Author Archive

Weather Spotter Training

From: Gonzales, Francesca
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2018 11:00 AM
Subject: Weather Spotter Training May 15th 2018

Good Morning,

Do you want to know more about identifying weather in your area? Maybe become a Weather Spotter for National Weather Service. Register at sheriffopstraining@nullbouldercounty.org. Space is limited and registration is required.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thanks

Francesca

Francesca Gonzales, Boulder Office of Emergency

Management

Law Enforcement Lead Technician

3280 Airport Road, Boulder, CO 80301,    303-441-3390

fgonzales@nullbouldercounty.org

Ensure your home is properly insured

 

From Garry Sanfaçon, gsanfacon@nullbouldercounty.org

A critical component of being vigilant and prepared is making sure your home is adequately insured. Government and charitable aid programs will not cover the cost of rebuilding a destroyed home. And agents, brokers and insurers often underestimate your home’s replacement cost. Finally, oral promises by insurance reps that you’re fully covered are useless if you can’t prove them later.

Why does it matter? More than 60% of 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire and 100% of 2016 Cold Springs Fire survivors were underinsuredand this proved to be a leading cause for the inability to rebuild. Take a few minutes and complete these three actions.

Fire Recovery Lessons Learned

  1. Make sure you are adequately insured

How do you know if you have enough coverage?

  • First, go to your “Declaration Page” of your policy, which is a map to your coverage.
  • Coverage “A” is the amount of insurance covering your Dwelling. This is what you will have to

rebuild your home in the event of a catastrophic event. This amount should be very close to

what it would cost to actually rebuild your home.

  • You can quickly calculate the cost-per-square-foot coverage amount by dividing the large

number by the livable square footage in your home. For example, your coverage may be

$400,000 and you have 2,000 square feet (do not include your garage) which when divided

equals $200 per square foot to rebuild.

  • For basic mountain homes, I contacted local builders and the cost-per-square-foot is roughly $300-325/sq. ft. currently. Much higher for custom homes.
  • For a more accurate estimate of the cost to rebuild your home, pay for a professional home replacement cost estimator or local building contractor. Many insurers offer this service at no charge.
  • Don’t rely on what your home is appraised for or what homes have sold for in the area to estimate cost to rebuild.
  • Code upgrade (ordinance or law) coverage should be a minimum of 25% in your policy.
  • Flood Insurance:  Even if you do not live in a designated flood zone, you may need flood insurance to protect you from unexpected water flow (policies have a 30 day wait period).
  • If you find you are underinsured call your agent immediately and request an increase to your

coverage. If the agent assures you that you are adequately covered, ask that they put that

statement in writing. Oral promises by insurance representatives are useless if you can’t prove

them later.

  1. Create a home inventory

Why? Because preparing an inventory for the insurance company after a total loss is very painful,

difficult, and time-consuming. And after a traumatic loss it is nearly impossible to remember

everything you once had, so most people never collect full insurance benefits. Below are two ways

to create a home inventory depending on the amount of time you have to dedicate.

  • Create a spreadsheet of your belongings and save it on a secure computer, flash drive, or print

out the sheets. Here is an excellent resource to get started:

www.UPHelp.org/pubs/how-create-home-inventory. Remember to update the inventory as

you acquire new items, and remove items you no longer have. Scanning and adding receipts

to the document can help guarantee a more accurate payout.

  • Photograph or video the inside and outside of your home (open closets and drawers) and upload the

images onto a flash drive or store them in the cloud.

ssons Learned continued

  1. Store documents & home inventory offsite

Why is this important? Many home-use safes (even fireproof-rated safes) did not survive the

extreme heat from recent fires. Therefore, you should store important documents and your home

inventory in a secure place outside of your home. This could be in your office or a safe deposit box.

Scanning all documents into digital form and saving them in the cloud is another option.

 

Source: United Policyholders (www.UPHelp.org)

For more information: Garry Sanfaçon, Boulder County Office of Resilience & Recovery

720-564-2642 or gsanfacon@nullbouldercounty.org

 

Donal and St. Patrick’s Day

FAKE NEWS! FAKE NEWS! Many people have accused me of not hosting a St Patrick’s Day party last year! But the truth is that not having a party last year simply did not happen! There WAS a party and it was a HUGE success…the best ever! No one has ever had a better party. And the alternative fact is that because no one remembers the party, it only proves that it did indeed occur! Folks, I don’t know how we are going to top last year’s effort, but we gonna try…we’ll see what happens! Feel free to come by Harumph Tower at 730 Main Street, Gold Hill this Saturday, March 17…the GREATEST DAY EVER…from mid-afternoon onwards. Bring something if you want or just bring yourselves. This year, we’ll emphasize the GREEN and minimize the orange! And just so everybody understands, no Russians have meddled in the planning or execution of this affair. NYET!!! Get it? No collusion…COMRADES!

Donal Maloney  donalmalo@nullgmail.com

Mountain MidLife and NAS Friends

Mountain MidLife and NAS Friends:                                                                   

Sign Up Now for our Mountain MidLife Dinner and Games Night on Friday, March 23. See details below.

 

Pancake Appreciation: Thank you to the 45 people who volunteered to help with our Community Pancake Breakfast during Frozen Dead Guy Days! We needed and appreciated every one of you as we enjoyed serving over 625 guests in just 6 hours!

Thank you: Bob Behrens, Loren Blaney, Arden Buck, Marty Cheshes, Jim Disinger, Jim Elder, Carrie Evans, Bob Foss, Marilyn & Terry Goyer, Sandy Hollingsworth, Michele Hurliman, Guy & Lorelei Falsetti, Kathy & Steve Fox, David & Margaret Freeman, Justine Irwin, Lee Kennedy, Chastity & Sierra & Tabitha Lamb, Norman Linke, Rebecca Lundberg, Al & Kathy & Matthew Meyer, Drew & Sandy Morris, Lois Ott, Taylor Pajunen, Lauren & Mirasy Pfister, Bob Reeser, Jeannie Reynolds, Kathryn Roberts, Randy Sachter, Kaitlin Silbaugh, Circe Stumbo, Lynn Underhill, Joy Weinstein, Pat Whited, Dan Williams, Laury Yates – and to Community Center staff for your unwavering support!

 

We are so Lucky! Please inform your friends (email, Facebook), especially those in Boulder, to please contribute to our nonprofit Nederland Area Seniors (host of Mountain MidLife) with their “wooden nickels” (10 cent bag credits, when they bring their own bag) at the checkout counter at Lucky’s Market NORTH at Broadway and Quince. We are only in this program from now until May 16, so we need to get the word out quickly asking Lucky’s shoppers for their help. We do not wish to divert any shoppers from our locally owned B&F Mountain Market, but if you tend to shop down below anyway, please take a moment to visit Lucky’s and donate your bag credit to us. Thank you!

 

Invite a friend to a meal (lunches every Monday and Wednesday or monthly dinners or breakfasts/brunches) and offer to pick them up and drop them home afterwards. With a “requested contribution” of $5 over age 60, we offer a fun and affordable get-together with friends. We need and appreciate your anonymous meal contributions, but please ensure people know that we welcome anyone over age 60 regardless of ability to pay. Those under age 60 pay $8 breakfast/brunch, $8.25 lunch, $10 dinner.

 

All ages of adults are welcome at all events, attended mostly by folks over age 50.

Sign up for all Mountain MidLife events at 303-258-0799 or Meetup.com/Mountain-MidLife-Social-Group (posted within the next two days) or by replying to this email.

 

Everybody’s Table

 

Everybody’s Table is a new event featuring good nutrition for seniors – and the people who love them. Dr. Coco Dughi from the Boulder Medical Center presents “The Power of Diet and Lifestyle in Healthy Aging” and a resource fair includes demonstrations with food, as well as information about meals, nutrition, and senior services in Boulder County. Continental Breakfast provided. Everybody is welcome to the Table – Seniors, MidLifers, Family Caregivers – Thursday, March 15, 9am-Noon, hosted by our Boulder County Area Agency on Aging at the Jewish Community Center at 6007 Oreg Ave, Boulder. RSVP to https://everybodystable.eventbrite.comor contact 303-441-4995 for more information.

 

Snowshoe Interest Group

 

The BIGfoot Snowshoe hike tradition continues with our volunteer leader Gunda Starkey. These hikes meet on third Fridays at 10:00am at the lower east entrance of the Nederland Community Center to carpool to a nearby trailhead. Our next snowshoe hike will be on Friday, March 16. If you have no snowshoes but would like to learn and participate, let us know. When we have too little snow, we can hike with YakTrax (or equivalent). Please call Gunda at 303-459-0412 with questions/reservations.

