<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
    xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
    xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
    xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/">
<channel>
    <title>Outdoors</title>
    <category>Outdoors</category>
    <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/section/outdoors-sports/feed/</link>
    <atom:link href="https://www.durangoherald.com/section/outdoors-sports/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
    <description>Stay informed with the latest breaking news, local stories, sports, business, weather, and community events from Durango, Southwest Colorado, and the Four Corners region.</description>
    <lastBuildDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2026 18:09:34 -0600</lastBuildDate>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <ttl>30</ttl>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/worms-and-grandchildren-the-future-of-fly-fishing/</link>
        <title>Worms and grandchildren: The future of fly fishing</title>
        <description>Introduce your grandchildren to fishing to have a future fly-fishing partner</description>
        <pubDate>Sun, 02 Nov 2025 15:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">DB57F789-6D7D-4B7E-ACC9-FD7DB78B841E</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=1C13F86C-F2D1-5625-8FA6-CE4FC88F6CE5&#038;function=cropresize&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;q=75&#038;width=1200&#038;x=1.0E-5&#038;y=0.21709975&#038;crop_w=0.99999&#038;crop_h=0.50293378" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=1C13F86C-F2D1-5625-8FA6-CE4FC88F6CE5&#038;function=cropresize&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;q=75&#038;width=1200&#038;x=1.0E-5&#038;y=0.21709975&#038;crop_w=0.99999&#038;crop_h=0.50293378" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Introduce your grandchildren to fishing to have a future fly-fishing partnerccaRecently, I had the pleasure of having my two youngest grandchildren, ages 4 and 7, visit me. When they arrived, they informed me they wanted to catch fish, not cast for fish, but catch.I was reminded there is a difference between catching and fishing. So to help the catching along, I went to Walmart and procured some hooks, ole fashioned red and white bobbers, not strike indicators, and a carton of worms. I then found two old and short spinning rods in the garage, and we headed to the pond. The gauntlet had been laid down.Once at the pond, we headed to the dock where I knew bass, pan fish, and trout lived. I promptly found a good spot, sat down, and put my feet in the water to begin the process. After rigging the rods up, I showed them how to cut worms in half and put them on the hook. My granddaughter, at first, was a little squeamish about cutting the worms in half. That soon changed.I had them stand on either side of me; it is easier to keep track of young catchers when they are close by. I made a short cast for my grandson and handed him the rod. Before I could get a second line in the water for my granddaughter, fish number one, was on the hook of my grandson’s rod. It was a nice bass. Not to be out done, my granddaughter wanted her line in the water before I could remove the bass from my grandson’s hook.As I was removing the first fish, my granddaughter had a fish on her hook. My grandson waited, impatiently I might add, for fish two to be removed so I could help him put his worm back in the water.This round robin of catching and putting fish back into the water went on until the worms had disappeared from their hooks. I opened the box of worms and begin to cut a worm in half. At this point my granddaughter wanted to do the cutting. I explained a sharp knife in the hands of a four-year old was not particularly safe. She, of course, objected. I held firm to my safety talk and she made mention that biting them in half would be safe. So much for being squeamish.The cycle of catching and releasing went on for about an hour. At this point they wanted to move to the other side of the dock to see how the catching was on that side. I gave them my talk about not leaving fish to find other fish. It did not do any good.We moved to the other side and caught some fish. After another 30 minutes, going to the far end of the lake to swim and play with the dogs was now what they wanted to do. It was a successful morning of catching.So, how are grandchildren using worms to catch fish the future of fly fishing. Next time they tell me they want to catch fish, instead of rigging up spinning rods, I’ll put the hook, worm and a strike indicator at the end of short fly rods. I will then show them how to do a short roll cast.After catching fish using a short roll cast, I bet one or both of them are going to ask how they can get their worm out a little further. I think a pick-up and put-down cast would be pretty easy to make.This, of course, will be followed with a shooting cast, followed with using a fly instead of a worm. All of these steps won’t occur in one outing, but multiple times at the pond with Grumps. If this plan is successful it won’t be long until I hear, “Grumps, will you take us fly fishing?”The reason I am confident this will happen is that I used the same tactics to get my daughter and three older grandchildren wanting to go fly fishing. If you use this method with the young children in your life, I guarantee you will end up with future fly fishing partners.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/wolf-creek-opens-multiple-lifts-after-23-inch-storm/</link>
        <title>Wolf Creek opens multiple lifts after 23-inch storm</title>
        <description>Purgatory opens top-to-bottom skiing after receiving 14 inches</description>
        <pubDate>Sun, 26 Nov 2023 15:03:27 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B3BA0E34-808A-470C-AC76-FECBD4578C07</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=1DAD7E27-9F5B-5679-AE78-7FE6E1B87BDC&#038;function=cropresize&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;q=75&#038;width=1200&#038;x=1.0E-5&#038;y=1.0E-5&#038;crop_w=0.99999&#038;crop_h=0.99999" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=1DAD7E27-9F5B-5679-AE78-7FE6E1B87BDC&#038;function=cropresize&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;q=75&#038;width=1200&#038;x=1.0E-5&#038;y=1.0E-5&#038;crop_w=0.99999&#038;crop_h=0.99999" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[A skier finds a pocket of powder at Wolf Creek Ski Area over the weekend. The latest storm dropped 23 inches of snow at Wolf Creek, allowing the mountain to open additional terrain and lifts. Rosanne Haidorfer-Pitcher/courtesy of Wolf Creek Ski AreaccaPurgatory opens top-to-bottom skiing after receiving 14 inchesWolf Creek Ski Area in the southern San Juan Mountains snapped early November’s dry weather pattern with a 23-inch storm over the weekend.The new snowfall allowed the mountain to open Lynx, Bonanza, Raven and Treasure lifts on Saturday, in addition to Nova and Magic Carpet, which were operational during weekends since Wolf Creek’s opening day on Nov. 11. With those six lifts spinning, skiers and boarders could enjoy roughly 30% of the mountain’s terrain.On Sunday, the Charity Jane, Alberta and Elma lifts were anticipated to open, which will increase the skiable areas to 60% of the mountain.Conditions on Sunday were powder and packed powder with early-season conditions and unmarked obstacles.Wolf Creek is also encouraging the skiing public to use caution. The mid-stake snow depth is 27 inches with a year-to-date snowfall total of 38 inches.Mountain crews are now harvesting snow to supplement the natural snowfall in efforts to open the remaining lifts.Lift tickets are at local appreciation rates until the next significant snowfall: $66 for adults, $47 for seniors and $33 for children. Wolf Creek Ski School, Ski and Snowboard Rental, Pathfinder Bar and the Wolf Creek Lodge are open with full services. Treasure & Noel Sports are also open.For information and the most up-to-date snow report, visit WolfCreekSki.com.Purgatory open top to bottomPurgatory Resort also received 14 inches of new snow from the latest storm, allowing skiers and snowboarders to ride Lift 1 from the top all the way to base area for the first time this season. Westfork, El Diablo, Upper Demon and Lower Demon trails can all be ridden top to bottom.Purgatory is now reporting a 20-inch base, and is forecasting snow showers likely to return on Thursday.Visit purgatory.ski for more information.The latest storm dropped 23 inches of snow at Wolf Creek Ski Area, allowing the mountain to open additional terrain and lifts. (Rosanne Haidorfer-Pitcher/Courtesy of Wolf Creek Ski Area)cca]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/alaskas-denali-is-finally-open-to-guided-skiing-and-you-have-a-colorado-company-to-thank/</link>
        <title>Alaska’s Denali is finally open to guided skiing, and you have a Colorado company to thank</title>
        <description>Permit rules were written with the expectation that mountaineers would stay roped, walking uphill and down</description>
        <pubDate>Mon, 04 Jul 2022 10:52:20 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">72A56F5F-D972-4050-9E1A-9D774F249772</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=C1779D76-7869-5909-93C4-D52477F2E360&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=C1779D76-7869-5909-93C4-D52477F2E360&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[A skier with Telluride-based Mountain Trip descends Alaska’s Denali in May as part of the first-ever guided ski mountaineering on North America’s highest peak. (Jediah Porter/Mountain Trip)Permit rules were written with the expectation that mountaineers would stay roped, walking uphill and downFor the 25 years he has guided peaks in the Alaska Range, Bill Allen looked at snowy slopes on Denali, North America’s tallest peak, and saw a prize to be had.“It’s the crown jewel of North America for not just mountaineering, but ski mountaineering,” said Allen, co-owner of and a guide for Mountain Trip, a Telluride-based company that leads clients up each of the highest points on each continent, including Denali, known as the Seven Summits.But until May, Allen’s guides had been banned from taking ski mountaineering clients onto Denali. When the National Park Service implemented a permit system in Denali National Park decades ago and set rules for guiding services working there, Allen said, “ski mountaineering wasn’t a thing the way it is now.” Permit rules were written with the expectation that mountaineers would stay roped, walking uphill and down, and so required that safety measure. Breaking the rules could cost the company its spot as one of few authorized to guide in the park. So for years, individuals could ski from the summit, but anyone who hired a guide had to stay roped.“You can’t ski safely down a mountain on a rope – it just doesn’t work that way,” said Chris Davenport, renowned ski mountaineer and former World Extreme Skiing Champion, who talked with Allen about the dream of guiding ski mountaineering trips in the national park for more than a decade. “It’s one thing to be on a rope when skinning up, but skiing down, it’s easy to yank someone off their feet.”Allen argued the case for changing the rules to park rangers for more than a decade. In 2020, park management finally lifted the rope rule. In May, Mountain Trip guides led their first guided ski descent from Denali’s summit and then the second at the end of June for a group of developing ski mountaineers with a mission of skiing these peaks to talk about climate change.“Now, we’re able to go and bring skiers there and see the beauty of the park from a skier’s perspective,” Davenport said.Skiers guided by Telluride's Mountain Trip ascend Denali in Alaska earlier this year. (Courtesy Mountain Trip)Building a pathway in paperwork and pipeline for skiersWith interest in backcountry skiing and ski mountaineering exploding, particularly over the last two years, more people have built strong backcountry skiing skills, Allen said, and are looking to Alaska to take their adventures to the next level. That makes for both increasing appetite and a growing pool of potential clients with skills enough to attempt skiing on the 20,310-foot-tall peak (formerly Mount McKinley; its Athabaskan name was officially restored in 2015). That appetite helped motivate the park service to change its guidelines.Fifteen years ago, Allen recalls, “The park was like, ‘Why do we need this, nobody is even asking for it?’ and I was like, well they’re not asking for it because it’s not an option, so we just say no to people every year – do you want us to have them call you? And we started doing that for a while,” Allen said.For about five years, he handed out the email address and phone number for the park service to anyone who asked for a ski mountaineering guide on Denali, and the park service listened. Having Tucker Chenoweth, a skier, as south district ranger for Denali National Park, also helped.“He gets it,” Allen said. Chenoweth couldn’t adjust the contracts that issue concessionaires their permits but could answer his bosses’ questions about whether guided ski descents were reasonable and what protocols to set. To answer those inquiries and nudge the bureaucratic workings along, Allen proposed guidelines for how to assess the terrain, avalanche hazards, where ski mountaineers should be roped, and where it’s appropriate to drop the rope based on test runs Mountain Trip staff made off the summit years ago.“I have, on my own private trips, skied on Denali, and recognized that it could be done and that there was no real reason for the park service to prevent it,” Chenoweth said. “I think in a wilderness setting, you should have a choice on how you want to experience that place.”Chenoweth is seeing more ski mountaineers on Denali, as well as more climbers on guided trips. Which is understandable. It’s challenging to camp at altitude for two-to-three weeks waiting for a weather window to reach the summit while making food and melting snow for water and dealing with sapping strength. Skiing adds another layer of difficulty.“I’d say skiing on Denali is survival,” Chenoweth said. “There’s places and times that it lines up and you have decent snow, but in general, you’re going to be really battling the conditions. You’re going from 7,000 feet to 20,310 feet and so you get the whole gambit of conditions. It’s everything from breakable crust to wind slab to corn to powder, all the way up to super- hard alpine ice. It sounds fun, so I think there will be interest, but the reality of committing to it and doing it is going to be different, because it should not be taken lightly.”Ski mountaineering on Denali requires all the skills of a mountaineer for glacier travel, crevasse rescue, climbing 50-plus degree slopes covered in snow and ice with crampons and ice axes, and self-arresting to prevent long falls.“All these things, as well as dealing with the altitude and the environment of Denali,” Allen said. “Then, you also need to be a really strong and proficient skier that can handle skiing with a heavy pack on in, like, not perfect snow conditions, in potentially some steep terrain. … There’s a lot of people who have interest and fewer people who have the skills.”But the shift in regulations also allowed for launching a program to develop those skills. With Davenport, Mountain Trip began weeklong ski mountaineering camps in the national park. The first series of those camps were held in 2021 and the second ran in April.Mountain Trip guided the first-ever ski mountaineering trips on Denali in Alaska in May. The Telluride-based outfitter worked with the National Park Service to allow guided skiing on North America’s highest peak. (Jediah Porter / Mountain Trip)“This is exactly what I, personally, from a selfish perspective, want to be doing. I want to be flying into Denali National Park with an awesome camp setup and doing steep skiing with my clients,” Davenport said. “When you get to the bottom of a steep, long ramp or run or couloir and they turn and look at you and say, ‘That’s the most incredible thing I’ve ever skied,’ that’s where we set the bar for this program.”For Davenport, trips to the Alaska Range in the mid-2000s illuminated the ski mountaineering potential not just on Denali and the Messner Couloir – which he included in his book, 50 Classic Ski Descents of North America – but throughout the national park. The best skiing isn’t up high, where temperatures drop too low for snow to fall most of the year, Davenport said, but on the lower slopes. That’s exactly where they’ve aimed those ski mountaineering camps, which skip the hassle of hauling gear in on sleds by flying in supplies to build a base camp on a glacier at around 6,000 feet. Guides also use the lower flanks of the mountain to teach critical mountaineering techniques when rough weather blows in and it’s too dangerous for a lengthy tour that can climb 3,000 vertical feet.The ski camps have been busy enough to fill the narrow three-week window in April for prime skiing conditions in the Alaska Range. So far, demand hasn’t been huge for ski descents of Denali, with just two small trips booked this year. One trip went with one skier, and the other hosted three, compared to the standard group size of six. That’s expected as Mountain Trip builds the first-of-its-kind ski mountaineering program.“It’s the kind of thing that I think takes people years to sort of build up to,” Allen said. The guide service also leads backcountry skiing and climbing excursions around Colorado. “So, we have people who are coming and skiing with us in Colorado, doing some training there, then coming to Alaska for the weeklong ski mountaineering camp next year. It’s going to take people a couple of years, I think, to build up the skills and comfort level.”For skiing Denali, the itinerary mirrors a mountaineering trip: Move to camp one, start carrying loads up to camp two at around 11,000 feet in elevation, then spend about three nights there before moving on to camp three, at 14,000 feet, the big basin where teams spend most of the time. Both camps sit amid skiable slopes, and the ski mountaineering trip in May stayed extra days at that 14,000-foot camp just to ski a few more lines, acclimatizing while skinning up to about 17,000 feet, then skiing back to camp.Completing the West Buttress Route, the standard route up Denali, includes skinning up some low-angle glaciers, roped to avoid the worst consequences of crevasse falls. Higher up, where the terrain becomes steeper, the snow deeper, and the crevasses fewer, they evaluate slope, avalanche risk, and fall hazards.“We’re not ditching the ropes entirely,” Allen said. “But we have the ability now to decide, OK, we can take the rope off.”Much of the summit push can be done on skis, with sections that require shouldering skis. Ski descents start from close to the top, though wind and variable snow can push the starting point farther down the peak. This season, an unguided ski mountaineer was injured and the rescue effort required a helicopter, Allen said, but generally, the skiing itself is fairly straightforward.“It’s not extremely steep, but steep enough it can be super-fun,” he said. “In some ways, it makes the mountain feel so much smaller because everything gets closer and you can move fast through terrain – sometimes, but not always. It changes the dynamic in a lot of ways. If you can get down safely and it’s good snow conditions, that’s the dream, for sure. But just being able to get down that terrain is a big win.”A skier with Mountain Trip descends Rescue Gully at 17,000 feet on Denali in Alaska in May. (Jediah Porter/Mountain Trip‘The Last Ride’ film looks to guide serviceOn Tanzania’s Mount Kilimanjaro, Edward Salisbury and Will Tucker stood on the last shred of an ice field, the finger of snow and ice dropping off around them, pink in the low sunlight. Their figures were dwarfed by the thickness of the ice below them. In recent lifetimes, deep snow and ice blanketed the mountain, but climate change melted glaciers on Africa’s tallest mountain down to the last fringes.The two had traveled to Kilimanjaro in April as part of a film project to ski the Seven Summits and document how climate change is transforming the world’s highest peaks. They knew the project would sometimes require walking over more bare rock than sliding down snow. They’ve titled their forthcoming film for what they expect this project might be: “The Last Ride.” Some, like Kilimanjaro and Puncak Jaya (or Carstensz Pyramid) on the island of New Guinea, the peak they intend to reach this fall, are already barely skiable.Tucker and Salisbury are just enthusiastic skiers who became aware of the changing winter landscape and wanted to do something about it, they explained in an interview via video conference from their hotel room in Anchorage in mid-June. The next day, the two, along with Jon Moy, director and cinematographer for the film, would drive three hours to Talkeetna, Alaska, then fly to the Kahiltna Glacier to spend three weeks in Denali National Park, looking for a good weather window to ski Denali. On June 28, they became the second Mountain Trip-led team to ski from the summit this year.“A core part of the project is working out how to channel personal passions into this kind of climate crisis messaging,” Moy said. “Part of the challenge with what we’re doing is, skiing – and particularly high-altitude mountaineering – is a very small, niche, privileged little market. But what we’re trying to do is present that to as wide a possible audience as we can. It’s less about the mountaineering, but more so about working out what you love and finding a way to use that for good.”Skiers with Mountain Trip in May ascend fixed lines on the Headwall at Denali in Alaska at 16,000 feet. ( (Jediah Porter/Mountain Trip)As former ski racers and freeride and freestyle competitors, Tucker and Salisbury were confident in their skiing skills. An interest in paragliding gave them experience ascending to and running off technical terrain in Europe. But between the altitude – until Russia’s Mount Elbrus last year, none of them had been above 5,000 meters in elevation, and many of these summits press toward 8,000 meters in height – and needing someone to partner with Moy while he skied away from the others to film, they decided to hire a guide service. Mountain Trip’s Allen was, Will said, “basically the only guy crazy enough to say yes.”They plan to offset the 58 tons of carbon dioxide emissions they estimate their travel, camera gear, and other equipment will produce seven times over. By exploring each of the offsets they purchase in the film, they expect to illustrate different efforts to mitigate climate change’s worst effects. Options covered could include planting trees, capturing methane at landfills, or carbon capture operations that use fans to pull carbon dioxide from the air before and storing it deep underground.“We’re not saying to people, lock yourself up in a room and never burn carbon – it’s impossible,” Salisbury said. “We want people to get outside. The more people can spend outside, and in these areas, the more they’ll connect to them and the more they’ll want to save for themselves. … So how can you be outside and see those places responsibly?”After they ski the last peaks in their lineup in Antarctica and South America in 2024, the film will blend in insights from locals who face severe losses as the planet warms. Working with guiding companies helps connect with those communities and build a deeper familiarity with these mountains. On Denali, the two aim to interview guides and pilots about how they’ve seen Alaska’s glaciers change, the future of Denali mountaineering and an Inupiak tribal member whose village needs to relocate to escape rising sea levels.“Global warming, I think, is the biggest concern we have for Denali,” Allen said. “It’s warming up, and it’s going to start falling apart in the next few decades.”Already, a bathtub ring has formed on the mountains that marks where glaciers have retreated. A ridge between 16,000 and 17,000 feet in elevation that used to be snow-covered has melted down to scree. Even after Alaska received record snowfall this winter setting up expectations for deep snowpack on the lower glacier, Allen said that’s not what he found this spring.“It seemed like being there in May, when I went in, it looked like June conditions,” Allen said, “That’s, whatever, one little observation, but things are warming up in the Alaska Range.”Still, Denali remains a big, snowy, arctic mountain where skiing isn’t immediately threatened, Allen said.“It’s going to take a long time for the snow to melt out of there,” he added, “but it has changed.”Balancing risk and rewardAs an ice-climber at heart, Ouray-based mountain guide Elías de Andrés-Martos won’t be guiding ski descents, but he calls them a great addition as a chance to diversify guiding at Denali and allow more people to “find their niche.” He’s mountaineered for 25 years and guided for more than 15 of them in the Alaska Range, Alps, Andes, and Himalaya, among others. He’s in his third season of working with Mountain Trip in Alaska.We caught up over breakfast before heading out to explore Ouray’s 3-year-old via ferrata, the “iron way” of ladder rungs and cables used to traverse the Uncompahgre River canyon. For de Andrés-Martos, the “fun” outing fits in between sleeping in a hypoxic tent, running up Mount Sneffels six of the eight previous days, and living out of a duffel bag packed for the moment a weather window opened on his next goal, the Cassin Ridge on Mount Denali.The prized alpine route has not successfully been guided in decades, de Andrés-Martos told me as we hiked uphill toward the via ferrata. Denali’s annual mountaineering summaries date the last successful guided trip up the Cassin to 1991. While 943 climbers attempted Denali from the West Buttress last year, just 16 tried the Cassin.He was confident his two clients, who have trained and climbed with him for a decade, had the fitness and skills to complete the route. Then, at lunch, he heard from one of those clients who had gone to base camp for a West Buttress expedition to acclimatize. Cold had injured his index finger. He’s out, de Andrés-Martos said. Further cold exposure could cost him the finger.Skiers approach the summit of Denali in Alaska in May. Telluride-based Mountain Trip guided the first ski mountaineering clients on North America’s highest peak this year. (Jediah Porter/Mountain Trip)Like backcountry skiing and ski mountaineering, interest in mountaineering seems to have grown, if on a different scale. Take Mount Everest, which saw 100 climbers on the summit in a single day in May. Climbers are also enjoying a success rate, with the number of successful summits on Everest doubling over the last 30 years. On Denali this year, the share of summit attempts that succeeded bumped as high as 71%. Allen credits good weather, with a high-pressure system sitting over Alaska yielding strings of sunny days that let all 10 Mountain Trip teams summit.“How the sport is evolving is making it more accessible, so we have more people,” de Andrés-Martos said. “In the terrain that’s known – because we haven’t found everything – in the terrain that’s known and what most of the mortals have access to, what are the challenges going to be? They need to be created. … You come up with your ‘first’ and continue to do what’s already been done.”Ski descents have pushed that line forward, he added, if they sometimes require more jump turns and survival skiing rather than the swooping downhill familiar to skiers at resorts. The undertaking isn’t new, with Bill Briggs skiing Wyoming’s Grand Teton in 1971. Mugs Stump’s stunning solo ascent of Denali in 1991 involved skiing and down climbing the West Rib Route. And Andreas Fransson skied Denali’s rugged South Face in 2011, which that year’s annual mountaineering report on the peak called “a fantastic statement of one person’s courage to challenge himself in the mountains.”And yet, space remains for new achievements. French mountain guide Paul Bonhomme spent last year skiing 10 new lines in the Alps. The year of Fransson’s ski descent of Denali, the mountaineering summary report mentioned Denali consistently sees about 1,000 climbers each year – it still does and has since the early 1990s – but climbers often find variety by pursuing new lines or with “different, notable strategies.”“Mountain Trip actually are the pioneers in guiding ski trips in Denali. It’s its own thing,” de Andrés-Martos said. “Ski guiding has another array of risks, but also has another array of benefits. You get down the mountain now faster. Somebody’s developing a cold injury, just get them down quick. Fatigue, you cover ground much faster. Could be dangerous going up, but it’s really beneficial on the way down.”Skiing can also be dangerous on the way down, he added later, because skiers move faster through crevasse-laced terrain, and might come upon them too quickly to avoid them. Plus, ski boots are colder. That said, skis distribute weight over a fragile crust of snow, potentially keeping that person aloft where boots and crampons might punch through. Or, skis could catch someone’s fall before they drop into a crevasse. On acclimatization trips, hauling gear uphill to practice breathing at altitude, ski mountaineers can cache gear at a high camp and be back at base camp in half an hour. For a hiker, that return trip can take four hours.“Those people are going to be more ready to kick ass when it’s time to on summit day,” he says. “But you need to have the guides for it.”Any of the five guiding services permitted to lead in Denali could now offer ski descents from the summit. So far, Alaska Mountaineering School seems to be the only other guiding company to take that opportunity. In a system where Denali National Park allocates a limited number of permits each year and those offerings are already well-booked, for a lot of guiding services, there’s little incentive to take on more hassle.“We’re happy with mountaineering, which took long enough to get under control as it is,” said Gordon Janow, director of programs for Alpine Ascents, another guiding service that works in Denali National Park. This year, they’re taking close to 100 people to Denali – and turned away 50. Skiing is “probably not something that we would add, because we’re in good shape,” he said, “but I think it’s viable for the right group of people.”But, in a crisis, when guides and rangers collaborate on rescues or otherwise support one another through situations in which someone can’t continue, he hopes skiers might become an asset to everyone, using their ability to quickly descend to help move gear as needed. At a minimum, Allen added, guides can model best practices and perhaps improve safety among other groups.Mountain Trip has also filled every space on its trips in recent years, he said, and “We didn’t need skiing to make that happen.”“It’s definitely more of a passion project,” Allen said. “It’s a ski mountaineering mountain. It’s so well suited to ski mountaineering, it would be a shame if we weren’t offering that.”Read more at The Colorado SunThe Colorado Sun is a reader-supported, nonpartisan news organization dedicated to covering Colorado issues. To learn more, go to coloradosun.com.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/a-hometown-spring-hike-north-of-durango/</link>
