Friday, July 28, 2023

Massive Collbran mudslide evident from space

By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com

The big slide near Collbran in 2014 was massive enough to be seen from space, and get the attention of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

Nasa images 

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/83883/mudslide-near-collbran-colorado

"On Sunday, May 25, 2014, a large mudslide rushed down a Colorado mountain near the town of Collbran covering an area three miles long and one-half to three-quarters of a mile wide. It claimed the lives of three ranchers and triggered a small earthquake," according the NASA Earth Observatory.

 Two years later, Jesse Paul, in a article in The Denver Post published Feb. 29, 2016, reported the landslide that killed three men was caused by rain over melting snowpack, triggering a series of earth movements that began 10 hours earlier.

“Our results revealed that the rock avalanche was a cascade of landslide events, rather than a single massive failure,” said the study led by Jeffrey Coe, a research geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey.

The 2.8-mile-long West Salt Creek landslide on the Grand Mesa on May 25, 2014, was the longest such slide in Colorado history, the Post described.

"The report found the sequence began with an early morning rockfall event that combined with a later earth failure," wrote Paul.

The slide near the town of Collbran lasted about 3.5 minutes and sent a wall of debris rocketing down from the Grand Mesa.

“If precursor events, such as the one at West Salt Creek that occurred (before) the main avalanche, could be seismically detected and placed in the proper context, they could possibly be used for avalanche warnings,” the report said.

The men who died in the slide had gone up to find out why irrigation water below the slope that gave way had stopped running, said Jesse Paul, of the The Post.

Coe says that irrigation ditch had likely been plugged by the rockfall 10 hours before the main slide.

“To really be able to use that precursor event for warnings, we’d need a much more detailed seismic network than we have in the U.S.,” Coe told The Denver Post.

Coe explained there are proposals for such systems in some landslide prone areas, but not on the scale needed to provide universal coverage.

“I think we’re a ways off from any kind of dense network,” he said. “That kind of infrastructure just isn’t currently available and the cost would be very substantial.”


The extent of the mudslide is evident in the top image, which was acquired by the Landsat 8 satellite on June 7. The lower image, taken by Landsat 8 on June 20, 2013, shows the slide region before the slide. The top edge of the slide, the scarp, is on the lower side of the image. The debris flowed north and ended at the toe, partially covering a natural gas well.

"The slide happened in the Grand Mesa region of western Colorado, an area extremely prone to landslides. In fact, the recent mudslide began at the scarp of a previous landslide. The region is unstable because of its underlying geology. A layer of basalt lies on top of soft claystone that erodes easily. The basalt slumps when water erodes the soft rock beneath it, as illustrated in these diagrams. Landslides are most prevalent in this region during the spring and early summer when the ground is moist from snowmelt and runoff," according to NASA

Colorado experiences thousands of landslides every year. According to the Colorado Landslide Inventory, most of the slides occur in the mountainous western half of the state.

NASA Earth Observatory images by Robert Simmon, using Landsat 8 data from the USGS Earth Explorer. Caption by Holli Riebeek.

 

 

Following is a brief description of what happened on that day, as reported by the Grand Junction Sentinel.

The natural disaster happened on May 25, 2014. The below information is based on a 2015 Colorado Geological Survey/Colorado School of Mines publication issued in 2015, including police/witness reports contained in that publication's appendices. Material from Daily Sentinel coverage at the time also supplements this account.

■ Between 6 and 7 a.m., Melvin "Slug" Hawkins began hearing a strange "hissing" noise in the West Salt Creek drainage. He suspected a problem at one of the natural gas well pads in the area, but after driving to one of the pads found no problem.

■ A small seismic disturbance was detected at 7:18 a.m. by a seismometer 20 miles southeast of the landslide site. It may have recorded precursor landslide activity Hawkins observed that morning at a prehistoric landslide site on the east side of the head of West Salt Creek. He also recalled that a second precursor slide occurred on the west side of the creek later that morning.

■ Water in irrigation ditches originating in West Salt Creek stopped flowing. Hawkins said he went up the valley and heard trees snapping and toppling. That may have been due to mud/debris flow high on the valley floor.

■ That afternoon, Wes Hawkins, Melvin's son, and Clancy and Danny Nichols drove up the valley to assess damages to an irrigation diversion structure and whether there was a landslide risk to Salt Creek Road. Hawkins, 46, worked for the Collbran Conservancy District, and Clancy, 51, worked for Mesa County's Road and Bridge Department. Danny, 24 and Clancy's son, was a geologist with Olsson Associates in Grand Junction.

■ At 5:45 p.m, a magnitude 2.8 earthquake was recorded about eight miles southeast of Collbran, lasting for about three minutes, and reflecting the duration of the longest landslide in the recorded history in Colorado, at almost three miles in length. The landslide buried and killed Wes Hawkins and Clancy and Danny Nichols. It was caused by a rotational slide of a half-mile block in the Green River geological formation, with spring snowmelt and recent rain infiltrating rock joints, fractures and shear surfaces and likely triggering the slide. The rotational slide caused a rock avalanche and debris flow down the valley. Rock and debris moved fast enough to overtop two ridges where the valley curves, depositing rocks in some cases as large as small houses. The slide descended 2,100 feet and displaced an estimated 38 million cubic yards of earth, leaving deposits up to 123 feet on the valley floor and burying nearly a square mile of land. The slide encroached on a gas well pad but did not impact wells.