 

St Patrick’s Day with The Gael

 

Everybody’s Irish on St. Pat’s Day! Kick off your celebration on St. Pat‘s Eve here in Nederland with local Irish band The Gael at Very Nice Brewing Company in the shopping mall on Friday, March 16, 6:00pm-8:30pm. Dance a jig and drink a craft brew with friends. The band is made up of local Mountain MidLife friends and is a fabulous local choice for our St. Patrick’s celebration!

 

Auditions for Viva Theatre Spring Show

Viva Theatre is casting for a production of A.R. Gurney’s The Dining Room to be performed in late May at the Dairy Center for the Arts in Boulder. Both small and large roles are available, as well as behind-the-scenes stage hands. Auditions will be held in Boulder Saturday, March 17, 2:00pm to 4:00pm at Frasier Meadows, 350 Ponca Place, Boulder OR Sunday, March 18, 6pm-8pm at Horizon West Condominiums Community Room, 1850 Folsom. Required dress rehearsals and performance weekends run 5/15-26. For info, contact info@nulls4creativeaging.com.

 

Swing Dance to Live Big Band Music

 

Swing Dance to a live dance band at the Avalon Ballroom at 63rd and Arapahoe in Boulder on Saturday, March 17. This month’s big band will be the Flatirons Jazz Orchestra – the same group that played the Caribou Room last year. Dance lesson 7pm-8pm included with the price of admission. Dancing 8-11pm. DJ dance music during intermissions. Light snacks provided. All ages welcome. No partner or dance experience required. Please wear non-marking shoes. Dress to express yourself. Casual is fine. Admission: $15 per person general; $10 students; $5 children accompanied by adult; volunteers free. Cash or check.

 

Featured Event!  Mountain MidLife Dinner & Games

 

Meet old and new friends at the Mountain MidLife Dinner on Friday, March 23, 5:00pm doors open for social, 5:30pm meal served. This month’s menu includes beef/mushroom or vegetable/sweet potato empanadas, eggplant/squash, roasted potato, and pear with dulce de leche. Please reserve as far in advance as possible at Meetup.com/Mountain-MidLife-Social-Group, by replying to this email, or by phone at 303-258-0799.  If you have special dietary needs not already registered with us, please inform us several days in advance. $10 Adults under age 60 or $5 requested contribution over age 60. Bring a game you’d like to play with friends after dinner!

 

Please VOLUNTEER to help at these events. If you enjoy cooking and would like to assist our friendly new chef Cher Rainbolt in the afternoon, please let us know AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. If you can help at the door with greeting/check-in and welcoming/orienting our newest guests, we really appreciate it. We need 3-4 people to handle this each time and need to know several days in advance that we have these positions covered.

 

X-C Ski Interest Group

 

Join us on a weekday or weekend day for classic cross-country skiing on the groomed trails at Eldora Mountain Resort. We will meet inside the Nordic center, just left of the downhill beginners’ slope, on Sunday, March 25, at 1:30pm. Single day trail passes on weekdays are $25 and $16 (weekends are higher) and equipment rentals are $27, or $22 over age 65. Our volunteer leader (not a certified ski instructor) can help beginners; otherwise please consider scheduling a lesson in advance with a professional instructor ($80) from Eldora Nordic Center prior to our outing. Plan to arrive early if requiring rental equipment.

 

With varying skill levels in our group and snow/trail conditions being fickle, we will need to communicate prior to the event. Please call Gunda at 303-459-0412 with questions/reservations and indicate what type of cross country skiing you have done and your skill level so we can plan groups. This event presents inherent risk of injury and all participants must sign a liability waiver.

 

New Event!  Boulder Opera – Mozart’s Cosi fan Tutte

 

Mozart’s clever opera buffa follows the lives of two sets of lovers whose fidelity is put to the test in a comedy of errors. Lines are hilariously blurred as deceit and desire cause characters to lose sight of what is reality and make believe. Come see one of Mozart’s most adored musical works satirizing both women and men.

 

Sung in Italian with English subtitles, featuring an ensemble orchestra. We will attend the matinee on Sunday, March 25, 3:00pm at the Dairy Center for the Arts in Boulder. We offer a special price available nowhere else, with the usual senior ticket reduced from $25 to $17 for mountain residents over age 60. This price is only if we have a group of ten or more. Make checks payable to NAS, P O Box 188, Nederland CO 80466 and ensure we receive your signup and payment by Wednesday, March 14.

 

Foot Care

 

 Local Registered Nurse Debbie Neal serves mountain older adults with toenail and skin care, review of foot concerns – Monday, March 26. By appointment, downtown Nederland, $30, sign up early at 303-258-0799.

 

National Caregiver Training Program

 

Acquire the practical skills needed for safe, confident home care of a frail elder older loved one. Taught by a nurse. Learn to provide personal care, take vitals, manage medications, lift and transfer, use a wheelchair safely, and more. Book and resource info included. Tuesdays, April 3 – May 8, 1:30-4:30 in North Boulder.

303-678-6116 or InfoCaregiver@nullbouldercounty.org. Open to Boulder County residents providing care for a relative, partner, or friend who is age 60 or over or of any age if the person has dementia. No charge; donations appreciated. Respite care assistance offered.

 

Fitness Author & Movement Class at NCL

 

Bust the myths of the aging process with a lively discussion followed by gentle movement lessons designed to improve posture, core strength, flexibility, and balance. Cheryl Ilov, Physical Therapist and author of Forever Fit & Flexible…Feeling Fabulous at Fifty and Beyond, offers a special class at Nederland Community Library on Wednesday, April 4, 1:30pm-3:00pm. This fun, interactive, and informative class shows us how we can remain fit, flexible, vibrant, and active in our 50s, 60, 70s, and beyond. Please arrive by 1:15pm for check-in, dress in layers, and bring a yoga mat or blanket and a pillow or towel.

 

Book Group

 

The Book Group will meet at a private home on second Thursdays; the next meeting is Thursday, April 12, 6:30pm, and the format is pot luck. Call us at 303-258-0799 for the location or other info.

April’s book is The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson.

 

Open-Caption Films at Monday Matinees

 

Our friendly Backdoor Theatre crew at the Nederland Community Center has added a special matinee showing every Monday at 1:30pm of the prior weekend’s film. Please help spread the word to friends whose jobs or busy schedules prevents them from attending movies on Friday and Saturday evenings. The matinee includes “open captioning”, which shows the words at the bottom of the screen. This is most helpful to those of us who stopped attending movies because we have trouble understanding what the actors are saying. Enjoy this new, enhanced feature and show your support to the BDT so they can continue to offer this new service!

 

New Opportunity!  Create Our Events

 

Our new board is reconfiguring some of the ways our organization can operate most effectively. We invite all of the folks who have enjoyed an event or outing in the past few years—or would like to in the future—to help us sustain our vibrant activity levels. Your input about what specific outings you would like our organization to plan and a small amount of your energy to help make them happen for everyone is needed. We are reducing hours for our tiny overburdened staff and need YOU, our friends we love to get together with, to help keep our group lively. If we don’t step up to make them happen, our wonderful array of activities and outings could become a distant memory. Let’s get together regularly to plan all the fun times we can share! Please call us at 303-258-0799to volunteer with our fun programs and activities planning group.

 

Other Events of Interest

 

Plan an outing or interest group and we can post it at Meetup. Email details to Serene at serenekarplus (at) gmail.com. Adults of all ages are welcome at all events.

 

 

  WEEKLY CALENDAR

 

Lunch at Nederland Community Center — RSVP 2 days ahead

   Every Monday & Wednesday, Noon

 

Mtn MidLife Breakfast/Brunch, Nederland Community Center —RSVP one week ahead if possible

   Second Sat Odd # Mos, 8:30am/9:00am

   Second Sun Even # Months, 11:00am/11:30am

    

Mtn MidLife Dinner at Nederland Community Center —RSVP one week ahead if possible

   Fourth Fridays, 5:00pm/5:30pm

 

Exercise at St. Rita’s Catholic Church; free

   Every Monday & Wednesday, 10:30am

 

Pickleball at Nederland Community Center; Ned CC fees

   Every Monday, Wednesday, Saturday, 10:00am

 

Writing Skills at Ned Community Library; free

   Every 1st and 3rd Monday, 1:00pm

 

Writing Life Stories at Ned Community Library; free

   Every 2nd & 4th Wednesday, 1:00pm

 

NedKnits at Ned Community Library; free

   Second Thursdays, 1:00-3:00pm, Ned Comm Library

 

BIGfoot Memorial Snowshoe/Hike Meet at Nederland Community Center; free

   Every 3rd Friday, 10:00am, Call NAS to Confirm

   

 March Menu

 

Please RSVP two days ahead for lunches, several days ahead for breakfasts and dinners to 303-258-0799.