        <title>A hometown spring hike north of Durango</title>
        <description>Mitchell Lakes Trail, Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail lead to wide-open views</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 08 May 2021 10:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">AFC0D338-9A53-4286-8764-C99055722990</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=6919ABFA-EA21-5441-86F4-1A09A7678790&#038;function=cropresize&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;q=75&#038;width=1200&#038;x=0.025&#038;y=1.0E-5&#038;crop_w=0.87875&#038;crop_h=0.99999" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=6919ABFA-EA21-5441-86F4-1A09A7678790&#038;function=cropresize&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;q=75&#038;width=1200&#038;x=0.025&#038;y=1.0E-5&#038;crop_w=0.87875&#038;crop_h=0.99999" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Two large benches break the fall line of the Hermosa Cliffs as they plummet 2,700 feet to the Animas River Valley. Mitchell Lakes rest on the upper terrace. The Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail threads its way up a south-facing slope and the San Juan Mountains preside over the whole scene.Debra Van Winegarden/Special to the HeraldMitchell Lakes Trail, Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail lead to wide-open viewsThree trails penetrate the Hermosa Cliffs running west of U.S. Highway 550 between the town of Hermosa and Purgatory Resort: Mitchell Lakes, Goulding Creek and Elbert Creek.Of these, the Mitchell Lakes Trail is not only the closest to Durango, it is typically free of snow by late April. Begin this hometown hike from County Road 250 at the bottom of Old Shalona Hill and ascend westward. Segue onto the Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail and climb to Hermosa Ridge, the divide between the Animas River and Hermosa Creek watersheds. Top out on Point 9,564’ where views extend from the valley floor to Missionary Ridge, and from the La Plata range to the San Juan Mountains.Travel BasicsHike westward on the Mitchell Lakes Trail. For the shortest hike follow the blue-line trail onto the Mitchell Lakes terrace and explore the three lakes. Or, transition to the Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail and ascend to Hermosa Ridge. Climb a short distance north to Peak 9,564’. Note: The Hermosa USGS topo map has not been revised since 1963 when U.S. Highway 550 was running up Old Shalona Hill. Apogee Mapping of Durango has roads and trails correctly delineated on their Hermosa quad. Debra Van Winegarden/Map Special to the Herald Travel: From Durango, travel north on U.S. Highway 550. Pass the town of Hermosa and drive over four rollers, the “Four Sisters.” Pinkerton Hot Springs (“Bubbling Rock”) is at the top of the Fourth Sister. Continue for 0.2 mile and turn right on La Plata County Road 250. The road makes a sharp hairpin to the right then hooks back left. It splits just before Riverside KOA, 0.2 mile from the highway. Make a sharp left (while watching for bicyclists!) onto "Old Shalona Hill.” In 0.1 mile, park in a wide turnout on the left. The Mitchell Lakes Trail goes west up Forest Service Road 740, a technical track not suitable for four-wheel drive vehicles.Distance and Elevation GainPoint 9,564': 8.2 miles, 2,850 feet of verticalMitchell Lakes: 7.4 miles, 1,900 feetTotal Time: 5 to 6.5 hoursDifficulty: Trail; navigation easy; no exposureMap: Hermosa, Colorado 7.5' USGS Quad, or Apogee Mapping 24001563I think of this as one of Durango’s finest early-season fitness hikes. For those who make it to the highpoint, the mileage and elevation gain is equivalent to the workout on the more popular Haflin Creek Trail.Moderate hikers may stop shy of the ridge and explore Mitchell Lakes. The trail system is open to hikers, equestrians, mountain bikes, dirt bikes and OHVs. Traffic increases as the season progresses.Pinkerton Hot Springs (Bubbling Rock) is on the east side of the highway just before the turnoff for La Plata County Road 250. Judge Pinkerton and his family homesteaded near the hot springs in the 1870sCourtesy of Thomas Holt WardMitchell Lakes TrailThere is no trailhead sign for Mitchell Lakes at the parking pullout, elevation 6,780 feet. Forest Service Road 740 is labeled on a post. Private land surrounds the road for the first 0.4 mile. Walk through a tunnel under U.S. Highway 550 and pass the Fume Wall, a sport climbing destination. The wall is composed of Leadville Limestone. It is surprisingly the same formation as the Redwall Limestone in the Grand Canyon.The cement fortresses you see are intended to protect homes from floods and debris flows emanating from the 416 Fire burn scar. The fire started on June 1, 2018, just up the tracks from the Forest Service Road 740 crossing. It was contained July 31 after burning 52,778 acres. While the fire swept through the entire region, destruction was spotty. Some ponderosa and aspen groves survived. Caution! The trail passes through stands of incinerated trees. Do not hike on a blustery day.Hikers walk through a tunnel under US 550 to get started on the Mitchell Lakes Trail. West of the highway is the Fume Wall, a technical climbing area in Leadville Limestone.Debra Van Winegarden/Special to the HeraldCross the tracks, hop over a creek and enter the San Juan National Forest. The road degenerates and the grade varies from nearly level to super steep. To be honest, some locals avoid this trail for its steepness and rubbly footing.Almost a mile up the initial northwest traverse, a spur takes off to the left. Continue on the main road which makes a hairpin to the southwest at 1.1 miles.Cross a series of shallow, boulder-choked ravines scoured out from fire-enhanced debris flows. The sandstone is a member of the Hermosa Group found on this east-facing slope. The repetition of sandstone, limestone, shale and siltstone record sea level rise and fall and glaciation in the Pennsylvanian Period 300 million years ago.At 1.8 miles – 8,000 feet – the trackway strikes north across a broad bench. It is a pleasant interlude through a woodland of Rocky Mountain and Utah juniper, ponderosa and gambel oak. In the spring, mahonia (Oregon grape) flows over the ground splaying bright yellow blossoms. After the idyllic reprieve, the trail pitches radically before swinging west to approach the base of the east ridge of Point 9,564'.Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail to Point 9,564'Arrive at the signed junction with the south end of the lengthy Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail (PFT) at 2.7 miles. To reach Hermosa Ridge, transition onto the PFT, a multi-use singletrack.The trail is named for James Harvey Pinkerton, a La Plata County judge in the 1870s (no relation to the Pinkerton Detective Agency). The judge, Ann Eliza and their seven children homesteaded in the area now known as Pinkerton Hot Springs. The family raised dairy cows and sold butter to Silverton miners.The trail climbs swiftly as it ascends the south flank of the eastward lateral ridge. Old-growth ponderosa that survived the conflagration part to reveal sightings of the Mitchell Lakes cluster on the bench below. The treadway makes a couple of switchbacks through a lens of gray limestone. A gorgeous slab of blue polka dot shale rests on the trail. Climb constructed sandstone steps and transition between the Hermosa Group and red Cutler Formation as you near the divide.After a year of hiking solo, friends are overjoyed to be charging together up Point 9,564’ in early April. Snow cover in the La Plata Mountains foretell promise of summer wildflowers.Debra Van Winegarden/Special to the HeraldIntersect north-south-running Hermosa Ridge at 3.9 miles, elevation 9,420 feet. The field of vision from the divide is mesmerizing, but climb just a little further and it is spellbinding.To summit Point 9,564', stay on the PFT as it turns northwest. Enter the Hermosa Creek Special Management Area (SMA). The Hermosa Creek Watershed Protection legislation, passed by Congress in 2014, created both the 37,236-acre Hermosa Creek Wilderness and the SMA. After a few paces, watch for a ridgeline trail to the crest of the highpoint at 4.1 miles.Find the summit register tucked in the branches of a limber pine. The lookout provides an astounding vista to all compass points. In the west, the La Plata Mountains rise substantially above Barnes Mountain and Cape Horn. North is Engineer Mountain, Snowdon Peak and the Twilights. Northeast is Mountain View Crest, Shalona Lake, Old Shalona Hill and U.S. Highway 550.While this hike turns around here, other exit strategies exist provided you set up a short shuttle. Continue north on the PFT and intersect the Jones Creek Trail in 0.6 mile. The lower Hermosa Creek Trailhead is about five miles south. Or, continue north for about 3.2 miles on the PFT to the Goulding Creek Trail and descend three miles east to the trailhead off U.S. Highway 550.Mitchell LakesFor a more leisurely hike, explore the three lakes and forego the little mountain. When the PFT takes off at 2.7 miles, stay on the Mitchell Lakes Trail. Big timber, a pocket of aspen, grasses – it is pretty and peaceful. Follow the two-track up and over a low ridge and onto the three-lake terrace, a glacial cirque.The first lake has nearly completed the age-old Earth process of turning into a grassy meadow.The next pond is hidden from view to the northwest over a low rise. The reedy tarn is teaming with Boreal Chorus Frogs. Their cheerful springtime cacophony fills the hollow with song. Walk due south to the third lakelet. A witness tree stands sentry over pleasing blue water.Leave No TraceOur trails are pristine and free of micro-trash because locals have a high regard for wild places. Thank you for cleaning up after yourself and others. In the spring, it is important to stay on established trails, no matter how muddy. Be kind to yourself and all living things: people, wildlife, plants…rocks too!http://debravanwinegarden.blogspot.com. Debra Van Winegarden is an explorer and freelance writer who lives in Durango.Hike westward on the Mitchell Lakes Trail. For the shortest hike follow the blue-line trail onto the Mitchell Lakes terrace and explore the three lakes. Or, transition to the Pinkerton-Flagstaff Trail and ascend to Hermosa Ridge. Climb a short distance north to Peak 9,564’. Note: The Hermosa USGS topo map has not been revised since 1963 when U.S. Highway 550 was running up Old Shalona Hill. Apogee Mapping of Durango has roads and trails correctly delineated on their Hermosa quad.Debra Van Winegarden/Map Special to the Herald]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/landowners-shut-down-access-to-three-colorado-fourteeners/</link>
        <title>Landowners shut down access to three Colorado fourteeners</title>
        <description>Bross, Democrat and Lincoln temporarily closed</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 30 Apr 2021 17:41:41 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">C137DF25-E7B4-19C1-E053-0100007F6E81</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=944F3D1F-A88C-4DE2-A036-93B9A96033A2&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=944F3D1F-A88C-4DE2-A036-93B9A96033A2&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Bross, Democrat and Lincoln temporarily closedDenver resident Steve Flowers approaches the north face of Mount Democrat on a splitboard on April 16, 2020.Hugh Carey/The Colorado Sun file Landowners who own the tops of Colorado’s Mount Lincoln, Mount Democrat and Mount Bross on Thursday closed access to the trio of Mosquito Range fourteeners. The closure triggered an upswell of lamentations from Colorado’s peak-bagging community. But the closure is expected to last only this month. “It is a temporary closure,” said Julie Mach, conservation director with the Colorado Mountain Club, who has worked for years with landowners in the Mosquito Range to protect both access and private property. It is illegal to access the summit of Mount Bross, but landowners have allowed access to Mount Democrat and Mount Lincoln via a trail that starts at Kite Lake and loops around the three fourteeners. The landowners for many decades have worried about liability. There are mining structures and open pits all over the peaks. One property owner told Lloyd Athearn, the head of the Colorado Fourteeners Initiative, about seeing a family off the loop trail a couple years ago. “The dad was holding his son by the ankles, dangling him over a mine opening. The son had a flashlight and dad was asking what he could see,” Athearn said. “So yeah, there are some legitimate concerns about liability up there.” The landowners have closed access to the peaks before, but reopened them after reaching agreements with land managers, fourteener trail groups and the Town of Alma. The liability concerns of the landowners spiked anew in 2019, when a federal court upheld a $7.3 million verdict awarded to a Colorado Springs mountain biker who crashed into a sinkhole on a washed-out trail at the U.S. Air Force Academy. In the case involving injured cyclist, James Nelson, the Air Force Academy argued it was protected from damages under the Colorado Recreational Use Statute, which provides immunity to land owners who let people recreate on their land at no charge. But the statute does not provide liability if a landowner knows a dangerous condition exists and demonstrates a “willful or malicious failure” to guard or warn visitors about the dangers. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit in February 2019 upheld several previous court decisions, ruling that Air Force Academy “failed to provide a justifiable excuse for its willful failure to guard or warn against the likely harm posed by the sinkhole.” “That case certainly rekindled their concerns about liability,” Mach said.Frisco resident Gary Fondl skis on the west face of Mount Democrat on May 11, 2019 near Leadville.Hugh Carey/The Colorado Sun file John Reiber has owned mining claims all over Mount Lincoln, Mount Democrat and Mount Bross for decades. In that time he has worked with the Colorado Mountain Club, Colorado Fourteeners Initiative and the Town of Alma to protect recreational access to the peaks. He allowed construction of a trail on his property on the flanks of Mount Bross, but the trail does not go to the summit, because other landowners there do not allow hiking on their property. The Colorado Fourteener Initiative’s annual use report shows 20,000 to 25,000 hikers a year climb the three peaks, often also scaling the 14,238-foot Cameron Peak, which does not rank as an official fourteener because it does not climb more than 300 feet from an adjacent saddle. That loop is informally known as the Decalibron. In a June 2020 online discussion with the Colorado Mountain Club, Reiber outlined his concerns about liability and impacts from increasing traffic on the peaks. After closing trails to the peaks in 2004, Reiber and his fellow landowners in 2006 reached an agreement to restore access with the Town of Alma, which leased about 3,900 acres around the three fourteeners. The deal – which is anchored in Colorado’s recreational use statute – alleviated some, but not all, landowner concerns about liability, Reiber said in an online discussion last summer. “From time to time I check with an attorney on that level of protection and I have been recently advised it’s not as good as it used to be,” said Reiber, who could not be reached on Friday. The Alma lease requires that hikers must remain on the trail and can’t remove materials, damage mining property, leave trash or make fires. The lease does not allow access to the top of Mount Bross. In his presentation to Colorado Mountain Club members, Reiber showed maps that hikers could use to determine the boundaries between public and private land in the Mosquito Range. Then he scrolled through pictures of a gate ripped off a mine entrance on Lincoln, right next to a “No Trespassing” sign. He scrolled through photographs showing a line of hikers heading to the summit of Mount Bross on marked private property, including off-road-vehicles heading up to the summit. He described vandalism, stolen mine equipment, illegal fires, shooting and trash on his property. “A lot of this is education,” he said. “I think that’s a never-ending opportunity. If people could be educated as to where they are at and respect that private property, I think through that we can work to keep these peaks open for everyone to enjoy.” Alex Derr last August joined landowners and representatives from the Colorado Fourteeners Initiative and the Colorado Mountain Club on a hike up Lincoln and Democrat. His master’s thesis in environmental policy at CU Denver studies access and liability issues swirling around the Mosquito Range, where pretty much the entire ridgeline is a collection of privately owned mining claims. As they hiked, a dozen people on ATVs navigated around a gate and “no motorized access” signs and started throttling across the tundra. The owners chased them down and the drivers apologized, saying they were unaware they were on private land, Derr said. “That was a real turning point for me,” said Derr, whose blog provides maps and guides to the state’s highest peaks. “I could really see the owners’ frustrations. If you want your land preserved and protected, but you don’t want to put up fences and keep everyone out, you are really stuck between a rock and a hard place.” Both Mach, with the Colorado Mountain Club, and Athearn, with Colorado Fourteeners Initiative, feel confident access will be restored by June 1, which is when snow begins melting enough for hikers to actually start reaching peaks. But when access is restored, advocates are pleading with hikers to help prevent a longer or even permanent closure. “The landowners are supportive of recreation and they want to be able to keep the peaks open so it’s really contingent on recreationists to be responsible and stay on the trail,” Mach said. Athearn, who has worked with Reiber, suspects the landowner may be using the temporary closure to affirm their property rights and prevent a prescriptive easement. (That’s when unfettered access through private property without permission lasts so long that it becomes a sort of de facto right of way.) “This is a courtesy closure reminding people that he allows them to access his private land,” Athearn said. “It is his private land and he has been very accommodating and generous over the years, given that a lot of people behave irresponsibly up there.” The Colorado Sun is a reader-supported, nonpartisan news organization dedicated to covering Colorado issues. To learn more, go to coloradosun.com.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-celebrating-an-old-season-and-new-life/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Celebrating an old season and new life</title>
        <description>That’s right, the final two days of resort skiing and snowboarding have arrived this weekend at Purgatory Resort. It’s the last chance for those who don’t venture into the backcountry to step into those bindings and make a few turns...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 17 Apr 2021 02:53:45 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">C022E594-DFFC-592F-E053-0100007F162C</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=EA266A8B-0F62-4233-B9AF-A7374BD552D3&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=EA266A8B-0F62-4233-B9AF-A7374BD552D3&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[This, my friends, is the end. One last hurrah before packing away the winter gear. And, perhaps, one last powder day? That’s right, the final two days of resort skiing and snowboarding have arrived this weekend at Purgatory Resort. It’s the last chance for those who don’t venture into the backcountry to step into those bindings and make a few turns down the front side of the mountain. It’s a chance to celebrate, jam to live music and reflect a bit on the season. Wolf Creek Ski Area closed for the year April 4. It had a sensational season with 362 inches filled with epic powder days, including one of my deepest first days of a season in memory. It truly set the tone for a special year. Purgatory Resort has remained open on weekends only since April 4, with this Sunday set as the grand finale. The local hill received 195 inches this year but none so far this month. That is set to change this weekend with snow showers and as much as 11 inches in the forecast for Saturday and into Sunday. Could Purg break the 200-inch barrier for the season? Forget the spring slush, bring on the big wet flakes!Livingstondu1-i-syn Saturday is the big bash at Purgatory with music from local band State 38 to play from 1 to 4 p.m. at the beach area. No pond skim for a second year in a row, so let’s hope that makes a triumphant return in 2022. For this snowboarder, this weekend symbolizes a bit of a turning of a page. I’ve often been able to track big life events with the passing of a ski season. This year was no different. Growing up in Colorado, it may be surprising that I didn’t strap on a board for the first time until I was a junior in college. I played football, basketball and baseball – with baseball becoming a year-round focus early in my high school days – and my parents kept me away from the slopes. All that catcher’s equipment and new bats cost enough money, and keeping me away from a broken leg was a bigger priority. But thanks to my best friend, I was introduced to snowboarding at Loveland Ski Area halfway into my college years. He took me straight to the top, fighting a bit of a New Year’s Day hangover, and told me I would figure it out by the time I got to the bottom. He wasn’t totally wrong, but he wasn’t completely right, either. A year later and after a stance change from regular to goofy, the turns started coming to me. And after moving to the Four Corners in 2010 and getting my first Purgatory season pass, I started cranking out days at a high volume. It became my favorite sport. I still love stepping on a baseball or softball field, hitting a big drive off a golf tee box, paddling a raft down a river or reeling in a nice trout on my fly rod, but nothing beats a powder day and weaving around trees on the mountain. Snowboarding is my passion and a place to express my energy in a pure form. It’s something I want my first-born child to experience well before their college days, as I now wish I had been a lifelong snowboarder. So, during many of my wonderful experiences chatting with strangers on chairlifts this season, I found myself talking increasingly more about getting a child started in the sport. What age is too young? When can a kid first get into lessons? What are the best ways to make sure the child has a good experience? How do I avoid becoming one of those families that is arguing with each other in a lift line? I received a lot of great answers to those questions, and all of the parents were stoked to share stories of towing their little ones around their driveways, some before they could even fully walk on their own. This will be my last weekend of riding before becoming a father later this year. I learned that during the 2020-21 season before taking my fiancé, Allyson Ropes, to Purgatory, where I proposed to her on her favorite run – Sally’s. She likes to call it “Ally’s.” Our paths had long crossed at Purgatory, but our journey started back in those high school days when snowboarding was the furthest thing on my mind, as we graduated from school together before taking different life routes to Durango. Now, we are ready to get our first parent share pass at Purgatory and introduce our son to the ways of boots and bindings in the coming seasons. Those future days at Purgatory are going to be a lot different than in my single days, but if our experience is anything like that of those who I chatted with this season, they will be even more rewarding. I’m ready to pass this deep love of winter sports down. Thanks to everyone for the wonderful advice this season. And a thank you also goes out to so many of you who reached out with kind words of support for this column over the last few months. Let’s keep it going next season. I hope to see you on a lift this weekend. We all have a lot to celebrate. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter or Instagram, @jlivi2.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/colorado-rejects-effort-to-require-ski-areas-to-report-injuries/</link>