■ Melvin Hawkins reported hearing at that time what sounded like a long clap of thunder that rattled windows at his house. Another neighbor described what sounded like a low-flying, large military helicopter, while children reportedly spoke of hearing a noise like a freight train. There are no living eyewitnesses to the slide. The victims' remains and the vehicles they were driving never were found.

■ A week after the slide, as many as 1,000 people attended a service in Collbran to remember and honor the men who died. The service was briefly halted around 5:45 p.m. to mark the moment a week earlier when the slide occurred and took the lives of Wes Hawkins and Clancy and Danny Nichols.

 

 

Thursday, July 27, 2023

Mary McKinney Mine, Halfway House, Grand Valley, Snowmass, Frontier Days, Florissant School, Nellie Tramway, Battlement Mesa, Keystone Mine, Dolores Tank, Manitou Clock, Basalt blowup, Work Goose, Bardwells, Columbine mine, Palmer Lake depot

 

Thing of the past ...
Palmer Lake, Glen Park
Eleven men stand in front of the Denver and Rio Grande Railway building at an unidentified exposition, the building was later moved to Palmer Lake (El Paso County), Colorado and served as the railroad depot. The Victorian style building has a tower with decorative spindles, brackets, and front and side gables. A sign reads: "Denver & Rio Grande Railway Company Come In." Some of the men wear work clothes with aprons, others wear vests with pants, and one wears a suit. All except one wears a hat.
Date: 1882
Notes: History Colorado.; Condition: Stained, pencil marks, frayed and missing edge.; Formerly F-19.549; Handwritten on envelope: "C-Palmer Lake."; Title and "Foreman Miles McGrath and building crew R [sic] & R.G. RR. This is the circle RR depot at the Exposition in 1882 later removed by the same crew to Palmer Lake and is still in use. Loaned by M. Davis McGrath" handwritten on back of photographic print.
Is Part Of: History Colorado, subfolio collection
History Colorado

 


Thing of the past ...

Coal miners in the Columbine Mine

Date: [1933-1940]

Miners work in a tunnel of the Columbine Mine near Erie (Weld County), Colorado. They wear hats and miner's lights.
Type-written labels attached to back of print read: "Coal miners, Columbine Mine, Lafayette" and "Writers' Project. Photo".
Denver Public Library Special Collections.


Thing of the past ...
Fort Collins (Colo.)
Silas and James Bardwell
Date: [1900?]
Silas and James Bardwell pose in Fort Collins, Larimer County, Colorado, in cowboy hats.
Digital Version Created From: Gwen Goldsberry April 1974.
Notes:Title hand-written on back of photoprint, with: "homesteaded north of Horsetooth Reservoir. Both buried on hill above ranch."
Denver Public Library Special Collections


Thing of the past ...
Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge motor car number 6
Creator: Richardson, Robert W.
Date: 1952
Motor car, from front end, close view; Work Goose switching gondola. (The Work Goose never carried passengers or freight. It was used in maintenance of way service.) Photographed: Dolores, Colorado, September 5, 1952.

 


Thing of the past ...
Remains of engine 35 which blew up at Basalt after Uncle Albert just gotten off
Date: [1895?]
Debris from the engine 35 explosion litters the tracks of the Colorado and Midland Railroad in Basalt, Colorado in Eagle County. Metal grates, wheels, and scraps from the locomotive are piled next to the tracks. A large locomotive wheel is on the opposite sides of the track. Spectators gather around the wreckage. Several people stand on top of the piles of debris. Wood-frame buildings are in the background.
Hand-written on back of photoprint: Procured for me by Midberry of Basalt, R.W. and C.L. Daniels in Basalt Book. Title hand-written on back of photoprint.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 

Thing of the past ...
Street view Manitou, Colo.
Creator(s): McClure, Louis Charles, 1867-1957
Park in Manitou Springs (El Paso County), Colorado at the junction of Manitou and Canon Avenues with a clock tower and statue. Shows Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church (behind the town clock), Manitou Mineral Water Company's Bottling Works' building, horse-drawn wagons, delivery wagons and carriages, street railway tracks and "Pure Lake Ice" delivery wagon.
Date: [between 1900 and 1910]
Notes: History Colorado.; Formerly F-43,234; Handwritten on envelope: "C-Manitou - Streets"; Title and "667" inked on front of photographic print. "Manitou Streets," "Street View - Manitou Colorado at the foot of Pikes Peak, Denver and Rio Grande Railroad" handwritten on back of photographic print.
History Colorado
 

 
 