 

 

Day Date Entrée Vegetable Carbohydrate Salad Fruit
Mon 3/5/18 Sweet and Sour Pork Broccoli Brown Rice Field Greens Salad Apple
Wed 3/7/18 Chicken Fried Steak   Mashed Potato Cole Slaw Pear
Sat/Sun Breakfast 3/10-11/18 Eggs/ Sausage / Yogurt   Pancakes, Bran Cereal   Banana
Mon 3/12/18 Tuna Salad Sandwich       on WW Garden Vegetable Soup     Berries
Wed 3/14/18 Corned Beef Cabbage / Carrot Potato   Apple/Berry
Mon 3/19/18 Turkey ala King Green Bean / Carrot / Mushroom Egg Noodles   Orange
Wed 3/21/18 Eggplant Parmesan   WW Spaghetti / Garlic Bread Italian Salad Peach
Friday Dinner 3/23/18 Beef or Veggie/Sweet Potato Empanadas Eggplant/Squash Roasted Potatoes   Pear w Dulce de Leche
Mon 3/26/18 Beef and Broccoli          Stir Fry California Vegetables Brown Rice   Banana
Wed 3/28/18 Herbed Fish Lemon Spinach / Carrots WW Roll   Pear

 

 

We look forward to seeing you at an event soon!

 

Serene Karplus, Director

Nederland Area Seniors & Mountain MidLife

NederlandAreaSeniors@nullgmail.com

www.NederlandAreaSeniors.org

www.Meetup.com/Mountain-MidLife-Social-Group

303-258-0799

 

(

Nederland CO 80466

St Patrick’s Concert at Gold Hill Store and Pub

 

St Patrick’s Concert at Gold Hill Store and Pub— MARY RUSSELL with Becky Martinek, Jamie Polisher, & David Chamberlain

Saturday March 17th — doors 5:30, music 6-8:00.  No cover.  Our menu will include Corned Beef & Cabbage dinners (while they last).

(And don’t forget — Pizza Nights every Friday, 5-8; and Happy Hour Sundays, 4-7.)

Gold Hill Soup Potluck

From Tony Vrba  tonyvrba@nullgmail.com

Gold Hill Soup Potluck– Monday, March 12th at 6 pm Fire Barn Community Room

Let’s warm up with some hearty soup and a great community get-together with the March Soup Potluck!  Bring soup, dessert, crackers, cheese, salad, bread,  etc. and your own drinks – we will have the bowls, spoons, etc.  

The Boulder County Sheriff-Joe Pelle will join us and will let us know about many important issues in the county. 

 

Hope to see you there!

From Tony Vrba  tonyvrba@nullgmail.com

Gold Hill Fire Department training today

Gold Hill, Sunshine, Four Mile fire departments, and the USFS and Sheriff’s office will be conducting a large wildland wildfire training on Gold Hill Road west of Gold Hill and east of the Switzerland Trail on Saturday March 10th from 9:00am-12:30pm. There will be numerous fire apparatus and firefighters on Gold Hill Road. Thank you for your support. 
 
 Please pass this on to firefighters. We were expecting warmer weather, but we learned it is going to be 48 in Boulder with wind and possible snow in the air up here. Since this exercise will focus on filling out the Wildfire Annex we are not expecting full Wildland PPE. Please dress warm with PPE where it works for you. You will be out in the elements pretending to put out fire. 
 
Leslie Finn
GHFPD 5471
lesliefinn@nullyahoo.com
 
 

Music at the Store today

MIKE & BONNIE COATS will return to the Pub next Saturday, March 10th, 1:00 – 3:00.  Enjoy the classic melodies of the Traditional American Songbook while we serve afternoon lunch and a selection of beers.

Cabin Fever Concert at the Store

Wednesday, March 7th, 2018
Please join us in welcoming Jessie Burns and Eric Thorin for the next Lickskillet Studios Cabin Fever Concert at the Gold Hill Store & Pub. Tickets are $10 per person. Please email kortmccumber(at)gmail(dot)com to reserve seats. The best way to guarantee a seat is to call or pay in person, in advance at the Gold Hill Store & Pub. 303-443-7724. Doors @ 6:30pm, Concert @ 7pm.
531 Main Street, Gold Hill, CO

Fiddler Jessie Burns toured for six years and recorded three number one world albums with Celtic supergroup Gaelic Storm. Eric Thorin, the folk world’s busiest bassist, currently tours with the Matt Flinner Trio, Mollie O’Brien, and with Jeff Austin of Yonder Mountain String Band.

Thank you!

Amy Fortunato (Boss Lady)
Amy@nullcowboys-sweetheart.com

Docket H-1Docket H-18-001 Robinson Residence OCC Public Hearing March 9th at 11am

Robinson Residence

Review for 1,600 square-foot new residence in Historic (H) zoning district approximately .32 acre parcel. 

350 Boulder Street, Gold Hill

Owner: Joyce Robinson

Agent: Kent Havell, MVB, Inc.

The Boulder County Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) public hearing will be held:

March 8, 2018

11:00 am

Third Floor, Hearing Room, Boulder County Courthouse, 1423 Pearl Street Boulder CO

You are welcome to attend this hearing and aid the County in their decisions. Information regarding this docket is available for public examination at the Boulder County Land Use Dept, 2045 13th St, Boulder CO. You can also call the County office at 303 441-3930 or email sfrederick@nullbouldercounty.or for more information, or view the file online at www.bouldercounty.org/landusedockets by searching by the docket number listed.

From Tony Vrba, tonyvrba@nullgmail.com

Gold Hill Soup and Smiles

Gold Hill Soup and Smiles – Monday, March 12th at 6 pm, Fire Barn/Community Center

Let’s warm up with some hearty soup and a great community get-together with the March Soup Potluck!  Bring soup, dessert, crackers, cheese, salad, bread, etc., and your own drinks – we will have the bowls, spoons, etc.  

The Boulder County Sheriff, Joe Pelle, will join us and will let us know about many important issues in the county. 

Hope to see you there!

Tony Vrba,  GHTMeeting Chair

Gold Hill Store Music and news

At last! The FARMER SISTERS will perform Saturday March 3rd, thanks to a good weather forecast this time. Doors 5:30, Music 6-8.  $5.

Also, The Gold Hill Store & Pub will initiate two new evening pursuits this week:  Friday Pizza + Beer Special 5-8pm, with plans for a weekly Fish Fry; and Sunday Happy Hours with bar snacks 5-7pm (or later).

Music at the Gold Hill Store

A great tradition!  MIKE & BONNIE COATS return to the Pub this Saturday, Feb 24th, 1 – 3 pm, for an afternoon of Bluegrass, Gospel, and Americana.   Join us for lunch, a beer, and this rousing session of true American Music.

Caucus Information

Ok, Gold Hill area folks, it’s time for participatory democracy! The Caucuses are Tuesday, March 6, 2018, at 7:00 P.M., and you get to help select candidates for offices in Colorado, starting with Governor, as well as elect delegates to attend the County Assembly.

You must be a registered Democrat or Republican as of January 8 in order to vote at the Caucus.

To find out what happens at the caucuses and other info contact https://www.sos.state.co.us/pubs/elections/Candidates/FAQs/caucuses.html

The Democratic Caucus will be at the Gold Hill Elementary School, 890 Main Street, Gold Hill. You can pre-register on line https://www.bocodems.org/caucus/

and print out your pre-registration to bring with you, or register at the Caucus – registration starts at 6:00 p.m and the Caucus is at 7:00

If you are a Republican, the Republican Caucus will be held at Mesa Elementary, 1576 Lehigh Street in Boulder. You can pre-register and bring your pre-registration with you to  the Republican Caucus at http://caucus.cologop.org

 

Boulder County Democratic Party

Mailing Address:
Boulder County Democratic Party
P.O. Box 18793
Boulder, CO 80308

Physical Address:
5735 A Arapahoe Avenue
Boulder, CO 80303-1340

Call: (720) 526-2104     info@nullbocodems.org


Boulder County Republican Party

Mailing Address:
619 Ken Pratt Blvd. 
Longmont, CO  80501

Phone: 303-758-3333 (303) 443-6606

https://www.bocogop.org/index.php

 

 

 

Gold Hill Pie Party!