        <title>Colorado rejects effort to require ski areas to report injuries</title>
        <description>Senate Bill 184 would have forced resorts to be transparent</description>
        <pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2021 19:34:02 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">C00ACA95-00E2-0C29-E053-0100007FA348</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=D2270287-C977-47AD-AAB8-9CAEB482CE37&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=D2270287-C977-47AD-AAB8-9CAEB482CE37&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Senate Bill 184 would have forced resorts to be transparentSki patrollers tend to an injured skier in Vail’s Game Creek Bowl on Dec. 11.Jason Blevins/The Colorado Sun Colorado state lawmakers on Thursday killed a bill that would have required ski areas to publish ski injury statistics and safety plans. The Colorado Senate’s Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee heard from more than 40 witnesses over three hours Thursday, many pleading for the passage of Senate Bill 184. They also heard from ski industry representatives who urged the committee to reject the Ski Areas Safety Plans and Accident Reporting Act. Ultimately, the five-member committee of two Republicans and three Democrats voted 4-1 to kill the bill. The lone vote to advance the measure came from Sen. Jessie Danielson, a Wheat Ridge Democrat and prime sponsor of the legislation. Denver’s Danilda Polanco, whose 18-year-old nephew Etthan Mañon died skiing at Echo Mountain in December, said requiring resorts to report accidents is “a no brainer.” “We are here to try to prevent other families from going through the horror we had to experience as a family,” said Polanco, describing how a ski patroller told her family that accidents like what happened to her nephew “happen all the time.” “If this happens all the time, why hasn’t something been done? It’s because of a lack of transparency,” she said. Lynda Weston Taylor’s 27-year-old son Jason Taylor died after striking a tree at Keystone ski area in January 2016. “I urge you, Colorado, to do better,” she said. “And to lead with safety.” Pat Campbell, the president of Vail Resorts’ 37-resort mountain division and a 35-year veteran of the resort industry, said requiring ski resorts to publish safety reports “is not workable” and would create an “unnecessary burden, confusion and distraction.” Skiers don’t ask for safety plans, Campbell said. But they like skier safety education messaging and seeing safety and ski patrollers on the slopes. They appreciate signage noting family areas and slow-skiing zones, she said. Requiring resorts to publish public safety plans, she said, would “trigger a massive administrative effort” that could redirect resort work from other safety measures. “Publishing safety plans will not inform skiers about our work or create a safer ski area,” Campbell said. Danielson, the state lawmaker pushing for the new policy, blasted the ski industry’s argument that reporting injuries would be inconvenient and an administrative burden, saying she was siding with the families who lost loved ones on the slopes. “When we approached the ski areas to work on any of the details in the bill, they refused,” said Danielson, who sponsored the bill with Democratic Sen. Tammy Story, of Conifer. “They refused to tell us what about this bill was unacceptable prior to today. It makes me wonder what it is that they are hiding. It seems to me that an industry that claims to have safety as a top priority would be interested in sharing the information about injuries on their mountains.” Don Fisher, a physician, told the committee that systematic data collection, reporting and analysis “become routine and simplified over short periods of time” when industries adopt new levels of safety. He said safety improvements have reformed industries like health care, oil and gas production, mining, chemical production, public utilities and consumer products. “Senate Bill 184 is a good start to help make the Colorado ski industry a world leader in attracting skiers and riders,” Fisher said. Chris Romer, the president and CEO of the Vail Valley Partnership who was representing a coalition of chambers and tourism groups, said requiring Colorado to be the only one of 37 ski states to report injuries would be “a self-imposed black eye” that could damage the state’s ski communities and tourism industry. Larissa Wilder, who directs the 1,500-member Parents for Safe Skiing group, also opposed the bill, arguing that more direct interactions with resorts can yield effective safety changes. “This bill implies it is the consumer’s responsibility to sift through thousands of pieces of data to best determine which inherent risks they are willing to consume,” Wilder said. Jordan Lipp, an attorney with the Colorado Civil Justice League who represents ski areas in injury lawsuits, said national injury statistics tend to show beginner skiers suffer injuries more often than advanced skiers, so smaller ski areas that attract beginners could be harmed by reporting numbers. Melanie Mills, president and CEO of the 22-resort Colorado Ski Country trade association, said ski areas already collect, analyze and report ski injury data. The National Ski Areas Association will issue its fifth 10-year study of ski injuries this summer. That peer-reviewed study looks at injury rates, changes over time, types of injuries and types of skiers injured. “No other recreational sport is better researched and studied than skiing,” Mills said. Kim Hart said her 86-year-old father, Richard Hart, was killed “by a reckless snowboarder” at Copper Mountain in March 2020. She sought more information about the collision and was unable to learn any details, she said. “This (bill) will strengthen our ski industry, not weaken it,” she said. Russ Rizzo, the statewide director of Safe Slopes Colorado and a longtime skier teaching his two young sons to ski, described his group finding “an undeniable chorus of support for common-sense answers we are discussing today.” Rizzo said his group’s request for injury statistics from ski industry groups like Colorado Ski Country yielded nothing. “They flat out told us they have zero interest in engaging in transparency,” Rizzo said. New statistics provided last year by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment show as many as 55 skiers and snowboarders arrive at Colorado emergency departments every day of the ski season. The CDPHE numbers showed 4,151 skiers and snowboarders transported to emergency rooms in ambulances or helicopters in 2018, 2019 and the first part of 2020, which is about 10 patients every day of the season. Stephanie Stevenson’s husband, Paul, a neurosurgeon, was killed following a collision with another skier at Snowmass ski area in March 2014. He suffered multiple injuries. A surgeon told Stevenson her husband’s injuries “were like he had been hit by a Mack truck.” “If a truck had hit him, we would have had more information about what happened,” she told the committee on Thursday, describing the challenges of learning details about the collision that killed her husband. “We don’t trust that Colorado ski resorts are really doing all they can to prevent accidents.” Stevenson said she and her daughter recently went hiking in Utah’s Zion National Park and came across a sign that warned hikers of dangers ahead. The sign noted how many hikers had died while traversing that trail. “That sign made us choose a different trail,” she said. “It didn’t make us not want to hike.”Chris Arnis stretches December 12, 2020, at his Steamboat Springs home. Arnis received a C-4 spinal cord injury after crashing March 15, 2015, at Steamboat Resort.Matt Stensland/Special to The Colorado Sun Chris Arnis from Steamboat Springs described a crash at the Steamboat ski area that left him a quadriplegic after he slammed through ruts left by a lift line maze that had been removed before the resort closed. “There is no transparency. I asked for some information and I got a small piece of paper with tons of misinformation,” said Arnis, a former All American collegiate skier and local ski coach. “I love this sport. My kids still ski. My ex-wife still skis. But ... I’m done.” Dr. Dan Gregorie, the founder of the national SnowSport Safety Foundation, lost a daughter at a California ski area 14 years ago in what he called “a preventable accident.” He said ski injury reporting by resorts would make the ski industry “ safer” and “stronger.” “It is incomprehensible that Colorado law requires amusement parks to report injuries and accidents while there is no statistics on injuries at ski areas statewide,” Gregorie said. Rana Dershowitz, the co-chief operating officer at Aspen Skiing Co.’s four Roaring Fork Valley ski areas, refuted “fundamental flaws” in the legislation’s suggestion that resorts are not taking safety seriously. Safety is a “core component” of every aspect of Aspen Skiing Co.’s operation and training for safety is an ongoing enterprise in a “dynamic environment with conditions changing often by the hour,” she said. The specific injury reporting provisions of Senate Bill 184 “seeks to shift the longstanding and thoughtful balance of the current Ski Safety Act,” she said. “Instead of respecting trained professionals, whose entire careers are about supporting a safe ski experience, we would tell them to turn their focus away from the complex interplay of what is happening on our mountains to ensure that they are collecting dozens of specific and potentially irrelevant data points,” Dershowitz said. “We want our ski patrols focused on actually monitoring mountain safety.” The Colorado Sun is a reader-supported, nonpartisan news organization dedicated to covering Colorado issues. To learn more, go to coloradosun.com.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-bring-warm-weather-wax-to-the-party/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Bring warm weather wax to the party</title>
        <description>The first weekend of April brings the end to daily skiing at Purgatory Resort, Wolf Creek Ski Area and Telluride Ski Resort. That makes it easier for the mind to wander to golf courses, rivers, climbing areas and bike trails....</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 03 Apr 2021 01:08:52 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BF041268-2A16-38D5-E053-0100007F90C8</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=2E4BB7CD-3D90-4AE8-9034-B02FC4A5CFA8&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=2E4BB7CD-3D90-4AE8-9034-B02FC4A5CFA8&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Seasons have changed and the urge to change gears into spring hobbies is strong. The first weekend of April brings the end to daily skiing at Purgatory Resort, Wolf Creek Ski Area and Telluride Ski Resort. That makes it easier for the mind to wander to golf courses, rivers, climbing areas and bike trails. But with the end of the season comes one of the best celebrations of the year, and there is plenty to celebrate this year. We made it.Livingstondu1-i-syn Yes, we made it through a weird year of skiing and snowboarding around the COVID-19 pandemic and all the related health guidelines. We stood in longer lift lines, wore masks, kept our parties to smaller numbers and didn’t congregate at indoor bars and dining areas. It was different, and it lacked a bit of what I love about snowboarding at resorts – things that have nothing to do with the sport itself like watching afternoon Denver Broncos games on a warm bar stool or catching some spring training baseball action from that same seat in the spring. But the skiing was good and we got to finish the season, unlike a year ago. So this weekend, get out and celebrate that fact at the ski area of your choosing. Purgatory Resort still boasts a 53-inch base depth with fairly decent coverage, though some rocks were starting to show their faces in the middle of prominent runs Friday. Wolf Creek has a whopping 103-inch base depth thanks to 362 inches of snowfall this year. And Telluride still is holding onto a 65-inch base depth. But beware, some of that spring snow is as sticky as tree sap. With temperatures near 60 degrees this weekend at Purgatory and over 40 at Wolf Creek, hopefully some of that stick snow turns into that good spring slush. It is past time to put warm weather wax on the bottom of your skis or snowboards. If you haven’t yet, it’s still worth the work or the small fee to take it to your favorite board or ski shop with the potential of a couple more weekends of playing on snow this month. Purgatory Resort will be open weekends only now until a closing-day party April 18. Wolf Creek has yet to announce official plans and said potential weekend operations will depend on snow conditions. With that base depth, it’s hard to imagine not getting at least one more weekend at Wolfie. Before you pack your gear away for good this season, let’s enjoy another weekend or two together on the slopes in our tank tops and silly costumes. And be sure to give a “thank you” to the hard working and often under appreciated employees at our favorite mountains for a job well done keeping us sane, organized and safe this season. I’ll see you on the chair lift. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram, @jlivi2.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-clinging-to-winter-as-the-seasons-change/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Clinging to winter as the seasons change</title>
        <description>Spring break is in full effect with more tourists than locals filling the slopes at our southwest Colorado ski areas. And while everyone seems slightly more on edge this year, it’s nice to see people getting outside and having some...</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 19 Mar 2021 23:59:58 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BDE7E0B1-76B8-1394-E053-0100007F92CA</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=F24F4842-C44F-4358-93FF-79EE29778EC0&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=F24F4842-C44F-4358-93FF-79EE29778EC0&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[As the days get warmer, the calendar turns to spring and the snow begins to melt, one begins to ponder how many more days will be spent sliding down the mountain in the next few weeks. Lucky for us, there’s still plenty of snow on the ground and more on the way. Spring break is in full effect with more tourists than locals filling the slopes at our southwest Colorado ski areas. And while everyone seems slightly more on edge this year, it’s nice to see people getting outside and having some fun together after a long year of stay-at-home orders and quarantines.Livingstondu1-i-syn Lift lines weren’t the only lines I stood in this week. As frontline journalists became eligible for the vaccine Friday in Colorado, I stood among the herd at the La Plata County Fairgrounds. Many were there in snow pants after a day on the mountain, giving a reminder that it was this time a year ago resort skiers and snowboarders had already packed up their equipment with the mountains closed for the rest of the season. We’ve come a long way in a year, and it’s encouraging to see that health guidelines and customer attention to protocols have allowed ski areas to remain open all season. Unlike last year, there is still much to look forward to this season. Some snow throughout the last week freshened up mountains, and Telluride Ski Resort was a big winner with 28 inches in a 48-hour span. It was nice to see Telluride get one of its best weeks of skiing in recent memory, and I know of a few who expertly timed a Telluride trip and savored being thrown into the white room for a full day of March powder skiing. Well done to those folks. More snow is on the way with OpenSnow calling for seven inches between Sunday and Tuesday night and as much as 10 inches during that span at Wolf Creek Ski Area. With additional snow coming this week, it’s hard to think ahead to the 2021-22 ski season. But alas, Purgatory Resort has sent out word that next season’s passes will go on sale March 24. And the days are quickly ticking down toward the April 4 shutdown of daily operations with only the hope of weekend skiing the following two weekends. During a Wednesday outing at Purgatory, I found myself on the lift with a man named Russell. We both pondered buying next year’s pass again this spring, setting up payment plans or dropping a wad of cash on next season’s winter thrills in the early spring when thoughts of summer hobbies and new gear for the river or trails come to the front of the brain. After holding a Purgatory pass for the last 10 years, I admitted debating different options next season. “I’m not sure I’ll get a pass next year,” Russell agreed. “I’ve had one now for 15 years, maybe more.” Russell lives in California now but once called Durango home. But, for six glorious weeks this winter, Purgatory has once again been his second home. With all of the COVID-19 restrictions in place, I remarked at what a great time he had picked to get out of California and enjoy the snow. “I’ve been skiing for 55 years now,” he said. “I’ve lived longer than I ever thought I would and skiing way longer than I thought I could. I don’t know how many years I’ve got left.” After the year we’ve had, I think more are questioning their mortality than ever before. And I think we are all a little more thankful to have a sport like skiing and snowboarding in our lives that has provided such a healthy and refreshing outlet when we all could have just as easily been stuck inside. So when that email comes out from Purgatory on March 24 with options for next year’s season pass, I think I know what I’ll do. I only hope to keep doing it as long as my new pal Russell. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram, @jlivi2.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/ride-of-the-ancients-returns-to-dolores-june-26/</link>
        <title>Ride of the Ancients returns to Dolores June 26</title>
        <description>New gravel grinder route is through San Juan National Forest</description>
        <pubDate>Tue, 16 Mar 2021 18:13:28 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BDB08F50-84D0-5D90-E053-0100007FB990</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=24DD46D0-7158-4259-ACD1-494B62C14D28&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=24DD46D0-7158-4259-ACD1-494B62C14D28&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[New gravel grinder route is through San Juan National Forest The popular Riders can choose between a 95-mile or 30-mile loop course on a network of gravel roads in the Boggy Draw and Groundhog regions. The Gran Fondo endurance ride is a fundraiser for the Southwest Colorado Canyons Alliance and Trails of the Ancients Byway Association. “It’s a fun, new community event for Dolores that features the beautiful scenery of the southern San Juan Mountains,” said organizer Diane McBride, assistant executive director of the SCCA, in an interview Friday. After a two-year hiatus, the race will transition to a mountain gravel grinder from its roots as a 100-mile desert road ride around Canyons of the Ancients National Monument. The switch was seen as ideal because of the rising popularity of gravel-road biking events, and the challenging, hilly terrain of the mountains north of Dolores. The gravel roads have much less vehicle traffic, and the cool mountain climate is also a plus for riders. “Gravel-grinders are the new trend, and there are not many right around here, so we hope to fill that gap and attract a lot of riders,” said Susan Thomas, executive director for Trails of the Ancients Byway Association, in an interview on Friday. The ride is casual-recreation style, McBride said, but will be timed for the competitive crowd. Awards will be presented to the top three riders in both race courses. The race begins and ends in Dolores at Fourth Street and Central Avenue, where the Dolores River Brewery and the new Kokopelli Bike Shop are located. Festivities and live music are planned for the race finish. The 95-mile route leaves Dolores and follows the Boggy Draw Road and Dolores-Norwood Road to the Cottonwood Road and on to Dunton. It then climbs up to Black Mesa and passes by Groundhog Reservoir before reconnecting with the Dolores-Norwood Road and onto Dolores. It has an elevation gain of 7,363 feet. The short course climbs out of Dolores and makes a 30-mile loop using the Dolores-Norwood Road and the Boggy Draw Road. It has an elevation gain of 2,196 feet. Race courses were designed by local professional mountain biker Ashley Carelock. Aid stations will be on both courses, and volunteers will guiding riders. Emergency first responders will be present, and the courses will be monitored. The fundraiser will benefit conservation and tourism efforts of both organizations. SCCA will use the funds to support a trail information program, archaeological site stewardship program, and wilderness study area efforts. Trails of the Ancients National Byway Association plans to upgrade its website for mobile devices and to promote tourism opportunities along the byway, which has archaeological attractions. For more information and to register or the event, visit rideoftheancients.com. jmimiaga@the-journal.com]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/pandemic-forces-route-change-other-precautions-for-iditarod/</link>
        <title>Pandemic forces route change, other precautions for Iditarod</title>
        <description>In years past, mushers would stop in any number of 24 villages that serve as checkpoints, where they could get a hot meal, maybe a shower and sleep — albeit “cheek to jowl” — in a warm building before getting...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 06 Mar 2021 13:42:00 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BCE4D9BA-D260-4020-E053-0100007F09A1</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=FF6C689A-E5AD-4622-9738-FFB0A0D4D96D&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=FF6C689A-E5AD-4622-9738-FFB0A0D4D96D&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Traveling across the rugged, unforgiving and roadless Alaska terrain is already hard enough, but whatever comforts mushers previously had in the world’s most famous sled dog race will be cast aside this year due to the pandemic. In years past, mushers would stop in any number of 24 villages that serve as checkpoints, where they could get a hot meal, maybe a shower and sleep — albeit “cheek to jowl” — in a warm building before getting back to the nearly 1,000-mile (1,609-kilometer) Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. When the race starts Sunday north of Anchorage, they will spend the next week or so mostly camping in tents outside towns, and the only source of warmth — for comfort or to heat up frozen food and water — will come from their camp cookers. “It’s a little bit old school,” said Iditarod CEO Rob Urbach. This year’s Iditarod will be marked by pandemic precautions, a route change, no spectators, the smallest field of competitors in decades, the return of one former champion and the swan song of a fan favorite, all against the backdrop of pressure on the race and sponsors by an animal rights group. The most noticeable change this year will be no spectators. The fan-friendly ceremonial start in downtown Anchorage, which draws thousands of people, has been canceled, and the actual start in Willow of the race is being moved to a boat dock 7 miles out to help cutdown on fans who would normally attend the race start just off a main highway. Urbach is encouraging fans to watch the race start and finish live on TV or on the Internet. The route has also been shortened to 860 miles. For the first time in the race’s 49-year history, the finish line will not be in Nome. Instead, mushers will go from Willow to the mining ghost towns of Iditarod and Flat, and then back to Willow for the finish. This, Urbach notes, was the original vision of the race co-founder, the late Joe Redington. Howard Farley, 88, of Nome remembers that well. He disagreed with it in the early 1970s when Redington proposed it, and he’s against it now. He said he told Redington before the first Iditarod in 1973: “There’s nobody in Iditarod. It’s a ghost town. There’s nobody there to clap. I said, ‘Just bring it to Nome.’” The Iditarod could have easily and safely held the finish in Nome again this year, too, he said. “It just makes me sad that all of our work and all of our prayers down through the years have come to this,” Farley said. Since the mushers will have to double back to Willow for the finish, they will go over the Alaska Range twice. Mushers will have to navigate the dangerous Dalzell Gorge and the Happy River Steps, or a series of steep switchbacks that routinely leave competitors bruised and sleds broken. In an effort to prevent the spread of the virus, the Iditarod will skip most of the communities to help prevent any transmission, leaving mushers to sleep in tents specially made for Alaska’s tough weather or under the stars in temperatures that could be well below zero. Urbach has had challenges at every turn as he tries to pull off the second Iditarod during the coronavirus pandemic. The virus took its hold on the U.S. in the middle of last year’s race, one of the few major sporting events not to be canceled in March 2020, when they learned to deal with the pandemic on the fly. This year, they’ve had more time to prepare. Mushers will undergo vigorous testing and anyone with a confirmed positive COVID-19 test before the start of the race will not be allowed to compete. Additional testing and monitoring will take place on the trail. Any musher with a confirmed positive test during the race will be withdrawn and isolated. Defending champion Thomas Waerner is not the race, telling The Associated Press “it is impossible to plan ahead” during the pandemic. Last year, he and his dogs were stranded in Alaska for months because of travel restrictions after his win. They only made it home to Norway after hitching a ride on an airplane that was being flown from Anchorage to its new home at a museum in Oslo. The race will start with 47 mushers, the smallest field in decades. This year’s field includes four former champions, including two four-time winners, Martin Buser and Dallas Seavey. Buser last won in 2002; Seavey collected his four titles over a five year span, ending with his last championship in 2016. Seavey last raced the Iditarod when he came in second in 2017, when Iditarod officials said four of his dogs tested positive for a banned opioid painkiller. He adamantly denied giving his dogs the painkillers. The next year, the Iditarod reversed its decision and cleared Seavey, but he took his dogs to Norway to race instead. At only age 34, Seavey is considered by many to someday match and perhaps surpass the win total of the race’s most decorated musher, Rick Swenson who collected five championships between 1977-1991. “Five would be awesome,” Seavey said. “I’m going to do my best to win this. If I get beat, which is a pretty likely outcome ... whoever beats me is going to earn it.” While Seavey returns, one of the sport’s most liked mushers is bowing out after this year’s race. Aliy Zirkle, 50, announced on her website last month that it was time to retire. Zirkle has finished in the top 10 seven times since 2002, and finished second three years in a row starting in 2012. She has never won. The individual prize money for the world’s premiere sled dog race hasn’t been determined. Waerner picked up about $50,000 and a new Dodge pickup for winning last year’s race. However, Chrysler through its Anchorage dealership dropped sponsorship of the Iditarod after that race. The animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has been applying pressure on national sponsors, claiming credit for ExxonMobil announcing it would end its sponsorship after this year’s race. PETA claims the race is cruel to dogs, and says more than 150 have died during races since the first in 1973. The Iditarod disputes that number but has not provided its count to The Associated Press despite many requests over the years. “PETA absolutely makes it challenging,” Urbach said. He said PETA is “inflammatory and grossly inaccurate” in their approach, but admitted it creates a difficult dynamic for the race. However, Urbach said they are trying to change the narrative, continuing to promote dog wellness, nutrition, training and breeding on its website. The Iditarod has had two other financial hits this year. Because of the pandemic, fundraisers have been canceled, and they have spent thousands of dollars on personal protective equipment and COVID-19 tests. They also reduced the entry fee in half and reduced the total prize purse by 20%, to $400,000.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-frog-ponds-and-reunions-on-the-slopes/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Frog ponds and reunions on the slopes</title>