Thing of the past ...
Stevens homestead
Date:[1860-1890]
The Stevens family (three men and two women), stand near their home in Florissant, Colorado. Sam Stevens had killed the bear (draped over the chair) the day before the image was taken.
Hand-written on back of photoprint: "l to r: Mae Stevens, David G. Stevens, Nancyann Stevens, Sam T. Stevens, & Frank Stevens." and, "Sam had just killed a bear the day before the picture was taken."; Title hand-written on back of photoprint.
Rex Stevens (through Gwen Goldsberry). Denver Public Library Special Collections
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge locomotive, engine number 461, engine type 2-8-2
Creator: Richardson, Robert W.
Date: 1945
Right rear view of engine; engine uncoupled, taking water. Photographed: Dolores, Colorado, October 10, 1945.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
Title from inventory prepared by Western History Department, Denver Public Library.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Keystone Placer Mine, sluice boxes
Creator: Jackson, William Henry, 1843-1942
The Keystone Placer Mine in San Miguel County Colorado. Shows mining buildings and sluice apparatus.
Date: [between 1882 and 1900?]
Notes: Attribution to Jackson based on the photonegative's inclusion in the History Colorado William Henry Jackson Collection.; History Colorado.; Condition: glass plate chipped, emulsion scratched, pocked.; Formerly Jackson 2807.; Hand-lettered title on negative.; Number: "3202" hand lettered on negative.
History Colorado
 

Thing of the past ...
Shale claim corner on Battlement Mesa, facing Collbran
Men stand and pose beside a wooden claim marker pole on Battlement Mesa in probably Mesa County, Colorado. Men wear overalls or vests and felt hats. One man holds a pick axe; another man smokes a cigarette.
Date: [between 1910 and 1920?]
History Colorado, Denver and Rio Grande collection
Handwritten on envelope: "C-Collbran-Industry-Oil Shale."Title inked on photographic print.
 

Thing of the past ...
Cable for the Nellie Tramway, Length 10810, Weight 1700 lbs.
Creator: Moore Bros.
Date: [1897]
Colorado freighter David Wood's mules loaded with cable for the Nellie Tramway, July 3, 1897 on Main Street (Colorado Avenue), Telluride, Colorado. Fifty-two mules carry load of continuous coil for a total length of 10,810 feet without splices. Townspeople line boardwalk in central business district; First National Bank and San Miguel County Courthouse steeples are in background. Business signs read: "Bath Room, Furnished Rooms," "Furniture," and "Restaurant."
Denver Public Library Special Collections
Penciled back of photoprint mat: "Telluride, Colorado, Cable for the Nellie Tramway, Length 10,810, weight 17,000 lbs. ca 1895"; Photoprint faded. Telluride Historic District designated a National Historic Landmark in 1964. Title hand-lettered on bottom of original.
 

Thing of the past ...
Florissant School
Date: September, 1894
School children and their teachers pose in front of their schoolhouse in Florissant, Colorado.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
Title hand-written on front of original.
 

Thing of the past ...
Cheyenne Frontier Days cowboys
Title-Alternative: History Colorado, Buckwalter collection ; no. 751
Creator: Buckwalter, Harry H.
Cowboys pose near their horses at Cheyenne Frontier Days in Cheyenne, Wyoming. They wear chaps and woolies, pistols in holsters, and wide-brimmed hats.
Date: [1905]
Notes: itle handwritten on negative envelope. Group portrait of (A.G. Birch Broncho Busters) cowboys in Cheyenne, Wyoming,
History Colorado.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Clarks break camp at Snowmass
Date: 1911
Snowmass, Piktin County, Colorado; shows a tent, a loaded surrey, and the Clark family in bonnets.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Grand Valley
Creator(s): Beam, George L. (George Lytle), 1868-1935.
Denver & Rio Grande and Rio Grande Junction railroad depot and frame buildings in the town of Grand Valley (Parachute) in Mesa County, Colorado. Men stand near boxes, crates and milk jugs on the platform of the depot. A sign on the depot reads: "Western Union Telegraph & Cable Office." Girls or women are in the street near a horse-drawn wagon and a timber commercial building with signs that read: "Doll Bros and Smith, General Merchandise," "Gasoline, Polarine [?] Supplies." The "Grand Valley News" building is near a D.& R.G. freight car on tracks.
Date: [between 1910 and 1920?]
History Colorado, Original photographs collection
 

Thing of the past ...
Mary McKinney Mine
Men, women and children disembark from Colorado and Southern Railroad passenger cars near Anaconda (Teller County), Colorado. The site, identified as the Mary McKinney mine complex, was part of the Cripple Creek Mining District. Shows a mill processing building with tar paper siding and sash windows, railroad freight cars, tailings, head frames and tracks. A freight car is labeled: "Colorado Midland, 8081."
Date: [between 1920 and 1930?]
History Colorado
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Halfway House, Manitou and Pike's Peak Railway
Creator: Hook, W. E. (William Edward), 1833-1908
Date: [1890-1900?]
Manitou and Pikes Peak Railway (Pikes Peak Cog Road) locomotive number 3 and a passenger car near the halfway house in El Paso County, Colorado. Crew are on the engine by a square wooden water tank, a small wooden depot and a rail spur.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
Title printed on original and reproduced in photographic print with "1762."; "Halfway house, Pikes Peak Railroad" pencilled on front border of card photograph.

Friday, July 21, 2023

Gypsies in the palace, old and new music at Mad Dog Studios

We're gypsies in the palace, he's left us here aloneThe order of the sleepless knights will now assume the throneWe ain't got no money, we ain't got no rightBut we're gypsies in the palace, we got it all tonight

Songwriters: Glenn Lewis Frey / Jimmy Buffett / Will Jennings 

Glenn Frey, Jimmy Buffett and Steve Weisberg playing with two other men in Aspen, from the Aspen Times April 1, 1976.  (Photo used later in June 16, 1977.)