6-7:30 pm Gold Hill Pie Party! Monday, Feb 12th 6pm at the Fire Barn Community Room Bring a pie (or 2,3…) to share and enjoy the sampling-bring your spatula for cutting the pie. Sweet or savory- please identify your pie with a note; gluten free, sugar free, and the kind, etc. I heard that there will be Cajun Shrimp Pie, Chicken Pot Pie, Key Lime and more!!!! Did you know there are over 231 varieties of apple pie! We will have napkins, plates, forks and cups, though bring your own beverage; If you are not the baking type, enjoy sampling for a $5 donation. Everyone in the area is encouraged to participate. Gold Hill Town Meeting follows at 7:30

Slash Pile burning update

From: Armstrong, Katherine R -FS
Sent: Monday, February 05, 2018 9:14 AM
Subject: Pile burning continues west of Boulder this week

 

Pile burning continues west of Boulder this week

BOULDER, Colo. – (Feb. 5, 2018)  U.S. Forest Service firefighters successfully burned more than 400 slash piles last week in the James Creek area.  Depending on conditions next week, burning will continue in the following areas:

  • James Creek Units (1 mile northeast of Ward; also near intersection of Gold Hill Rd/Switzerland Trail)
  • Lump Gulch (West Magnolia area, 1 mile southeast of high school)
  • Sugarloaf (Ridge Road/U.S. Forest Service Administrative Site)

Conditions are evaluated each day to determine if ignition will take place. Precipitation, wind, temperature, fuel moisture and staffing all play a part in when and whether ignition occurs.

Ignitions are generally expected to begin after 10 a.m. and will cease several hours before sunset. Firefighters monitor the area after burning is complete. Public and firefighter safety is always the number one priority in burning operations.

Wind helps disperse smoke created during pile burning operations and snow helps keep the piles contained. Seeing flames and smoke, even after dark, is part of normal operations. This is one way that we can help reduce the buildup of fuels on the landscape under the safest conditions.

 If you know anyone else who would like to receive updates on pile burning activities in the Boulder Ranger District area, have them emailkrarmstrong@nullfs.fed.us and ask to be added to our email updates. To unsubscribe, please reply with UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line.

A complete list of areas where pile burning could occur on the Boulder Ranger District this season is located at:http://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/4648/

 

 
K. “Reid” Armstrong
Public Affairs Specialist
Forest Service

Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests
Pawnee National Grassland

p: 303-541-2532
c: 970-222-7607
krarmstrong@nullfs.fed.us
2150 Yarmouth Ave.
Boulder, CO 80301
www.fs.usda.gov/arp
Caring for the land and serving people

GHFPD Board Meeting Jan. 18, 2018 notes

Notes on the Gold Hill Fire Protection District Board meeting 1-18-18 by Gretchen Diefenderfer.  The Fire Board meets on the third Thursday of each month at 7:00 p.m. at he Community Center.

The meeting was called to order by Chair Rich Lopez. Board members Rick Geesaman, Bobby Vrba, Paul Garabedian, and Boyd Brown, Chief Chris Finn, community members Max Yeager and Gretchen Diefenderfer, and pension plan board members Kris Gibson and Val Crist all attended.

Minutes of the previous meeting were approved

Chief’s Report – Chris passed around a new map book he has put together. It goes to the printers next week and will be distributed to firefighters and board members.   The next trainings will cover maps, the second Saturday in February, and the 4th Thursday will be the first of a two-part training including maps and planning for an escalating incident in the County and will include the Sheriff’s office.

            SCBAs have all been tested and fire extinguishers inspected (2 replaced).

            Firebarn has new emergency lights that come on if the power is out.

            CPR classes will be offered in Sunshine in February and everyone is encouraged to get trained or recertified.

Calls – One sparking power line, two medical calls in Sunshine and one on Gold Run Road.

Retirement Fund – Bobby reported that in January $2,000.00 was transferred to the retirement fund from the checking account. Members have to put in 36 hours per year on training and calls for 10 years to qualify.

Cisterns – Rich has received a letter from the Town Meeting supporting the cisterns, the title work and easements are almost done, plans have been engineered. Rick will come to the February 12 Gold Hill Town Meeting to talk about the plan and answer questions. Plans will be resubmitted to the County soon.

            The board is looking at the timetable to get it done – first quarter get it all through the County – second quarter get bids and finalize plans, get tanks from Greely. Kelly trucking put in the dry hydrants in Lefthand for free, so they might be our guys, since we might need big equipment (hopefully not a crane). Max thinks a dolly gizmo with a dozer will be able to drive up the drainage and do it. The tanks are 40’ long and 10’ deep. Third quarter, actually install the tanks, which will supply 40,000 gallons of water for firefighting!  There will be hydrants up on Hill Street as well as one at the bottom of the meadow accessible from the cemetery road.

***The plans will be at the Gold Hill Store for people to look at them. Rick Geesaman is the contact person – (303) 564-0876, rcgeesaman@nullmsn.com

Gold Hill Mill permit issue – Rich asked if the board has concerns that should be addressed. Chris volunteered that they have said they would put in a gravity hydrant for the Fire Department and we would like to encourage them to work with us on that. Rich will draft a letter.

The Fire Board adjourned and reconvened as the Pension Board with Kris Gibson and Val Crist as firefighter members along with the members of the Fire Board. The money is in for this year and they will be receiving the paperwork on it in March or April. The State matches approximately 90%. The two firefighter members were elected, and it turns out one needs to serve a two year term and one a one year term. They decided that Val would serve the two year term and Kris for one year, so Kris will have to run again this year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pile burning continues west of Boulder this week

From Chief Chris Finn  cfinn@nullgoldhillinn.com

Pile burning continues west of Boulder this week

BOULDER, Colo. – (Feb. 5, 2018)  U.S. Forest Service firefighters successfully burned more than 400 slash piles last week in the James Creek area.  Depending on conditions next week, burning will continue in the following areas:

  • James Creek Units (1 mile northeast of Ward; also near intersection of Gold Hill Rd/Switzerland Trail)
  • Lump Gulch (West Magnolia area, 1 mile southeast of high school)
  • Sugarloaf (Ridge Road/U.S. Forest Service Administrative Site)

Conditions are evaluated each day to determine if ignition will take place. Precipitation, wind, temperature, fuel moisture and staffing all play a part in when and whether ignition occurs.

Ignitions are generally expected to begin after 10 a.m. and will cease several hours before sunset. Firefighters monitor the area after burning is complete. Public and firefighter safety is always the number one priority in burning operations.

Wind helps disperse smoke created during pile burning operations and snow helps keep the piles contained. Seeing flames and smoke, even after dark, is part of normal operations. This is one way that we can help reduce the buildup of fuels on the landscape under the safest conditions.

 If you know anyone else who would like to receive updates on pile burning activities in the Boulder Ranger District area, have them emailkrarmstrong@nullfs.fed.us and ask to be added to our email updates. To unsubscribe, please reply with UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line.

A complete list of areas where pile burning could occur on the Boulder Ranger District this season is located at: http://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/4648/

 
K. “Reid” Armstrong
Public Affairs Specialist
Forest Service

Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests
Pawnee National Grassland

p: 303-541-2532
c: 970-222-7607
krarmstrong@nullfs.fed.us
2150 Yarmouth Ave.
Boulder, CO 80301
www.fs.usda.gov/arp
Caring for the land and serving people

Gold Hill Town Meeting Agenda for Monday, Feb. 12

February 12, 2018

Gold Hill Town Meeting Agenda

 

6-7:30 pm Gold Hill Pie Party! Monday, Feb 12th 6pm at the Fire Barn Community Room Bring a pie (or 2,3…) to share and enjoy the sampling-bring your spatula for cutting the pie. Sweet or savory- please identify your pie with a note; gluten free, sugar free, and the kind, etc. I heard that there will be Cajun Shrimp Pie, Chicken Pot Pie, Key Lime and more!!!! Did you know there are over 231 varieties of apple pie! We will have napkins, plates, forks and cups, though bring your own beverage; If you are not the baking type, enjoy sampling for a $5 donation. Everyone in the area is encouraged to participate. Gold Hill Town Meeting follows at 7:30

 

7:30 Start GHTMeeting

Approval of previous Minutes

Treasurer’s Report

Committee Reports

 

Old Business

  • Move money for Forestry
  • GH Communication Plan
  • Rick – Fire Cisterns in Town Meadow – plans are at the GH Store
  • Strategic Plan of: Community, Communication, and Mitigation
    • Community Center lead needed

 

New Business/Announcements

  1. Soup and Sherriff March 12th
  2. Town Portrait
  3. Noise
  4. Amend By Laws discussion
  5. Guideline for website postings
  6. Budget guidelines

Mountain MidLife News

Mountain MidLife Friends:
LAST CALL for Mountain MidLife Brunch and Optional Hike THIS Sunday, February 11!  See details in calendar listings below.