        <description>Members of the 1971 Durango High School state champion ski team get together for a photo last Saturday at Purgatory Resort.Courtesy of Daryl Tomberlin February provided some great skiing and snowboarding in Southwest Colorado. Storms early in the month provided...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 06 Mar 2021 02:00:06 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BCD14C83-0041-7F24-E053-0100007F003F</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=65D398C3-55E5-46B4-81AB-A12B78002265&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=65D398C3-55E5-46B4-81AB-A12B78002265&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Members of the 1971 Durango High School state champion ski team get together for a photo last Saturday at Purgatory Resort.Courtesy of Daryl Tomberlin My 10-year high school reunion at a brewery didn’t sound like a lot of fun. But a reunion at a ski area? Now that I could get into. February provided some great skiing and snowboarding in Southwest Colorado. Storms early in the month provided the foundation for soft groomer days as February turned to March. And a fresh storm Thursday delivered six new inches at Purgatory Resort and 11 at Wolf Creek Ski Area, leaving Wolf Creek only four inches shy of 300 inches of snowfall this season. Wolf Creek should eclipse that mark Tuesday with another mid-week storm in the forecast. Purgatory sits at 154 inches for the season with a 51-inch base depth.Livingstondu1-i-syn That adds up to good news for spring breakers from across the Southwest in the coming weeks, who will undoubtedly make the annual pilgrimage to our ski hills for their getaways. I encourage any visitors reading this to please adhere to the health guidelines in place that have allowed our ski areas to avoid any COVID-19 related shutdowns this season. Remember, we didn’t get any spring break skiing last year when the novel coronavirus initially began to appear in Colorado’s high country and led the governor to shut down resorts. We’d sure like to finish our season this year. Trash should also find appropriate bins or be packed out. It’s crazy the amount of bottles, cans and other liquid receptacles that seem to litter the slopes when spring breakers arrive. And if you absolutely can’t make it to a bathroom to relieve yourself, at least find some trees to dip into. The middle of a populated run is not an ideal place to unzip. It sounds crazy, but in 10 years of being a Purgatory passholder, I’ve seen it nearly every year. While it wasn’t quite the party scene of spring break, last week saw a couple of reunions at Purgatory Resort. First, the 1971 state champion ski team from Durango High School gathered for not only its 50th reunion but also for some racing. Stars from that team, Daryl Tomberlin and Ron Yeager, even raced head-to-head, something they didn’t get to do in 1971 at the state championship races held at Purgatory, as Yeager, a two-time Olympian in 1972 and 1976, was in Finland that day competing in the World Junior Championships for cross-country skiing.Ron Yeager and Daryl Tomberlin line up in the start gate for a little head-to-head slalom racing at last weekend&#x2019;s 50th reunion of the 1971 state champion Durango High School ski team.Courtesy of Daryl Tomberlin Tomberlin organized the wonderful event and shared a few old stories of what it was like to be part of a ski team that won five state titles in six years under the coaching of Jerry Davis. “To be on the team, you had to run the frog pond,” Tomberlin said, sparking my interest in where this frog pond was in town. Before the North College Drive leading up to Fort Lewis College existed, Tomberlin explained there was a dirt trail that went past a frog pond and up to the rim, and every athlete who wanted to be on the ski team had to run up and down that grueling hill once a week. If that wasn’t the key to Durango’s ski team success, it at least provided plenty of chances for team bonding. “Every week, Jerry Davis made us run that dang hill. Yeager was always first,” Tomberlin said. “You would run there, and the frogs started singing.” A few days after the DHS reunion, I shared a lift with another man, Tom, who was visiting Purgatory from Florida for a 1978 class reunion from Fort Lewis College. Still a property owner in Durango along with his brother, Tom likes to visit a few times a year. After the high-speed six-pack Lift 1 at Purgatory Resort was out of order for multiple days a few weeks earlier, Tom and I got to talking about how much the mountain, especially the lift, has changed since his days of skiing in college. “It’s wonderful,” he said. “It’s gotten so much better. Back then, there was just a two-seater here on the front and then another small one where Lift 3 is, and that was it. There was no Chair 8 or any of that great skiing. They were those funny chairs with the bar down the middle and took a long time to go up. It’s incredibly better these days.” Tom, who was a business major, had a long run in the food and beverage industry in Florida after leaving FLC. He’s gone into business with his son doing outdoor enclosures for pools and back porches more recently. Before we got off the chair, Tom asked if I knew Dolph Kuss. “Sure, but I know his son a lot better,” I told him. Tom asked who Dolph’s son might be, and I informed him how Sepp Kuss had competed in last year’s Tour de France and was one of the top road cyclists in the world. “That’s pretty good,” Tom said. “I guess I’m not surprised. Dolph was, and still is, an incredible athlete.” It was then I realized Dolph Kuss and Yeager were both at the 1972 Olympics for Nordic skiing for the U.S, with Dolph as a Nordic combined coach and Yeager competing in cross-country skiing. I hope someday I can share a ski chair with both of them. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram, @jlivi2.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/a-place-to-call-your-own/</link>
        <title>A place to call your own</title>
        <description>To get started, you most likely purchased some type of beginner tying kit. These kits usually contain a vise, a few spools of thread, a dozen hooks, some tools, hackle and feathers. Just enough stuff to set up on a...</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 05 Mar 2021 19:11:31 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BCD14C83-0044-7F24-E053-0100007F003F</guid>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[The pandemic, lots of snow and the San Juan River and Southern Ute Reservation closures may have inspired you to start tying your own flies. I know the local fly shops, and probably the non-fisher you share a habitat with, are very happy about this. After all, you can only watch a limited amount of Fox News and CNN before you, and anyone you’re close to, goes absolutely bonkers. To get started, you most likely purchased some type of beginner tying kit. These kits usually contain a vise, a few spools of thread, a dozen hooks, some tools, hackle and feathers. Just enough stuff to set up on a small out-of-the way table in the den that no one will really notice. You can also keep all these things neat and orderly. This soon ends. As you get more into tying, you discover the large amount of space dedicated to tying in your favorite fly shop. You also have now most likely subscribed to some publication dedicated to tying flies. There are an endless amount of materials and tools to help you become a dedicated tier. Welcome to my world. As all your purchases needed to support your new habit begin to expand exponentially, a small voice whispers in your ear, “Clean up this mess or I’ll do it for you, and you won’t like the end result.” It is now time to find a place that allows you to spread lots of stuff out and tie flies in peace and solitude. It’s time to have a place to call your own. You will need a location large enough for a tying bench, shelves and cabinets where you can keep all your new purchases neat and orderly. Next is extra ventilation for cigar smoke, a non-carpeted floor that cigar ash won’t bother, TV and an extra chair for a tying buddy or to just sit and watch shows about tying flies. All of this fits nicely into a pre-fab tool shed or a room added to your home. If you buy a pre-fab tool shed, remember to add a couple of windows and a good heater. A screen door is also nice for the summer. Most of my friends and I would have a hard time justifying that type of expense for a hobby. So, now you are relegated to finding an unused location in the house. The first place I would look is a study or library where studying and reading no longer occurs. Both of those sounded good when the house was built, but in actuality don’t receive that much use anymore. That space probably already has shelves built-in that will hold all your tying paraphernalia. Next, I’d look at that small guest room that hasn’t seen a guest in a really long time. Even if that location has been converted to a project room, your new tying habit ranks right up there as an ongoing project. Still no luck? How about a really large walk-in closet that is filled with all sorts of holiday decorations? If you have a closet similar to this, you will have to empty it in secret and put a lock on the door to which only you have the key. What you don’t want to happen is to get tricked into a corner in the garage. It will be cold, and the light is really bad. Regardless of where your tying room ends up, make it a happy place – a place that allows you be creative. Those creations you can use to fool fish when we’re all allowed to go outside and fly fish with other people again. Reach Don Oliver at durango.fishing@gmail.com]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/repeatable-delight-upper-muley-twist-canyon-in-capitol-reef-national-park/</link>
        <title>Repeatable delight: Upper Muley Twist Canyon in Capitol Reef National Park</title>
        <description>Capitol Reef hike offers contrasting scenery</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 27 Feb 2021 08:33:08 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BC2E2188-2E66-6B33-E053-0100007FB6FC</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=88181DCE-2DA4-468A-9C5A-8A7747130BB7&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=88181DCE-2DA4-468A-9C5A-8A7747130BB7&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Capitol Reef hike offers contrasting scenery One of Capitol Reef’s most topographically diverse hikes wanders through a landscape of contrasts from high and wide-open to a slot inside the earth. The stem-and-loop incorporates four elements: Upper Muley Twist Canyon, Waterpocket Fold, multiple sensational arches and views spanning from Strike Valley to the Henry Mountains. Walk on sheets of cream-colored Navajo Sandstone while hunting for windows eroded in matte-brick Wingate Sandstone. While this hike gets full treatment in park literature, I have visited the canyon many times over a quarter century and have encountered few people. Wear sticky-soled shoes and bring some courage for two slickrock friction pitches. The canyon served as a wagon route for Mormon Pioneers in the 1880s. The passage was narrow enough to “twist a mule.” Please observe park rules in regards to COVID-19 before taking on this adventure. From the trailhead, elevation 5,860 feet, walk northwest in Upper Muley Twist Canyon. Living along the sides of the flat-bottomed, gravel and rock-filled watercourse are Great Basin sagebrush, rabbitbrush, snakeweed, roundleaf buffaloberry, ephedra, fourwing saltbrush, cliffrose, Harriman’s yucca, prickly pear and Indian ricegrass. The Twist has carved a rift in the Waterpocket Fold exposing the interplay of Navajo and Wingate sandstones. A soaring, vertical red wall abuts the canyon floor on the east, its otherwise smooth, water-burnished surface textured with solution cavities. Deep green Utah junipers and two-needle piñon pines contrast with the colorful wall, a tapestry streaked with the black sheen of desert varnish. A tributary enters upcanyon-left at 1.2 miles. Begin watching for Muley Arch soon after. Stand under its sharp-edged, inverted catenary curve. The canyon closes in, elements are reduced to stone and sky. At 1.8 miles, muscular Saddle Arch with its expanded aperture rises from a banded platform on the west side. Rim Route, Waterpocket Fold An old wooden sign marks the turnoff for the Rim Route. The loop initiates here and can be done in either direction. The conventional circuit spins clockwise, beginning with the canyon segment and returning on the Waterpocket Fold. I prefer to start out on the Fold. The exposed rim is traversed in morning coolness, strong shadows highlight arches and the canyon is softened by afternoon shade. The route to the rim is not a groomed trail. It winds all around through boulders while exploiting breaks in cliff bands. Follow plentiful cairns carefully. As you crest the Fold, look back across the canyon at the stand-alone, globular stone structure that embraces Muley Arch.Can you find the arch in this photograph? Walk on the Waterpocket Fold in the morning when shadows cast by windows on the opposite canyon wall make them easier to spot.Courtesy of Thomas Holt Ward In the east is a highly unusual landscape of linearities all running north-south. The Notom-Bullfrog Road cruises along at the base of scalloped, pink-hued Oyster Shell Reef. Above the sinuous oxbows of Halls Creek rests an ultra-flat golden bench incised with trenches intersecting a straight-as-an-arrow rib. Next is the fluted Mancos Shale escarpment of Tarantula Mesa. And finally, the three blocks of the Henry Mountains. The monoclinal Fold spans nearly 100 miles from Thousand Lake Mountain in the north to the Colorado River in the south. The traverse north on the Rim Route stretches for 2.6 miles before diving back into the canyon. The route undulates and weaves all around, so link cairns to keep on track and out of trouble. A mix of sand patches and slickrock transitions to pure stone walking. Shallow potholes, or waterpockets, are weathered into the surface. The precipitation they capture and store is essential for the survival of all desert creatures. The name “Waterpocket Fold” references these depressions and “Capitol Reef” in turn, refers to the Fold. Navajo Sandstone is characterized by domes and smoothly rounded, buff-colored forms. Look across the canyon to the older Wingate Sandstone. Its uniform, flat-brick color is brightened by a hint of salmon. The uplifted wall has eroded into soft-edged pilasters, pillows, reclined fins, and most notably, arches. Arch hunting is sensitive to the angle of the sun and varies with the seasons and even time of day. On one hike, I spotted nine arches from the Fold alone. Every time, I see a different set of windows. If you are serious about counting arches, pack a pair of binoculars.A hiker walks on a narrow stretch of the Waterpocket Fold. The park&#x2019;s signature domes to the north were obscured by smoke generated by regional wildfires in 2020Debra Van Winegarden/Special to the Herald The ridge narrows to six feet with mild exposure at 2.9 miles. Point 6,470’ is at the abrupt north end of a ridge block; if you were to continue on the spine you’d get cliffed out. Bypass to the west on a short friction pitch, losing 100 feet in elevation. The steepest pitch is yet to come. The route leaves the ridgetop and steps down to the east on a slanted sandstone slab. Let the cairns guide you. This may challenge hikers with a fear of exposure. To maximize your traction, take short steps and deliberately flatten the soles of your shoes onto the granular rock to create suction. The route drops into a notch. Look directly north across the saddle and find the trail climbing steeply up a buttress and back onto the ridgecrest. The last segment along the Fold is mellow and broad. Reach the north end of the Rim Route at about 4.8 miles where the Canyon Route sign guides you off the Fold. The route drops along the west side of a vertical wall that looks like a sherbet-banded whale. There’s one Class 2+ scramble down a 10-foot wall with nice holds. Upper Muley Twist Canyon Contact the floor of the canyon at about 5.2 miles. Just as the fluted waterway begins to slot up and deep tanks develop, the route leaves the wash for a 0.8 mile bypass. Watch for cairns downcanyon-left leading you steeply out of the drainage. The bypass threads ledge systems together with mild exposure.Upper Muley&#x2019;s slot canyon puts on the squeeze. The walk up the finger canyon ends all too soon at an impassible (for most of us) pouroff.Courtesy of Thomas Holt Ward If there is no danger of a flash flood, upon returning to the wash walk upstream and enter a slot canyon. Glowing light in the constriction highlights tafoni, smooth-edged cavities in rock surfaces, also known as honeycomb weathering. In just 0.1 mile a 12-foot pouroff turns around casual hikers. Shallow divots in a vertical wall can be scaled by canyoneers but while the slot can be explored further, it can’t be passed through. Heading down the Twist, flaring red walls contact the flat floor allowing easy passage through the corridor. Be on the lookout for arches, all unique in form. A few minutes downstream, walk into a gap to stand under Upper Muley Twist Arch. You can’t miss massive Rimhandle Arch. Scan the south wall of a side canyon for two small skylights. Close the loop at Saddle Arch at 8.5 miles. On the jaunt back to the trailhead, you are likely to see arches you missed at the beginning of your hike. http://debravanwinegarden.blogspot.com. Debra Van Winegarden is an explorer and freelance writer who lives in Durango. Travel BasicsTravel: Drive south from the junction of Utah State Route 24 and Notom-Bullfrog Road (nine miles east of the Visitor Center). The road is paved for 16 miles before transitioning to graded clay and dirt. The track can be impassable when wet and has short segments of deep sand when dry. Peek-a-Boo Arch, visible high on the wall to the west, precedes the right turn onto the Burr Trail at 23.4 miles. Drive carefully up the steep switchbacks cleaved into a break between stone walls. Turn right on Strike Valley Road, 3.1 miles from the Notom-Burr Trail junction, following the sign for “Upper Muley Twist Canyon, 3 miles.” To reach the trailhead, four-wheel drive with good clearance and sturdy tires is recommended. Most of the track is buff but there are some seriously rocky sections. There is room for six to eight vehicles at the trailhead parking lot. No facilities, no water. Fees and Camping: Please see the Capitol Reef National Park website for current information. Distance and Elevation Gain: 10.3 miles with 1,100 feet of climbing. Total Time: 5½ to 7 hours Difficulty: Wash bottom and cairned route; navigation moderate--experience following cairns is recommended; Class 2+; mild exposure; carry all the water you will need and avoid on hot summer days and when there is any threat of electrical storms or rain. Maps: Hiking Map and Guide: Capitol Reef National Park; Trails Illustrated: Capitol Reef #267, available at the Visitor Center.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/hunters-and-trappers-disregard-wisconsins-wolf-kill-target/</link>
        <title>Hunters and trappers disregard Wisconsin’s wolf kill target</title>
        <description>A gray wolf at the Wildlife Science Center in Forest Lake, Minn.Dawn Villella/Associated Press file The Department of Natural Resources closed the season Wednesday afternoon after hunters and trappers had killed 178 wolves, which was 59 more than the state’s...</description>
        <pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2021 11:31:05 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BC2E2188-2E56-6B33-E053-0100007FB6FC</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=2EC50BD8-CD29-4CC0-B64D-FA2AC2F8E625&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=2EC50BD8-CD29-4CC0-B64D-FA2AC2F8E625&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[A gray wolf at the Wildlife Science Center in Forest Lake, Minn.Dawn Villella/Associated Press file MADISON, Wis. — Hunters and trappers blew past Wisconsin’s wolf kill target in less than 72 hours, forcing a premature end to a hunt that initially wasn’t supposed to happen for another nine months and raising the ire of animal rights activists. The Department of Natural Resources closed the season Wednesday afternoon after hunters and trappers had killed 178 wolves, which was 59 more than the state’s target of 119. Hunters and trappers exceeded their target in all six of the state’s management zones. The agency estimated that about 1,000 wolves roamed the state before the hunt began. The department’s population goal is 350. The season began Monday and had been scheduled to run through Sunday. DNR officials announced Tuesday that the hunt would end Wednesday afternoon because so many animals had been killed in the first two days. The wolf season has been one of the most contentious outdoors issues that Wisconsin has grappled with in the last 20 years. Animal rights advocates have argued that wolf populations are too small to support hunting and that the animals are too majestic to kill. Farmers and rural residents, though, say wolves are killing their livestock and pets. Wisconsin law hands wolf hunters and trappers significant advantages during the season. Unlike with deer hunting, wolf hunters and trappers can operate at night and use dogs to corner wolves. Snow cover also aids tracking. Wayne Pacelle, president of animal rights group Animal Wellness Action, said in a statement Wednesday that killed Wisconsin wolves didn’t stand a chance. “Traps are set like landmines for unsuspecting animals and the hunters are deep into the woods and out of the range of communication, and they can easily claim they didn’t get the ‘stop the hunt’ notice before they killed their wolf,” he said. Collette Adkins, carnivore conservation director for the Center for Biological Diversity, an Arizona-based nonprofit that works to protect endangered species, issued a statement calling the Wisconsin hunt “a reckless slaughter.” Hunters and trappers exceeded the state’s kill target during Wisconsin’s 2012, 2013 and 2014 seasons, which were held before the wolf was placed back on the federal endangered species list. Wisconsin law requires the DNR to give 24-hour notice of wolf hunting zone closures, which means hunters and trappers can keep killing wolves for another day after a closure is announced. If they kill a wolf after the zone is closed, they would face a $330 fine. The DNR announced on Tuesday that three zones would close at 10 a.m. Wednesday and the remaining three would close at 3 p.m. The Trump administration removed federal protections for wolves in January, returning management to the states. Wisconsin law requires the DNR to hold an annual hunt between November and February. The department was preparing for a November hunt when Republican lawmakers demanded the season start before the end of February, saying they were worried the Biden administration might re-list wolves before November and deny Wisconsin hunters a season. The DNR resisted, but hunter advocacy group Hunter Nation won a court order earlier this month that forced the immediate launch of a wolf hunting season. The DNR still plans to hold a November wolf hunting season. Keith Warnke, the department’s fish, wildlife and parks administrator, told the agency’s policy board during a meeting Wednesday that hunters had exceeded the limit. None of the board members expressed any reaction to the news. The board’s chairman, Fred Prehn, said the target was too low given the population goal of 350 wolves and that the November target should be set to get closer to that goal. Warnke said he didn’t know if that would be safe for the overall population, but that the department would use that 350-animal goal to inform its decisions. He said new population estimates are expected in April. Lawmakers in neighboring Minnesota have introduced dueling bills that would ban wolf hunting and establish a season.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-everyone-deserves-a-chance-to-play-in-the-snow/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Everyone deserves a chance to play in the snow</title>