Legends, parties, personalities, 

but above all — musical inspiration

By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com

Mad Dog Studios in Old Snowmass is two, or three parts Rock music history, mixed with multiple legends, parties, personalities — and now a preservation project restoring the storied ranch’s charm and history while simultaneously upgrading the recording studios with state-of-the-art equipment to help launch the next generation of legendary musicians. Named originally for long-time owner Glenn Frey's three frollicking dogs, countless parties, and top-flight recording sessions — with new owners, it now aims to be inspiration for  a new crop of music legends.

From Mad Dog Ranch and Studios:
"We are a professional recording studio. Previously home to not one but two legendary musicians Jimmy Buffett and Glenn Frey. The studios were designed by Frank Comentale of The Hit Factory. Our head engineer Marc Meeker spent the last 17 years working in the music industry in Nashville. He has expertise as a studio tech, audio engineer, and musician. The studios are perfect for artists, writers, engineers, and producers at any point in their creative process. We have provided services for full bands, solo artists, voice overs for movies and commercials, and audio books."

 "After sitting quiet for the better part of a decade, music has returned to Mad Dog. The wooded, creekside Rocky Mountain compound was once owned by Buffett and, later, Frey, who both regularly visited Aspen for rest and artistic inspiration beginning in the late 1970s. Mad Dog’s new owner, Julie Garside, has completed an ambitious renovation of the property’s main house (where she lives), small guest cabin, and two outbuildings that Buffett and Frey used as private recording studios," wrote Sara Kuta, in 5280 magazine, Sept. 16, 2021.

“I really want to share it with everyone because it’s such an awesome place,” Garside says. “I’d like it to be a creative, inspiring, safe space for artists who come here to create and find unique inspiration, collaborative moments.”

"Buffett bought the property in 1976, then sold it to his good friend Frey in 1990. Frey converted two log-cabin outbuildings into small recording studios, where he recorded his album Strange Weather and mixed the Eagles’ live album Hell Freezes Over. Buffett, too, produced some creative works here, writing the songs “Son of a Son of a Sailor,” “Changes in Attitudes, Changes in Latitudes,” “Gypsies in the Palace,” and two children’s books. According to Garside, the ranch also hosted some raucous, celebrity-filled parties in its heyday (naturally)," Kuta writes.

Garside owns a property management company and is a retired ski instructor  was recovering from knee surgery in 2015 and looking for a home renovation project to pursue when stumbled upon the property in a newspaper real estate ad. Intrigued, she reached out and scheduled a showing. 

Kuta reports when she arrived on-site, she immediately felt a personal connection to the lush, green property, which is surrounded by tall trees and accessible via a covered bridge that crosses Snowmass Creek. 

“When I stepped foot on the property, I just felt this instant creative energy,” she says. “It just felt like it’s in the ground. I feel like the property chose me.”

Mad Dog's renovation became her her biggest project yet. “Something in me felt, I needed a change. I need to do this. This is how I need to express myself,” she told Kuta.

Garside, a fan of Buffett, Frey, and the Eagles since childhood, began negotiating with Frey’s team. She wasn’t the highest bidder, she closed the deal because she planned to bring the property back to life, she thinks. The  contract contract was signed in January of 2016,  two days before Frey died of complications related to rheumatoid arthritis.

Renovated the guest cabin and the main house throughout 2017 and 2018, Garside also set up some older equipment in two, empty on-site recording studios. In 2019, she began hosting a few private events, songwriter retreats, and recording sessions. 

With the pandemic hit. Garside saw a major uptick in requests for private events and individual parties, but she also used it  as an opportunity to modernize the recording studios’ equipment and bring onboard Marc Meeker, a sound and recording engineer of 17 years who’s worked with the likes of the Rascal Flatts and Keith Urban.

Meeker, living in Nashville at the time, moved to Colorado to become Mad Dog’s engineer.

“There really is some magic in the studio and in the property itself,” Meeker says. “Creative types are inherently very sensitive to their environment. When you are coming in to try to reveal your most sensitive feelings or create that moment, the environment and the atmosphere means everything to them. Because if they don’t feel like it’s a safe place where they can be comfortable and create, the magic doesn’t happen,” quotes Kuta.

Jimmy Buffett fondly recalled his first meeting with Glenn Frey and their decades-long friendship in a touching tribute to the Eagles guitarist and co-founder upon Frey's death, according to a piece in Rolling Stone by Jon Blistien. Jan. 21, 2016.

The two musicians first met backstage at a concert at the Columbia Coliseum in South Carolina in August 1975: Buffett and his Coral Reefer Band had been tapped to open for the Eagles — “the best American band of my generation and many to follow,” the musician declared — and were well aware how important a gig like this was to their burgeoning career. After watching the Eagles soundcheck, Buffett told his band, “That is the kind of band we want to become."

“Waiting to go on that night seemed like an eternity,” Buffett continued. “Mixed emotions were flowing, fear, excitement, and a lot of ‘what if’s’ were running through my head, when the door suddenly opened and in walked Glenn Frey. That was the first time we met. He greeted me and the band warmly, thanked us for being there (duh?) and said to me how much he loved ‘A Pirate Looks at 40.’ He wished us luck and then went back out the door. That was the beginning of a long and lovely friendship.”