 It is also not too soon to sign up for Mountain MidLife Dinner & Games Night only two weeks away Friday, February 23! See details in calendar listings below.

 Sssshhhh!  It’s a Secret!  Jim Elder, our President of 5 years and Master Pancake Flipper of 7 years, turned 80 last week. His family is planning a surprise gift of a book of memories from his friends in the Nederland community. Please email your stories, photos, or comments to maggieharrismay@nullgmail.com or deliver them to our NAS office in person or mail them to us at NAS, P O Box 188, Nederland CO 80466 by Friday, February 9.

His family has also apprised us of an invitation-only (limited length guest list) party to celebrate Jim later this month and we would like to include friends his family hasn’t met yet! They asked us to determine who might like to be invited to it so they can be contacted. If you are fond of Jim and would like to be invited, please email us at NederlandAreaSeniors@nullgmail.com.

 We are so Lucky! Yea! We won Lucky’s Bags for Change, thanks to those of you who voted for us last month. Now, everyone can chip in. Please inform your friends (email, Facebook), especially those in Boulder, to please contribute to our nonprofit Nederland Area Seniors (host of Mountain MidLife) with their “wooden nickels” (bag credits, when they bring their own bag) at the checkout counter at Lucky’s Market NORTH at Broadway and Quince. We are only in this program from now until May 16, so we need to get the word out quickly asking Lucky’s shoppers for their help. We do not wish to divert any shoppers from our locally owned B&F Mountain Market, but if you tend to shop down below anyway, please take a moment to visit Lucky’s and donate your bag credit to us. Thank you!

 See other new events below!

 Invite a friend to a meal (lunches every Monday and Wednesday or monthly dinners or breakfasts/brunches) and offer to pick them up and drop them home afterwards. With a “requested contribution” of $5 (over age 60), we offer a fun and affordable get-together with friends. We need and appreciate your anonymous meal contributions, but please ensure people know that we welcome anyone over age 60 regardless of ability to pay.

All ages of adults are welcome at all events, attended mostly by folks over age 50.

Sign up for all Mountain MidLife events at 303-258-0799 or Meetup.com/Mountain-MidLife-Social-Group (posted within the next two days) or by replying to this email.

 Luncheon Program – TRU PACE

TRU PACE is a unique program of multiple levels of services available to help mountain seniors who need nursing-home-level care so they may age in place at home while benefiting from these services in Lafayette. They even come pick us up at home to take us to their center for everything from PT and medical to counseling, social, meals, and more. Learn about the variety of services they offer from speaker Leslie Mader at lunch Wednesday, February 7.

 Book Group

The Book Group will meet at a private home on second Thursdays; the next meeting is Thursday, February 8, 6:30pm, and the format is pot luck. Call us at 303-258-0799 for the location or other info.

February’s book is The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown.

New X-C Ski Interest Group

  Join us once again – on a weekday this time – for classic cross-country skiing on the groomed trails at Eldora Mountain Resort. We will meet inside the Nordic center, just left of the downhill beginners’ slope, on Friday, February 9, at 10:00am. Single day trail passes on weekdays are $25 and $16 and equipment rentals are $27, or $22 over age 65. Our volunteer leader (not a certified ski instructor) can help beginners; otherwise please consider scheduling a lesson in advance with a professional instructor ($80) from Eldora Nordic Center prior to our outing. Plan to arrive early if requiring rental equipment.

  With varying skill levels in our group and snow/trail conditions being fickle, we will need to communicate prior to the event. Please call Gunda at 303-459-0412 with questions/reservations and indicate what type of cross country skiing you have done and your skill level so we can plan groups. This event presents inherent risk of injury and all participants must sign a liability waiver.

 Ancient Light at Fiske Planetarium

NOTE:  We have ordered 14 tickets for those who signed up by 2/5. We can order more (General Admission, so we can sit together) if they are available – please sign up and pay us by Wednesday, 2/7.

 A thousand years ago, the Ancestral Puebloans built a complex and extensive civilization in the mountains and deserts of the Southwest US. They left behind extraordinary art and architecture which reflect their intimate relationship with the land, the sun, the moon and stars. This project combines the scholarly, artistic and technological expertise of the University of Colorado, Boulder. The team includes astronomers and archaeologists who have made some of the most important discoveries in these regions and uses forefront technology to create high-resolution full-dome environments which will immerse our audiences in the stunning landscapes, archaeological sites and under starry skies. This one-hour educational experience led by Dr. Erica Ellingson will combine ancient knowledge and modern technology to explore the universal connection between humans and the skies.

We will attend this show on Friday, February 9 at 7pm. Cost is $10 Adult, $7 Over age 65. This show is popular and sells out. Please sign up (303-258-0799 or email or Meetup site) and submit payment to NAS as early as you can and no later than Monday, February 5. We can form carpools to depart Nederland Community Center at 5:45pm (call us for this option and specify either driving or needing a ride) or meet there as needed, as long as we arrive 30 minutes prior, as requested by the Fiske Planetarium.

Featured Event!  Social Sunday Brunch & Hike

Come join us for a relaxed social brunch and optional hike at the Nederland Community Center on Sunday, February 11. Doors open at 11:00am, with the meal served at 11:30am. Menu is at end of email. All ages of adults are welcome. Cost is only $8 under age 60 and $5 requested contribution from those over age 60. Please RSVP to 303-258-0799 or reply to this email or www.Meetup.com/Mountain-MidLife-Social-Group. An optional hike follows at 11:45am.

 *  Please VOLUNTEER to help at these events. If you enjoy cooking and would like to assist our friendly new chef Cher Rainbolt the evening prior or in the morning, please let us know AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. If you can help at the door with greeting/check-in and welcoming/orienting our newest guests, we really appreciate it. We need 2-3 people to handle this each time and need to know several days in advance that we have these positions covered.

 Cybersecurity

For those who missed our Mountain MidLife Dinner in November when we hosted the Boulder DA’s office to share tips on Cybersecurity – or for those hungry for more info from another perspective – we share with you the announcement from our Nederland Community Library about the following event on Tuesday, February 13:

Cyber Security for the Individual

Tuesday, February 13, 7:00 pm

Presented by Allen Gordon, Ph.D., CISSP

The internet is in a way like the wild west of 100 years ago. While there are laws, people still have to protect themselves against bad guys prowling the internet for victims. They are after people’s personal information so that they can steal, hold hostage, or simply create mischief. This presentation is for people who use devices such as computers, smart phones, smart TV’s etc., to access the internet. I will introduce some important concepts concerning cyber security and will present ways that all users can protect their information. Light refreshments will be served.

Valentine’s Luncheon

Join us for a special salmon lunch to share our love for all our friends on this special day, Wednesday, February 14. All age adults welcome. Menu is salmon, peas, new potatoes, mixed greens salad, and berries.

Over age 60 requested contribution $5. Under age 60 $8.25. Wear red if you’d like.

RSVP required by Monday, 2/12 to 303-258-0799.

The Gael CD Release Party

Celebrate The Gael’s CD Release at Very Nice Brewing Company in the shopping mall in Nederland on Thursday, February 15, 6:00pm-8:30pm. Dance a jig (or just drink a craft brew) to honor this local Irish band that always draws a nice crowd. The band is made up of local Mountain MidLife friends! Come show them a little love for them at this post-Valentine’s Day event!

New Snowshoe Interest Group

The BIGfoot Snowshoe hike tradition continues with our volunteer leader Gunda Starkey. These hikes meet on third Fridays at 10:00am at the lower east entrance of the Nederland Community Center to carpool to a nearby trailhead. Our second snowshoe hike of the season will be on Friday, February 16, 2018. If you have no snowshoes but would like to learn and participate, let us know. When we have too little snow, we can hike with YakTrax (or equivalent). Please call Gunda at 303-459-0412 with questions/reservations.

 Swing Dance to Live Big Band Music

Swing Dance to a live dance band at the Avalon Ballroom at 63rd and Arapahoe in Boulder on Saturday, February 17. Dance lesson 7pm-8pm included with the price of admission. Dancing 8-11pm. DJ dance music during intermissions. Light snacks provided. All ages welcome. No partner or dance experience required. Please wear non-marking shoes. Dress to express yourself. Casual is fine. Admission: $15 per person general; $10 students; $5 children accompanied by adult; volunteers free. Cash or check.