        <description>With the assist of two Adaptive Sports Association instructors, 16-year-old Reagan from Texas skis at Purgatory Resort on Friday.John Livingston/Durango Herald Skiing and snowboarding conditions have been oh-so-good at Southwest Colorado ski areas in recent weeks. If the forecast is...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 13 Feb 2021 00:05:31 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BB2A86D7-B12C-562B-E053-0100007F41BA</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=A6622051-0C2F-4FF3-92F2-D67D19AE06F8&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=A6622051-0C2F-4FF3-92F2-D67D19AE06F8&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[With the assist of two Adaptive Sports Association instructors, 16-year-old Reagan from Texas skis at Purgatory Resort on Friday.John Livingston/Durango Herald Everyone deserves a chance to play in the snow. Thanks to the Adaptive Sports Association in Durango, everyone can. Skiing and snowboarding conditions have been oh-so-good at Southwest Colorado ski areas in recent weeks. If the forecast is any indication, the next week is going to be another one to remember, if you can navigate the President’s Day weekend crowds. Open Snow is calling for 31 inches in the next five days at Wolf Creek Ski Area, where you will need to purchase your lift ticket in advance online if you want to ski this weekend. Purgatory Resort could see up to 25 inches. Both mountains are 100% open with a 44-inch base depth at Purgatory and an 88-inch base depth at Wolf Creek. The new snow could help Hesperus Ski Area reopen after a closure this week, too. Fingers crossed.Livingstondu1-i-syn In the last two weeks, I have ridden most chairlifts alone. But Friday was different. I arrived at Purgatory along with a mass of out-of-town visitors eager to start their four-day weekend. I was on my first chair shortly after 9 a.m. with a local gentleman who taught me a bit about his job as a property inspector in town. We chatted about our rental history of old homes in Durango, and he informed me of how one in every two dwellings in Durango have issues with radon, a naturally occurring, radioactive gas that can cause cancer. I’ll be sure to keep that in mind while searching for my first home to buy in the coming year or so. Next, I split a chair with another Durango local. Married for 18 years, she has taken at least one scuba diving trip each year since her honeymoon with her husband, who has long been a diver from his days growing up in California. I learned of all kinds of tropical fish and of some of her preferred reefs to visit across the world. I think this is a hobby I might need to explore if I am ever around water again. The rest of my lift rides were reserved for a special experience. After reading my initial entry in this column series, “Flies & Lies” fly fishing columnist Don Oliver invited me to share a ride with the folks at the Adaptive Sports Association. Don, a longtime fly fishing guide, ski instructor and volunteer with ASA, is a wonderful writer who always makes me smile with his column while teaching me something new. I had a feeling this meeting would leave me with a similar experience, so I eagerly accepted his invitation. I met ASA Executive Director Ann Marie Beresford and was soon introduced to Reagan, a 16-year-old from Texas. Reagan, who has a cognitive disability, has been skiing at Purgatory with the assistance of ASA for 10 years. I met his mother, Leslie, who told me they bought a place to stay at Purgatory so they can come up every holiday. Reagan is one of more than 500 disabled clients ASA helps get on the slopes for roughly 1,000 ski lessons each winter. Like any teenager, Reagan was ready to get on his skis and make some turns down the mountain after tossing a few snowballs around with the ASA crew.Reagan takes control of his run while skiing with Adaptive Sports Association instructors on Friday at Purgatory Resort.Courtesy of Adaptive Sports Association For his first run, Reagan had a pair of clamps on the tips of his skis with a chain attached to them to prevent him from crossing up his tips. Eric Beyler, the treasurer for ASA and a longtime volunteer, also followed behind Reagan with tethers to keep him from veering too far off course. Another ASA instructor, Mark, was the driver. He held a pole with two handles on it that Reagan could grab as he initiated his turns down the mountain. While Mark could help steer, he still made sure Reagan was doing the work. “We can use those to help build a strong stance for him, and we can add what is called a spacer bar on the back of the skis for someone who has a lot of leg weakness,” Beresford said. “Devices like that can help teach muscle memory. We can create that stable platform for them to stand on and the instructor can ski behind them to help initiate and finish a turn.” By his second run, Reagan had shed the tethers and was ready for more independence. And by the third run, he ditched the clamps on the tips of his skis and was making beautiful turns on his way back to the Graduate lift. I have long admired the work of ASA while riding at Purgatory, watching them assist with a variety of clients, including sit-skiers. I first became aware of the work of ASA because of Alana Nichols, a five-time Paralympian from Farmington with six medals in alpine sit-skiing and wheelchair basketball. She credited ASA for helping her get back on the slopes after a snowboarding accident in 2002 left her paralyzed below the waist. From those who have been in an accident to disabled veterans and those with cognitive disabilities, ASA welcomes anyone interested in getting out on the mountain in the winter as well as those interested in camping, canoeing, cycling or rafting in the summer. “We get to see this progression of people who come here and aren’t sure if they will be able to ski because they are blind or have lost a leg or use a wheelchair,” Beresford said. “Over the course of time, you get to see them experience success and they go home and realize, ‘I did that. What else in my life is still possible? If I can do that, I can do anything.’ The skiing is just the carrot. It’s the thing that gets people excited about coming out, but it’s the big impact stuff for their lives we get to see on a regular basis.” This week, ASA will host its Dave Spencer Classic from Feb. 15-21. Normally, it is a weekend-long event at Purgatory Resort. But because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the 23rd year of the event will look a little different. Participants can sign up for a movement challenge to stay active each day of the week. And for locals who register, there will be a scavenger hunt around Durango with a new location each day, beginning with Purgatory on Sunday. ASA has a goal to raise $70,000 through the Dave Spencer Classic and had raised $52,000 by Friday afternoon. Roughly one-third of ASA’s funding comes from fundraising events such as the Dave Spencer Classic. Another third comes from contributions from the community and the rest from grants. The incredible work of ASA, a non-profit organization with more than 200 volunteers with the youngest 12 and the oldest in his 80s, cannot be understated. In four lift rides, the passion and spirit of those involved had filled me with awe. “We are truly blessed to work with this population,” Beyler said. “To take someone through the progression and see their skill growth is incredible, and I think I learn as much from them as they do from us. Every day is a different day, and one of the things I’m particularly impressed with is our instructors and the attitude and heart they bring to it. We are blessed with a great bunch of people.” While ASA is able to change lives in so many ways, I was blown away to find out they make scholarships available to any participant who is in need. If a day of skiing lessons costs $180, ASA asks how much the client is willing to pay. If the answer is only $5, ASA will cover the rest through the funding it receives. Last year, ASA was able to cover 80% of its clients through scholarships. While I go to ski areas for the snowboarding, it is so often the connections made that make days memorable. My morning spent with ASA is a day on the mountain I won’t forget. And I hope to have a few more interactions with these fine people who make sure everyone has the chance to play in the snow. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @jlivi2.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/iditarod-drops-ceremonial-start-over-crowd-size-concerns/</link>
        <title>Iditarod drops ceremonial start over crowd-size concerns</title>
        <description>“After consulting with our stakeholders and in consultation with the Municipality of Anchorage, we decided to cancel our traditional ceremonial start in Anchorage due to the COVID-19 concerns of a large gathering,” Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race CEO Rob Urbach...</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 05 Feb 2021 21:58:55 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BAA426E8-D9D1-302F-E053-0100007FB175</guid>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[ANCHORAGE, Alaska — There has been another dramatic change to the world’s most famous sled dog race this year because of the pandemic, with officials announcing Friday that the ceremonial start has been canceled. “After consulting with our stakeholders and in consultation with the Municipality of Anchorage, we decided to cancel our traditional ceremonial start in Anchorage due to the COVID-19 concerns of a large gathering,” Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race CEO Rob Urbach said in a statement. The Saturday event normally draws large crowds to downtown Anchorage to watch as mushers carrying Iditariders, or people who won auctions to ride in the sleds, take a leisurely jaunt through Alaska’s largest city. It’s a party atmosphere with beer tents and food stands lining downtown streets. For the actual start of the race, which is always held the following day, the Iditarod has said there will be limited space for spectators outside a secure area, and encouraged fans to watch the start and finish on live television. “We take the health and well-being of our racers, volunteers, staff, and spectators very seriously,” he said. The Iditarod had earlier announced that the route was being changed this year to start and end near Willow, about 50 miles (80.47 kilometers) north of Anchorage. With mushers not traveling across Alaska to the traditional finish line just off the Bering Sea coast in Nome, that has knocked the normal 1,000-mile (1,609-kilometer) race down 860 miles (1,384 kilometers). This year’s Iditarod will be the final race for ExxonMobil, a major race sponsor since 1978, after the oil giant received pressure from one of its shareholders and the race’s biggest critic, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. Fifty mushers will begin the race March 7, the smallest field in the last two decades.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-lifes-questions-fade-on-a-powder-day/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Life’s questions fade on a powder day</title>
        <description>Ullr finally rewarded Southwest Colorado with heaps of snow. It was enough for Hesperus Ski Area to finally open Thursday, giving the Durango High School alpine ski team its slopes to train on ahead of its season-opening race Feb. 3...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 30 Jan 2021 18:14:11 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BA2315F1-B968-27BC-E053-0100007F4B90</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=77E2522D-B20E-4952-85E9-59B971E97213&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=77E2522D-B20E-4952-85E9-59B971E97213&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[There’s a time for reflecting and deep inner thought. Then there is a time for powder skiing and snowboarding. During a long dryspell to start January, it was time for the former. For the last two weeks, it’s been all about the powder. Ullr finally rewarded Southwest Colorado with heaps of snow. It was enough for Hesperus Ski Area to finally open Thursday, giving the Durango High School alpine ski team its slopes to train on ahead of its season-opening race Feb. 3 at Ski Cooper in Leadville. And for all the powder hounds across the region, Purgatory Resort and Wolf Creek Ski Area have been a haven with never-ending refills of perfect snow. Wolf Creek has once again been blessed the most with 51 inches in the last week to bring the season total to 228 inches. That’s good for a 98-inch midway depth. After two sell-out days last weekend, locals around Wolf Creek enjoyed bottomless snow and no lift lines.Livingstondu1-i-syn All the snow, including 37 inches just in the last week, has helped Purgatory go from a 26-inch base depth only two-and-a-half weeks ago to a 50-inch depth, unlocking nearly 100% of the mountain’s terrain and all of the locals’ favorite tree runs. The mountain has now seen 113-inches of snow this season as of the writing of this column, with more on the way Friday night to make for more fresh turns Saturday morning. This column may come in handy for killing time in traffic on the way to Purgatory if last weekend was any indication. U.S. Highway 550 looked more like Interstate 70 with the flood of cars trying to get into the packed parking lots. With more folks avoiding carpools because of COVID-19 and visitors flocking to Southwest Colorado for the best snow conditions in the state, it was a zoo. The lift lines? The longest this snowboarder has seen in 10 years as a Purgatory passholder. But once strapped in, all the stress of those lines evaporated with the sweet feeling of effortlessly floating on clouds. It felt good to let go of all stress and concerns for the world even on a busy day on the mountain. Only a few days earlier, Jan. 20, I found myself interacting with three different gentlemen, and a theme prevailed throughout the day. First, I ran into my old pal Brandon Mathis, a former weekend reporter at The Durango Herald and the first editor of Adventure Pro Magazine. Mathis is now head of marketing at Backcountry Experience. He was leaving the mountain as I was just going up, and we got to talking about the people we love most in our lives as well as our careers. The usual conversation between an active print journalist and someone who has left the print side of life for the world of marketing ensued. As those talks usually do, it had me thinking of my own career as I walked up to the mountain and rode alone up the six-pack charlift. As I boarded my second lift of the day, I met a man named Eric, who was from Durango but had been living in Denver until being laid off from his oil and gas job in Denver during the COVID-19 pandemic. Back home, Eric has been fully enjoying getting out to snowboard as often as he can. Though, in the back of his mind, always wondering when his job might return. Eric has long thought about getting into solar energy or another line of work, but he loves what he does and can’t bring himself to leave. “To me, it’s worth something waking up happy every morning and loving what you do,” he told me. Well said. There’s no doubt, much like the oil and gas industry, the print journalism world has seen its share of adversity over the last 20-plus years. More than 1,800 newspapers across the country have been closed or merged with another paper. More than 30,000 journalism jobs have been eliminated since 2006. It’s the dark cloud hanging over the head of journalists all over the country every day. But, like Eric said, there’s something beautiful in loving what you do. That, and the access to places like Purgatory and Wolf Creek, have helped keep me going through hard times for seven years in Durango. After I said my farewells to Eric and we went our separate ways down the mountain, I found myself boarding a lift with a fellow Johnny. He told me of how he had sold his share in a company he owned before the pandemic hit and launched himself into a mid-life crisis as a bartender. Enjoying the freedom of his new position and the time it allows him to spend with his young family, I’d say Johnny had it figured out more than being in any kind of crisis. He’s enjoying watching his 3-year-old get into skiing and loving life on the mountain every day. “No idea what I’m going to do next, just figuring it out as I go,” he told me. As I cruised back from Lift 3 down to the base area on my final run that day, I was left thinking about the juxtaposition of hanging onto a job you love albeit in a tumultuous industry or the freedom and excitement of changing everything and entering the unknown with no expectations. I like the idea of both. But with the arrival of big snow to the area, it’s not time to think about the more serious questions in life. Moe powder days are in store over the next week, so it’s time to get out and enjoy every last inch that comes our way and to embrace it with the enthusiasm of an elementary kid on a snow day without a care in the world. And, if you’re heading to Purgatory on a busy powder day, allow me to depart with a friendly reminder: We’re all going to the same place. Passing on the left into oncoming traffic or a snow plow or passing on the right shoulder and dodging back into the line of traffic when a snowbank sneaks up on you is only going to make the line longer for all of us. And it’s really going to agitate the state troopers who have beefed up enforcement along U.S. Highway 550 after last weekend’s shenanigans. Let’s all get to the mountain safe and have a good time together. I’ll see you on the lift. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter @jlivi2.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/picking-the-correct-fly/</link>
        <title>Picking the correct fly</title>
        <description>However, sometimes a well-thought-out approach works best. A good option is to use the one from Dave Whitlock’s book “Guide to Aquatic Trout Foods.” Mr. Whitlock suggests you use size, action, texture, shape and color – in that order –...</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 29 Jan 2021 16:07:15 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">BA110A31-B4A8-6F8A-E053-0100007FE0E4</guid>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Not long ago, a friend asked me how I knew to use a San Juan Worm one day, while fly fishing the Animas River. I thought about giving her some technical reason, but then I decided the truth was best. I told her I had run out of ideas for the correct fly. Then I thought, fish like worms, so I decided to see if they liked a red San Juan Worm; they did. End of scientific discussion. However, sometimes a well-thought-out approach works best. A good option is to use the one from Dave Whitlock’s book “Guide to Aquatic Trout Foods.” Mr. Whitlock suggests you use size, action, texture, shape and color – in that order – to fool fish. That’s great, if you have the time or interest to thoroughly investigate everything in the air and water. Or, you can use the approach a gentleman was using one day while fishing next to me on the San Juan River. He was catching fish and having a great time. I asked him what he was using, and he told me a Royal Wulff. For those of you that regularly fish the San Juan River, you might find this somewhat odd. I asked him why he was using a Royal Wulff, and he told me because he could see it. I think that runs the gamut from A-to-Z. For me, I use techniques somewhere in-between those two approaches. The first one I use is matching the hatch. Whatever is in the air, mayflies or caddis for example, are the easiest to match. If there is nothing in the air, I think back to what bugs were flying around or crawling on the ground when I walked to the river. Ants, beetles and hoppers are good examples. If I don’t see anything flying or crawling on my way to the river, I look around to see if anything is flying around or trying to swim across the river when I get to where I am going to fish. If there is, I use a hybrid of Mr. Whitlock’s formula. I go with size and color and forget the other three criteria. I know trout are smart, and can drive you nuts when you’re trying to get them to eat something, anything. I just don’t think trout can count the number of legs on a bug, know whether it’s crunchy or soft or how it swims through the water. The best example I can think of for picking a fly, based on size and color, is a black fly. If I get in a river and notice black flies, horse or household, I’m tying on a Black Gnat that matches the sizes on the rocks or buzzing around my head. This holds true for midges or the itty-bitty bugs crawling up my waders. Just being aware of what’s going on around you or in the water goes a long way in selecting the correct fly. If none of the above techniques works, I suggest you try a method my good friend Steve Meyers likes to use. It’s called the “hmmm method.” First, take out your box of favorite flies. Look at all the flies, say hmmm, then close your eyes and pick one. Regardless of what you think about the fly you pick, use it. You just might have a trout see it, swim up to it, think hmmm, and eat it. No matter what technique you use, just have fun with it, and enjoy the day. Reach Don Oliver at durango.fishing@gmail.com]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/nepal-team-that-scaled-k2-receives-heros-welcome/</link>
        <title>Nepal team that scaled K2 receives hero’s welcome</title>
        <description>Mountaineers, supporters, friends and family lined the Kathmandu airport to greet the climbers with garlands and cheers as a police band played tunes. They were then driven around city in open trucks. “As a team we feel really proud; we...</description>
        <pubDate>Wed, 27 Jan 2021 15:03:52 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B9E956B5-FB88-75B7-E053-0100007F8231</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=781F9F84-3EB3-4CA4-AECE-F806EAC31275&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=781F9F84-3EB3-4CA4-AECE-F806EAC31275&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[KATHMANDU, Nepal — A team of 10 Nepalese climbers who became the first to scale the world’s second-highest peak during the harsh winter season received a hero’s welcome on return home to Nepal on Tuesday. Mountaineers, supporters, friends and family lined the Kathmandu airport to greet the climbers with garlands and cheers as a police band played tunes. They were then driven around city in open trucks. “As a team we feel really proud; we feel really honored. I think we sent a really clear message to the world, if we unite nothing is impossible, so everybody is happy here,” said Nirmal Purja, one of the members of the team who also holds the record for the fastest climb of the 14 highest peaks in the world. The winter climb marks another achievement for Nepalese climbers who for decades worked as porters and guides for foreign mountaineers but now are setting their own records and running expeditions on the highest peaks. “This expedition has risen the status of Nepali climbers to a new height, which is an achievement for all the mountaineering and shows that there is nothing that we cannot achieve if we attempt,” said Mingma Sherpa, who organized the expedition. K2 is the most prominent peak on the Pakistani side of the Himalayan range, and is second in height only to Mount Everest. K2 had remained the last peak above 26,240 feet in the world that was yet to be climbed in the winter. The Nepalese team made sure that all 10 members reached the summit at the same time. “All 10 of us worked together in the same level. We all took a big risk to our lives. We felt like it has to be justice for every team member,” Purja said.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/longest-running-skibike-festival-returns-to-purgatory-resort/</link>
        <title>Longest running skibike festival returns to Purgatory Resort</title>
        <description>Durango the ‘epicenter’ of sport’s revival</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 22 Jan 2021 03:43:37 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B96FA778-5FFF-79AE-E053-0100007F2369</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=10F99356-5710-448E-8ECE-91B19F9C4350&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=10F99356-5710-448E-8ECE-91B19F9C4350&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Durango the ‘epicenter’ of sport’s revival Purgatory Resort has long been a heaven for skibikers. Ideal conditions will welcome those attending the longest running skibike festival in the country this weekend. In partnership with the American SkiBike Association, Purgatory will host its SkiBike Festival on Saturday and Sunday. It is the 18th consecutive year Purgatory has hosted the event. “Purgatory was at the center of where this sport got going again,” said Jim Cameron, chairman of the American SkiBike Association. “Roy Meiworm started the festival, and Mike Sparkman has helped make Durango an epicenter of what I would call the rebirth of skibiking in the USA.” Skibiking got its start in the 1950s. Cameron said it made a run in the late 1960s and early ’70s before dying down as resorts resisted the movement and the sometimes questionable equipment. When it made a return in the late 1980s and early ’90s, Purgatory was one of the mountains that embraced the sport. Now, roughly one-third of ski areas in the U.S. allow skibiking.Skibiking has continued to grow in popularity and is now allowed at roughly one-third of U.S. ski areas.Courtesy of Purgatory Resort “The sport of skibiking is really growing all over the U.S. as well as in Canada and Europe. It’s taking off as a sport for all ages and abilities, and it’s great for adaptive skiing,” said Sherry Rawls-Bryce, one of the American SkiBike Association board members who got her start in the sport with a lesson at Purgatory Resort in 2013. Technology improvements have helped in that process. No longer are skibikes – also often called snowbikes – made of converted mountain bikes and old chopped up skis. Frames are specifically made for skibiking purposes. Companies have also standardized the fittings to attach skis so customers can use a variety of skis on their frame from numerous manufacturers. Powder skis will be in demand this weekend with up to 10 inches of snow in the forecast for Saturday and another four inches Sunday. “We will have two brands of new powder skis we will be showing at the festival,” Cameron said. “People don’t realize how the industry has standardized some things now. It’s like when snowboard companies all aligned and decided on a universal way of attaching bindings to any brand of board. “The bikes are much better since the old days of conversion kits.”Skibike technology has rapidly evolved in recent years, making the sport more accessible to a variety of athletes.Courtesy of Purgatory Resort Several skibike manufacturers will be at Purgatory Resort this weekend showing off the latest equipment. Cameron said he expects a slightly smaller gathering this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Still, he knows some skibikers will come from as far as Seattle and the Midwest to partake in the action. The stop at Purgatory Resort is the third of five official events the American SkiBike Association has scheduled around the country this year. “In the past, we have had races. But we aren’t going to do races this year,” Cameron said. “But everybody is coming to ride. It’s a great networking event and a chance to check out the latest and greatest gear from the manufacturers. It’s like a big skibike summit, and everybody is jazzed to be in Durango again this year.” Cameron also will be working on filming an instructional video this weekend at the base area. And while there won’t be any official racing, Cameron said some riders will hit up the Purgatory NASTAR course Sunday. “Skibiking results are captured in a national database,” he said. “A lot of the people who go to Durango have qualified for nationals in the past.” jlivingston@durangoherald.com]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-could-it-be-love-on-the-lift/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Could it be love on the lift?</title>