Buffett credits Frey and Don Henley for playing a huge role in his rise, including linking him with their manager, Irving Azoff, and asking him to serve as opener on the Eagles’ Hotel California tour. 

Later, Frey and Buffett became neighbors in Aspen and frequent collaborators, and when the Eagles were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Buffett was asked to deliver the induction speech.

“Glenn was a true friend, a true professional, an inspiration and sometimes could be a handful,” Buffett wrote. “I cherish great memories of our time spent together and will never forget his kindness that first night and our friendship for all these years.”

Jimmy Buffett’s  Statement on Glenn Frey Death:

In August of 1975, I was sitting in a dressing room in the Columbia Coliseum in South Carolina, about ready to go onstage. It wasn’t your ordinary gig by any stretch of the imagination, and still gives me “chicken skin” as I write about this morning. We were opening for the Eagles, the best American band of my generation and many to follow. Any band worth their salt started out as an opener for somebody. Opening for the right band at the right time, could be your stairway to heaven.

 Jimmy Buffett’s closing set at the Jazz Aspen Snowmass Labor Day Experience on Sunday marked the music legend’s first Jazz Aspen show, but it continues a relationship with Aspen that goes back nearly 50 years, says  Andrew Travers, Aspen-based freelance journalist, and former Aspen Times writer in Sep 5, 2021.

"Though South Florida beaches and boats and sunny celebrations of the good life are the mainstay of the persona he’s created in song and on stage since the early 1970s, Buffett has also more quietly embraced mountain living and skiing here."

Buffett’s time in Aspen goes back to summer 1972, according to interviews with local media over the years, when the young Mississippi-bred singer-songwriter had just one album, 1970’s “Down to Earth.”

"He spent the following three summers here as his star rose and his songs made their first appearances on the charts — including “Why Don’t We Get Drunk (and Screw)” in 1973. After those initial summer stays, Buffett bought a house, stayed for the winter of 1975-76 and learned to ski," Travers writes.

"At the time, he was intent on splitting his time — or non-touring time, at least, as he was playing about 150 nights per year back then as his profile was growing — between the Florida Keys and Aspen, both still wild counterculture outposts at the time." 

“I have the best of both worlds,” he told Aspen Magazine in the February-March 1976 issue. “I have the mountains and the ocean — the Florida Keys and Aspen. I don’t believe in waiting until you’re 55 to enjoy your times.”
Jimmy Buffett performing at the Aspen Club in September 1984. 

He was then 29 years old and between the releases of his film and soundtrack “Ranch Deluxe” and his 1976 album “Havana Daydreamin’.”

The house he bought was a rustic creekside two-building property in Old Snowmass that Buffett would later sell to The Eagles’ Glenn Frey, who would convert Buffett’s log-built garage and office into the famed Mad Dog Ranch Studios in 1986.

"Buffett was among a bumper crop of shaggy young musicians here playing to the hippie ski bum masses and après-ski crowds in the ’70s, including The Eagles and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, many of them lured to town by the influential manager Irving Azoff, an Aspen regular and avid skier."

Buffett formed a long-running softball team in the Aspen rec league, called the Downvalley Doughboys, and landed a Corona beer sponsorship for the team. Tim Mooney, a J-Bar bartender at the time, recalled that the Doughboys got a four-case beer allotment per game and that Buffett once flew New York Yankees third baseman Craig Nettles to town to play as a Doughboy for a championship game. Their primary rival was Frey’s team, the Werewolves.

An August 1976 edition of the magazine Snowmass Affairs, previewing Buffett’s appearance at that year’s Snowmass Summer Festival — which also featured Bonnie Raitt, Emmylou Harris and the Dirt Band — colorfully described Buffett’s on-stage presence at his early local shows: “Buffett bounces on stage like a hobo surfer healthy enough to do an orange juice commercial with his fun-tan and straw-colored hat.”

Buffett’s local backing band then, as now, was billed as the Coral Reefer Band, though with different personnel. Aspen Mountain ski instructor Mike Mooney — Tim’s brother — signed on as Buffett’s tour manager in those early days and remains so today.

Buffett’s breakthrough to super-stardom came in 1977 with the release of the platinum-selling album “’Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes” and the anthem “Margaritaville.” That summer Buffett married his wife, Jane, at the Redstone Castle — renting the entire property for a three-day party. Their first child, Savannah Jane Buffett, was born at Aspen Valley Hospital in June 1979.  

John Denver and Jimmy Buffett photographed for The Aspen Times at a Windstar Foundation auction hosted by Buffett on Dec. 23, 1982. (Aspen Historical Society/Cassatt Collection)


"Though his boozy, free-living beach-bound lifestyle was intertwined with his songs, Buffett said back then that he wasn’t interested in writing about Aspen, thus differentiating himself from another local friend who happened to be the most popular singer-songwriter in the world at that moment: John Denver"

“The things I write about are people I’ve seen, places I’ve been and experiences I’ve had,” Buffett said in the Aspen Magazine interview. “But I can experience and not feel that I have to reflect about it. I wrote a song once about how all my friends are writing about Colorado, I don’t like to write about feeling free with nature. I am in Aspen to enjoy it. I feel really nice rushes on the slopes, but I don’t have to make a song about it.”

An exception to that rule would come in 1985, when he and Glenn Frey memorialized the wild caretakers’ parties at Mad Dog Ranch in their co-written “Gypsies in the Palace.”