 Foot Care

 Local Registered Nurse Debbie Neal serves mountain older adults with toenail and skin care, review of foot concerns – Wednesday, February 21. By appointment, downtown Nederland, $30, sign up at 303-258-0799.

 Featured Event!  Mountain MidLife Dinner & Music

Relax after an hour of lively conversation with friends and immerse yourself in the beautiful music of classical piano. Local resident Paul Srein performs for us after the Mountain MidLife Dinner on Friday, February 23 – 5:00pm doors open for social, 5:30pm meal served. Please reserve as far in advance as possible at Meetup.com/Mountain-MidLife-Social-Group, by replying to this email, or by phone at 303-258-0799.  If you have special dietary needs not already registered with us, please inform us several days in advance. $10 Adults under age 60 or $5 requested contribution over age 60.

 *  Please VOLUNTEER to help at these events. If you enjoy cooking and would like to assist our friendly new chef Cher Rainbolt in the afternoon, please let us know AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. If you can help at the door with greeting/check-in and welcoming/orienting our newest guests, we really appreciate it. We need 3-4 people to handle this each time and need to know several days in advance that we have these positions covered.

Boulder International Film Festival – Free Tix

We appreciate the kind donation made to us each year by the organizers of the Boulder International Film Festival. Their committee selects films they think may be of interest to us and offers us a few free tickets to several screenings. These tickets are intended for those who may not otherwise be able to afford to attend the films and priority will be given first to lower income older adults. However, we encourage everyone interested in any of the films for which we receive tickets to step up and express interest, because if no one else claims them, we will still want to ensure the tickets are put to good use. Sign up with us now for the free tickets you can commit to for the weekend of February 23-25 to catch a few inspiring films! The roster/description of selected films is attached to this email. Reply now to this email or call 303-258-0799 by Monday, 2/19, to list which films you would like to request and we’ll let you know if you won the tickets later that week…

Degas at Denver Art Museum

 Degas: A Passion for Perfection will showcase prolific French artist Edgar Degas’ works from 1855 to 1906 – more than 100 paintings, drawings, pastels, etchings, monotypes, and sculptures in bronze. The exhibition will focus on the most prominent and recurring themes throughout Degas’ 60-year career. These include his interest in learning from the art of the past and from that of his contemporaries, a lifelong fascination with the nude, a passion for horses, and his strong interest in opera and dance.

We will enjoy the luxury of a private group bus round trip from Nederland to Denver to tour the Degas exhibit on Thursday, March 1. We meet at 8:45am for a prompt 9:00am departure from the Nederland Community Center and return by 3pm. Bring money for lunch at Mad Greens on the DAM plaza. Tickets to the Degas are time-reserved and must be purchased in advance. The DAM is the sole American venue for this exhibition and some time slots are already sold out. Thanks to some generous donors, we offer $5 per person off of the ticket price of $24, and your $19 includes the free bus transportation. Please submit your reservations as soon as possible via phone, email, or Meetup and mail or deliver a check payable to NAS (P O Box 188, Nederland CO 80466) to be received no later than Monday, February 19.

Wake Up Your Life

 A local friend alerted us to a program for Seniors and MidLifers that will meet Thursdays, March 8 through May 10, 10:30am-Noon in Boulder. The group meets to investigate how to make the most of every precious day in our MidLife or Senior years and explore the path of self-discovery and engagement with what it means to wakefully evolve into our Senior selves. Cost is $250 for the 10-session series. Contact Reva Tift, MA, for further information at 303-444-0152, revatift@nullgmail.com, www.AHCDGuidnce.com.

FDGD Pancake Breakfast

 We are ramping up for our biggest food event of the year. Please volunteer now to help with our pancake breakfast from 8am to 11am on both Saturday and Sunday of the big Frozen Dead Guy Days celebration, March 10 & 11. We serve hundreds of locals and tourists at this fundraiser for NAS, our nonprofit sponsor organization. Please help us get the word out – locals tend to eat early Saturday or anytime Sunday to avoid the busy rush and we invite every one of our MidLife friends to either sign up to help or at least show up to eat!

Everybody’s Table

On Thursday, March 15, 9am-Noon, the Boulder County Area Agency on Aging hosts a free speaker and resource fair at the Jewish Community Center at 6007 Oreg Ave, Boulder. Named Everybody’s Table, this event features good nutrition for seniors – and the people who love them. Dr. Coco Dughi from the Boulder Medical Center presents “The Power of Diet and Lifestyle in Healthy Aging” and the resource fair includes demonstrations featuring food, meal, and nutrition services in Boulder County. Continental Breakfast provided. Everybody is welcome to the Table – Seniors, MidLifers, Family Caregivers… RSVP by February 28 to https://everybodystable.eventbrite.com or contact 303-441-4995 for more information.

St Patrick’s Day with The Gael

Everybody’s Irish on St. Pat’s Day! Kick off your celebration on St. Pat‘s Eve here in Nederland with local Irish band The Gael at Very Nice Brewing Company in the shopping mall on Friday, March 16, 6:00pm-8:30pm. Dance a jig and drink a craft brew with friends. The band is made up of local Mountain MidLife friends and is a fabulous local choice for our St. Pat’s celebration!

Open-Caption Films at Monday Matinees

Our friendly Backdoor Theatre crew at the Nederland Community Center has added a special matinee showing every Monday at 1:30pm of the prior weekend’s film. Please help spread the word to friends whose jobs or busy schedules prevents them from attending movies on Friday and Saturday evenings. The matinee includes “open captioning”, which shows the words at the bottom of the screen. This is most helpful to those of us who stopped attending movies because we have trouble understanding what the actors are saying. Enjoy this new, enhanced feature and show your support to the BDT so they can continue to offer this new service!

New Opportunity!  Create Our Events

 Our new board is reconfiguring some of the ways our organization can operate most effectively. We invite all of the folks who have enjoyed an event or outing in the past few years—or would like to in the future—to help us sustain our vibrant activity levels. Your input about what specific outings you would like our organization to plan and a small amount of your energy to help make them happen for everyone is needed. We are reducing hours for our tiny overburdened staff and need YOU, our friends we love to get together with, to help keep our group lively. If we don’t step up to make them happen, our wonderful array of activities and outings could become a distant memory. Let’s get together regularly to plan all the fun times we can share! Please call us at 303-258-0799to volunteer with our fun programs and activities planning group.

Other Events of Interest

 Plan an outing or interest group and we can post it at Meetup. Email details to Serene at serenekarplus (at) gmail.com. Adults of all ages are welcome at all events.

 WEEKLY CALENDAR

 Lunch at Nederland Community Center — RSVP 2 days ahead

   Every Monday & Wednesday, Noon

Mtn MidLife Breakfast/Brunch, Nederland Community Center —RSVP one week ahead if possible

   Second Sat Odd # Mos, 8:30am/9:00am

   Second Sun Even # Months, 11:00am/11:30am

Mtn MidLife Dinner at Nederland Community Center —RSVP one week ahead if possible

   Fourth Fridays, 5:00pm/5:30pm

Exercise at St. Rita’s Catholic Church; free

   Every Monday & Wednesday, 10:30am

Pickleball at Nederland Community Center; Ned CC fees

   Every Monday, Wednesday, Saturday, 10:00am

Writing Skills at Ned Community Library; free

   Every 1st and 3rd Monday, 1:00pm

Writing Life Stories at Ned Community Library; free

   Every 2nd & 4th Wednesday, 1:00pm

NedKnits at Ned Community Library; free

   Second Thursdays, 1:00-3:00pm, Ned Comm Library

BIGfoot Memorial Snowshoe/Hike Meet at Nederland Community Center; free

   Every 3rd Friday, 10:00am, Call NAS to Confirm

February Menu

 Please RSVP two days ahead for lunches, a week ahead for breakfasts and dinners to 303-258-0799.

 M    2/5   Pulled Pork, Macaroni/Cheese, WW Roll, Cole Slaw, Apple/Berry

W    2/7   Meatloaf, Beets, Baked Potato, Almond Pear

Su   2/11  Spinach/Tomato Quiche, Meat/Cheese/Bread Platter, Mixed Greens Salad, Berry Parfait

M    2/12  Red Beans/Rice w Turkey Sausage, Collard Greens, Corn Bread, Fruit/Nut Salad 

W    2/14  (Valentine’s Day—wear red) Salmon, Peas, Potato, Mixed Greens Salad, Mixed Berries

M    2/19  Chicken Fajita, WW Tortilla / Spanish Rice, Lettuce/Tomato/Guacamole, Banana

W    2/21  Roasted Vegetable Pizza, Mixed Greens Salad, Pineapple

Fr    2/23  Chicken Tika Masala, Spinach Saag, Basmati Rice, Cucumber/Tomato/Onion Chopped Salad, Mango/Tropical Fruit Dessert

M    2/26  Cashew Curry Turkey Salad on Romaine, Whole Wheat Roll, Carrot Salad, Peaches

W    2/28  Tuna Noodle Casserole w Peas/Celery, Cole Slaw, Fruit Salad

 

We look forward to seeing you at an event soon!