        <description>Like many Durango locals, I avoided the hectic scenes at Purgatory Resort and Wolf Creek Ski Area during the holiday weeks with so many out-of-state visitors to our local mountains. As a reported 5,000 people packed Wolf Creek Ski Area...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 09 Jan 2021 15:48:06 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B86E6C3E-F1C5-64C4-E053-0100007FA7F0</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=835D52E5-DE6C-42EF-B532-374C68AC87A1&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=835D52E5-DE6C-42EF-B532-374C68AC87A1&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Could it be love on the lift? Time will tell. Like many Durango locals, I avoided the hectic scenes at Purgatory Resort and Wolf Creek Ski Area during the holiday weeks with so many out-of-state visitors to our local mountains. As a reported 5,000 people packed Wolf Creek Ski Area on Dec. 29 and filled U.S. Highway 160 with parked cars to create a dangerous scene, I remained home with family. Though there was 2 feet of new snow from a winter storm, I was content to let the visitors chop it all up with hopes of another big powder day to come in the near future.du1-i-syn So far, no luck on that front. Still, I continued to appreciate the decision to stay away as Purgatory Resort dealt with the closure of its main lift Dec. 30 through Jan. 2 for repairs. And I was especially glad to have stayed home after chatting with a ski patrol friend who reported 17 collisions in one day at Purgatory Resort that same week. While Purgatory was able to open the “Legend’s Lift” Chair 8 that helped thin some of the herd, without a 50-inch base in the trees to escape the packed slopes, I was happy not to not become one of those unfortunate statistics. That didn’t leave many opportunities for great chairlift encounters for sharing in this column. However, a Dec. 20 trip to Purgatory before the holiday visitors arrived in full force provided the subject for this week’s entry. One day after the debut of “Livi on the Lift,” I was witness to the start of a new connection that wouldn’t have been possible if not for a bit of a lift line on a busy Sunday on Chair 3. One my superpowers is eavesdropping; I find it impossible to tune out the conversations of those around me. So, as a woman in front of me detailed past relationships that had started by chance encounters at Purgatory, my ears were tuned in. And as she told her friend the requirements she was looking for in a new partner, I looked to my snowboarding pal for the day, who happens to be my roommate, and made sure he was listening, too. “Someone with a steady job, between the ages of 30 and 35,” seemed to be the baseline requirements. He fit the description. So, I slapped him on the shoulder with my unoccupied mitten and let him know what I had heard. “Does 34 work?” he asked with enthusiasm. After a quick glance over, the woman began taking stock of the inquirer. Impressed by the brand of snow pants he roommate was wearing and seeing that he fit the general description, a conversation began and a phone number was soon exchanged. Later that day, we caught up for a drink at the Powderhouse. An advanced skier, my roommate then had to prove he could keep up on the final run down to the base area. Another box checked. Some more “getting to know you” moments were required with an après-ski at The Nugget Mountain Bar. As I sat in my chair by the fire pit and listened to them talk, I could tell this was going somewhere. We came to find out that not only did these two, who will not be named for privacy purposes, have much in common, we are also previously unknowing neighbors. My roommate delayed his trip home to see family by a day to spend more time with the new interest. I am happy to report multiple dates have now been had. That’s what I love about life and spending so much of it at magical places such as Purgatory Resort. Had we been a little slower or faster down the previous run or had we picked another one of the four lines to Lift 3, we might never have met this new friend who lives just across the street. And whether this potential romance lasts or not, that chance encounter at the very least brought smiles and warm feelings to two 30-something Durangoans who felt a little less alone around the holidays. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter @jlivi2.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/steve-ilg-gets-vertical-to-end-2020/</link>
        <title>Steve Ilg gets vertical to end 2020</title>
        <description>Merry Vertmas win dedicated to friends recently lost</description>
        <pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 2021 02:57:32 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B82E7564-0A20-19C7-E053-0100007FD3C4</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=4F176D96-CD59-4A76-B8C5-2AC49493D525&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=4F176D96-CD59-4A76-B8C5-2AC49493D525&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Merry Vertmas win dedicated to friends recently lostDurango’s Steve Ilg climbs the south rib of Hogsback in December on one of his outings during the Merry Vertmas race held by Aravaipa Running.Courtesy of Steve Ilg Steve Ilg spent his final month of 2020 going uphill over and over again. Ilg, one of Durango’s famed mountain athletes, tackled the Merry Vertmas race put on by Aravaipa Running out of Arizona. In this virtual challenge, athletes logged all of their vertical feet climbed from Dec. 1-25. Ilg would log 87,915 feet of vertical gain across 182.8 miles during the 25-day effort. He spent a total time of 2 days, 7 hours across 40 different uphill efforts. That put him in first place in his age category of 50-59 and placed him 11th overall out of 348 international racers. “I naively thought my usual Nordic race preseason, which includes long ski mountaineering workouts, would rack up enough vert to get me close to the age group podium and maybe break the top-20 overall,” Ilg said. “Yeah, well, that was not the case.” Ilg logged his last feet on the Sky Steps from downtown Durango up to Fort Lewis College. He logged an extra 3,000 feet of vertical gain by 3 p.m. on Christmas to buffer a slight lead he had gained by repeating the Sky Steps on Christmas Eve. He anxiously watched updates to the virtual leaderboard to see if he might need to get back out for a few more climbs. As the clock hit midnight Dec. 26, he was still in first in his age group. “Felt so relieved,” he said. “Not happy, just relieved I didn’t have to call my crew out again late on Christmas to slog up more vert.” At 58, Ilg knew one of the biggest obstacles in his pursuit of a victory could be the wear and tear on his body going downhill. He was able to coordinate a shuttle from the top of the Sky Steps back to the bottom of the climb thanks to some of his students of his Wholistic Fitness program, Caroline Eastburn and Charlotte Lenssen. “It takes a village to get the podium on this crazy race,” Ilg said.Durango&#x2019;s Steve Ilg climbs the Sky Steps during one of his final days of the Merry Vertmas challenge.Courtesy of Caroline Eastburn Ilg logged more than 29,032 feet on the Sky Steps alone, which is more than the height of Mount Everest. The 550 steps rise 300 feet. He also logged plenty of miles on Hogsback and in the Overend Mountain Park along with runs up Animas Mountain, Twin Buttes and some skiing up Cascade Divide. He said he wished Purgatory Resort would allow uphill skiing where he would have felt safe to climb during a time of dangerous avalanche conditions in the backcountry. Ilg dedicated his latest victory to two friends who died in December. Roy Wallack, Ilg’s teammate on their record-setting team in 2018 at The Furnace Creek 508 ultra-marathon through Death Valley, died in a mountain bike crash. Bert Perry, one of Ilg’s yoga students and a ski mountaineering competitor, also died in an avalanche. Ilg said thoughts of Durango professional cyclist Benjamin Sonntag, who was killed when he was struck by a motorist while out for a training ride last year, also filled his mind. Ilg, who suffered spinal paralysis in a mountaineering accident on Longs Peak in 1981 and self healed through yoga, did not listen to music during any of his outings, as he instead meditated through the climbs. “I’ve lost all my dearest friends to the high mountains. Even more acquaintances have been lost,” he said. “It’s easy to find motivation to race three times per day when you somehow survived four decades of elite mountain athletics and find yourself among an elite group of mountaineers that are still alive at nearly 60 years old. “Every step is sacred once you’ve been paralyzed.” Ilg finished his final ascents of the Sky Steps alongside his 13-year-old daughter, Dewachen, who helped build section 250 of the Sky Steps with Durango Trails. Asked by passersby how many times he had climbed the Sky Steps, Ilg simply shrugged and said, “I don’t know. I’m just chasing more vert.” “Hopefully I have inspired some fitness warriors to keep it up,” Ilg said. jlivingston@durangoherald.com]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livi-on-the-lift-having-fun-do-you-live-in-town-have-a-good-run/</link>
        <title>Livi on the Lift: Having fun? Do you live in town? Have a good run!</title>
        <description>Having fun out there? How many runs have you gotten in? Have you been to the backside yet? Do you live in town? What do you do? And, finally, the farewell of, “Have fun!” That’s how the majority of my...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 19 Dec 2020 00:02:48 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B6C347F7-6A09-3C98-E053-0100007F4365</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=5DF2348C-A69C-4520-8EB0-47896DF173BD&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=5DF2348C-A69C-4520-8EB0-47896DF173BD&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Do you want to ride the chair together? Having fun out there? How many runs have you gotten in? Have you been to the backside yet? Do you live in town? What do you do? And, finally, the farewell of, “Have fun!” That’s how the majority of my encounters go on a ski lift, and I am sure most skiers and snowboarders can relate. But every once in awhile, there are some special moments had on a lift with complete strangers. There are unique stories that can brighten your day, the chance to learn something new or to even make a new friend. Then, you also have the rare oddities. For instance, last season I was blown away by the beatboxing skills by one snowboarder and the rapping skills of his friend. I wish I had gotten their names and could have shared their talent with others.Livingstondu1-i-syn So, welcome to my first “Livi on the Lift” column, where I will highlight some of my favorite experiences on chair lifts at Purgatory Resort, Wolf Creek Ski Area and, if I am lucky, beyond this season. As I highlighted in my Purgatory opening day column, it has already been a fantastic start to the season here in Southwest Colorado, even with that pesky two-week dry spell. Wolf Creek became the first ski area in Colorado to surpass 100 inches of snow and boasts a midway depth of 64 inches after six more inches fell Thursday night into Friday morning. Purgatory opened Chair 3 on Friday to provide the first taste of “backside” skiing this season in Durango. Three inches of new snow graced those slopes to those who were able to make their first turns down Zinfandel on Friday morning on a 23-inch base. I’ve toyed with the idea of the “Livi on the Lift” column for a few years. I was afraid this year it might not happen because of COVID-19 social distancing guidelines and the recommendation for members of separate households to ride different chairs. Purgatory has done an excellent job accommodating that. The lift lines might be a tad longer than we are used to, but it’s worth it to keep the mountain open and the visitors safe. Working nights, I am able to get out a bunch on weekdays to ride as a single. And on the six-pack main lift at Purgatory, I’ve been able to enjoy some chair rides with others this year while keeping a distance. This week, I met a Durango local named Dave. I was pleased to find out he was an avid reader of The Durango Herald, and we quickly delved into a conversation about the Durango High School football team. In the 10 years I’ve been a pass holder at Purgatory, this was the first time anyone has talked to me about local high school sports on a chair lift. Winning a state championship will do that, but it was a treat to share the joy that team has brought the town with someone new when I never expected it. We said our farewells and I pushed over to “Styx” for my first Purgatory black turns of the season. After a good conversation and a smile on my face, the push to the top of the run was a little easier. With this column, I hope to share some of my enthusiasm for the 2020-21 ski and snowboard season. So let’s catch a chair together and have a few special moments. What I learn or enjoy most, I will hope to spread with you all. And, certainly some of the more bizarre moments will appear in these column inches, too. I’ll see you on the mountain soon. Until then, have a good run. John Livingston is the Regional Sports Editor of The Durango Herald. He can be reached at jlivingston@durangoherald.com. Follow him on Twitter @jlivi.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/up-to-55-injured-skiers-and-snowboarders-arrive-at-colorado-ers-each-day/</link>
        <title>Up to 55 injured skiers and snowboarders arrive at Colorado ERs each day</title>
        <description>More than 4,100 transported across 2018, 2019 and the first part of 2020</description>
        <pubDate>Thu, 17 Dec 2020 17:14:24 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B6AFB6EA-151E-7F8D-E053-0100007F7194</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=BA7ADFE1-701F-4F37-BD96-F2E84AD214E1&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=BA7ADFE1-701F-4F37-BD96-F2E84AD214E1&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[More than 4,100 transported across 2018, 2019 and the first part of 2020Jason Blevins/The Colorado Sun<br><br>Ski patrollers tend to an injured skier in Vail’s Game Creek Bowl on Dec. 11, 2020.du1-i-syn Chris Arnis was with his crew, carving spring snow on his home hill. It was a good Sunday for the lifelong skier. It was a little shy of 4 p.m., March 15, 2015, when it happened. Arnis, a ski coach in Steamboat Springs, hit some deep ruts where a speed-controlling fence had just been pulled to prepare for snow grooming that evening. He lost a ski and flew face first into the flats on a run called Rainbow. He’s been in a motorized wheelchair ever since. “They pulled the fencing and left these trenches. If they had left those up, I would not be sitting here in this chair playing computer games right now,” the quadriplegic husband and father of two said from his home in Steamboat. “It could have easily been avoided.”Matt Stensland/Special to The Colorado SunChris Arnis stretches December 12, 2020, at his Steamboat Springs home. Arnis received a C-4 spinal cord injury after crashing March 15, 2015, at Steamboat Resort.du1-i-syn There are many stories like Arnis’ — the tragic recounting of falls and crashes that changed lives in an instant. But they provide little insight into the severity and frequency of injuries at the nation’s 460 ski areas. Skier safety laws that require skiers to recognize inherent risks in the sport and be responsible for their own behavior have for decades protected the resort industry from large legal settlements and kept the public from understanding how often people are seriously hurt on the slopes. But new statistics provided by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment offer a peek behind the resort industry’s curtain. A study of ski-season hospital admissions in 20 mountain ZIP codes shows as many as 55 skiers and snowboarders a day arriving at emergency departments. Another report shows 4,151 skiers and snowboarders transported to emergency rooms in ambulances or helicopters in 2018, 2019 and the first part of 2020, which is about 10 patients every day of the season. And a review of CDPHE statistics showed more than a third of the 1,426 skiers and snowboarders admitted to Colorado’s trauma centers in the 2017-18 season required immediate surgery. “These numbers indicate a significant public health and safety risk that is not being addressed at all in Colorado,” said Dan Gregorie, a retired physician whose Snowsports Safety Foundation has spent 14 years working with lawmakers to push ski resorts to provide more detailed information about safety plans, accidents and injuries. “I can’t think of another recreational activity that generates these kinds of numbers.” National stats show one major injury per million skier visits The National Ski Areas Association gathers reports from the country’s ski areas and tracks “catastrophic injuries,” which it defines as “significant neurological trauma, major head injuries, spinal cord injuries resulting in full or partial paralysis and injuries resulting in the loss of a limb.” Over the past decade, the association has counted an average of 45 catastrophic injuries a season nationwide. The U.S. sees about 55 million to 60 million skier visits a year, so the rate of catastrophic injury is less than one for every 1 million skier visits. That does not include skiers suffering from underlying health issues or resort employee injuries. Dave Byrd, the director of risk and regulatory affairs for the National Ski Areas Association, declined to comment about the statistics, which he said he was unable to review in depth. Many in the ski industry are reluctant to discuss injuries and steer clear of studies that are not peer-reviewed. But many of the peer-reviewed studies involve injury data available to only a select few researchers. At least one Colorado lawmaker would like resorts to share injury statistics publicly. Only ski resorts can share numbers that differentiate between injuries resulting from a fall or collision and emergency room trips involving skiers and snowboarders suffering from underlying health issues associated with exercise at altitude. “I think resorts stand to gain more out of a transparent process than keeping data hidden and out of sight,” said state Sen. Tammy Story, a Democrat from Conifer. “If the industry was more clear about all the things they do to ensure the safety of the public, that could assure the public that when they are on the mountain, that resort is doing everything to protect them. But if resorts are not doing all the things that can be done and it’s jeopardizing public safety, I think that also needs to be known.” Colorado’s public health data on emergency room visits, emergency transport and admissions to trauma centers show a much higher rate of injury than the industry’s “less-than-one-in-a-million” reports. But those trauma center admissions do not necessarily fall under the resort industry’s definition of “catastrophic.” The CDPHE statistics defined the severity of injuries using international standards that identified 96 of the 1,426 trauma admissions as “severe” or “profound.” The 2017-18 ski season in Colorado saw about 12.2 million skier visits, so 96 major injuries equates to about one for every 127,000 skier visits. And the trauma center report showed 1,131 skiers and snowboarders admitted into hospitals following an on-slope accident in 2017-18, which is about one hospital admission for every 10,800 skier visits. At the state’s most trafficked ski areas, that means two, maybe even three skiers a day are spending a night in the hospital. A study presented at the 23rd International Congress on Snowsports Trauma and Safety last year at Squaw Valley in California reported there were about 96,000 “medically significant” ski and snowboard injuries every winter in the U.S., which is about 1,600 for every 1 million skier visits. In Switzerland, which has 25 million to 30 million annual skier visits, research presented at the same safety conference last year shows about 76,000 skiers and snowboarders sustain injuries that require medical attention, which is about 2,500 injuries for every 1 million skier visits. A review of ski area databases by Jasper Shealy, a researcher who has published more than 100 peer-reviewed articles on ski safety in the past 40 years and has access to nonpublic ski resort injury statistics, shows a declining trend in ski and snowboard injuries over the past several decades. Shealy last year presented his study of emergency room visits in California between 2006 and 2017, based on the same cause-of-injury codes used in the Colorado public health department analysis. Shealy’s review showed the number of ski and snowboard injuries in California dropping from around 9,000 per season in 2006 to around 4,500 by 2014 and staying at that level in following seasons. Gregorie also presented a report at the snowsports safety meeting last year, but it did not include any injury reports. Instead, his presentation, “Assessing and Assuring Effective Safety Management at California Ski Resorts,” noted that not one of the state’s 26 ski areas responded to his surveys or requests for safety plans. “We conclude that the volume of annual injuries serious enough to require hospital care and the absence of the documentation of effective safety management constitute a significant unaddressed personal injury and public safety concern that the resorts do not appear motivated to address,” Gregorie wrote in his abstract of the report provided to conference attendees. Shealy’s research in California, where 26 ski hills log about 7 million skier visits a year, shows about 640 emergency room visits for every 1 million skier visits. The CDPHE used the same emergency room codes as Shealy in California to count about 8,000 skiers and snowboarders visiting emergency rooms every season in Colorado. In a state with about 13 million annual skier visits, that’s about 615 injuries for every 1 million skier visits. Shealy said the raw data from the CDPHE is “really insufficient” to reach sweeping conclusions and “no one in the scientific community would publish this or cite it.” Shealy said the lack of demographic information showing the skill levels, locations, conditions, ages and other details detracts from the weight of the hospital admissions data. “With this incomplete data from a handful of Colorado hospitals, you simply cannot draw any conclusions at all,” said Shealy in an email to The Colorado Sun. “And for decades, epidemiologists and engineers like myself have analyzed truly comprehensive audited data sets with scientific controls and with statistical validity, and those analyses have undergone and withstood the rigor of objective, peer-reviewed scientific journals. My peers internationally in Canada, Europe, and Asia have all generally found that using similar methodologies as we use in the U.S., national, peer-reviewed injury rates around the world are largely similar and comparable, remarkably comparable. We have also observed that over long periods of time, injury rates have declined significantly.”Jesse Paul/The Colorado SunDenver Health medical center, photographed on Thursday, April 4, 2019.du1-i-syn The Colorado report of 1,426 skiers and snowboarders admitted to trauma centers in the 2017-18 season also ranked the severity of their injuries using two standardized systems. The Glasgow Coma Score ranks head injuries, from mild to severe brain damage. The trauma center admissions data show seven of the 1,426 patients suffered moderate or severe head injuries while 501 were ranked with “mild closed-head injury.” Another 900 were not scored. But the Colorado Hospital Association statistics detailing the injuries of the 4,151 skiers and snowboarders needing transport from slopes to the hospital over three seasons showed 50 patients with severe to moderate brain injuries. Another standard for measuring trauma is the Injury Severity Score, which ranks trauma as minor, moderate, severe and profound. In the trauma admissions report detailing 1,426 injured skiers and snowboarders, 96 patients — roughly 7% of the total — suffered “severe” or “profound” injuries. Up to 50 injured skiers, snowboarders a day in Frisco Dr. Marc Doucette has worked in the emergency department at St. Anthony Summit Medical Center in Frisco since it opened in 2005. The emergency medical team at the hospital — which serves skiers from Arapahoe Basin, Breckenridge, Copper Mountain, Keystone and Loveland — has seen traffic steadily increasing in the last decade. The patients come in surges, closely aligned with weekends and holidays. The Christmas holiday is the busiest, with the week before New Year’s typically seeing 100 patients every day. Presidents Day weekend, spring break and Martin Luther King Jr. weekend typically see 50 to 70 patients a day. About half of the patients coming to the Level III trauma center are injured skiers or snowboarders, Doucette said. And most of those skiers and snowboarders have passed through clinics at ski area bases. Centura Health has St. Anthony clinics at Breckenridge, Copper Mountain and Keystone. Those clinics send less severely injured patients home, but some are forwarded to Doucette at St. Anthony in Frisco. Those patients have injuries like a broken femur, a head injury, a collapsed lung or an injury that requires surgery. “On a typical busy ski season day, our orthopedic surgeons start receiving patients from the (ski area) clinics and they will start operating midday and often go late into the night with cases,” Doucette said. The more serious patients with multiple traumas will go to Level 1 trauma centers in Denver.Andy Colwell,/Special to The Colorado Sun<br><br>Keystone Emergency Services vehicles are pictured next to the Keystone Ski Patrol&#x2019;s aid station at the base of the River Run Gondola on Dec. 12,.du1-i-syn Doucette is not seeing the severity of injuries on the slopes increasing. “Often the type of injury we see correlates with the ski conditions on the given day,” he said. If there’s a lot of new snow, the injuries tend to involve knees and twisted joints. When conditions are firm and fast, the injuries worsen. “The really bad injuries typically are most commonly seen on groomed terrain on intermediate and beginner runs where skiers are going excessively fast and strike the snow surface or strike a fixed object, like a tree,” Doucette said. St. Anthony Summit Medical Center and Centura Health are part of the national Think First Injury Prevention program, which focuses on education and prevention of spinal cord and head injuries. The hospital’s trauma team works with local schools and ski resorts and gives out more than 200 helmets every year during the annual Skier Safety Week. “We want the public to be aware. It’s a great sport but it’s also potentially dangerous and it’s so important to pay attention and ski in control and wear your helmet and have good slope awareness,” Doucette said. “We don’t want to see horrible injuries, but we always do.” The Colorado Hospital Association provided CDPHE with emergency room admission statistics from its statewide payment database based on the codes that hospitals use for billing for treatment of injuries. Those statistics showed more than 8,000 skiers and snowboarders visiting the state’s emergency rooms in 2019. That’s up from 6,876 in 2018. But those codes are third, even