Along with finding an enduring public friendship here with the late Frey, Buffett bonded in Aspen with locally based cultural figures like the “60 Minutes” journalist Ed Bradley, actor Jack Nicholson and “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas” author Hunter S. Thompson, who Buffett recalled meeting in the mid-1970s. 


Jimmy Buffett, Sen. Gary Hart and actor Jack Nicholson at a fundraiser for Hart’s presidential campaign at the Aspen Meadows on Aug. 25, 1983. Aspen Historical Society/Aspen Times Collection


“I lived downvalley and, through a mutual friend, I got invited over to Hunter’s house — of course I was a huge fan — and then he came down and saw my show in Denver with a bunch of guys from Aspen,” Buffett recalled in the 2007 oral biography “Gonzo,” “and we just immediately locked in.”

In 1977, Buffett, Thompson and Frey teamed for an event in the Aspen High School auditorium. Filmed by Grassroots TV — and now viewable on YouTube — the event included a Q&A by with Thompson followed by a concert performance by Buffett and Frey (which boasts an early rendition of “Margaritaville.”)

Along with playing the high school gym, Buffett performed in innumerable local venues and small festivals in those early years, known to sit in occasionally with Dirt Band member Jimmy Ibbotson at the Aspen Inn or with touring musicians including Willie Nelson at the Holiday Inn at Buttermilk.

After he became an international star, Buffett continued playing the Aspen area and remained a regular at benefit concerts like the Deaf Camp Picnic in Snowmass, at events like Aspen Junior Golf’s High Country Shootout, Windstar Foundation events and one-off fundraisers like a 1983 concert for Colorado Senator and presidential candidate Gary Hart at Aspen Meadows.  

In more recent years, he took to occasionally playing small clubs like the Double Diamond and Belly Up Aspen under the pseudonym Freddy and the Fishsticks, including New Year’s week shows in both 2005 and 2006 that raised funds for local charities.

After selling the Old Snowmass house, Buffett didn’t buy another permanent home here but came back frequently for extended stays in in rented properties in all seasons and skiing with the Mooneys each winter. Annually on Christmas night, from the mid-70s on, Buffett was part of the tight-knit group that would celebrate the holiday at actor Jack Nicholson’s home in the West End. Those gatherings — including a mix of locals along with Thompson, Bradley, Henley and visitors like Paul Simon — continued until about a decade ago when Nicholson sold the house.

Most recently, during spring 2020 amid the coronavirus pandemic, Buffett sent a special message and song via video to Aspen High School’s graduating class as students could not have a traditional graduation ceremony.

Referring to himself as “a child of the ’60s,” he called on the graduates to improve on his generation’s work making the world a better place.

“It’s your world out there ahead,” he told the young people, “and I have great confidence in the kids that I know and the kids that come to the shows, kids that I meet in Aspen when I’m out there, that you understand this better than we did.”

"If you visited the Mad Dog Ranch & Studios circa the 1980s, here’s what you’d most likely walk in on: a rowdy pig roast attended by famous musicians, local raconteurs and a mannequin in red-kitten heels resembling Glenn Frey’s ex-wife. You’d also find Jimmy Buffett’s bathtub in the backyard and two pristine recording studios where legendary songs were co-created with Colorado’s evocative nature," says  a Dec. 16, 2022 story by Erin Lentz  in the Aspen Daily News.

"Today, while the mannequin took its final bow along with stimulant-induced all-nighters, the rebel and creative spirit of this legendary property remains, thanks to visionary local owner Julie Garside, the new Inspire Aspen Foundation and Forum Phi Architects. The retreat has had a major face lift and its stewards are ensuring Aspen’s long-standing affair with music in the mountains. And while the property’s infamous studios now draw the likes of Coldplay’s Chris Martin and local students hoping to hit the big time, music remains the muse, " Lentz writes.

"Jimmy Buffett, a longtime fan of the Aspen area, discovered and purchased the Old Snowmass property in 1986. The initial entice? Its original covered bridge over Snowmass Creek, which today still lassoes oohs and ahhs from first-time visitors. In a 1981 Colorado Homes & Lifestyles article, Buffett stated: “The first thing I saw was the covered bridge taking you across the river to the log house. It wasn’t much, but there was potential.” That potential became a custom-built 2,900-square-foot home on 6.5 acres of wilderness. The escape inspired Buffett’s hit “Gypsies in the Palace,” which he recounted while headlining Jazz Aspen Snowmass’ 2021 Labor Day Festival, telling the tale of his former property manager: While Buffett was away on tour, the manager impersonated him at the Hotel Jerome, picked up two young ladies, brought them back to the ranch to party and drove Buffett’s Porsche into the river. Oops.

Buffett was known to throw legendary gatherings himself, often attended by the Eagles and longtime friend Glenn Frey. Frey liked the place so much that in 1990, Buffett sold the property to him. He quickly named the area Mad Dog Ranch because he had three dogs that frolicked along its grounds. Most notably, he reimagined the two log-cabin outbuildings into small recording studios designed by Frank Comentale of the famous Hit Factory in New York City. In these small yet mighty spaces he created his album Strange Weather (inspired by Colorado’s finicky forecast) and mixed the Eagles' live album Hell Freezes Over.  