Serene Karplus

serenekarplus@nullgmail.com
303-258-0799

Boulder International Film Festival 2018

Film Tickets for Nederland Area Seniors

Welcome to BIFF 2018! The organizers of the Boulder International Film Festival are generously donating to our mountain seniors free tickets to selected independent films at the festival February 22-25. Please see the following information to understand how the free tickets will work.

General Information

  • BIFF will provide the Nederland Area Seniors with four free tickets to each of the films listed below. Their intention is to provide the tickets to low-income seniors and seniors with limited access to quality independent films.
  • We need to ensure that all tickets are used, so we encourage all participants in NAS or Mountain MidLife programs to request tickets of interest from NAS by Friday, 2/16 (303-258-0799 or NederlandAreaSeniors@nullgmail.com). Please double check your calendar to ensure you are available to attend the chosen films and list your requests in order of priority, in case we can provide tickets to only one or two of your selected films.
  • Tickets in high demand will be allotted first to lower income persons over the age of 60, then to others if not claimed by this group, possibly by lottery.
  • Tickets are printed late, about a week or so before the festival and will need to be retrieved from the Nederland Community Center after Wednesday, 2/21.
  • You must bring the film tickets with you to give to the ticket collector as you enter the theater and wait in line with all general admission attendees.  Line and venue managers will be aware that seniors will be at these showings and that some may need extra help.
  • Please plan to get to the theater at least 30 minutes before the show to ensure a good seat.  
  • Parking can be a problem, so please use the “N” bus or carpool and allow plenty of time to find parking. The HOP should be free for ticket holders and will take people to all venues.
  • Visit www.biff1.com to find the entire program, including the map showing venues and parking garages. Please note that several music/food events are accessible free to ticket holders. The printed program should be available after February 7.

 

Selected Films

Friday, February 23, 2018

  1. Bending the Arc

         First Presbyterian Church, Friday, February 23, 10:00am

Feature Documentary, 2017, 102 min.

This stunning documentary chronicles a team of young people—Paul Farmer, Jim Yong Kim and Ophelia Dahl– whose charitable medical work 30 years ago during a tuberculosis epidemic in Haiti ignited a worldwide healthcare movement. Their idea was to deliver basic healthcare to those with no access to medical help by training ordinary Haitian villagers as healthcare workers. The team turned the epidemic around and cured almost all of their patients. But there were obstacles: The World Bank, the medical establishment, dysfunctional governments and the poverty of their patients. As they won over allies, including President George W. Bush, and through governmental contributions, their good work expanded to fighting the AIDS epidemic in Africa, and the Ebola virus in Rwanda. They took their fight from the village to the world stage to ensure that healthcare is a right for all, and that poverty should not determine whether a person should live or die.

  1. My Enemy, My Brother

         First Presbyterian Church, Friday, February 23, 12:15 PM

         Canada Feature Documentary, 2017, 88 min. – Subtitled

At 13 years old, Zahed ran away from home to become one of 100,000 child soldiers for the Iran military during the Iran-Iraq War. Najah, a soldier for Iraq, was captured and spent 17 years in a prison camp in Iran. The two former enemies meet 20 years later in Vancouver at a counseling class and, over time, become friends. They decide to go back to the Middle East, Najah to find his wife and child, and Zahard to visit his sick father. That’s how this heroic true adventure begins. You will be gripping your set to the end.

  1. 3. Liyana

         First Presbyterian Church, Friday, February 23, 2:30 PM

         Swaziland/USA/Qatar, Feature Documentary Animation Hybrid, 2017, 77 min

This beautiful film is a celebration of collective storytelling. Under the gentle eye of the great African storyteller, Gcina Mhlophe, five African orphans write the screenplay for an animated feature film using their own darkest memories and brightest dreams as raw material. While the script is written, it is also sketched and beautifully animated as the children brainstorm obstacles and triumphs faced by their fictional heroine, Liyana, as she journeys through unknown lands with her beloved bull while desperately searching for her kidnapped brothers. As the real and imagined worlds begin to converge, the children must choose what kind of story they will tell—in fiction and in their own lives.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

  1. Leaning into the Wind: Andy Goldsworthy

         Boulder High School, Saturday, February 24, 10:00 AM

         UK/Germany, Feature Documentary, 2017, 92 min – Subtitled

What if a tree falls in the forest and there’s no videographer around? Andy Goldsworthy’s art creations are all made in nature, subject to the whims of weather, and last anywhere from just a few seconds to several years. Each environment he encounters becomes a fresh kaleidoscopic canvas for his art. Goldsworthy struck gold a few years ago when he teamed up with famed filmmaker Thomas Riedelsheimer to produce the huge art house hit Rivers and Tides featuring much of Goldsworthy’s work. A lushly visualized travelogue, Goldsworthy’s art and Riedelsheimer’s exquisite cinematography redefine landscape and inextricably tie human life to the natural world.

  1. Andre: The Voice of Wine

         First Presbyterian Church, Saturday, February 24, 12:15 PM

         USA/Russia/UK, Feature Documentary, 2017, 98 min

Andre Tchelistcheff first caught the world’s attention in 1976, when a blind tasting competition held by a panel of France’s most glorified oenophiles produced a shocking result: Two California wines—a 1973 Chardonnay and a 1972 Cabernet, both made using Andre’s methods—were named the best white and red wines in the world. The French were duly shocked, and Time magazine covered the story. A Russian immigrant, Andre arrived in Napa Valley in 1938 and began teaching the few local vintners how to grow world-class grapes scientifically. Today, there are more than 600 wineries in the valley, and Andre’s epic story is being told by his descendant, Mark Tchelistcheff, with the help of Hollywood stars who discovered the great Napa wines long ago, including Francis Ford Coppola, who built his own wine empire on Andre’s science of wine.

  1. Love Means Zero

         Boulder High School, Saturday, February 24, 2:30 PM

         USA, Feature Documentary, 2017, 89 min

At 86, famed tennis coach Nick Bollettieri is a living legend. At his academy in Florida, he raised a generation of champions. Courier. Seles. Agassi. And many more. No other coach has matched his success, his dominance or his fame. His greatness, though, came at a price. Eight marriages, financial upheaval, and a dramatic break with his surrogate son and cherished student, Andre Agassi. This film tells the story of the celebrated yet controversial coach and explores the cost of his all-consuming drive for greatness. The film premieres on Showtime later this year.

  1. 7. Soufra

         First Presbyterian Church, Saturday, February 24, 5:00 PM

         Singapore/USA/Lebanon Feature Documentary, 2017, 73 min

Soufra follows the unlikely and highly inspirational story of entrepreneur Mariam Shaar, a third-generation refugee who spent her entire life in the huge Burj El Barajneh camp in Lebanon. The film follows Shaar as she sets out to launch a catering company, “Soufra” (Arab for feast), then works to expand it into a food truck business with the help of Kickstarter. Shaar is breaking barriers, pulling together Syrian, Iraqi, Palestinian and Lebanese women from the camp, each with delicious recipes from home, to work side by side and form beautiful friendships while running the thriving business. There are many nervous and exciting firsts for these women—a first visit to a farmer’s market, a first movie in a theater (The Chef), first driving lessons, first professional cooking lessons—and their excitement builds throughout the two years covered in this film. With this documentary, Shaar has become a hero to women across the Arab world.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

  1. Lunafest Shorts

         Boulder High School, Sunday, February 25, 10:00 AM

         USA, Canada, 2016/2017, 84 min

Nine wonderful short films, ranging from 2 to 19 minutes that tell the stories of young girls and grown women with experiences in the United States and far beyond. Some are comedies while others are heart wrenching first-person accounts of difficult happenings in difficult times.