fourth hand, trickling through health care and payment systems. And that’s only one problem with the data. The CDPHE statistics were harvested from 20 mountain ZIP codes, but the identity of the ZIP codes has been masked. CDPHE spokesman Peter Myers said state law prohibits the department from identifying the exact locations of emergency medical service transports and injury locations of patients admitted to trauma centers. That law protects patient and provider confidentiality and prohibits the release of any Emergency Medical Services data that could potentially identify patients. The law also requires the health department to only present data in bulk. While the statistics were gleaned from 20 different ZIP codes across the state, more than 82% of the injuries that required admission to a trauma center came from only six. It’s likely those include Summit, Pitkin and Eagle counties, home to 10 ski areas that account for about 8 million of the state’s annual skier visits. The Ralph Nader of the resort industry Gregorie has been searching for these kinds of numbers for nearly 15 years. His group has conducted smaller snapshot studies at individual resorts that indicate injuries could be as high as two to three for every 1,000 skier visits. “Although not life-threatening, an unknown but significant number of these injuries result in considerable short-term disability, or even long-term and in some cases lifelong chronic pain or disability,” he said. The physician’s daughter, 24-year-old Jessica, died in a fall at California’s Alpine Meadows in 2006 while hiking on a traverse above cliffs. He sued the ski area for wrongful death. The resort pointed to a waiver signed by Jessica for her season pass and the case was dismissed. An appeals court upheld the decision, ruling Jessica’s fall was among the inherent risks of snowboarding and the ski area “only owed her a duty not to increase the risks she encountered beyond those which are inherent in snowboarding.” After losing the legal challenge, he started fighting for ski areas to reveal safety procedures. In 2008 Gregorie founded the California Ski and Snowboard Safety Organization, which has morphed into the more national Snowsports Safety Foundation. He started lobbying lawmakers to enact legislation that required resorts to offer detailed safety plans to all visitors and file monthly reports on injuries and deaths. California lawmakers approved the legislation, but then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill in 2010, saying the law would have placed an “unnecessary burden on resorts” without assuring it would reduce injuries.Jason Blevins/The Colorado SunSki patrollers prepare to load an injured skier onto the Game Creek Express chair on Dec. 11, 2020.du1-i-syn Gregorie’s group has expanded to other states and helped the nascent coalition Safe Slopes Colorado with funding to work with the CDPHE to comb its database for injury reports involving skiers and snowboarders. Safe Slopes Colorado hopes the data bring together skiers, parents, lawmakers and resort leaders “to encourage transparency and leadership,” said Russ Rizzo, with the fledgling group. “With better data, we can better focus our safety prevention efforts,” Rizzo said. Colorado’s trauma center admissions and ambulance rides are only a peek, Gregorie said. More information is needed. He’d like to see more statistics on the cost of treatment for ski injuries. His rough math — calculating 8,000 emergency room visits at $5,000 each and 96 major trauma center admissions at $100,000 each — puts the annual cost of ski injuries around $50 million. “We need to know more about the problem if we want to address this. We don’t really know what resorts are doing to prevent accidents and reduce the severity of injuries. And they have successfully convinced the public and legislators that an inherent risk means it is not preventable,” said Gregorie, citing skier safety laws across the country that protect ski areas from inherent risks like weather, changes in snow conditions and varying terrain. “Inherent does not mean ‘not preventable.’” The 72-year-old Gregorie fancies himself the Ralph Nader of the ski industry. Nader’s landmark bestseller, “Unsafe at Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile,” criticized car makers for resisting safety designs like seatbelts. The auto industry dismissed Nader while shifting the blame for most accidents to drivers, much like the resort industry asks skiers to shoulder responsibility for potential hazards and injuries. “Once the information about injuries and deaths in automobiles was finally put out there, look at what has happened,” Gregorie said. “Safety in automobiles has become a competitive attribute, not a threat. Public focus on safety creates improvements. If we can get good data out there about safety and drag it out in the sunshine, it will generate all kinds of improvements and the resort industry will thrive.” The grassroots group Parents for Safe Skiing started last year after Boulder mom Larisa Wilder started looking into chairlift accidents involving young skiers. Her young son had watched a 6-year-old fall more than 30 feet from a chairlift at Eldora and she was shocked to learn that resorts only have to report chairlift injuries outside of the loading and unloading zones. (The Colorado Tramway Safety Board only reviews very uncommon accidents involving skiers during the ascent, not when they are getting on and off the lift.) She asked Colorado lawmakers to require resorts to report injuries while loading and unloading to the Colorado Passenger Tramway Board. When Colorado lawmakers balked at requiring more transparency in injury reporting at ski areas, Wilder’s group expanded into advocating for more protections for children at resorts. Wilder has spoken with dozens of Colorado lawmakers over concerns with waivers signed by parents that protect resorts and put the onus for protection on skiers, including children. “When I leave my 4-year-old at ski school, that 4-year-old is legally on their own. A child that young cannot be responsible for themselves at any other place but ski resorts. I tell that to legislators and the first response is I must be crazy,” Wilder said. “This is an uncomfortable conversation for everyone on all sides here. But really, we need to talk about waivers. It’s hard to understand how far ski area waivers go to protect ski areas. You really have to go to a place of nonbelieving to go skiing once you are informed.” Ski resorts also have some of the highest rates of injury among employees. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s latest reports show 8.5 ski resort workers out of every 100 suffered non-fatal injuries in 2019, ranking as the industry with the sixth highest rates of injury, behind armored car guards, delivery drivers, steelworkers, veterinarian workers and prefabricated wood construction builders. That is down from 10 injured workers per 100 in 2018 and 10.7 in 2017. The National Ski Patrol this season is rolling out a new Outdoor Risk Management Program for ski patrollers, which will help with identifying and mitigating risks. ‘Keep a conversation going’ Story, the state senator from Conifer, has been skiing in Colorado for more than 30 years. She raised her kids skiing and they still all visit ski resorts together. Ski safety has always been something she thought about, but her focus grew more acute when she became a lawmaker in 2019. “There are more and more people talking to me about concerns and issues related to ski safety. Did you know when you buy a lift ticket you are accepting a liability waiver that says the bulk of all liability and responsibility falls on you as a skier?” she said. “I find that extraordinary. And the more I looked into it, it’s astounding to me that there is very little data that is publicly available relative to injuries and user days so you can gauge the frequency of injuries. It just seems that the whole industry has kept really quiet about people getting hurt skiing.” Story wants to “keep a conversation going” with safety advocates and resorts to see if more information could be studied about injuries at ski areas. With more information, maybe trends could be identified that would better persuade skiers to take more responsibility on the slopes. Maybe information could spotlight ways resorts could improve safety as well, she said. “But without data, it’s hard to see what needs to be done,” she said. Story has watched resorts create sweeping new operating plans designed to protect skiers and employees during the pandemic and make sure customers feel comfortable visiting ski areas. All those new plans have been shared publicly, with some details — like capacity limits — removed from public view. “I think if we can review their new procedures and policies to address COVID, we certainly should be able to look at the overall industry and ski resorts to see what’s going on during their general operations without a pandemic,” Story said. Story is quick to point out that she does not think resorts are doing anything unsafe. Advocates for better transparency in injury reporting are not raising issues about dangerous activities at ski areas. There are no industry-wide accusations regarding grooming, signage, opening terrain too early or shoddy safety practices. Skiing and snowboarding are inherently dangerous. The mix of gravity, speed and freedom to roam is both thrilling and rife with danger. Skiers have a large responsibility to be safe and prevent accidents. And the resort industry has a responsibility to protect skiers as well. The legal obligations of both skiers and operators are outlined in ski safety legislation in nearly every ski state. Those statutes often restrict the amount injured skiers can get from resort operators in a lawsuit. In Colorado, for example, the Ski Safety Act limits liability to $250,000. Melanie Mills with Colorado Ski Country, which represents 22 of the state’s 28 ski areas, said the state’s ski resorts prioritize guest safety “every day without exception.” “Dan Gregorie’s rush to draw conclusions about an incomplete data set that hasn’t been subjected to the rigors of scientific review is disappointing, but not surprising,” Mills said in a statement emailed to The Colorado Sun. “We’ve seen him operate like this in other states as he promotes a policy agenda untethered to skier safety. Other states’ policymakers haven’t bought his unscientific analysis and we don’t expect Colorado policymakers will either.” Even with the promises from ski areas, Story wonders if more could be done by resorts. “It’s impossible to know without more information,” Story said. “I think it’s time for the state and the industry to step up and lead. Why would we not want to look at this and address public safety issues, especially if we could minimize public risks? Resorts have made so many improvements in safety over the years I’ve been skiing, but could there be more that needs to be done? Let’s take a look and see.” Arnis, back home in Steamboat with his wife and service Labrador, hasn’t spoken much in the past five years about the accident at Steamboat ski area. He knows many ski patrollers on the mountain. Maybe some of them pulled the bright fencing off the run that Sunday afternoon. It’s hard to criticize ski patrollers, he said. But he doesn’t see much progress on ski safety. He sees ski resorts hiding behind legislation that protects them. He thought about trying to sue the ski area. He thinks he has a good argument that the resort was negligent in removing the barrier before skiers were off the mountain. But if he lost, the resort could come for legal fees. (Like Alpine Meadows did when Gregorie’s lawsuit was dismissed.) “I think I could have won, but if I didn’t they could have taken everything,” said Arnis, who grew up at his dad’s Willamette Pass ski area in Oregon and ski raced in upper-level collegiate contests. “It was a hazard and they knew it and they did nothing to fix it. The worse part is just knowing they aren’t doing anything differently. Nothing changed. There are a lot of things they could do differently but they haven’t done anything because they don’t have to. They are the irresponsible kids in the neighborhood, answering to nobody.” Read more at The Colorado Sun The Colorado Sun is a reader-supported, journalist-owned news outlet exploring issues of statewide interest. Sign up for a newsletter and read more at coloradosun.com. Read more at The Colorado Sun]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/snowboard-icon-sports-are-great-with-or-without-olympics/</link>
        <title>Snowboard icon: Sports are great with or without Olympics</title>
        <description>Terje Haakonsen has been delivering that message since before 1998, when snowboarding made its debut at the Olympics. “I won more prize money in the ‘90s than people win in a FIS contest right now,” Haakonsen said recently, referring to...</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 11 Dec 2020 19:54:51 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B637BDE1-8B72-10B3-E053-0100007F59B7</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=718866F5-BADA-4965-936F-B61A0F680D0F&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=718866F5-BADA-4965-936F-B61A0F680D0F&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[To all those surfers, rock climbers, skateboarders and, now, break dancers, who dream of taking their act to the Olympics soon, one of history’s best snowboarders has a message: Your sports are great with or without the rings. Terje Haakonsen has been delivering that message since before 1998, when snowboarding made its debut at the Olympics. “I won more prize money in the ‘90s than people win in a FIS contest right now,” Haakonsen said recently, referring to the International Ski Federation that sanctions most snowboard contests in Europe. “So, have things been good when the popularity of halfpipe and prize money is lower than what it was in the ‘90s? I don’t think so.” Snowboarding’s entrance into the Olympic program was the IOC’s first major attempt to skew to a younger audience – an effort that took its latest twist earlier this week when break dancing was added to the program for the 2024 Games in Paris. It was the IOC’s decision to put Olympic snowboarding in the hands of FIS, which ran ski events but not much snowboarding, that Haakonsen and dozens with similar opinions saw as the most toxic symptom of what they viewed as little more than a mismanaged cash grab. In 14 months, snowboarding will make its seventh appearance at the Olympics, at the 2022 Games in Beijing. On the sport’s biggest day in the early years of its Olympic ascendancy – in 2002, when the American men swept the medals on the halfpipe in Park City, Utah – Haakonsen was famously at Disneyland, taking his 4-year-old son into the park to enjoy the day. “The way FIS is running snowboarding is how a parent would take over a kids’ sport,” Haakonsen said that day. He’s never been to an Olympics, has never sat down to watch an Olympic snowboard contest and has largely steered clear of buying products made by Olympic sponsors. “I did grab an energy drink once and noticed there was an Olympic logo on it,” he said. “I have to apologize for that.” None of this is to say Haakonsen is against making money with his snowboard, or that he chafes against competition, which many on the filming and lifestyle part of the sport shy away from. The now-46-year-old Norwegian was the world’s top contest rider in the early 1990s and would’ve been considered a favorite had he participated at the Olympics in 1998. And the interview for this article was, in fact, arranged because he lent his expertise to a new virtual-reality snowboarding game, Terje Haakonsen’s Powder VR, that’s set to come out Friday for the holiday season. Haakonsen says he believes the game marks a breakthrough in the industry, which has tried but largely failed to bring a product to the gaming world that authentically depicts snowboarding. Which isn’t all that different from pretty much every foray the sport makes into mainstream media. Snowboarding sells billions in product, but still has a more limited core audience that expands every four years when the show moves to the Olympic halfpipe. Yet the old debate about how to remain “authentic” to the lifestyle side of the sport while still eagerly chasing after bucks and, now, gold medals, has largely dissipated over the decades. Though the Winter X Games and the Dew Tour and events sponsored by Burton serve as the backbone of the competition side of the sport, there’s little doubt among the biggest names – most notably, three-time champion Shaun White – that the Olympics are worth the time and effort, and whatever compromises must be made to win them. But Haakonsen says there are still battles to be waged, and urges this generation to keep on waging them. He is an outspoken critic of the Olympics – “It’s just sad to see a lot of sports fooled by a lot of different things that don’t have anything to do with their sport,” he said. He views the NHL’s decision to sit out of the Pyeongchang Games two years ago – one that wasn’t universally agreed upon by players and the league – as a great example of all the parties engaging in a healthy debate about whether the Olympics are the best thing for their sport. “I’d just like to see the action sports community get stronger and stand up for themselves and have values and do their own thing,” he said. “It’s always good to see the world come together. But when you read some of the headlines, you see in a lot of ways, the Olympics are really dividing us more.”]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/livingston-an-opening-day-to-savor/</link>
        <title>LIVINGSTON: An opening day to savor</title>
        <description>It is opening day at Purgatory Resort north of Durango. It is a day to celebrate in most years, but especially so with the arrival of the 2020-21 season. It comes after last year’s ski season was cut short with...</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 21 Nov 2020 04:34:17 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B490A185-D2AB-332F-E053-0100007FABFF</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=D0AF41B2-9153-4312-A92F-6752B3626172&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=D0AF41B2-9153-4312-A92F-6752B3626172&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Stepping into bindings for the first time in eight months, getting the first scan of a new season pass and the comfortable feeling of loading the chair lift and being carried high up a mountain side. Those sweet turns that follow and the free feeling of sliding down a snow-covered slope. It’s all back, and not a moment too soon. It is opening day at Purgatory Resort north of Durango. It is a day to celebrate in most years, but especially so with the arrival of the 2020-21 season. It comes after last year’s ski season was cut short with a sudden closure in mid-March because of the COVID-19 pandemic. While Purgatory and many of its faithful held out hope for a closing weekend reopening, it never came. Eight months later, here we are, back on the lift but still dealing with the coronavirus as it spikes at an alarming rate. The world around us is still as uncertain as it was in March, but at least we have this feeling again. During the blur of most ski and snowboard seasons, there are always a few days one remembers above others. The yearly holiday trip with family or old friends, the best bluebird powder day or the ones spent in blizzard conditions as the snow piles up. Undoubtedly, closing day and opening day are among those often most easy to remember.Livingstondu1-i-syn Friday, Purgatory Resort had a special early opening day for season pass holders. An email went out Thursday afternoon offering a lottery for pass holders to get their chance at the first runs of the year before the general public opening day Saturday with snow expected to fly all weekend. The opening Friday was a gift from Purgatory to its local pass buyers and was framed as a “thank you” to customers for their understanding and patience after they had to close early last season. It was the kind of move I have come to appreciate from Purgatory since 2015 when James Coleman purchased the mountain and started making more local-friendly moves such as discounted passes for young adults like me. After never getting proper closure to last year’s season, I wasn’t going to miss my chance to get out Friday at the first chance to return to Purgatory’s slopes. In a way, it felt like the beginning of a new chapter. In others, it felt like I was finally getting back to a book I had set down in March and put out of my mind. In a world filled with so much noise right now, all felt right as I sat back on the chair, closed my eyes, felt the cool air flow past my face and soaked in sweet mountain silence. It was an average opening day at Purgatory. A mostly man-made 16-inch base, only a few exposed rocks and a ripping fun time with top-to-bottom riding and some fun terrain park features near the base. Remembering back to 2017 when opening weekend consisted of top to mid-lift skiing and having to take the six-pack chairlift ride back to the base area, it now feels good anytime you can make turns all the way down to the base in November.Purgatory Resort opened on Friday with six trails open from top to bottom. Season pass holders were allowed on the slopes before the mountain opens to everyone Saturday.Jerry McBride/Durango Herald This wasn’t my first day of the season, though. I’ve been lucky enough to escape east to Wolf Creek Ski Area for two days already. Sadly, after hitting a deer on a drive back from a Bayfield football game in late October, I didn’t have a car to make it to Wolf Creek’s opening day on Oct. 28. With my car back from the body shop, I was able to start my season Nov. 9 during a massive storm that made for one of the best opening days of my life. I went back two days later for my first bluebird powder day. With the mountain 94% open thanks to more than a 50-inch base with 80 inches of snowfall already this year, I was hooting and hollering while zipping through stacks of snow through the trees of the “Numbered Chutes.” It was the best feeling I have had since the pandemic started. March 16 was the last time I had felt it. My best friend and I decided to head to Brian Head in Utah where I could take advantage of my Purgatory pass to ride a mountain I had never visited. High school basketball state tournaments had been canceled the weekend I departed on that trip, and spring sports had been suspended for high schools and colleges as COVID-19 began to spread through the U.S. Upon our arrival at Brian Head, social media posts kept popping up with one ski area after the next shutting down because of the virus. We crossed our fingers that Brian Head would hold out through our weekend trip. It did. But the first day we were supposed to ride, we hunkered inside our Airbnb rental instead of hitting the slopes. Winds were howling, it was bitter cold, and we were both weary of hopping into lift lines with other spring breakers from Arizona and California. But we had traveled a long way, so we reluctantly went out the next day for what turned out to be our final day of winter. Upon arriving back in Durango, I learned Purgatory Resort had shut down in the middle of the height of spring break tourism. Season over. It was a long spring, summer and fall because of the pandemic. Every small problem that popped up felt worse than it normally would. Summer camping season was more difficult with travel restrictions and forest closures, we haven’t been able to fly fish the San Juan River in New Mexico, and rafting permits became even more difficult to obtain than they already are. Folks from out of state flocked to our corner of Colorado to escape restrictions in their own larger cities. Vallecito was as busy as I’ve seen it, even on normally calmer weekdays. When Durango locals wanted to escape in their own backyard, our places of refuge were full of others looking for the same. But now at our ski areas, everyone is smiling again. The stoke is high for a new season with hopes of big storms and powder days ahead. So please, let’s not ruin it. Let’s wear masks, avoid that gathering outside the Bear Bar on the beach and only share lifts with those we live with. And skip even a powder day if you have any COVID-19 symptoms. I am beyond thankful for the opportunity to return to the sport I love and am filled with cautious optimism we might be able to keep our mountains open this winter without another shutdown. The preparation of the staffs at Purgatory and Wolf Creek has been impressive. They are going to remind you to put your mask up over your nose and demand people to stay six feet apart. There’s no need to squabble with their requests. Please, just do it. Whether it is in the parking lot, base area, ticket and lift lines or at unloading zones, there are no excuses or reasons to chirp back at the employees doing everything they can to keep the mountain open so we can all have some much-needed fun. If you’re anything like me, you need these ski areas right now. It would be a long, miserable winter without them. jlivingston@durangoherald.com]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/silvertons-bryon-powell-completes-the-first-troutman-100/</link>
        <title>Silverton’s Bryon Powell completes the first Troutman 100</title>