In 2016, longtime local Julie Garside spied a property listing in the local paper. “I used to bike by it all the time and had no idea it was Frey’s,” says Garside. Working with friend and realtor Tami Word, Garside acquired the ranch with a vision to perpetuate a community hub. “When we first looked at the property, it was in shambles,” she says. “No one had stayed in it for six years. Glenn had poured his money into the studio.”

Realizing the property required a major renovation, Garside enlisted Forum Phi Architects. Working with principal Ryan Lee, the team first tackled the guest house, located just 15 feet from the river. Standing among its newly constructed wood beams and modern kitchenette—a copy of Buffett’s book “A Pirate’s Look at Fifty” adorning the coffee table—Lee explains the location of the property’s buildings (the main cabin and guest house are in the 100-year floodplain) are integral to its unique DNA. “With today’s restrictions, this can never be done again—having a building so close to the river—which makes it special,” he says. “Julie wanted to bring this property back to life, getting people to record music in this serene setting once again as Frey and Buffett previously did. The remodel allowed us to get creative with the existing elements found throughout the house, keeping much of the original footprint and design elements implemented in the ‘70s and ‘80s.”

The main cabin was lifted 16 feet for a new foundation and the upstairs was completely renovated, creating new spaces for a guest bedroom and master suite. “Many of the existing features of the home were reused such as the fireplace, hand-carved wood door, and the original log structure,” says Lee. The curvilinear staircase remains, too, featuring handcrafted wood from Buffett’s boat, Euphoria. “We combined the new and old with similar synergy,” Garside told reporters.

"While the rest of the property required heavy lifting, its two recording studios—Studio A and Studio B—only needed a fresh coat of paint and new flooring. The cozy Studio B is considered a songwriting room, while the techy Studio A is a sound engineer’s dream, nicknamed The Rocketship, given its ready-for-lift-off acoustics. To position the studios (which can be integrated into one large space) for its next community phase, Garside enlisted Marc Meeker. As the full-time studio operations manager and lead engineer, Meeker is a 20-year veteran of the Nashville music scene. Sitting at the Neve Genesys Black G32 Console of Studio A, he says, “The room is part of the instrument. Every surface serves a purpose,” wrot Lentz.

"As such, all details of the space are designed to leverage sound: Walls are insulated with sandbags, the floor is reflective, stretched fabric on the ceiling and walls were created for sound absorption, and the studio houses 4,500 feet of electrical wire. “We’re paying homage to past and present and pushing the art forward,” Meeker says.

That art includes fostering musical education, sound engineering and songwriting workshops. While playing a beautiful track by a 16-year-old Glenwood Springs student, he explains she came into Studio A expecting to cover a Michael Jackson tune yet felt inspired to write her own lyrics. Within two hours she had her first song. “Watching the young kids, seeing the light bulbs going off, nothing can compare to that,” Meeker adds. He then plays Chris Martin’s acoustic version of Coldplay’s “Higher Power,” recently recorded in Studio A. “Chris went right to the keyboard and played on his knees. I offered him a chair and he didn’t want it,” he says. “When musicians come here, it’s more laid-back. It’s not about trying to make a hit but about creating art or expressing themselves.”  

To further push music forward, Garside and Tami Word co-founded the Inspire Aspen Foundation in 2021. Quickly realizing that accessing a recording studio is expensive and not easily open to members and youth of the community, Mad Dog Ranch Studios turned from an LLC to a 501(c)3. With nonprofit status, Inspire Aspen could fundraise and apply for grants, providing a free and subsidized space where young and emerging musicians can connect, play and create.

"Inspire Aspen has quickly gained attention, staging annual Aspen Rocks student competitions at the Wheeler Opera House among other immersive programs. 

“There aren’t many places where students can go to a studio and learn about engineering, songwriting, recording or DJ-ing,” Word says.

The property is also a community hub, featuring a large, riverside teepee and plenty of space for hosting private parties. “Back in the day, everyone who came out here came to play music, party or both,” she says, adding that John Denver recorded his last song ever at Mad Dog, and Hall & Oates was known to visit, too. Today, that torch is carried forward via events like this past summer’s hit soirée with Texas musician Pat Greene. What’s more, a percentage of all event proceeds further fund Inspire Aspen. 

“We party with a purpose,” says Word.



 

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Coke ovens, Chuckwagons, Snow sheds, Outhouses, Banks, Broodmoor, more ...

 


Thing of the past ...
Gillett, Colo. Store
Date: 1920-1940?
C.E. Butters, Althea B. Seirer and step-daughter in front of Butters' general store, in Gillett, Colorado, includes a partial view of a wood frame building with a pair of street level four-paned glass windows. The man is in suspenders, and the woman and girl wear hats, jackets and knickers. The boardwalk is in disrepair.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 
 

Thing of the past ...
1st Nat. Bank, 20 yrs. ago, A. H. Hunt, cash, at window
Creator: Poley, H. S. (Horace Swartley)
Date:: 1910-1920?
The First National Bank, Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado, features coffered wood ceilings and an ornate, three-windowed tellers box and brass footrails under writing shelves. A. H. Hunt, the cashier is behind beaded grating and another man stands in the background. Signs read: "Cashier," "Teller," "Next Window," and "Revenue Stamps for sale at This window."
H. S. Poley collection. Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Broadmoor & Lake, Colorado Springs
Creator: McClure, Louis Charles, 1867-1957
Date:1918-1920?
Broadmoor Hotel and lake, Colorado Springs (El Paso County) Colorado; shows women and child on dock near rowboats, the Italianate inn with fresco, and a smokestack in the background.
Louis Charles McClure papers, Denver Public Library Special Collections
 

