning, June 5.   Thursday, June 6, waterflow 1,390 cfs compared to the historic average 1,030 cfs for that date.   The 86-year average for high water on June 4 is 947 cfs and 982 cfs on June 5. The all-time high for downstream water flow was 1,960 cfs in June, 1938.   The supposition that Lake Fork waterflow will peak early this year – well before usual start of high water on June 15 in years past – is borne out by a miniscule patch of snow which remains at Snyder’s High Water Mark above Henson Creek as viewed from downtown Lake City. The water mark is named in recognition of pioneer Lake City blacksmith Harmon Snyder (1852-1923) whose blacksmith shop on the banks of Henson Creek allowed him to gauge peak runoff in terms of snow which remained on a scree slope above Henson Creek.   When the last of the snow on the scree slope disappears, according to Snyders’ calculations, runoff for the season has peaked and will start to decline. Snyder had a personal interest in peak flow in Henson Creek due to the fact bellows and other equipment in his blacksmith shop — now the location of the Butch and Irma Hurd residence at 1st Street and Silver Street — was powered by a waterwheel within the creek. Pioneer Lake City blacksmith Harmon Snyder, right, and his high-water mark — shown with arrow — with just two small patches of snow as of Tuesday this week.Below, roiling Lake Fork water beneath the Ball Flats Bridge.

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Bridge Repairs, Limited Reopening

A – Structural repairs to Dillon Pinnacles Bridge, between now and late June, will include the installation of four massive steel plates — 2 at fracture joints and 2 at “structural anomalies.” Structural steel plates shown in blue are 27 feet long, 2 1/2 “thick and between 2 and 2 1/2 feet wide and will be secured with 280 bolts.  B – This graphic shows examples of where still plates remedying anomalies on the Dillon Pinnacles Bridge, which will continue this summer into late October.  C – Including the two weld fractures and two anomalies to be repaired immediately with steel plates, a total of 183 bridge structure anomalies have been identified which will be repaired between now and late October.  Graphics courtesy of CDOT.    Structural repairs to the U.S. Highway 50 Dillon Pinnacles Bridge — closed to traffic across Blue Mesa Reservoir since cracks were discovered April 18 — may allow the resumption of limited traffic across the bridge as early as the upcoming July 4 weekend.   Participants at a remote webinar hosted by Colorado Dept. Transportation and Gunnison County on Tuesday evening this week learned that four immense steel plates, 27’ long, 2-1/2” thick, 2 to 2-1/2’ wide and anchored with 280 bolts, will be installed in coming weeks to stabilize steel girders on the bridge at the location of two cracks and two other locations within the bridge supports where “concentrations of anomalies” have been identified.   At Tuesday’s webinar, CDOT Executive Director Shoshana M. Lew stated “if everything goes right and conditions make it possible,” limited traffic will allow reopening that portion of heavily-travelled U.S. Highway 50 on July 1. In addition to limited traffic with specific weight limits, reopening the 61-year-old Blue Mesa Reservoir bridge is also contingent on shaving off 3” of accumulated asphalt on the bridge decking to literally lighten the load.   Including the four steel plates which will be installed in coming weeks to structurally reinforce the bridge, repairs will continue on the Dillon Pinnacles Bridge non-stop between now through October to rectify a total of 183 “anomalies” to the bridge structure which have been identified through ultrasound analysis.   An added complication to traffic flow on U.S. Highway 50 even with a partial reopening of the Dillon Pinnacles bridge is resumption of the five-mile highway widening project through Little Blue Canyon, a multi-year effort scheduled for completion this summer under guidance CDOT partnering with Federal Highway Commission. Work on final phases of the project is now resuming with completion of infill terracing, paving, and completion of guardrail. Expansion work through Little Blue Canyon will once again require traffic delays with one-lane traffic flow through the construction zone.   CDOT Executive Director Shoshana Lew was questioned on the potential of expediting completion of the Blue Canyon work which is scheduled for late July. Lew stated a meeting with representatives from the Federal Highway Commission was slated Wednesday morning this week, Lew expressing her hope that with minimal traffic flow on Highway 50 as a result of the bridge closure, the Little Blue Creek Canyon work end date might be moved up to early July…. To read the full story, pick up this week’s edition of the Lake City Silver World or subscribe today!

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Look Back

Lake City news items of the past 140 Years AgoLake City MINING REGISTER, January 19, 1884 – Our lakes and rivers afford good skating, and the lads and lassies are enjoying it.Hinsdale 1883 output in dollars, paid for ore, was $390,000. An average of $60 a ton, this would equal one hundred and twenty-five tons a week.It is so cold up at Silverton that the solitary dairyman carries his milk in a gunnysack and chops it off with an ax for his customers.On Friday, January 11, the thermometer registered 18-degrees below zero at 7 a.m. Clear and pleasant all day. At 2 p.m. 40-degrees above zero; 10-degrees above at 6 p.m.The Henson Creek road is open for teams as far as Capitol City. Beyond that point the traveler must use snow-shoes. Snow slides cover the road; but the snow-shoeing is good.A dispatch from Weiser, Idaho, tells the story of the brutal lynching of Charles Deitard who in 1876-77 was a resident of this city. According to dispatch, a masked mob took Deitard, the murderer of Buck Bozie, from his cell in the jail, and shot and beat him. They then dragged him a mile to the slaughter house and hanged him to the windlass, which is used by the butchers.John Murphy, an employee of Mendenhall & Pride, butchers, was severely wounded last Friday evening by a ferocious boar. Mr. Murphy encountered the animal in the yard attached to the slaughter house, when he turned on him and showed fight. Instead of taking refuge in flight, the gentleman stood his ground. The boar struck him in the thigh, cut him and knocked him down and then made a dash at his head. John threw up his arm as a guard, when the animal seized his hand and inflicted a severe wound, and then attacked his foot, driving his sharp tusks through his boot. Murphy kicked at the savage hog, scrambled, scratched and rolled, and finally got away.130 Years AgoLake City TIMES, January 18, 1894 – Thirty-one degrees below zero Saturday morning.Very few cars of ore from the Golden Fleece Mine are shipped that bring less than $5,000 each.Everybody was out last Sunday afternoon, either sleighing or skating on the ice south of town.Never before in the history of Lake City were the schools of this place in a more flourishing condition than now. The corps of teachers now employed are certainly doing all in their power to advance the pupils in their studies.A number of horses, burros and cows are reported to be in a starving condition on the flat just across the river from town. The owners should be made to care for the stock or sell them to someone who will see to it that they don’t want for something to eat.The Lake City Drum Corps are expecting their new uniforms to arrive this week. The suits will consist of coat, pants, and cap, and a heavy plume in the cap. The coats are nicely trimmed with braid and heavy brass buttons, and altogether make very pretty uniforms.110 Years AgoLake City TIMES, January 22, 1914 – Stanley and Lee Williams have been busy with a crew of men on Oscar McCreary’s lake at the north end of town the past week getting out Lake City’s summer supply of agua fria and which is being stored in the Williams’ ice house.A dangerous incident in a two-seat cutter occurred near Hobo Spring on Henson Creek last Friday morning when the sleigh overturned on ice throwing its occupants into icy Henson Creek. The party consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Henrie, with their infant, Walden, along with Mr. and Mrs. Beckwith, and Lon Bryson. After the overturn, baby Walden was completely submerged in the water, Mr. Henrie and his sister, Mrs. Beckwith, both partly under water. With rare presence of mind, the men extricated themselves and quickly got the others out. Aside from a thorough soaking and numerous bumps, no one seriously injured.

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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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