        <description>Ultra-runner combines love for fly fishing, conservation work in mountain challenge</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 17 Oct 2020 03:41:18 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">B1D468C5-6B00-2DF9-E053-0100007F0794</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=06B704EF-4FCC-41DC-8724-5A78C60FD1FA&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=06B704EF-4FCC-41DC-8724-5A78C60FD1FA&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Ultra-runner combines love for fly fishing, conservation work in mountain challenge With no races to train for in 2020, Bryon Powell turned his attention to his newfound hobby for a summer of motivation. It all led to an impressive feat in the Colorado mountains. Silverton’s Powell, the editor-in-chief of famed ultra-running website iRunFar.com, completed a 100-mile run from Leadville to Salida in the Arkansas River Valley, stopping to fly fish along the way. The goal was to catch the grand slam of Colorado trout with a brook, brown, cutthroat and rainbow. It was the Troutman 100, the first of its kind, finished in 25 hours, 40 minutes, 21 seconds. “I decided to have some fun,” Powell said. “I had attempted the Troutman challenge all summer, failing many times and succeeding a few. I had found success previously in the Sawatch Range in Chalk Creek. I knew from running this in the past that it is a very long run. I said, ‘Huh, I wonder if I can Troutman during a 100-mile run.’ It was an audacious goal, but why not go for it?” Troutman is a challenge put on by Running Rivers, a nonprofit organization that focuses on preservation and restoration of freshwater ecosystems while also engaging with people through recreational events. The challenge is to run at least the distance of a marathon, 26.2 miles, with 3,000 feet of climbing while catching one of all four trout. The challenge is capped off by drinking a craft beer with an alcohol content of 12% or greater. It must be completed in 12 hours or less. Running Rivers also puts on several flyathlon events each summer as fundraiser activities. During a flyathlon, people run various distances and must catch a fish along the way while also finishing a heavy beer. Powell, a 42-year old former Washington, D.C.-based attorney who quit his job to move west in 2009 and pursue his love of trail running, has competed in a handful of flyathlons and volunteered on Running Rivers projects such as the Sand Creek Watershed Reclamation Project in Great Sand Dunes National Park. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Running Rivers took its flyathlon challenges virtual to give running, fishing and beer enthusiasts a way to stay connected. Powell, a three-time Hardrock Hundred Endurance Run top-20 finisher, was set to compete in another Hardrock 100 in 2020 along with a few other races as a journalist and athlete. But with events all canceled, he spent much of his summer fishing and running.A brown trout was the first of four trout Bryon Powell checked off the list during his Troutman 100 attempt.Bryon Powell/iRunFar.com “Adding fly fishing to trail running this summer gave me huge inspiration,” he said. “Having the motivation taken away to train for actual races, it gave me a ready source of adventure. Having new directions to go with fly fishing was a great boon, and I really enjoyed it.” Powell, who completed his first 100-mile race 16 years ago but only started fly fishing in 2016, previously completed three Troutman challenges of the marathon distance variety. As an ultra-runner, he was intrigued by the chance to finish the first 100-mile Troutman. He departed Leadville at midnight Oct. 7 with the goal of finishing 100 miles in 24 hours while catching the four trout within 12 hours of his first cast to complete the Troutman challenge. He ran 35 miles down U.S. Highway 24 before he cut over toward the Mount Princeton Hot Springs and got to where he would start fishing at Wright’s Lake 45 miles into his run.The second trout, a rainbow, took a few hours for Bryon Powell to catch during his Troutman 100 effort.Bryon Powell/iRunFar.com “I caught a brown trout a mile into the Troutman attempt and caught a rainbow trout next,” Powell said. “The rainbow took awhile. I had fished this stretch of water before and had good luck with rainbows, but I caught 10 or more brown trout and kept trying until I got a rainbow. It took a couple of hours of fishing a couple of small pools where I thought there’d be rainbows. There would be five browns in a row, and I was worried the rainbows weren’t biting or not there. But I knew I had to catch a rainbow in that general area. A couple more casts, I finally hooked one. It came out of the water, I saw a flash of silver and said, ‘Yes! I got my rainbow.’”Brook trout were easy to come by in Chalk Creek for Byron Powell during the Troutman 100.Bryon Powell/iRunFar.com Fishing Chalk Creek near the town of Saint Elmo, it didn’t take long for Powell to hook a brook trout. It came 55 miles into his run. He had previously caught a cutthroat in the same area, and he fished half a dozen spots but with no luck. He spent three hours trying for the cutthroat, but it was 4:30 p.m. with darkness only a couple hours away. So, he ran a couple miles downhill and then climbed a road 2,400 feet to Baldwin Lakes. He had never fished it but knew from previous research that it contained cutthroats. “I fished a couple of times along the way hoping to get lucky. I saw a few fish, but super spooky,” Powell said. “I got to lower Baldwin Lakes, and I swear I could look 40 feet out and the water was still only 10 inches deep, but fish were rising. I walked around to the inlet, basically lied down and threw a fly into a little ripply water and kept letting the fly drift to where I saw a fish rise. I had a soft strike but failed on the hook set. A couple of casts later, same thing. Finally, I got a strike again and the fourth time I hooked it. I landed my cutthroat at 6:30 p.m. with the light of Antero, a fourteener, sitting above me. It was just gorgeous, a spectacular setting.”Last but far from least, Bryon Powell finally caught a cutthroat trout in Baldwin Lakes to complete the Troutman 100 challenge, roping all four of Colorado&#x2019;s trout in under 12 hours and after more than 70 miles of running. He went on to complete 100 miles of running in less than 26 hours for the first Troutman 100.Bryon Powell/iRunFar.com After 72 miles and all four trout collected within 11 hours, 38 minutes of when he started fishing, Powell pulled out the beer he had packed with him. It was an AleSmith Speedway Stout from San Diego. It was a 16 ounce can with an ABV of 12%. “During numerous failed Troutman attempts, I had carried the same beer with me,” Powell said. “I had carried it 192 miles and then the final 10 miles up and back down Baldwin Gulch road. I finally drank it after carrying it 202 miles. It felt really satisfying.” Powell completed 93.6 miles in 24 hours but battled stomach issues and leg muscle problems. Determined to finish 100 miles, he walked out the final 6.5 miles from Poncha Springs to Salida for a finishing time in under 26 hours. “I initially set a long shot goal of trying to do Troutman and 100 miles within 24 hours,” he said. “I made good time up until midnight. I gave it my best shot. As ultra-runners want to do, I was a bit persistent and carried on the final 6½ miles to get the 100 miles in under 26 hours.”Mount Antero, 14,276 feet, was lit up by the sun in a glorious view over Baldwin Lakes after Bryon Powell caught the cutthroat trout to complete the Colorado grand slam for his Troutman 100 effort.Bryon Powell/iRunFar.com Powell estimated 80 miles of the running effort were completed on pavement with 10 more on good dirt roads and 10 on the super rocky road of Baldwin Gulch. For packing ease, he used a Tenkara USA Hane, a 10-foot, 10-inch rod that collapses down into a 15-inch handle. It does not require a reel. “So light, portable and quick to set up,” Powell said. “I don’t think about it while running, until I see a fishy looking spot and am fishing 30 seconds later.” Powell scouted out the areas to fish while helping crew his wife, Meghan Hicks, on a record-setting Nolan’s 14 run the first week of September. Hicks successfully linked up the 14 summits of 14,000 feet or higher in the Sawatch range in 50 hours, 32 minutes. That women’s supported fastest-known time was broken by Silverton’s Sabrina Stanley Oct. 3 in a time of 48:49. While crewing Hicks during her Nolan’s run, Powell was given encouragement to fish to pass the time. That’s when he discovered Chalk Creek. During his Troutman 100, it was Hicks’ turn to be the crew member.Wright&#x2019;s Lake and the Chalk Cliffs backdrop provided a stunning scene for the first fishing stop of Bryon Powell&#x2019;s Troutman 100 conquest on Oct. 7.Bryon Powell/iRunFar.com “Having my wife there when I started fishing that day at Wright’s Lake, it was stunning. A perfectly still morning with peak foliage and the Chalk Cliffs behind,” Powell said. “And the only reason I ever would have fished Chalk Creek was because of her Nolan’s 14 FKT. As it turns out, I caught fish there and I successfully completed a marathon Troutman on that a couple of days later. It was a good place to go back.” Powell first learned of flyathlons in 2018 while listening to an episode of The Dirtbag Diaries podcast. A year later, he did his first Running Rivers event and ended up winning the long course event on Middle Creek. “To win as a rookie, I enjoyed that,” he said. “Running Rivers does amazing conservation work. To see them change streams and rehabilitate them is breathtaking. Those efforts require dollars and boots on the ground, and these events help raise money for it.” Powell set up a fundraiser link for Running Rivers during his 100-mile effort. He has raised $595 of his initial $500 goal with two weeks remaining on the campaign. After his latest accomplishment, Powell took to the keyboard to pen a brilliant introduction to fly fishing for mountain runners on his website with the appropriate headline “iFishFar.” As for his favorite fish to catch, Powell said it is a Rio Grande cutthroat trout found a few miles outside Silverton at the Rio Grande headwaters. It’s a fish as tough as his effort on the Troutman 100. “Just a show of resilience of the native species around here,” he said. “They might not be big, but they’re beautiful.” jlivingston@durangoherald.com]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/more-colorado-fishing-holes-have-closed-this-year-than-in-the-past-10/</link>
        <title>More Colorado fishing holes have closed this year than in the past 10</title>
        <description>As algae, low water levels and repairs put fisheries out of commission, anglers rush in</description>
        <pubDate>Tue, 22 Sep 2020 16:51:10 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">AFEE8308-D552-54DD-E053-0100007F638B</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=2939AB73-6566-4964-AB05-84746C25E3BC&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=2939AB73-6566-4964-AB05-84746C25E3BC&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[As algae, low water levels and repairs put fisheries out of commission, anglers rush in GREELEY — Juan Jiminez comes to Poudre Ponds for the peace. The fish are a bonus. Jiminez, 47, of Greeley works the graveyard shift stocking shelves at King Soopers. He loves to unwind after work at the pond, so much so that he rarely changes out of his khakis. The pond, in fact, seemed to be the only respite from the coronavirus, as he adjusted to his own fears, a broken economy and wearing an uncomfortable mask for hours at work. He had fish on his mind when he drove over to the popular Greeley pond on a recent Sunday morning as a fresh sun crept into the sky. Jiminez had just returned from his honeymoon, where fishing was discouraged, so he was eager to cast a line, and he read on Facebook that Colorado Parks and Wildlife had declared an emergency fish salvage. Salvages are rare, as it means the state is essentially pulling the plug on the fishing spot, but there have been three this summer in northern Colorado, and two of them are because of the punishing drought that’s haunted the state all summer. The salvage declaration at Poudre Ponds banishes bag limits, meaning anglers can take home as many fish as they want. Jiminez enjoys eating fish from Poudre Ponds, but he also donates some of the bass, bluegill, catfish and trout he catches to others who could use a meal. When he pulled up that Sunday morning, he found anglers circling the pond, socially distanced but as crowded as he’d ever seen it. The fishing trip was not as successful as he would have liked. Monday morning wasn’t much better, either, when the only thing he caught was some algae. “That’s OK,” Jiminez said that Monday. “I’ve had an awesome time fishing out here. I’ve really enjoyed the outdoors lately, especially with everything going on.” Salvages are rare treats for anglers since they can catch and keep as many fish as they’d like. But they come at a stiff price: When fishing holes are opened to no-limit catches, it means they’ll soon be taken out of commission. This year, anglers have lost more of their favorite spots than in at least a decade. Most of the reservoirs at popular areas, such as state parks or regional open spaces, are owned by irrigation and ditch companies. In lean water years, like this one, when the only significant moisture of the summer came in a crazy September snow, growers drain reservoirs dry for irrigation. Greeley merely ran into bad luck, needing to drain Poudre Ponds to make unexpected repairs to a broken intake pump. The city plans to drain the pond all the way down to the dirt. But other popular spots, such as Barr Lake State Park in Brighton and Jumbo Reservoir in Julesburg, hosted public fish salvages because of an algae bloom or irrigation demands, and at least one other lake, Jackson Lake State Park, east of Greeley, had to close its boating ramp just a week ago, far earlier than normal, because of low water levels. The goal of a salvage is to use the fish in the pond, and with that in mind, Colorado Parks and Wildlife sometimes shocks fish to knock them out and move them to other fishing spots, said Jason Clay, spokesman for CPW’s northeast region. This typically happens when conditions get unsafe for anglers. “They won’t want people getting stuck in the mud,” Clay said, “so we will take what we can when that happens. We want as little waste as possible.” Biologists did this at Jumbo Reservoir State Wildlife Area, near Julesburg, and this week at Poudre Ponds. Justin Scharton, Greeley’s natural areas and trails division superintendent, said while water is being pulled from the ponds at an accelerated rate, there should be fishing until around Oct. 1. A double-edged sword Most anglers understand the need for bag limits. Greedy anglers who hog all the fish aren’t good for the lake. But they can be frustrating at times. “There are days you get out there and the fish are just banging, and the limit is just four,” said JR Pierce, an angler who can see Barr Lake from his home in Brighton. “So, heck yeah, salvages can be a fun way to fill the freezer.” Pierce, however, was mourning the idea of seeing his favorite fishing spot run nearly dry on Sept. 4, the day the fish salvage there began. He’s fished the reservoir for 30 years, since he was a kid, and called it his steady spot for the last decade. He also hosts a fishing tournament out at the lake. “The fishery has really blossomed,” Pierce said. “I caught some of the biggest fish I’ve ever caught out there. So it’s horrible. I hate it. It hurts.” But Pierce is also a water shareholder, and he uses the water for his hayfield. He’s also good friends with the people draining the lake. “It’s a double-edged sword for me,” Pierce said. “Unfortunately you can’t have it all.” A nasty blue-green algae bloom helped contribute to the emergency fish salvage, said Michelle Seubert, manager of Barr Lake State Park. Algae blooms were common until 2013, when the water quality improved, which Seubert attributes to more public awareness about preventing nitrates from seeping into the water. Dog owners began picking up after their pets more, for instance. But the water’s nitrate levels came back up this year, probably because there wasn’t any rain to help dilute the supply and keep water levels normal. Low water levels also usually mean higher temperatures in the water, which increases the chances of more algae blooming. As the water level dropped to about one-fifth of its normal level, the algae died off, robbing the water of its dissolved oxygen, leaving the fish gasping for breath. “It’s a perfect storm this year,” Seubert said. Anglers seem to understand why the salvages need to take place as they are stuffing their coolers, though most are as sad as Pierce, and many boaters have expressed some frustration. Low water levels just aren’t much fun anywhere, said Tyler Seward, the park manager at Jackson Lake State Park. Water levels haven’t been this low since 2013. “The fishery was awesome this year,” Seward said. “It was a good year until the boating stopped.” As Pierce said, Barr Lake’s fishery blossomed in the last few years, and that’s only helped the park’s recent designation as a bird oasis. Visitors crowd the park in the colder months to view the wintering bald eagles, as well as a nesting pair, and even with its terrific fishing, the park is probably more known for birding than any place in northern Colorado. Through July, the total visitation was nearly 185,000, or 45,000 more than in all of 2016. Seubert has fielded many calls about the bald eagle population, which the park has encouraged in past years with its eagle festival and Eagle Express ride that takes visitors around to see the big birds that sometimes snatch fish from the water. Seubert, however, isn’t worried about whether the eagles will visit this year: There will still be a bit of water in the lake. She’s also seen almost 200 pelicans stuffing their pouches with fish. “They’re making the anglers look bad,” she said. So the fishery, although smaller, is still there. “There’s a small pool, but the big fish will eat the little fish and become bigger,” Seubert said. “We will still have fish.” Rebuilding and rebounding All three fishing spots were popular, even if they didn’t match Barr Lake’s recent boom. Jumbo grew in popularity in the last eight years, even with residents from Nebraska, because it’s close. Colorado Parks and Wildlife and the city worked together to develop the Poudre Ponds in Greeley from a reclaimed mining site more than a decade ago. They even let it sit for a couple years so the vegetation and ecosystem had a chance to mature before stocking it with fish that were both good eating and good fun to catch. The pond now acts as an oasis among gravel mining operations and a nice place to take a break from a trip on the Poudre Trail, which winds around it. As hard as it is to lose all those fishing holes, Mandi Brandt has seen them disappear to drought many times. She is the northeast region’s fisheries biologist, and part of her job is to restock and restore fishing holes when they dry up. Brandt worked out in eastern Colorado for many years, and it seemed like every year a couple popular spots dried up because of the demand for irrigation in the area. “We have had to rebuild fisheries in the past after severe droughts,” Brandt said. “We rebuilt the fisheries at both Jumbo and North Sterling Reservoirs following the drought in 2012. It takes time, but it can be done.” It usually takes two to three years for fisheries to build back to where they once were, but anglers can fish in them as soon as the next year. They just may not be able to keep anything, as bag limits also can put limits on the size of fish anglers can keep. But history shows rebuilding usually works: Seubert said Barr Lake had low levels in 2013, and the lake rebounded with a banner year for walleye in 2016. Most salvages are still going on, although anglers should check the CPW social media for water levels. The state usually closes them for safety before water levels get too low. The real issue, of course, comes next year. If it’s a normal year, the lakes have a good chance of rebounding right away, especially with the stocking by the state. But if it’s another dry year, the lakes could make no progress at all. “A low water level next year means they will have the same issue as this year,” Brandt said. Although he’s sad to lose his favorite spot, Jiminez understands that work at Poudre Ponds must be done. He’s already planning to head to Carter Lake, west of Loveland, and other places for fall fishing. His hopes are high for some trophy trout. But even if he doesn’t land one, he’s OK. “Just being out here is more than anything I can ask for,” Jiminez said.]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
    <item>
        <link>https://www.durangoherald.com/articles/sports/mcmillan-peak-a-treasure-to-be-shared/</link>
        <title>McMillan Peak: ‘A treasure to be shared’</title>
        <description>Spacious summit, enthralling views atop McMillan Peak</description>
        <pubDate>Sat, 19 Sep 2020 11:03:06 -0600</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">AF8911A6-12B6-2575-E053-0100007F474B</guid>
        <media:content url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=95DC526A-C5C6-4255-8B60-449538EDEB20&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" medium="image" type="image/jpeg" />
        <media:thumbnail url="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=95DC526A-C5C6-4255-8B60-449538EDEB20&#038;function=thumbnail&#038;type=preview&#038;source=false&#038;width=600&#038;height=400" />
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Spacious summit, enthralling views atop McMillan Peak Before writing this column, I checked in with Betsy Petersen. She has been climbing McMillan Peak near Red Mountain Pass on various routes for 20 years and has introduced the mountain to more than 200 people while leading annual excursions for Durango’s hiking club, Seniors Outdoors! Betsy took a small COVID-19 bubble of friends up McMillan this summer at age 84. For Betsy, McMillan Peak is a treasure that deserves to be shared and enjoyed by young and old alike. For those who have hiked but have never summited a mountain, McMillan is an excellent place to start, according to Betsy. The climb is a half day ramble up immense spans of unfettered tundra to a spacious summit with an enthralling 360 degree panorama. If you can’t tear yourself away from the wonder, make it a two-peak day by scampering up neighboring Ohio Peak. U S Basin to McMillan Peak, 12,804’ The hike begins at tree limit where healthy spruce stands concede to the alpine. From the parking pullout, elevation 11,760 feet, walk up the road a few paces to intersect an old trail running up into U S Basin. If you can’t find it, no worries. This is free-range hiking at its best. Just favor the south side of the basin, staying clear of willow patches. Cross the Big Horn Gulch headwater stream at half a mile. The basin is famous for its wildflowers mid-summer. When we visited in August, multitudes of domestic sheep were munching the flowers as if they were ice cream, and few remained. In autumn, direct your attention to spent seed pods and leaves – beet-red fireweed, crimson geranium, and scarlet alpine avens. The navigation objective is simple. Visually locate the low point in the north-south running ridge while ascending southeast. Gain the divide in just under a mile at about 12,360 feet. A well-trodden social trail flanks Point 12,652’ on the west. I prefer to stay right on the ridge top because the view from the roller is spectacular. Let your eyes sweep vertically from Silverton to the Grenadier Range. Plot your route to McMillan Peak, discernible by the microwave repeater on its summit. A friend in telecommunications said the repeater reflected signals for long distance phone calls back in the landline days. A trail works down through a rock band on the north side of the point.McMillan Peak is easily identified from all over the region by the microwave reflector standing on the softly-rounded summit. The climb is a half day ramble up immense spans of unfettered tundra.Courtesy of Thomas Holt Ward The climbing is a little steep for the last 200 feet to a secondary crest. The slightly higher summit is a few more paces east at 1.7 miles. Sprawl out and play the age-old, name-the-peak game. Start with the astounding array of thirteeners to the west of U.S. Highway 550 and see if you can locate Grizzly Peak and Golden Horn. Find the serious four-wheel drive tracks winding up into Porphyry Basin and over Black Bear Pass. Continuing clockwise, the fourteener Mount Sneffels looks like a dark triangle. The three Red Mountains showcase their everlasting brilliant display. The eastward drop to Cement Creek is abrupt. Gladstone is the Gold King Mine reclamation site on the canyon floor, and Handies Peak is the flat topped behemoth on the horizon. North Loop Return The most direct route back to the starting point begins with a descent on the north ridge of the subsidiary summit. A helpful trail will get you started. At about elevation 12,600 feet, leave the track and curve west and then southwest back into U S Basin, keeping an eye on your vehicle. The only obstacles on the relaxing descent are willow patches. From above, plot a course that weaves around and through the restraining foliage. Cross the creek in the center of the basin and rejoin the trail. South Loop Return The South Loop provides adventuresome rock play. Return to the saddle at the head of U S Basin and continue south for 0.3 mile to the westward ridge that rims the bowl on the south. Go right up the face of Point 12,596’, a short, moderately steep climb. There’s a little slot in the rock band you can squeeze through.Two hikers return to the saddle above U S Basin. From there they may walk on the south rim of the basin (image-right) or climb Ohio Peak (image-left). The array of thirteeners includes Vermilion Peak and Golden Horn above the Ice Lake Basin.Debra Van Winegarden/Special to the Herald Scramble down a rocky spine (or go around), run out the ridge to County Road 14 and turn right. At first, the road is pointed west instead of toward the vehicles, but it soon cranks around in the right direction. The road segment is 0.4 mile with 50 feet of uphill. Ohio Peak, 12,673’ It is only a mile from the saddle at the head of the basin to Ohio Peak, but the climb requires some light scrambling and exposure tolerance. Pass the South Loop option and locate a cairned social trail traversing west of two small knolls. Head the defile at the top of Minnesota Gulch and then descend on sheep trails to the base of Ohio’s north ridge. A miner’s shack constructed with sheet metal and wooden planks stands in the saddle, 400 feet below the summit.Jana Goldstein walks through a corridor of stone on her way to Ohio Peak. Ohio is less than two miles south of McMillan.Debra Van Winegarden/Special to the Herald A short escarpment on the north ridge presents the toughest obstacle of the hike. There are several braided trails west of the cliff with resistant soil that pitch steeply. Return to the ridge line at first opportunity. From there, it is a mellow, rocky ascent up and over a false summit to the peak. The soft red dome at the south end of the divide is Anvil Mountain. Silverton is nestled below Anvil’s formidable south slopes. The fastest return route is through U S Basin. ••• After publishing nearly 80 hiking columns for The Durango Herald over six years, this summer I’ve been admonished for (inadvertently) sharing secret places with the public. Some readers believe these articles are to blame for the exponential growth in backcountry visitors. I take your concerns seriously. My intention from the beginning has been to share the joy of walking in nature, not to generate sorrow or distress. From conversations on the street, I’ve learned the majority of readers are not hikers; they read to learn about the wild corners in our backyard. Those who do hike find solace and renewal in what’s proved to be a rough summer for all of us. Therefore, rather than giving up the column completely, my concession is to close the season early with this story about McMillan Peak. Next summer, I will be even more judicious and simply feature classic mountains nearby and Mount Elbert, Colorado’s tallest summit. http://debravanwinegarden.blogspot.com. Debra Van Winegarden is an explorer and freelance writer who lives in Durango. Trail basics Travel: The turnoff from U.S. Highway 550 is just south of mile marker 80, less than a quarter mile south of Red Mountain Pass. Turn east on unsigned Forest Service Road 825 and start measuring distance from there. You will need four-wheel drive and decent clearance on this steep but good dirt road. The track heads generally southeast. At 0.7 mile, turn right on San Juan County Rroad 14. Pass St. Paul Lodge & Hut. The road splits at 1.0 mile, turn right. Cross Big Horn Gulch at 1.3 miles. Park in the pullout on the left at 1.7 miles. Total Time: 3 to 4½ hours depending on route Difficulty: Off-trail; navigation moderate; no exposure Maps: Ironton; Silverton, Colorado 7.5’ USGS Quads Distance and Elevation Gain North Loop: 3.3 miles; 1,300 feet South Loop: 4.2 miles; 1,500 feet McMillan and Ohio Peaks: 5.6 miles; 1,900 feet]]></content:encoded>
    </item>
</channel>
</rss>