Thing of the past ...
Rio Grande Southern motor car (Galloping Goose), engine number 4
Creator: Hallock, Ralph E.
Date: Jan 5, 1947
Rio Grande Southern Railroad (RGS) Goose 4 just before it entered the Lizard Head Pass snowshed
Format of Original Material: 1 negative : film, black-and-white ; 10 x 13 cm (4 x 5 in.)
Original Material Found in Collection: Hallock (Ralph) Collection; Galloping Goose Trip: Jan 1947
Digital Version Created From: Original negative held by the Colorado Railroad Museum
Item Owned By: Colorado Railroad Museum
Lizard Head Pass
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 
 

Thing of the past ...
John F. Campion
Creator: Rose & Hopkins
Date: [1886-1901]
Seated profile studio portrait, three-quarter length, of John F. Campion, Denver miner and banker; Civil War veteran; first president of Colorado Museum of Natural History; founder of Great Western Sugar Co.
Jagged edge at top of glass plate; retouched. Title hand-lettered on back of photoprint. Vintage photographic print.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Trout Lake and outlet
Creator Jackson, William Henry, 1843-1942
Date:[1890s?]
Narrow gauge Denver & Rio Grande railroad tracks near Trout Lake (San Miguel County), Colorado. Shows a small farm, wagon, barn, cows, fences, telegraph poles; two men stand by a low dam near a boat dock. The San Juan Mountains are in the distance.
Original Material Found in Collection, W. H. Jackson sample album. Colorado Book VIII
Digital Version Created From W. H. Jackson sample album. Colorado Book VIII ; no. 103
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 

Thing of the past ...
Robber's Roost at Virginia Dale
Creator: Jackson, William Henry, 1843-1942
Date: 1868-1878
Donor: presented to Dept. by Agnes W. Spring.
Overland Route stage depot in Virginia Dale (Larimer County), Colorado; shows a frame building with a stone chimney, and a barn with antlers and bird houses.
Title inked on back of photoprint, with: "a well known stage station of the Overland Route from 1862 until the opening of the Railroad. At one time the home of Slade, a notorious character of the times. Larimer County, Colorado."
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 

Thing of the past ...
Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge views
Creator: Richardson, Robert W.
Date: 1951
"Goose" and "Gander" (ladies' and mens' outhouses). Photographed: Trout Lake, Colorado, August 4, 1951.
Title from inventory prepared by Western History Department, Denver Public Library.
 

Thing of the past ...
Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge locomotive, engine number 461, engine type 2-8-2
Creator: Richardson, Robert W.
Date: 1951
Three-quarter view of right side of engine, from front end, coming through gap where snowshed has blown down. Photographed: Lizard Head, Colorado, September 25, 1951.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
Title from inventory prepared by Western History Department, Denver Public Library.
 

Thing of the past ...
Denver & Rio Grande Western train (Narrow Gauge), engine number 461, engine type 2-8-2
Creator Perry, Otto, 1894-1970
Date: 1947
Freight, southbound, on the Rio Grande Southern. Photographed: emerging from snowshed at Lizard Head Pass, Colo., October 31, 1947.
Western History and Genealogy Digital Collections
Credit: Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Walden
Date: 1911, May 3
Veterans from the Grand Old Army of the Republic who include Silas Haskins, John T. Shippey, August Speck, Thomas Vils, John Cochran, Jephtah Davison, John W. Riggen, D. K. Smith, John Mitchell, Hubert C. Chadsey, and E. T. Rogers, pose with U. S. flags on a street in Walden (Jackson County), Colorado.
Digital Version Created From Mrs. Geo. J. Bailey Walden, Colorado.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Lunch stop, Allenspark
Date: 1953 July
Donor: Steve Matthews; gift; July 14, 1999.
The Roundup Riders of the Rockies eat lunch at a chuckwagon on their annual trail ride, in Allenspark (Boulder County), Colorado. Riders wear western attire and hold plates. Some men are identified: Tim Tyler, Hal Dahl, Anthony "Tony" Archer, Elmer Elliot, Felix Goldsborough, MD and his son Felix Jr. One man sits on a folding chair. The covered wagon, catered by =7 Ranch, reads "=7 Ranch, Tie Siding, Wyo., Virginia Dale, Colo." A lake and mountains are in the distance.
Title and identification from printed inventory titled: "Roundup Riders of the Rockies, pictorial history," prepared by Steve Matthews.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 

Thing of the past ...
Workers at the coke ovens at El Moro
Workers pose near the opening of a coke oven in the coal camp of El Moro (Las Animas County), Colorado. A man holds a trowel and leans against the oven. An old man holds a rake and another man balances a steel rod that extends into the oven.
Date: [between 1877 and 1900?]
Notes: History Colorado.; Condition: torn.; Formerly F35,609; Handwritten on envelope: "Mining-Coke Ovens."; Number inked on original negative and reproduced in print: "99."
History Colorado