  1. Bye Bye Germany

         First Presbyterian Church, Sunday, February 25, 3:00 PM

         Germany/Luxembourg/Belgium, Feature Narrative, 2017, 102 min. – Subtitled

Based on the author’s own, often funny, family history of Jews left behind in Germany after the war, this film is full of Yiddish-isms. It features David Bermann, a dapper, smooth-talking former trader, fresh from the camps who is soon training a crack team of fellow camp survivors as door-to-door salesmen of “fine French bed linens.” Because Germany’s retail networks have been destroyed, German widows scoop up the linens, and the motley sales force becomes quite successful. (All they want is to get the hell out of Germany.) But could Bermann have collaborated with the Nazis? The smart and attractive US officer Sara Simon conducts the secret interrogations. She wants to get to the heart of Bermann’s wartime memories, but his quick wit and wild tales are a challenge for Simon’s prosecutorial patience.

  1. Ayla: The Daughter of War

         Boulder High School, Sunday, February 25, 7:30 PM

         Turkey, Feature Narrative, 2017, 124 min. – Subtitled

Turkey’s submission for the 2018 Oscars

On a cold night in Korea in 1950, Sgt. Suleyman stumbles upon an orphaned five-year-old girl who was the only survivor of a raid on her village. The terrified, barely alive child melts Suleyman’s heart and he risks everything to carry her back to his army base and out of harm’s way. With no common language, Suleyman names her Ayla, after the bright moon that shone on the horrific frozen battlefield the night he found her. The two become inseparable, and Ayla effortlessly brings joy and laughter to the entire Turkish military base in the midst of the Korean War. When the war comes to an end, the sergeant is forced to give up Ayla to an orphanage, but vows that they will be together again someday. Will they find each other so many years later? Based on a true story.

        

Upcoming closures on Gold Run Road and Fourmile Canyon

Update on Flood Recovery Work in Fourmile Canyon
Upcoming closures on Gold Run Road

Hello –

Here’s an update on work currently taking place and future plans for projects in Fourmile Canyon. 

 GOLD RUN/SALINA:

Work is progressing well on the Gold Run Road and Creek Recovery and Restoration Project. Crews continue to work on several aspects of the project, including: major property access and roadway culverts, retaining walls, and stream restoration. Five private property access culverts have been installed and crews continue to progress uphill while working on new locations, all while forming and pouring the reinforced concrete aprons, footers, headwalls, and wingwalls that will significantly complete the structures. Several roadway drainage structures have been built and more are coming. Stream work is going as planned and will continue. 

 FULL ROAD CLOSURES PLANNED OVER THE NEXT TWO MONTHS:

There are four major roadway culverts to be installed beneath Gold Run in the coming weeks. Unfortunately these structures are simply too big and the road/canyon is too narrow to safely complete the work while keeping at least one lane open. Here are the current timelines and locations of closures on Gold Run Road above Salina Junction:

Full Roadway Closures will be in place from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday.

First Closure

Monday, Feb. 12 to Friday, Feb. 16

Just south of 1448 Gold Run Road

Second Closure

Monday, Feb. 26 to Friday, March 2

Just above 864 Gold Run Road

Third Closure

Monday, March 12 to Friday, March 16

Between 839 and 864 Gold Run

Fourth Closure

Monday, March 26 to Friday, March 30

At Ingram Gulch/637 Gold Run

 For those not familiar with the area, the closures are all located above the Salina Fire Station and Schoolhouse. A map is attached for reference (or click here to go to link).

There is a possibility that the road will reopen before 4:30 p.m. on Friday of each week, but we will not know exactly when until we get into the ground and determine exactly what material we are working with. I’ll post updates to this listserv each week to let you know how things are going. 

We have coordinated this work with Fourmile Fire and the Sheriff’s Office and they are prepared if an emergency event occurs that requires their attention during a closure period. SEMA has contingency plans in place and can reopen the road in approximately one-hour.

Unfortunately, The Climb bus will only be able to make their 6:35 a.m. eastbound run down Fourmile and into Boulder and their 5:30 p.m. westbound run up to Gold Hill during closure windows. The service will operate between Boulder and Gold Hill using Sunshine Canyon/Mapleton Avenue for regularly scheduled runs that operate between the 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. closure window. Residents will be able to flag down the bus along Sunshine Canyon Drive in areas where it is safe for the bus to pull over.

I apologize for any inconveniences this may cause anyone in their daily travels. The project team looked at this from every angle and could not find safe way to keep at least one-lane open during the work.

I’d like to take a moment to address a burglary that took place in the area that was perpetrated by a day-laborer hired by a subcontractor. This was an extremely unfortunate situation and everyone on the project team feels horrible that it happened. The burglar was arrested the day of the crime by the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office (BCSO). The BCSO understands the unease that has been created for many residents by having a lot of people working throughout the canyon, so they will increase their patrols to help keep an eye on things. The contractor has put new policies and procedures in place to ensure that trusted staff members and supervisors are always paired up with newer employees. In addition, the subcontractor will not use the company that supplied the problematic staffer again. I personally have found that the dedicated men and women who have been on this site and on other county-run projects in the canyon from the beginning of our flood recovery efforts are truly good people who only want to help residents get through this tough construction season as peacefully as possible.

UPPER FOURMILE/WALL STREET UPDATE

Work in upper Fourmile Canyon/Wall Street took a bit to get rolling, but things are up-and-running and crews are currently tackling both road and creek aspects of the project. Emerson Gulch Road has been rebuilt and looks great. Road crews have found tough going at retaining wall sites, but have come up with creative solutions for maintaining progress. Stream restoration crews recently began their work at Emerson Gulch. This work will continue at various locations through the canyon for the foreseeable future. Travel delays will continue to range up to 15-minutes along this stretch of the canyon, but we’ll do our best to keep them as short as possible. 

LOGAN MILL ROAD

Designs are substantially complete for the new bridge at Logan Mill, but we’re still waiting for few pieces of the puzzle to fall into place before commencing construction. SEMA (who’s working on Gold Run) has been awarded the project, and they’re ready to start as soon as we say go, which we’re hopeful will be in March. 

LOWER FOURMILE CANYON DRIVE

This project is still in a holding pattern as we await clearances from FEMA to get started. Unfortunately they’re still short-staffed in this region due to the devastating hurricanes that hit the south and Puerto Rico, which has forced the temporary relocation of a majority of their staff. We’re still hopeful we’ll break ground on this project later this summer or early this fall. 

I hope this information proves helpful. Please let me know if you have any questions, comments, or concerns.

Have a good day. 

Sincerely, Andrew

Andrew Barth, Communications
Boulder County Transportation
abarth@nullbouldercounty.org
303-441-1032
www.4MileCanyon.com
www.GoldRunRoad.com
www.Upper4Mile.com 

 

Lickskillet Concert, plus The Farmer Sisters

Gold Hill Store & Pub –  Wednesday, February 7th, 2018, Don’t forget, seats are limited…..

Please join us in welcoming lead singer and guitarist from the Gasoline Lollipops, Clay Rose. Tickets are $10 per person. Please email kortmccumber(at)gmail(dot)com to reserve seats. The best way to guarantee a seat is to call or pay in person, in advance at the Gold Hill Store & Pub. 303-443-7724. Doors @ 6:30pm, Concert @ 7pm. 531 Main Street, Gold Hill, CO

His musical style has been described as “complex, macabre and powerful …Tom Waits’s meets mountain bluegrass.”

Amy Fortunato 

amy@nullcowboys-sweetheart.com

Gold Hill Fire Department needs Volunteers

The Gold Hill Fire Protection District needs volunteers. No Previous training required. We are looking for dedicated, community minded people who are willing to safely learn what is necessary to respond as a volunteer fire fighter, medical responder, or both. Please contact Chief Chris Finn at 303-444-5549 or at cfinn@nullgoldhillinn.com Thank you! 

Gold Run Road Closures

From Chief Chris Finn

Firefighters
Attached is a map with road closure dates.
When the road is closed, our district runs down to the closure!
Questions?
Chris

—–Original Message—–
From: Cash House [mailto:cehouse4662@nullgmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 01, 2018 8:44 AM
To: Chris Finn; Michael Schmitt; Andy Almafitano; Jeremy Felix; Chris
Williams
Cc: Bret gibson Home; Four Mile Fire Crew
Subject: Gold Run road closure map

Hey Chiefs,

Please see the attached road closure map for the Gold Run area west of
Salina.   These closures will begin Monday, Feb 12.  These will be full
daytime closures so no access will be available through these locations
during a 3-5 day period from the start of the closure except at night….
super fun.  

There aren’t exact addresses for the closure sites so I will do my best to
get that info out to ya this week and add it to the map.

For any EMS/Fire response above these closure locations, all access must
come up sunshine canyon, through the town of Gold Hill and then down Gold
Run.  

Give a shout with any questions.  

Music

Saturday afternoon music at the Gold Hill Store & Pub